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Conference noted::equitation

Title:Equine Notes Conference
Notice:Topics List=4, Horses 4Sale/Wanted=150, Equip 4Sale/Wanted=151
Moderator:MTADMS::COBURNIO
Created:Tue Feb 11 1986
Last Modified:Thu Jun 05 1997
Last Successful Update:Fri Jun 06 1997
Number of topics:2080
Total number of notes:22383

481.0. "Thoroughbred Horse Racing" by MAGIC::JANICKI () Tue Jan 12 1988 16:29

    Does anyone follow Thoroughbred horse racing?
    
    I grew up on Long Island and became a diehard fan around the age
    of 12. 
    
    Now I subscribe to the Thoroughbred Record to try to keep up with
    the sport. But I don't know anyone else as interested as I am.
    
    Vicky
    
T.RTitleUserPersonal
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481.1We follow as best we canNOWIMP::DADDAMIOTesting proves testing worksTue Jan 12 1988 16:4612
    We generally watch all the races that are televised (regular channels
    - not cable), plus we read all the racing columns in the Chronicle
    and the Pedlar.  Have recently read about the syndication of Lady's
    Secret - first time I've heard of a mare being syndicated.
    
    We taped all of the Breeders' Cup races in November.  In fact we've
    taped most every televised race in the last two years (can't vouch
    for the quality of some of them as we were having some problems
    with our VCR at one point).  Might be willing to lend these out
    on a very limited basis (would have to clear it with my husband).
                                                                     
    						Jan
481.2WOW! ANOTHER TB ENTHUSIAST!!!MEMORY::ABBOTTWed Jan 13 1988 19:1121
    Hi, remember me from Canine Notes (with the Doberman, etc)?  Well,
    you've found a fellow diehard Thoroughbred enthusiast.  Actually,
    when I was 21 I moved to Ocala, Florida and for the next 9 years
    broke, trained, and galloped yearling Thoroughbreds on my ex's
    300 acre farm, also ran the training barn, helped with breeding
    and foaling of mares, etc.  Every year after breaking season I swore
    I was never going to go through that again, but every fall I would
    be back doing it (I found out it hurts a lot more when you get dumped
    on the ground at age 30 than it does at age 21).  I've been to
    Rockingham a few times since I've been up here in Mass (about 7
    months) and I just can't seem to get the darn horses out of my system.
    I REALLY, REALLY, REALLY miss working with the Thoroughbreds, even
    though I have a "real" job now.  Right now I'm trying to get my
    3/4 Arabian 1/4 Thoroughbred 2 1/2 year old filly up here from Florida
    because I'm going into horse withdrawals.  
    
    Does that sound like somebody as interested in Thoroughbreds (and
    horses in general) as you.????????
    
    chris (DTN 237-3376).
    
481.3MAGIC::JANICKIWed Jan 13 1988 20:1417
    re: .2
    
    Sounds like you are even more bitten than I am! I have never really
    been around racing Thoroughbreds. My enthusiasm is from visiting
    and working at the racetrack (as an usher- got to watch all the
    races plus get a free program).
    
    I too watch as much televised racing as I can. 
    
    I find I am most intriqued by the breeding aspect- not only the
    yearling sales part, but just breeding a good horse. I am fascinated
    by nicks and certain families that produce well. 

    Any thoughts on the current crop of horses?
    
    Vicky
    
481.4racing bugASD::WIMBERGFri Jan 15 1988 12:3315
    
    I loveeeeeeeee to go to the races - Unfortunately I'm note real
    good about following the races via the papers. So I go to Rockingham
    without any preparation at all - just look at'm and pick'm. Don't
    do too well with the wagering (but I don't wager much either!)
    
    I am lookign forward to the three year old season. 
    
    Also, since I'm originally from Louisville and this year's Breeder's
    Cup will be run at Chruchill Downs, I'm also interested in all the
    top stake races - I might even go visit my parents in early November
    and attend the big event!!!
    
    Nancy
     
481.5STANDARDBRED HORSESVLS3::RADICIONIThu Jan 28 1988 17:2019
    
     I love horse's and I love betting on them,but my heart goes out
    to the Standandbred horse's.. I use to train harness horse's at
    Rock,foxboro and other New England tracks as well as own them..
    I owned 23 horses,not all at one time,within 4 years time.. now,
    I just dream of owning and training them again.. there isn't a 
    good harness track around here anymore.. New York is the closest
    good track..
    
    Sooooo,its the rock and the thoroughbred's.. The wife and I head
    up to the Rock to see a friend that rides,no good tips.. my wife
    picks the horses by the name and I pick them by performance and
    times,guess who wins  ??? thats right,i'm broke and she buys supper..
    Its fun to watch,but a lot more fun to work with the horses..doesn't
    matter if its walking them,washing them or riding them,its great
    to be around them..
    Well,thats my two cents worth.. Hot Tip For The Day,"STOVE PIPE"
    
    ARNIE
481.6Schedule??PLANET::KEIRANThu Jan 28 1988 17:559
    Being a standardbred owner myself, I think its terrible what has
    happened to standardbred racing in New England.  The people I
    know who still race end up going to Scarborough or Lewiston, ME
    which is a long trip, especially if you work full time, and have
    horses as a hobby.  I was wondering if you knew what the racing
    schedule was a Rockingham,  I would be interested in going up
    there some weekend.
    
    Thanks
481.7ROCKINGHAMVLS3::RADICIONIMon Feb 01 1988 10:496
    
    ROCK'S SCHEDULE,AFTERNOONS AT 1:30pm ACCEPT FRIDAYS AND THEY START
    AT 7:30pm... THEY RACE ONE OR TWO NITES A WEEK.. CHECK THE HERALD,
    IT TELLS THE RACES AND TIMES THAT THEY START.
    
    ARNIE
481.8Dave Barry on RacingVOLGA::J_BENNETTJanice Bennett DTN 241-3522Fri May 13 1988 16:0998
       <<< HYDRA::DISK$NOTES$LIBRARY:[NOTES$LIBRARY]DAVE_BARRY.NOTE;1 >>>
                       -<  Dave Barry - Noted humorist  >-
================================================================================
Note 418.0                  Going Crazy at Post Time                  No replies
SUBSYS::DOUCETTE "Jim Doucette"                      91 lines   8-MAY-1988 20:33
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------


                          Going Crazy At Post Time

                                by Dave Barry

           [ Reprinted from the Boston Sunday Globe, May 8, 1988 ]


Recently, as a result of some unforeseeable beers, I fell behind on my work.
Realizing that I needed to get caught up quickly, I decided to employ a
time-management technique recommended by efficiency experts everywhere:  I
went to the horse races.

