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Bernardini wasn't a great horse....and frankly neither was Lamtarra. Both might have proven great but neither did on the racetrack.....and certainly not Bernardini. |
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Look, I really don't know how he ran specifically, and obviously he was an exceptional talent, but I just don't see how greatness can be proclaimed in what was effectively a three race career.
Hell, there are people who act like Ghostzapper wasn't a great and he ran a minimum of six great races.....and ran until he was five. Lamtarra was cheated out of his chance of truly proving his greatness by his owner. It's unfortunate but true. |
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Much like Curlin - R2R probably prefers to be outside of horses. If you look at the '07 Derby - four of the top 5 finishers raced on the rail for a significant portion of the race - only Curlin being the one who never saw it. As for the turns...I believe they were as follows Street Sense was rail - rail (1 wide, 1 wide) Hard Spun was rail - rail Curlin was 3 wide - 4 wide Imawildandcrazyguy was rail - 4 wide Sedgefield was rail - rail. Of the three rail-rail horses: Hard Spun earned his position - by setting very fast fractions and running hard the whole way. Sedgefield fell into a dream trip but did do some running to secure it. Street Sense passing 17 horses without leaving the rail and ever having a straw in his path was an act of God. Rags to Riches almost certainly would have had a wider trip than Curlin - or like Curlin, would have been compromised by the massive congestion of quitting horses in the 2-to-5 path from the 1/2 mile pole to the quarter pole. Look, I have big issues with the popular belief that one path on the turn equals one length. The reason I do is because the wide path is a preferred path to the rail most often. However - throughout the card on Derby day - I thought the rail was fairly decent .. and there was no advantage in being wide. If Curlin losses 2 lengths in ground loss to SS and HS on the 1st turn - and 3 lengths on the 2nd turn - that's 5 lengths he's spotted the top two finishers. Taking ground loss out of the equation - Curlin had two incidents that hindered him, the early trouble that Gary Stevens made a big deal about was very minor I thought - getting stuck momentarily behind a wall of tiring horses, while his chief rival got a totally unmolested run inside of him, that was a bigger deal. It's impossible to quantify Curlin's trip trouble - probably 1 or 2 lengths worth for a normal horse - but for a lightly raced horse who never even had dirt kicked in his face before in his life - that trouble is a little bigger deal. To be fair to Hard Spun - unlike Curlin and Street Sense - he actually had to work hard early - and he showed gameness having his heels clipped in the stretch and shifting out and gaining on the winner slightly in the final yards. Basically - it's impossible to say exactly how many, but Curlin gave SEVERAL lengths away to Street Sense in the Derby - and Rags To Riches was VERY likely going to be either wider than Curlin - or about as wide and caught in the big congestion outside of the quarter pole that can happen when the horses racing 2nd, 3rd, and 4th early on all back up sharply enroute to 17th, 19th, and 20th place finishes. Rags to Riches almost certainly would have been no better than 3rd in the Derby ... and could have run much worse if not rated back early. |
I will go out on a limb and suggest Invasor could have won.
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Do horses like War Emblem sometimes win the Derby as the lone speed? Of course, but it is one thing to do it with Proud Citizen chasing you home, and an altogether different proposition when the two horses trying to get by you are Sunday Silence and Easy Goer. |
Am I the only one looking forward to reading the book, The 2007 Kentucky Derby: A Comprehensive Analysis, by The Indomitable DrugS?
I think it will be a good one, but the 600 page length might be a bit daunting for some. |
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Widely acknowledged at Calumet as the best horse they ever bred.. including Citation. Set a 9f FL Derby stakes (and track) record that stood for 40+ years.. Split 4 decisions with Bold Ruler and would have gone off favored in the famed '57 Derby but scratched with a hoof bruise Friday. Developed the wobbles at 4 and had to be put down. One of the greatest tragedies in racing history. ![]() |
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AP Indy and UD Ghetto without question. No such thing as a miracle in horse racing. Travelling from Portland to Miami in 27 minutes would be considered a "miracle" trip. borel likes the rail. I don't think that's an unknown fact. So orchestrating a trip on the rail which he has always liked to do cannot in any sense be considered a miracle. I would actually consider it a "likely" trip more than a "miracle' trip. Whatever.
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--Dunbar |
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You have the right race, the right odds and the first time blinkers.. but... it wasnt Montreal Red, it was Wild Escapade. Montreal Red was about 3-5 in the Hopeful that year and finished second... |
I know this is dating me,but I'm surprised no one has mentioned Hoist The Flag.
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Graustark in the 60's.
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Sir Gaylord, injured before the 1962 Derby. I don't thing Buckpasser or Dr.Fager ran in their derbies either.
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Not necessarily horses that would have won, but some who would have had a fighting chance:
'88- Cherokee Colony '89- Prized '90- Roanoke '91- Olympio, Compelling Sound, Scan '92- A.P. Indy, Bertrando '93- Peteski, Miner's Mark, Colonial Affair, Strolling Along |
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I think Man O' War would have had a decent shot in the 1920 Derby.
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AP Indy is the one that seems obvious from the last 20 years or so.
How about Silverbulletday? I think she was faster than that crop of colts in the spring of 1999, and she dominated the Oaks in a faster 9f than the boys ran the next day. |
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Hoist the Flag, of course - beat the same horses who were winning other preps, by daylight and with glee. And with him out, Good Behaving, who beat the same horses in the Wood and Gotham. But Good Behaving wasn't Derby nominated and no supplements in those days.
Buckpasser out with quarter cracks; Derby went to Kauai King??? who couldn't finish in the same furlong with the champion. The Derby scenario would have been hard on Dr. Fager, like the famous Woodward where he was run into the ground by a rabbit. The Good Doctor wasn't a natural 10f horse; he won at the distance on his class. One who ran in the Derby and should have won was Blue Larkspur. The track came up muddy but BL's trainer had gone to the hospital with appendicitis and nobody in the stable felt they had the authority to get him shod with mudcaulks. Slipped and slided to fourth. |
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