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#21
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First, there is almost universal acceptance that the way they breed these horses has changed dramatically. They no longer are the sturdy horses we grew up with but have become a soft, fragile animal. The current training methods only make them softer. As much as I hate to admit it, it's becoming increasingly clear that they need more time between races than horses of the past. I may not necessarily believe this but obviously, many top trainers do. With that in mind, more spaces between the races would probably lead to more of the horses that are considered top horses running back in the Preakness. Each year, you usually have a couple of contenders that can have their Derby efforts tossed because of legitimate excuses that then skip the Preakness and run in the Belmont. You also get several that skip the Preakness just because it comes back so close and there is no reason to run back. Palace Malice, Union Rags, Summer Bird, Jazil, Birdstone, and Empire Maker are six that have run in Kentucky, skipped the Preakness, and won the Belmont in the last 11 seasons with Birdstone and Empire Maker both ending TC bids. So my belief is that with more top horses coming back in the Preakness, it makes that a tougher race to win. The same feeling holds true for the Belmont. The next reason I feel it would be tougher is because it would require the horses to hold their form for a longer period of time. The more time between the races, the more that can go wrong in training and the easier it is to lose their sharpness. A third reason is one that would be in conjunction with shortening the races. Listen, whether we like it or not, people aren't breeding horses to run 10f+ anymore. I remember once reading that 70% of the races in this country are run at 8f and under and that's what it seems breeders are aiming at. Nobody is trying to breed a Derby winner anymore. They are breeding 8-9f runners and hoping they can just be the best of the bunch and outlast the others to 10f. Look at a horse like California Chrome. The vast majority of the so-called "experts" will tell you that they believe his best distance is probably 9f. The 2yo champ from last year, Shared Belief, just made his return and I bet if you were to ask people what distance they'd prefer to see them match up at, it would be 8.5-9f. You could line up Groovy, Gulch, Very Subtle, Safely Kept, Xtra Heat, Meafara, On the Line, Kona Gold, and Artax and make it a 10f race and three of them will hit the board and one will win. But that is not the best distance for any of them and the best race for that group would be a 6f sprint where all of them can give their best. What I'm getting at is a 9f Derby would be a tougher race to win than a 10f one and a 10f Belmont would be tougher to win than a 12f one. Why? Because the conditions would suit more of the horses and make them legit contenders. It's only logical that the more contenders that fit the conditions, the tougher it is to win. Some people are set in their ways and will scream tradition and I respect that. But while changing it up will make it different, it won't necessarily make it easier.
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The real horses of the year (1986-2020) Manila, Java Gold, Alysheba, Sunday Silence, Go for Wand, In Excess, Paseana, Kotashaan, Holy Bull, Cigar, Alphabet Soup, Formal Gold, Skip Away, Artax, Tiznow, Point Given, Azeri, Candy Ride, Smarty Jones, Ghostzapper, Invasor, Curlin, Zenyatta, Zenyatta, Goldikova, Havre de Grace, Wise Dan, Wise Dan, California Chrome, American Pharoah, Arrogate, Gun Runner, Accelerate, Maximum Security, Gamine |
#22
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![]() --Dunbar
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Curlin and Hard Spun finish 1,2 in the 2007 BC Classic, demonstrating how competing in all three Triple Crown races ruins a horse for the rest of the year...see avatar photo from REUTERS/Lucas Jackson |
#23
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The current system is kind of a double-edged sword. The distance of these races eliminates a lot of contenders because there simply aren't that many horses out there that can get 1 1/4 miles. But the spacing is the great equalizer (especially when it comes to the Belmont) because after you win those first two race, you're going to be pretty knocked out going into that final leg. By the way, I'm sure most of you will disagree with me, but of those 6 horses that skipped the Preakness and won the Belmont, I'm not sure a single one of those horses (maybe one) would have won the Belmont had they not skipped the Preakness. I think the key to them winning the Belmont was skipping the Preakness and being fresh for the Belmont. I think it gave them a huge advantage. |
#24
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What has remained quite consistent, it seems, is that it's to a Preakness starter's advantage to have run in the Derby. Here's an article from 2014 about it: https://thoroughbredracing.com/artic...ners-preakness And one from 1998. La plus ça change... http://articles.latimes.com/1998/may/14/sports/sp-49712
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Gentlemen! We're burning daylight! Riders up! -Bill Murray |
#25
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#26
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#27
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![]() Also, he says 'only' three. That's three of eleven, in a five year span, and that after decades without one..