I went with veteran journalist Dick Evans, one of the select few people in
newspaper history ever to have simultaneously held the positions of bowling
writer and religion editor.  Needless to say, during this period he was known
as the Holy Roller.  "I did this column, called 'A Stranger Goes to Church,'
where I was supposed to go to a different church every Sunday and do a critique
of the sermon," recalls Dick.  "Naturally all my critiques came out that it was
great."

So we can see that Dick is no fool, which is probably why he is now The Miami
Herald's racing writer, which is definitely the best job in the world.  In the
middle of the day, Dick picks up his briefcase and walks out of the office,
looking like a regular civilian on his way to engage in some responsible
business activity involving his accounts payable, only instead he goes to:  the
track.

The track is a wonderful place.  It is at the extreme opposite end of the
lifestyle spectrum from the repressed little world depicted in those glossy
magazine advertisements for Ralph Lauren clothing, the ones featuring old-money
mega-WASPs in dark natural-fiber suits and slicked-back hair sitting on
uncomfortable antique furniture and engaging in traditional WASP parlor games
such as Name That Debenture.  At the track, the height of fashion is to wear a
shirt on which all the ink marks are the same color.

At the track, you can smoke a humongous spit-covered cigar and talk openly to
yourself, and nobody notices.  Also you can immediately get into an earnest
and sincere conversation with anybody, just by pointing to your program and
saying, "Whaddyathinka this (expletive) horse here?"

At the track, naked greed is socially acceptable.

At the track, the odds are less than 1 in 1,650,000 that anybody will mention
Michael Dukakis.

But the best thing about the track is that you can join with thousands of other
people in an intense and frenzied mental effort, comparable to the Manhattan
Project, devoted to figuring out what a group of superbly conditioned,
painstakingly trained and, above all, thunderingly stupid horses are going to
do.  And you just never know.  I used to work at a newspaper called The Daily
Local News where the professional handicapper, a man called Francis Mood, once
picked a horse to win - I think it was his Pick of the Day - only this horse
threw its rider, leaped the fence, ran into the decorative infield lake, got
stuck in the mud and drowned.  The Pick of the Day!  DROWNED!  As Francis Mood
eloquently put it:  "(Very bad word) horse."

I can't say I did much better, although I did pick one winning horse, using a
scientific theory of handicapping that was explained to me by a woman named
Valerie.  She was part of the crowd of bettors who gather in the saddling area
to examine the horses closely, looking for little tip-offs - such as a specific
horse looks depressed, or appears to have an inflamed furlong, or doesn't have
the total recommended number of legs or whatever.

"My whole strategy," Valerie explained, "is if the horse takes a dump on the
way out, that's the one."

This made sense, so I watched closely, and sure enough, the No. 3 horse did a
No. 2, and I bet him, and he won.  Only winner I had that day.

I usually bet by the Name Method.  For example, in the sixth race I bet the
last of my allotted betting money on the 10 horse, a 25-to-1 shot named Medical
Convention.  My theory was that this horse was probably owned by doctors with
absolutely no need for additional money, and, therefore, it would win.  While I
was waiting for the start, a man sat down next to me, and it turned out that he
had bet $40 on Medical Convention to win.  Thus we had a common interest, which
we explored via the following conversation:

	Him:  No question.  The 10.  Has to!  Has to win, the 10! 
	Definitely!

	Me:  Yeah.

	Him:  I'm tellin' ya.  Definitely.  This 10 horse.

	Me:  Yeah.

And, of course, Medical Convention came in about 38th, prompting me to
reluctantly leave the track and return to the world of accounts payable, and my
new friend to wander off toward the betting window, already deeply committed to
a new horse.  I had to envy him.  Definitely.
481.9WINNING COLORSAKOV13::LESAGETue May 24 1988 19:0811
    I have been following the triple crown this year.  Winning Colors
     as caught my fancy.  I have been following her since her races
    in Calif..  I have lost all my respect for Woody Stphens, his cutthroat
    tactics in the Preakness not only cost him the race, money, prestiage
    but also putting throughbred racing at the top of the sporting world.
    Stephens did not care if he won the race he just wanted to stop
    WINNIGN COLORS from winning the race.
    Some people do not like Lucas because of his success etc..  but
    he showed alot of class this year.
    We will see how she does in the Belmont at a mile and 1/2, she is
    tied with risen star with six bonus points.  
481.10Another Winning Colors FanKNEE::MONTVILLESharon MontvilleThu May 26 1988 17:3532
    
    RE .9
    
    I hadn't thought of it, but you brought up a very good point.  Woody
    Stephens' tactics were less than admirable.  I was really hoping
    that Winning Colors would pull it off - makes the Belmont much more
    exciting.  Now, to the general public, the Belmont won't be much
    more than "just another horse race" as compared to if Winning Colors
    had won, it would have been the chance of the century to see a filly
    win the Triple Crown.  That would have created alot of interest
    in the industry in general, and other trainers and breeders would
    have benefited indirectly.  Looks like Woody Stephens put an
    individual, short-term goal ahead of a long-term goal that would
    have helped the entire industry.
    
    I did hear Woody Stephens admit that Winning Colors was better than
    Forty Niner, after the race was over.  He said something to the
    effect that he was just trying to see if she was better than his
    colt and she was... Covering up his real reason , perhaps?
    
    Oh well.  I'm not as hopeful about her chances in the Belmont anyway.
    But for me, it will still be fun to watch!
    
    I have to admit I was not much of a fan of Lucas for a long
    time; all based on what I had read.  Then, I read an article in
    Sports Illustrated that changed my opinion.  Now, I see him as someone
    who *has* made mistakes, but who am *I* to judge??!!  And, it appears
    that he has learned from them, otherwise he wouldn't continue to
    be so successful.  If you really use abusive training methods, they
    will catch up to you.  From my viewpoint (not really "in the know"
    but more informed than average person), I don't see it catching
    up to him.
481.11CHGV04::LEECHDTN:474-2338 Chicago, Ill. ACIThu May 26 1988 18:5111
    The latest issue of THE DAILY RACING FORM ran an article on Woody
    Stevens and the performance of Forty-niner in the Preakness.  The
    article said that Woody Stevens showed very poor sportsmanship and
    pettyness in seeing that Winning Colors would not win at the expense
    of his own horse.  They came down on him very hard.  Someone should
    as this type of conduct should be punished.  If the filly wins the
    Belmont she will become the first filly to ever win two legs of
    the Triple Crown.  Still a good record, but not the same as winning
    all three.  
    
