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#1
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Not a knock on the super there as 5" of rain is tough to deal with anywhere, but that track looked REALLY hard yesterday.
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please use generalizations and non-truths when arguing your side, thank you |
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#2
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i don't think it's more on big days, it's just that big name horses get more press.
most of the time, if it's not an a list horse, you don't hear about it. you only know if you're there to see a horse go down, or are viewing on t.v. |
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#3
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Frankly, I believe that Eight Belles should have run in the Oaks and not the Derby. I believed it before the race and even though she ran teriffically, she had to run her heart out to chase that monster which probably contributed to her breakdown. It is a shame that Rick Porter wanted to get into the Derby so bad, they should have learned their lesson from Rags last year. While Rags won the Belmont, it was at the cost of her racing career. It is a shame, this one could have been one of the great fillies.
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#4
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#5
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#6
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no, it's only when fillies face colts. colts chasing colts...well, that's another story. filly might be as big as a colt, as strong, as fast, she's still just a lousy weak female and thus a lesser animal who should be kept in her place.
you know, like rags, who got injured in her next start, not the belmont. a loss, to a filly, in a race vs 'her own kind'. not against colts. but that wouldn't support the theory that fillies shouldn't race against colts, so just ignore the facts surrounding her injury and when it occurred.... |
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#7
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#8
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#9
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i think had rags or eight belles struggled in their races vs boys, you'd have a point. but putting in a good effort doesn't lead to injury. fighting an unfamiliar surface, or not running right due to discomfort-yeah, that can lead to injury. they both did so well, i don't think the fact that their opponents were of another sex had anything to do with it.
both fillies put in races equal to their male counterparts in previous races. the 10f derby was a first for all 20 horses yesterday. for whatever reason, after the finish, eight belles went down. but i don't feel the fact she faced males was the contributing factor, nor the distance run. |
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#10
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and i apologize for my tone in my previous post. i'm in a foul mood, and i'm taking it out on the wrong people.
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#11
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#12
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Well, here we go again. Because the breakdown occurred on the big stage, both NBC and CBS have done stories on the evening news about the dangers of horse racing. The answer according to the "experts" is synthetic tracks.
The CBS report claims that horse racing deaths are down 25% on tracks that have converted to synthetic. How long do you give Churchill? A year? Two years? Seems like the only time our sport makes the news is when something like this happens. This is Bullshiat!!!!!!! |
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#13
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There was I believe, a breakdown in the first at Belmont today....
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....stay lady stay...stay while the night is still ahead... http://www.playlist.com/playlist/15640118795/standalone |
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#14
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i just think, based on the fact that about 80% of the horses being raced are claimers, that they would also have more of the injuries-but less of the press. |
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#15
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#16
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Does souping up the track make it better? To me it offers a bias like in 2006 BC where the rail was like a conveyer belt.
Ever wonder why horses hardly break down on turf on big days? Because the track superintendent cant do anything to soup it up. |
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#17
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#18
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Fact is, as most of us are aware, this happens more often than we'd like to acknowledge. In my eyes, it is just as unfortunate when a 6 yr old $4,000 claimer breaks down in a race at Prairie Meadows as when a highly touted star like Eight Belles, George Washington or Barbaro does. The only difference is, at Prairie Meadows only the 38 people in attendance and simulcast watchers see it. On days like yesterday, millions see it, and hear Larry Blamalage lay it out cold that the filly had to be put down.
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"Boston fans hate the Yankees, we hate the Canadiens and we hate the Lakers. It's in our DNA. It just is." - Bill Simmons |
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#19
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would we be having the same discussion had EB gone down on Oaks day?
would EB run any less hard chasing or matching strides with Proud Spell? someone mentioned the synthetic surface, instead of having dirt tracks faster on big days, keep the softer, deeper, slower ALL the time. it has to be safer?
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"Always keep your heads up and act like champions." Coach Paul Bryant |
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#20
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We'd be having the same discussion when the next horse invariably went down on Derby or Oaks or BC Day at Churchill. Four breakdowns in five days doesn't seem like a coincidence. |
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