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Books serve to show a man that those original thoughts of his aren't very new at all. Abraham Lincoln |
#28
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Derby fever may overwhelm people, but presumably they have brains and are perfectly capable of doing the right thing by their horse that isn't able to handle all 3 races (which you know some of them know darn well going in if they're honest). They choose to make unwise entry decisions and that's not the TC series' fault. There's no shame in treating races like the Tesio, Peter Pan or Sir Barton as a goal for your horse rather than a prep. You wouldn't need to limit the Derby field if people answered the 'if my horse wins the Derby, will they be able to finish the TC journey well?' before dropping their name in the box. |
#29
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It's no different than claiming that horses are being ruined by the TC trail. If they can't handle the three races in five weeks, then they weren't very good horses to start with. And, as been pointed out in other threads, the ones that didn't run again after, who ran in all three races and did well, were more likely pulled from the track for the sweet smell of breeding cash than because the horse was ruined. Even in the case of Afleet Alex, who did suffer a fluke injury during the second race (though it had nothing to do with the spacing of the races, of course), at the time of retirement his trainer said he could come back from the injury- he was just worth too much money to wait: http://seattletimes.com/html/sports/...4_horse02.html
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Gentlemen! We're burning daylight! Riders up! -Bill Murray |
#30
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--Dunbar
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Curlin and Hard Spun finish 1,2 in the 2007 BC Classic, demonstrating how competing in all three Triple Crown races ruins a horse for the rest of the year...see avatar photo from REUTERS/Lucas Jackson |
#31
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Books serve to show a man that those original thoughts of his aren't very new at all. Abraham Lincoln |
#32
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I completely disagree with your assertion that most of those horses that were retired after the TC could have come back effectively later on. Afleet Alex had a condylar fracture. It is very unlikely that he could have come back and been the same horse. They tried to bring him back at one point and were forced to pull the plug. As you said, the condylar fracture may have come from the incident in the Preakness. We don't know whether it did or not but it is certainly possible. If it did come from that incident, then I wouldn't blame the TC for the injury. I was told that Smarty Jones had practically no cartilage left in his ankles. The person who told me is completely credible and was in a position to know. But even if you don't believe him, Dr. Bramlage said the horse needed several months off. Mine That Bird was not the same horse after the TC. I'll Have Another and Bodemeister were done after the Preakness. Those are just a few of the horses off the top of my head. I could probably come up with 10x more over just the last 15 years or so. Super Saver was done after the Preakness. They made a huge mistake running Orb in all three races. He was so knocked out both physically and mentally that they sent him out to Fair Hill. It's no secret how much weight that horse lost. After his horrible performance in the Preakness, I don't know why they ran him in the Belmont. Some will say he ran poorly in the Preakness because of the pace. That is silly. Mylute came from even further back than Orb in the Derby. And Mylute ran really well in the Preakness. He ran a credible 3rd and only lost by 2 1/2 lengths. He beat Orb by 7 lengths. By the way, owners will almost always downplay injuries. If you remember when I'll Have Another was scratched from the Belmont, they claimed he just had some tendonitis. In reality, he had a bowed tendon. You guys seem to think that owners try to exaggerate injuries. It's totally the opposite. They always downplay injuries. If an owner says that a horse has a minor injury and that the horse could probably come back the next year but they are going to retire him, there is a good chance that they know the horse probably could not come back, or not come back and be the same horse. |
#33
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It's ludicrous, some of the arguments on here, about how it's the time between racing causing the lack of TC winners. So many times, racing circumstances were what prevented the sweep. Sometimes a better horse came along to deny the Triple Crown (Touch Gold for instance), or really bad race circumstances (Afleet Alex). Heck, just look at Touch Gold again. I could make a case that with a little luck, he might have won the Triple Crown. He was best in both the Belmont and Preakness, and if my old memory serves me correctly, he didn't run in the Derby because he lacked earnings. I could be mistaken there, but still, he was the best horse in both the Preakness and Belmont. I recently posted a list of the last twelve or so horses going for the sweep in the Belmont, and things that happened to them that contributed to their losses. All Rupert did was summarily dismiss these things and then spend the next month reiterating that the 2-3 week format was to blame. For certain, Point Given, Smarty Jones, Afleet Alex and Real Quiet would have won the TC if it were not for jockey shenanigans. I don't even know how that can be countered. War Emblem and Alysheba I think had legitimate excuses, but I can't say for certain they would have won or not. Hell, I even think that had Barbaro not broken down out of the gate (nothing to do with race spacing), he'd have completed the sweep, overrated and overhyped Bernardini notwithstanding. The arguments in favor of spacing are empty and easily beaten with simple logic and reasoning! How on Earth did Point Given and Afleet Alex manage to win the Preakness and Belmont after running such monster losing races (due to jockey ineptness) in the Derby?????? The best race Smarty Jones ever ran was his lone loss in the Belmont! All this leads me to the conclusion that some people are hopeless contrarians. I just never thought I'd be seeing Rupert in the starring role of King Glorious in this particular movie. |