    Pat
481.12Didn't Genuine Risk win the Belmont????SCOMAN::STOOKERFri May 27 1988 17:5219
    RE. 11
    
    I may be mistaken, but I thought that Genuine Risk in 1980 won the
    Kentucky Derby, lost to Codex in the Preakness, but then won the
    Belmont.  So, Winning Colors would not be the first filly to win
    2 legs to the triple crown.   This really stuck in my mind because
    I remember that Genuine Risk would have possibly won the Preakness
    because she was bumped by Codex (who was trained by the trainer
    of Winning Colors) and even though the rider of G.R. filed for a
    fault and you could see it (bumping) on the replay of the race,
    they still called Codex the winner of the Preakness.  And I could
    be mistaken about the Belmont, but I do believe G.R. won it.  I
    also know that G.R. was named Horse of the Year in 1980 because
    she showed more consistency in her races that year than any of the
    colts.
    
    If I am incorrect about this please let me know.
                                                    
    Sarah
481.13Checking***CHGV04::LEECHDTN:474-2338 Chicago, Ill. ACIFri May 27 1988 19:478
    Genuine Risk won the Derby and placed second in both the Preakness and
    the Belmont.  I believe she was the first filly to ever run in all 
    three of the Triple Crown races and the best finisher ever.  I will
    check my back issues of Blood Horse to find out for sure.  They
    had one issue that covered the history of the Triple Crown and the
    horses that ran in it.  
    
    Pat
481.14KINGPOSTAKOV13::LESAGETue Jun 07 1988 13:295
    THE BELMONT STAKES IS RUNNING JUNE 11TH.  IT LOOKS LIKE A 7 HORSE
    FIELD.    I HAVE A FEELING THAT KINGPOST IS GOING TO WIN.  THE LITTLE
    HORSE MIGHT DO BETTER AT A LONGER DISTANCE.  IT WOULD BE NICE TO
    SEE WINNING COLORS WIN BUT I DO NOT KNOW IF SHE CAN GO A MILE AND
    1/2.
481.15RISEN STARAKOV13::LESAGEMon Jun 13 1988 14:077
    RISEN STAR WON IT EASILY.  KINGPOST A DISTANT SECOND.  WOODY STEPHENS
    WAS IN THE PAPER AGAIN TODAY.  HE SAID ABOUT WINNING COLORS, I AM
    QUOTING FROM THE HEARLD " THE FILLY YOU CAN FORGET HER.  SHE MIGHT
    NEVER RACE AGAIN. NOW SHE CAN GO WHERE ALTHEA CAPOTE AND THE OTHERS
    END UP.  HE JUST CAN NOT LET GO.  LOSING TO LUCAS AND A FILLY IN
    THE DERBY IS STILL BOTHERING STEPHENS.
    
481.16Wha' happened?JULIET::APODACA_KIHey, buddy....got a dime?Wed Nov 30 1988 21:1212
    Glad to see there are other racing fans here!  Still, no one's posted
    here for quite a few months...tsk!  :(
    
    anyway, I would kill for a tape of this year's Breeder's Cup (or
    any of them, really)....I promise I will send it back promptly,
    uneaten and intact.  Honest!  If you'd like to make a registrar's
    little heart happy, and you got a VHS tape of it, please, please
    let me know!  The name's Kim Apodaca and I'm at WRA/E7 (not too
    far from Bay Meadows, but a long ways away from Del Mar and the
    SoCal tracks....   :( again!)
    
    Also keep posting!                          ;>  --kim
481.17An invitation to racing fansNANOOK::RAWDENWater flowing underground...Wed Feb 15 1989 17:3423
This note hasn't seen any replies lately so I thought I would make 
another attempt to stir up some interest.

I'm wondering if there's anyone else out there with a serious interest in
horse race betting, or am I the only one around Digital who has wasted
his time (enjoyably I might add) reading Tom Ainslie, Andy Beyer and
Mark Cramer?  Is anyone else willing to admit that they regularly attend
the races?  Would anyone be interested in getting together to compare
notes on what works and what doesn't work for them?  

My local track is Rockingham, but I also get to Laurel/Pimlico regularly
and have made it to Saratoga the last two years.  If anyone is willing to
escort out of town visitors to their local track perhaps you could
"register" your interest here?  (I'm available for visitors to RKM.)

BTW - I think I can call myself an expert because I can always give a 
reasoned answer (all that reading pays off) of why the horse I picked 
was a reasonable choice even though he lost the race  ;-) !!!

Bill

(I've psoted a similar note to MILVAX::SPORTS)
    
481.18Our $$'s go to our horses.SMAUG::GUNNWed Feb 15 1989 23:073
    I suspect that most particpants in this conference spend their spare
    dollars, pounds or whatever on their own horses. I have not found
    many people whose hobby is riding who also bet regularly. 
481.19English RacingHAMPS::BAGNALL_HFri Mar 17 1989 12:4917
    In answer to your question regarding other Deccies who regularly
    attend racing and gamble, I fall into that category, although on
    the other side of the Atlantic.  Like the National Hunt racing best
    (over jumps, both hurdles and fences, steeplechasing), find the
    flat racing too scientific (all that breeding to consider).
    
    Had a day's holiday yesterday to attend the premier NH event, the
    Gold Cup (no, it is not the Grand National), wonderful day, with
    the people's favourite, a brilliant grey called Desert Orchid,
    justifying their faith in him by winning the race with a thrilling
    finish.
    
    If anyone ever wants to talk about English racing, please give me
    a call, I can talk for hours...
    
    Regards, Hilary	DTN. 768-5378
    
481.20I really miss NHCGOA01::LMILLERNow try it once more ......Mon Apr 03 1989 15:2614
    I would love to talk but distance and time differences won't allow
    (+7 hr).  I was a great NH fan when I lived in the UK. I lived near
    Ascot and also attended Windsor, Sandown, Kempton etc.  I even sold
    a pony to the ground steward at Ascot, he (the pony) was kept at
    the Ascot sale barns, so at sale time, you would see this little
    12:3 hh pony trying to see what was going on over the half door which
    was built with a 16:0 hh TB in mind.  Used to always attract a crowd.
         
