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#1
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AND CORRECT ME IF I AM WRONG:
But isn't the groom the one who really gets the horse and brings it out to the paddock area to be saddled? I swear most of the trainers don't see the horse until it gets to the paddock to be saddled. Now I know in the big races the trainer walks with the horse over to the paddock, but this was a $23,000 claimer and not a million dollar stakes race.
__________________
"Until one has loved an animal, part of their soul remains unawaken.
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#2
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In this particular case with Blasi, we don't even know if he was in town when this happened. They probably have horses running in 6 different states. Blasi can only be in one state at a time. Since he is the listed trainer, he is the one responsible, but chances are he wasn't even there. Assuming he wasn't there, it is the fault of his assistant trainer at that particular track. |
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#3
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#4
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#5
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Oh geez, are you kidding me here?
Good Lord I'm so tired of the conspiracy theorists, truly. They really are a pain in the ass because they whine and cry wolf so many times that when something of a real crooked nature happens, people are desensitized to it. They only have about a zillion horses. They screwed up, and hes being fined. The safeguard to this is the lip tatoo, which the identifier reads to insure who is who. If anyone really thinks that Blasi wanted to run a ringer in a cheap race, they really need to get a clue about risk/reward. What does he gain? Well maybe possible embarassment and humiliation and a tongue lashing( I'm sure hes had plenty of all three). For a cheap claiming race? Does anyone truly feel that they were trying to put one over? LOL!! Were they gonna get the identifier in on it? It happens, figure makers blow numbers, jockeys blow rides, grooms who are being paid very low wages bring over the wrong horse. The guy got fined, and maybe it should have been a little higher, but since it was their first offense with this type of transgression(kenny mcpeek committed the same act this summer for the 2nd time in his career, and I'm sure noone ws more upset about it than kenny). Newsflash, when a guy like Blasi has a bunch of horses in(and lake, Pletcher, Dutrow, whoever) they don't walk back to the barn after each race and walk out with the next runner. Its logistically impossible if you have a horse in back to back races. By the time the first race is over, and you talk to the jock, there is no way to sprint back to the barn and get the next one. You count on the asst or most often groom to lead the horse over. Obviously there is a trainer responsibility issue and Blasi is ultimately responsible and was issued a fine. |
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#6
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I can't imagine anybody realistically thought there was any funny business going on but considering the shenanigans this barn has been proven to have been involved in I would say they should get whatever is the maximum fine.
One of the biggest problems facing racing is the continued nonchalance with which people flaunt the rules and the lack of real penalties applied when these rules are broken. I would say this lacksidasical approach has a lot to do with getting us to where we are now....which is pretty much a game full of cheating whether you like it or not. |
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#7
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The horse identifier has the job of identifying the lip tatto and matching it to the the papers on the horse. These guys are quite diligent about their work, I've read about horses getting scratched because they brought over the wrong horse, but very few if any actually running under the wrong identity. Noone in their right mind would attempt this, noone. The guy got hit for 2500, and I'm sure that Veitch and company(himself having been a trainer) called in the people associated with the event and questioned them as to how it happened. Noone is sweeping it under the rug, and I don't see this an event that shatters my faith in anything. If anything horseplayers should be happy that the identifier is diligent and competent. |
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#8
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#9
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Eric |
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#10
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Oh I understand that it is the trainer's responsibility. I am not saying that he should not be fined. Just stating that it could have been a new groom that doesn't know the horses that well and grabbed the wrong one, etc...
It could have been a numerous amount of things. We shouldn't judge the trainer on a simple mistake. I don't think he was doing it to run the wrong horse if that is what this thread was asking. I just think it was a mistake.
__________________
"Until one has loved an animal, part of their soul remains unawaken.
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#11
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Honest mistake or not, it's pretty shabby management. What's interesting to me is that when this was first reported, it was stated that the horse in question was the current favorite, and that the "wrong" horse was an unraced filly without a lip tattoo.
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