#34
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With regard to Touch Gold, I agree with you that he was much the best in the Preakness. That hardly means he would have won the TC if he would have run in the Derby. He would have had to win the Derby and then you have to assume that the Derby would not have taken much out of him and that he would have run the same in the Preakness and Belmont as he would have run without running in the Derby. Point Given was certainly the best horse that year, but I don't think he had a legitimate excuse in the Derby. He ran poorly. I don't know why he didn't fire that day but he didn't. What was his excuse? Sure he was closer to a fast pace than he should have been, but Congaree was even closer to the pace than Point Given and Congaree ended up beating Point Given by 7 lengths. I don't know how a person could watch the Kentucky Derby that year and say that Point Given was the best horse that day. He had no legitimate excuse. If he would have ended up getting beat by a small margin and if he would have outfinished other horses that were close to the pace, then you could make that argument. But that wasn't the case. I totally disagree with you about Smarty Jones. I don't think the Belmont was anything close to his best race. In fact, I think he regressed by at least 4-5 lengths from the Preakness. What was the problem with the ride? Watch the replay and tell me what he should have done differently at what point. They went the half in :48 3/5, which is reasonable but not lightening fast. Eddington came up outside of Smarty Jones and forced him to move a little sooner than he would have liked to but that is racing. Overall, SJ's trip was reasonable. It wasn't great but it certainly wasn't horrible. He ran his last quarter in :27. If you think that was his best race, I strongly disagree. What was wrong with Afleet Alex's trip in the Kentucky Derby? It's a 20 horse field. You're practically never going to get a perfect trip. If you get a relatively clean trip, you have to be thrilled. AA had a relatively good trip. He saved ground and waited for room and he got through. After he got through, he got outrun. I don't think he had any real excuse in the Derby. To say Alysheba had a legitimate excuse in the Belmont is preposterous. He lost by 14 lengths. If he was 2-3 lengths closer to the pace, do you think that would have made up 14 lengths? Granted he did check at the quarter pole after he was hopelessly beaten. If he didn't check, he would have only lost by 10 or 11 lengths. I don't deny that we will continue to have plenty of horses that will win 2 out of the 3 legs. I'm sure there will continue to be plenty of horses that come close to winning all 3 races. My theory is pretty simple. My theory is that 99% of horses who win those first two legs are going to regress in the Belmont. How much they will regress is the question. All horses are different. Some horses may only regress by a couple of lengths. Others may regress by 5-10 lengths. If a horse is much the best and he only regresses by 2 lengths, he will probably be very competitive in the Belmont. |
#35
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You know all of that already though, doncha? Quote:
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#36
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![]() Why is smarty still being brought up? I thought chuck explained his injury, that it wasn't that serious.
Smarty was retired for one reason, and it wasn't cartilage. He didn't run again for a reason, and its green. Plenty of horses disprove what one horse is being used to prove.
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Books serve to show a man that those original thoughts of his aren't very new at all. Abraham Lincoln |
#37
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The biggest difference is the diminishing number of Derby/Preakness starters. Another difference is that in the 70's quite a few horses that were Derby/Belmont starters ran in a race other than the Preakness in between, rather than resting until the Belmont. Some even ran in all 3 TC races and a race in between the Preakness and Belmont. Gulch/Avies Copy in 87 and Cefis in 88 were the last to run the quad. |
#38
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With regard to Smarty Jones, his trip wasn't that bad. It's not like Eddington was head and head with him. Smarty was pretty much clear and he wasn't going that fast. I admit that Smarty Jones probably could have won the race if he went much much slower and nobody put any pressure on him. But why would you expect that to happen? Considering that Smarty won the Preakness by 10 lengths, it's not shocking that he could have won the Belmont if he got a completely uncontested lead in slow fractions. I watched Afleet Alex's Ky Derby this afternoon. If every horse I ever bet on in the Derby got that trip I would be thrilled. It was a relatively clean trip. If you have a relatively clean trip in a 20 horse field, it's a good day. With regard to Alysheba, the guy who was screaming about the ride was Van Berg. Van Berg had supposedly told McCarron before the race that he didn't think there was much speed and that Alysheba could probably go to the lead. I don't know why Van Berg would have thought that Alysheba would be in front of Bet Twice. Bet Twice was ahead of Alysheba in the early going in both the Derby and the Preakness and Alysheba was still able to beat him. Anyway, Van Berg claims the ride in the Belmont cost Alysheba the race. I don't know what he is smoking. He was very critical of McCarron. McCarron was diplomatic about it. He said maybe it was a bad ride. He never said he thought it cost him the race. |
#39
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How could you possibly claim that the horse had no cartilage damage in his ankles? You would have no way of knowing that. You can't believe everything that you read. The public comments that you read from owners and trainers is often times bs. I'm not just guessing that. I know that for a fact. I've seen it first hand. For example, they will often say publicly that a horse has a foot bruise when they have something much more serious. |
#40
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THUD!!! ![]()
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Tod Marks Photo - Daybreak over Oklahoma |