    I really miss NH racing as racing up here is only flat or trotters
    and 3rd rate at best.  I very seldom go, mind you racing here does
    make money for the track and government so it is well supported,
    at least by the dedicated gamblers.
    
    Linda
481.21good name=good horse JULIET::APODACA_KISongs from the Razor's EdgeTue Apr 11 1989 18:1210
    Flat racing scientific?? Nah....ya just pick the one with the good
    names, that's all (c'mon now, have you seen a horse with a STUPID
    name win? ;D  )
    
    Steeplechases interest me, but that's because I like all racing--for
    some reason, it just isn't dynamic enough to capture American racing
    hearts (perhaps the length?  Are they not usually at least a couple
    miles long?)
    
                                                               ---kim
481.22racingAKOV13::LESAGEWed Apr 19 1989 14:3317
    I am interested in tb racing.  I attend Rockingham park when I get
    a chance.  I am a part time Farrier and a couple of my clients have
    race horses.  I usually go when they have a horse running and if
    the horse wins I go get in the winners photo.  I bet, but not on
    every race.  Some days I win and some days I don't.  But its a
    good time whenever you go. 
    
    I have beem folowing the spring derby prep races.  I think Millitron
    is out of the derby picture unless he does good in the Wood this
    Saturday.   Easy Goer looks pretty good at this time.  Awe inspiring
    ran a good race, I think it was in arkansas.
    
    I do not go to Sufferin Downs too much, but reading about Buddy Laroux
    and the mass gov't is like ready a soap opera.  My bet is there
    will be no racing in mass. by years end.           
    
    
481.23BAUCIS::MATTHEWSget rhythm, DATE A DRUMMER!Wed Apr 19 1989 18:328
    
    
    does anyone work parttime at the track in salem??
    
    i'm looking for a job ponying horses, i know how to handle
    lot of horse, and also used to train and barrel race professionally.
    does anyone know who to contact?
    
481.24All work, no pay....SALEM::ALLOREAll I want is ONE shot!Thu Apr 20 1989 10:088
                 Yep, go to the Stable gate and ask them. Sometimes
    the trainers will post available jobs there. I hope you don't
    mind working your butt off for very little money......
                 I know a few trainers there and I'll ask them for
    you. Do you know how to wrap etc....?
    
    
                 Bob
481.25KENTUCKY DERBYAKOV13::LESAGEMon May 01 1989 18:145
    Kentucky Derby is Sat..  There are several good horses in the race:
    Easy Goer, Awe Inspiring, Houston, Sunday Silence.  I do not know
    the rest of the horses.  I would predict Easy Goer first then Sunday
    Silence and Awe Inspiring. I do not think Houston will be in the
    top three. 
481.26Boston Globe 5/1/89CIMNET::BUSHMANMon May 01 1989 20:265
    If you are able, catch the article in today's Boston Globe about the 
    various "high tech" ways that are being used to evaluate Thorobreds.
    They weren't able to analyze all the horses entered in this weekend's
    Derby, but they have some interesting points about the top horses.
    (My money is on Easy Goer...)
481.27raceAKOV13::LESAGEWed May 10 1989 17:095
    SUNDAY SILENCE WON!  I was suprised, I thought Easy Goer would win.
    No loss I had no $ on the race.
    
    Will there be a triple crown winner?  I will say Easy goer in the
    Preakness.
481.28More on Kentucky DerbyDECWET::DADDAMIOFri May 12 1989 19:2712
    After the Kentucky Derby we got out our tape of last year's races a
    watched Easy Goer in the Breeders' Cup race.  It was held at Churchill
    Downs and it was muddy.  He ran the same way then as he did in the
    Derby.  Guess he just doesn't like Churchill Downs in the mud!  I
    was rooting for him, but when I saw Pat Day hit him in the second
    turn, I knew there was a problem.  In the races I saw him win, Pat
    Day *never* had to hit him with the stick.
    
    I wasn't surprised that Sunday Silence won.  Charlie Whittingham
    only brings a horse to the Derby to win.  He was my second choice.
    
    If the track isn't muddy for the Preakness, I'll pick Easy Goer, too.
481.29raceAKOV13::LESAGEMon May 15 1989 17:372
    THE paper said today Sunday Silence has a bruise in his foot and
    might miss the Preakness if he loses tomany more training days.
481.30racesAKOV13::LESAGEThu Jun 01 1989 22:377
    IN ONE WEEK THE TRIPLE CROWN WILL BE ALL OVER. WE WILL SEE IF EASY
    GOER WILL WIN ONE OVER SUNDAY'S SILENCE.  I WILL GO WITH EASY GOER
    IN THE BELMONT.
    
    I went to Rockingham last monday Memorial day.  I hit one perfecta
    bu it only paid 28.20.  Didn't do do good on the other races, all
    my other horses finished 3rd or 4ths.  
481.31Belmont on SaturdayDECWET::DADDAMIOThu Jun 08 1989 23:4314
    I'd love to see another head to head run down the stretch between Easy
    Goer and Sunday Silence in the Belmont.  The Preakness finish was so
    exciting!  I'm hoping Easy Goer will win just to prove he's as good a
    horse as he really is.  He didn't run really bad races when he was
    beaten (and he always came in second!).  However, I'm also hoping that
    Sunday Silence will win so his trainer Charlie Whittingham will win the
    triple crown.  When they do spots on trainers on the race broadcasts,
    Charlie is the only one you see washing down horses and walking them,
    as well as watching them run.  So I'd like to see him win it.
    
    Anyways if it's anything like the Preakness, it should be a great
    race!
    
    						Jan
481.32No triple crown this yearASD::WIMBERGMon Jun 12 1989 17:4410
    
    Well, what do you think? I'm still a Sunday Silence fan but Easy Goer
    and Pat Day were un-real in the Belmont. Will they meet again in the
    Travers or will we have to wait for the Breeders Cup?
    
    Does anybody remember the duel between Majestic Prince and Arts and
    Letters? 
    
    Nancy
    
481.33Another great BelmontDECWET::DADDAMIOMon Jun 12 1989 19:4711
    Another great race, but without the stretch duel.  At first it looked
    like Sunday Silence was going to pick up speed when Easy Goer passed
    him, but it never happened and Easy Goer just blew them away!  We
    knew the times were fast and he didn't come close to Secretariat's
    record (2:24), but at least Easy Goer has the second fastest Belmont.
    
