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#1
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[quote=The Indomitable DrugS]I often get frustrated when I can't find the answers to something I want - and I'm often in disagreement on what the press reports on day to day. It's often not bad reporting that frustrates me - but not being able to find out or hear about what I want to know.
If I'm on track - and I really want to know something that hasn't been reported - I will obviously do what I can to try and find out. On two or three instances, it's meant going to the backside. That is only a verysmall part of the reason why I think people ought not need to be denied access to the backside. So how do you compare this lack of access to other sports? I mean, I get it that they are horses vs humans, but if I can support your being "all access" as a legitimate contributor, why should "people"...assuming you are using that generally, be allowed carte blanche?
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"but there's just no point in trying to predict when the narcissits finally figure out they aren't living in the most important time ever." hi im god quote |
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#2
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There is an element of secrecy with plays and formations...and the focus is on the team they will play the upcoming week. It takes only purchasing the cheapest license to get that access on the backside. |
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#3
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but fans aren't allowed into the locker room-which i would equate to the backstretch. if people want to watch the works, i would think that would be similar to being in the stands watching spring training. but i see no reason to allow random access to the backside. besides, liability could cause huge headaches. horses get loose, so a bystander could get run over-then who pays when joe schmo sues? the owner of the horse? the trainer? or the track?
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Books serve to show a man that those original thoughts of his aren't very new at all. Abraham Lincoln |
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#4
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Unless you are looking for trouble or are a complete drunken fool - I don't think the backside is much of a dangerous place to say the least. |
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#5
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The "general public" has no business being on the backstretch, for safety reasons alone. When you go to the backstretch, what are you looking for? You trying to find the trainers and talk to them yourself? (versus the press).
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"Have the clean racing people run any ads explaining that giving a horse a Starbucks and a chocolate poppyseed muffin for breakfast would likely result in a ten year suspension for the trainer?" - Dr. Andrew Roberts |
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#6
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The only time I'd go there almost daily to see a horse was for Fabulous Strike. I'm obviously much more in the minority on this than I thought. I also seem to think fans - even curious new ones - aren't as idiotic and dangerous as the guys who disagree with me all think. It's a lost oppertunity for the sport in my opinion. |
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#7
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ΜΟΛΩΝ ΛΑΒΕ |
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