    I don't think anyone committed to when they would run again, but we'll
    be watching for the Travers and all the other races between now and
    the Breeder's Cup.
    
    						Jan
481.34nextAKOV13::LESAGETue Jun 13 1989 22:143
    The rumors say the two horses might meet in the super
    derby in Louisiana sept 24th on or about for $1 million purse.  Then
    in the breeders cup in florida.  
481.35Racing updateDECWET::DADDAMIOHopelessly OptimisticWed Sep 20 1989 23:2419
  It's been a while since anyone updated this note, so here's what I've heard
  that's been happening since the Triple Crown Races:

	Easy Goer won both the Whitney and the Travers at Saratoga -
	  the Travers was televised and I believe he ran against
	  older horses

	Easy Goer won the Woodward (last weekend?) - he was the only
	  three year old in the field and carried more weight (122 lbs)
	  that the 2nd and 3rd place finishers

	Sunday Silence came in second in the Swaps (I think this was run
	  in July)

   Has anyone heard anything about the Super Derby?  I think I heard it
   mentioned that Easy Goer was now headed for the Breeders Cup races
   with no mention of the Super Derby.

						Jan
481.36Easy Goer vs Sunday Silence - Head to Head!!!ASABET::WORRALLWed Sep 27 1989 13:4711
    Well the race is set, the Breeders cup classic at Gulfstream park in
    sunny florida in November.  Easy Goer vs Sunday Silence head to head.
    But lets not forget that this race is for 3 yr olds and up.  So Shug
    may enter a entry Easy Goer coupled with Seeking the Gold, who ran
    second last year to Alysheba.  But in reality it is a race where theses
    two three year old colts are much better than any four year old or
    older in training.  Footnote - Open Mind Eugene Klein's star filly was
    finally defeated this past weekend by Bayokoa (sp).  Open Mind finished
    third.
    
    Greg
481.37Super Derby Results????DECWET::DADDAMIOHopelessly OptimisticWed Sep 27 1989 19:358
   Did anyone catch the Super Derby on ESPN this past Sunday?  Or see the
   results anywhere?  Heard that Sunday Silence was running in it but
   haven't been able to find out what the result was.  Would appreciate an
   update.

   Looking forward to the Breeder's Cup!

						Jan
481.38Last Northern Dancer soldBSS::LEECHPat Leech CX01/02 DTN 522-6044Wed Sep 27 1989 19:489
    
    
    The last Northern Dancer yearling colt was sold at the Keenland
    Summer Selct sale this year.  He was the sale topping yearling at
    a price of $2.8 million dollars.  He was purchased by the Japanese
    and was exported to that country soon after the sale.  Plans for
    him are minimal racing and then retirement to stud.  
    
    Pat
481.39RACEAKOV13::LESAGEThu Sep 28 1989 00:536
    In the Super stakes race Sunday Silence won by 7 lengths going away. 
    Awe Inspiring was third, I do not know who was second.  Both should
    meet in the Breeders Cup.  I do not think either is going to race
    before that race.
    
    
481.40Easy goer - easily one more time!!ASABET::WORRALLTue Oct 03 1989 16:436
    Easy Goer is going to one more dance before the Breeders Cup Classic. 
    He will run in this Saturday's Jockey Gold Cup race.  Looking forward
    to one of the most exciting Breeders cup in memory.
    
    Greg
    
481.41Secretariat BSS::LEECHPat Leech CX01/02 DTN 522-6044Thu Oct 05 1989 14:0012
    
    
    Two time horse of the year and Triple Crown winner Secretariat was
    put down yesterday at Clairborne Farm due to complications from
    laminitis (founder).  The 19 year old stallion sired over 500 foals
    in 16 years at stud including over 40 stakes winners.  He was buried
    at Clairborne next to Riva Ridge.
    
    Thoroughbred racing has lost one of the greatest horses of modern 
    times.
    
    Pat
481.42Easy Goer wins again!DECWET::DADDAMIOHopelessly OptimisticMon Oct 09 1989 19:1811
   Easy Goer won the Jockey Club Gold Cup on Saturday, beating older horses
   again.  We got a pretty sketchy description of the race in our paper out
   here - they only mentioned one other horse in the race, Cryptoclearance,
   and I don't know if he ended up being second or not.  The final time for
   the race was 2:29 for 1 1/2 miles.

   NBC is having a Breeders' Cup preview this coming Saturday (Oct. 14).
   Check your local listing for exact time (it's at 1:30 PM here on the West
   Coast).

						Jan
481.43Caro dead a t 22GENRAL::LEECHPat Leech CX01/02 DTN 522-6044Wed Oct 18 1989 15:2818
    
    
    From the Blood Horse dated Oct. 14, 1989.
    
    French classic winner and prominent sire Caro died of apparent heart
    failure on Oct. 6 at Spendthrift Farm near Lexington Kentucky.  The 
    22-year-old, syndicated stallion sired 1988 Kentucky Derby winner and
    champion filly Winning Colors and 66 other stakes winners, including
    champion grass runn Cozene and 1989 Canadian Triple Crown Winner With
    Approval.
    
      Bred in Ireland, Caro (Fortino-Chambord, by Chamossaire) won the 
    Poule d'Essai des Poulains (Fr-1) in 1970, and he was the country's
    champion older horse the following year.  He was leading sire in France
    in 1977, the year he was imported to stand at Spendthrift.  His
    European champions include Nebos, Madelia, and Theia.
    
     
481.444-H would like to visit trackCIMNET::BUSHMANWed Oct 25 1989 12:319
    Our 4-H group would like to go see the behind-the-scenes workings
    at a race track.  We are situated so we could go to Suffolk or
    Rockingham.  Are there any age restrictions on visiting the barns?
    Who would we contact?  Do we need to be "invited" by a trainer?
    The kids aren't as interested in going to watch a race as maybe
    going early to watch feeding, training, bandaging, etc.
    
    Can anyone make suggestions on such a field trip?
    Kate
481.45exMEIS::SCRAGGSWed Oct 25 1989 12:5417
    Hi Kate, when I was a 4-h leader I brought groups to both 
    Suffolk and Rockingham. At that time, both advertised for certain
    upcoming special races and at the bottom of the ads had a contact
    for group tours etc.. I think if you called the racetrack and asked
    for the activities director they would tell you what might be
    available?  They started the day by breakfast in the caf with all
    the trainers, jockeys etc.. that was really interesting, then we 
    moved around the track visiting the farriers, jockeys, silks room,
    then to the barns, trainers, riders, races then back to the barns
    to visit with the grooms and vets. It was very worthwhile! We even
    had out picture taken with one of the winning horses and the owners,
    the Conigliaros (of baseball fame..) 
    
    Good luck and have fun!
    
    Marianne
    
481.46DELNI::KEIRANWed Oct 25 1989 13:3213
    Hi Kate,
    
    I would suggest going to Rockingham, its a really nice facility and
    since Suffolk is in pretty poor shape as far as finances go it wouldn't
    give the kids a true picture of horseracing.  Like Marianne suggested,
    a tour is a great idea, the morning would probably be the best time as
    thats when most people do their routine (training, exersizing etc.). 
    Try calling the track to see what you can set up.  They are racing at
    Rockingham 4 days a week, with post time during the week being at 1:30,
    so you may do best by calling around noontime or so to speak to someone
    and not get a recording.
    
    Good luck.
481.47Charlie - Dont you know how to be humble??ASABET::WORRALLTue Oct 31 1989 12:225
    Well it is just around the corner - saturday - the breeders cup.  It
    ought to be quite a exciting evening.  I personally cant wait until
    Easy Goer defeats Sunday Silence to silence "the mouth" Whittingham.
    
    Greg 
481.48DELNI::KEIRANTue Oct 31 1989 12:523
    The last I read Pat Valenzuela wasn't going to be able to ride
    Sunday Silence because he tested positive for cocaine use.  Does
    anyone else have any information on that?
481.49Chris McCarron on Sunday SilenceNANOOK::RAWDENWe'll leave a light on for ya!Wed Nov 01 1989 11:5919
    Valenzuela was suspended by the California stewards for 60 days
    after a positive drug test.  They haven't released much info., other
    than that he tested positive for something and that he agreed not
    to object to the ruling.  One of the requirements of the suspension
    is that he must re-enter an addiction treatment program and test
    cleanly before he resumes riding.  If all goes well he's eligible
    to come back on Dec. 26.
    
    Chris McCarron has been named to replace him on Sunday Silence.
    Pincay will ride Mi Selecto, which was McCarron's original mount
    in the Classic.

    BTW has anyone entered the pick 7 contest that the Breeders' Cup
    is running?  (Entry blanks were in this weekend's Racing Form and
    some newspapers.)  Now that it's too late to get an entry in the
    mail do you want to tell us who we should have picked?  ;-}
    
    Bill
        
481.50on the line - in the sprint!ASABET::WORRALLThu Nov 02 1989 10:394
My best bet in the Breeders Cup - On the Line in the sprint.
    
    
Greg
481.51I don't bet, but I'll be rooting for Easy GoerDECWET::DADDAMIOHopelessly OptimisticThu Nov 02 1989 20:2010
    Re: .47
    
    I'll be rooting for Easy Goer too, but haven't heard what Charlie
    Whittingham's been saying.  Greg, was your reference to the interviews 
    they had on last Saturday when they showed the Breeders' Cup Steeplechase?
    We had a power outage for 20 minutes just when the interviews with
    Charlie and Shug started - bummer!  Hope that doesn't happen this
    Saturday!
    
    						Jan
481.52Breeders' Cup predictionNANOOK::RAWDENWe'll leave a light on for ya!Fri Nov 03 1989 00:4415
    re .50 -
    
    ESPN reported that On the Line had drawn post 7 and gave a "morning
    line" of 7-2.  I would have taken Safely Kept at 6-1 in the Sprint
    but post 14 doesn't sound too advantagous.  I'll vote for Stella Madrid
    in the Juvenile Fillies as a best bet instead.
    
    I think Sunday Silence and Easy Goer are a toss up.  If you had put
    $2 on the higher odds horse in each of the triple crown races you
    would have won all three bets.  Easy Goer is 6-5, Sunday Silence
    is 2-1.  I think Sunday Silence is the (marginal) overlay and the
    bet.
    
    Bill
    
481.53Breeders' Cup predictionNANOOK::RAWDENWe'll leave a light on for ya!Fri Nov 03 1989 17:2618
    OK, now I'm gonna let you in on a secret.  Here's how to win $150K
    from the Breeders' Cup Pick Seven contest:
        
    	Sprint			6 furlongs	  $1M	Safely Kept
    	Juvenile fillies	1 1/16 mile	  $1M	Stella Madrid
	Distaff			1 1/8 mile	  $1M	Bayoka
    	Mile			1 mile, turf	  $1M	Zilzal
    	Juvenile		1 1/16 mile	  $1M	Adjudicating
    	Turf			1 1/2 mile, turf  $2M	Behera
    	Classic			1 1/4 mile	  $3M	Easy Goer

    The contest rules are that if your pick doesn't start you get the
    betting favorite in its place in your entry.

    Getting the excuses ready for Monday,        
    Bill
    
    
481.54Let's hear those excuses...ASD::WIMBERGTue Nov 07 1989 14:088
    
    Well Bill, I'm anxious to hear those excuses. 
    
    I don't think Racing gets any better than saturday's racing. And even
    though I'm a Pat Day fan (I used to bet on him back when he was riding
    at Churchill Downs as a regular) I was cheering for Sunday Silence
    all the way. My non-racing friends think its really strange that I
    cheer during the replay.
481.55Sunday Silence better - bottom line !!!ASABET::WORRALLTue Nov 07 1989 15:429
    I know one thing, I have no excuses at all.  Sunday Silence is a better
    horse.  I think he is better for one simple reason, he has tactical
    speed and Easy Goer does not.  Easy Goer always has that one big run
    like his daddy (Alydar).  Much like Affirmed, Sunday Silence has that
    on the pace speed where he can lay second or third until the stretch.
    I do believe however that Easy Goer will be much more successful at
    stud than Sunday Silence.
    
    Greg
481.56DELNI::KEIRANTue Nov 07 1989 15:467
    I too have been a Sunday Silence fan since day 1.  I always like
    to root for the underdog, considering how much hype was made about
    Easy Goer at the beginning of the season, I don't think he's quite
    the horse everyone said he was.  I don't think Pat Day gave him a
    very good trip either, he was crooked coming out of the gate and
    probably would have won if he didn't run out of racetrack.  Now I
    hope that Sunday Silence will be Horse of the Year!!
481.57Still hope for horse of the year?DECWET::DADDAMIOHopelessly OptimisticWed Nov 08 1989 23:0811
    Even though I was rooting for Easy Goer, I was impressed by Sunday
    Silence - having Chris McCarron ride him was another plus.  Glad to see
    Chris win two Breeders' Cup Classics in a row.  I also don't think
    Easy Goer had a very good trip, especially the beginning.  I would like
    to still see Easy Goer for Horse of the Year based on his impressive 
    wins over older horses this summer.  Guess I'm a die-hard Easy Goer
    fan.  My husband was a Sunday Silence fan for the Derby after seeing
    him win the Santa Anita Derby, but he slowly switched over to Easy
    Goer.
    
    						Jan
481.58- excuses -NANOOK::RAWDENWe'll leave a light on for ya!Thu Nov 09 1989 14:51110
Re .54   

>    My non-racing friends think its really strange that I
>    cheer during the replay.

And what do your racing friends think?

>    Well Bill, I'm anxious to hear those excuses. 

I thought I was going to get off the hook when I didn't see anyone ask 
on Monday.  Oh well, here goes...

	Breeders' Cup results:
            
    	Sprint			6 furlongs	  $1M	Dancing Spree
    	Juvenile fillies	1 1/16 mile	  $1M	Go For Wand
	Distaff			1 1/8 mile	  $1M	Bayakoa
    	Mile			1 mile, turf	  $1M	Steinlin
    	Juvenile		1 1/16 mile	  $1M	Rhythm
    	Turf			1 1/2 mile, turf  $2M	Prized
    	Classic			1 1/4 mile	  $3M	Sunday Silence

*** set /reality=weak ***

In the sprint (Dancing Spree) -

1st excuse (traditional):  OK, I blew it.

2nd excuse (transfer blame): It's Sam Who's fault.  If he hadn't demolished
  the field the race would have set up differently and Safely Kept would
  have overcome the outside post position and won.

3rd excuse (hope springs eternal): OK, next year I'll remember that 
Cordero is the best sprint rider in the world.

Juvenile fillies (Go For Wand ) -

Ok, I blew it.  It was obvious.  Did I pick the horse?  Noooooo.

Distaff (Bayakoa) -

I was right, I was right, I was right, I was right, ... I'm a genius

Mile (Steinlin) -

The bum should have been disqualified for cutting off other horses in the 
stretch!  It's the stewards' fault.

Juvenile (Rhythm) -

I knew Phipps was touting this horse so he'd get a better price on 
Adjudicating.  It just goes to show that you can't trust rich people!

Turf (Prized) -

Best move by any owner and trainer for the day.  No excuse, it should 
have been obvious that he was bred for turf and everyone knows that all 
you have to do to pick turf winners is look at the breeding ;-)

Classic (Sunday Silence) -

Do I get points for this one?  I said Sunday Silence in note
52 and Easy Goer in note 53.  Note 52 comes before 53 so I was right.

Set /reality=returning

It certainly was a fine day of racing.  And what a refreshing break from 
those bozo's on ESPN!

Re .50 & .55

>    I know one thing, I have no excuses at all.  

Nah, use the same excuse for your sprint prediction - It was Sam Who's 
fault!

Re: Pat Day

Shug said after the race that Pat rode him well, but that Easy Goer
was a "quirky" horse.  I guess that now that they don't have to
keep up the horse of the year image they can be a little more open
about what he can and can't do.  
    
Easy Goer lost the race when he came out of the gate and drifted left
when he was crossing the gap were there's no railing from the chute to
the main track.  If the horse can't be consistent about breaking
out of the gate cleanly and running straight he ain't the world's greatest.

Harvey Pack said they should have taken Day off when Easy Goer was 
second in the Juvenile last year.  He thinks it's just not a good fit.
I think that's a pretty good analysis.  Day's good but no rider can be 
expected to get the most out of every horse.
    
In the New York races Easy Goer had 1 or 2 live competitors in each
race that he had to get by.  In the Breeders Cup his weaknesses
finally caught up with him.  He got behind and he didn't take hold
of the track.  There were too many live horses for him to get by.
I think this race shows that his best distance may be 1 1/2M,
when he has plenty of time to pick his way through the field and
use his stamina to best effect.

I'm glad to hear that they'll both be running as 4 year olds.  (Maybe
Easy Goer can win next year's BC Turf!  ;-)
    
Retiring from the prediction business,
Bill

P.S. If anyone is going to Las Vegas, could you make a future book bet 
on the Derby for me?  I know who's gonna win that race...
    
481.59Sonic BoomGENRAL::LEECHPat Leech CX01/02 DTN 522-6044Tue Nov 14 1989 15:3442
    
    
    The British racing world was shattered last week by the allegation
    during a legal trial at Southwark Crown Court in London that a "sonic
    gun" was fired at Royal Ascot in June, 1988, and prevented Ile de
    Chypre from winning the King George V stakes (Eng-III). 
    
    Car dealer James Laming, 49, of South London, was in court, charged
    with conspiracy in a $15 million Pruvian cocain ring.  A major item of
    his defense was that he claimed to be innocent of involvement in the
    drug conspiracy, but admitted he had collaberated with Rene Black, also
    alleged to be a major participant in the cocaine plot, to defraud the
    betting community by using a "sonic gun," which he said he had
    invented.
    
    The court was shown a pair of binoculars that had been adapted to hold 
    electronic equipment and which had a trigger on the side.  Laming
    claimed that he aimed these binoculars at Ile de Chypre when the colt 
    was three lengths clear at Royal Ascot and looked certain to win,
    causing him to hear a sound that sounded "like a firework going off."
    
    Certainly, the behavior of Ile de Chypre was unusual, to say the least. 
    The well-backed, 4-1 second favorite swerved sharply to his left for no
    apparent reason inside the final furlong, throwing experienced rider
    Greville Starkey out of the saddle.
    
    This performance earned Ile de Chypre a temporary reputation of a
    rogue, but he has never done anything like that since that day.  In
    1989, he has been one of the most successful 4-year-olds in training, 
    upsetting his stablemate, Guy Harwood's more fancied Cacoethes, in the 
    International (Eng-I) at York and also winning the Tattersalls Rogers
    Gold Cup (Ire-II) at The Curragh.  In last weekend's Breeders' Cup
    Turf (gr.IT), he led all the way to the final turn, but found the 
    distance too far for him.  
    
    Laming claims that the "sonic gun" would have been used at Lingfield 
    and other race courses had he not been arrested a few weeks after the 
    Royal Ascot meeting.  The court is arranging for tests on the "sonic
    gun" to be made in th next few days.
    
    From The Blood Horse dated Nov. 11, 1989 page 6334.
     
481.60DELNI::KEIRANTue Nov 14 1989 15:463
    They showed this race during the Breeders Cup, it was lucky that both
    horse and rider or someone else in the race didn't get seriously 
    injured!
481.61Eugene Klein Dispersal at KeenlandGENRAL::LEECHPat Leech CX01/02 DTN 522-6044Tue Nov 14 1989 16:0454
    
    
    Champion Open Mind brought the highest price among the glittering array
    of Thoroughbreds making up the dispersal of stock owned by Eugene
    Klein, the most successful Thoroughbred owner of the 1980's.  The
    3-year-old filly, which finished third in the Breeders' Cup Distaff
    (gr.I) on Nov. 4, was purchased by Kazuo Nakamura for $4.6 million two
    days later at Keenland.  Arthur Appleton was the underbidder.
    
    A multiple grade I winner and champion at 2 in 1988, Open Mind has
    earned $1,844,372.  Her triumps this year include wins in the Kentucky 
    Oaks (gr. I) and the New York filly Triple Crown.
    
    Yoshimi Deguchi, speaking on behalf of Nakamura, said, "Open Mind will
    remain in training and continue her racing.  We attended the Breeders' 
    Cup.  The start was terrible for Open Mind, but she ran well.
    
    Klein, who received Eclipse Awards as America's outstanding owner for 
    three consecutive years (1986, 1987, and 1988), dispersed 114 horses on 
    the second day of Keenland's November breeding stock sale (Nov. 5-13).
    The Klein stock included a Kentuckey Derby (gr.I) winner, the world's
    leading money-winning mare, two Horses of the year (one in this country
    and one abroad), six champions, and a total of 11 grade 1 winners.  The 
    Klein consignment grossed $26,623,000and averaged $259,851.
    
    Open Mind was one of the three Klein fillies which sold for more than 
    $3.5 million.  Second-highest price of the sale was $4.1 million, paid
    for Winning Colors, the third filly ever to win the Kentucky Derby. 
    Gainesway Bloodstock Services purchased the 4-year-old filly on behalf
    of Graham Beck and an undisclosed partner.  Joe Allbritton of Lazy Lane
    Farm was th underbidder.
    
    "We went too high," Beck said, "but she's a great race filly and
    tremendously well bred.  She has finished racing and will be bred."
    
    Gainesway Bloodstock was the underbidder on Lady's Secret, Horse of the
    Year in 1986 and the world's leading money-winnig mare ($3,021,325). In
    foal to Alydar, Lady's Secret brought the third-highest price of the
    dispersal, being purchase by Fares Farm for $3.8 million.
    
    Lady's Secret's first foal, an Alydar filly, was the dispersal's
    top-priced weanling, going for $950,000 to Robert Levy's Muirfield
    East.
    
    The seven Klein horses which topped $1 million also included the
    5-year-old mare Fiesta Gal, in foal to Alydar.  She was purchased for 
    $1.5 million by Appleton.  Also in foal to Alydar, 4-year-old One of a 
    Klein was sold to Pam and Martin Wygod.
    
    Stanly Gumberg's Skara Glen Stables purchased the 3-year-old filly Some
    Romance for $1.15 million, and the 3-year-old colt Is It True went for 
    $1 million to Barry Farmer.
    
    
481.62A cup, and farewell.GENRAL::LEECHPat Leech CX01/02 DTN 522-6044Tue Nov 14 1989 17:0333
    
    
    In the immediate aftermath of the Breeders' Cup, retirement plans
    already were underway for many of the horses which competed in the
    seven races.  Among Breeders' Cup competitors which have been retired
    from racing are ZilZal, Sabona, Goodby Halo, Sunshine Forever, and
    Blushing John.
    
    Financier and horseman Carl Icahn purchased 50-per-cent in Darby Dan 
    Farm's 1988 champion male turf runner, Sunshine Forever, and in Allen
    Paulson's major winner Blushing John, which finished third in the
    Breeders' Cup Classic (gr. I).
    
    Two days prior to the Breeders' Cup Ichan also purchased 911 acres of 
    farmland from Paulson, neighboring the latter's Brookside Farm near
    Versailles, Ky.  Paulson has retained the other half-interest in
    Blushing John, which will enter stud at Brookside in 1990.  The racing 
    partnership of Dan Galbreath and John Phillips has retained the other
    half-intrest in Sunshine Forever, which will stand at Darby Dan Farm
    for $20,000 live foal.
    
    Sir Ernest Harrison's and Audrey Reed's Sabona, which finished second
    in the Breeders' Cup Mile (gr. IT), will enter stud next season at Dr.
    William O. Reed's Mare Haven Farm near Lexington. Shaikh Mana al
    Maktoum's Zilzal, which finished sixth as the favorite in the Mile,
    will stand at Shaikh Maktoum al Maktoum's Gainsborough Stud near
    Versailles, Ky.  
    
    Arthur Hancock III's and Alex Campbell Jr.'s Goodby Halo, which
    finished sixth in the Breeders' Cup Distaff (gr.I), arrived in
    Kentucky on Nov.7.  She will be bred next season.
    
    From The Blood Horse dated Nov.11, 1989 page 6228.   
481.64On The Line's injuryGENRAL::LEECHPat Leech CX01/02 DTN 522-6044Tue Nov 14 1989 17:2038
    
    
    Major winner On the Line was scheduled to be sold at Eugen Klein's
    dispersal on Nov. 6.  Instead, he was fighting to recover from severe
    leg injuries sustained two days earlier in a multi-horse collision soon
    after the start of the Breeders' Cup Sprint (gr.I) at Gulfstream Park.
    
    "He got hit about 25 yards out of the gate," said Gary Stevens, On the
    Line's jockey.  "That's basically where he broke down.
    
    "Sam Who (which broke from the 12th post position) did a left-hand turn
    and wiped out about five of us.  the horse on my outside (Black Tie
    Affair) hit us so hard that he turned us sideways, and at the same time
    that horse (Black Tie Affair) stepped on his (On the Line's)foot.
    
    "The head of the horse next to me (Black Tie Affair) hit me so hard
    that it tore the skin off my cheast.  I was bleeding when I came back."
    
    On the Line sufered multiple injuries to his right foreleg.
    
    "The skin from right underneath the middle of the cannon bone was
    pushed down to the ankle," said trainer D. Wayne Lukas the morning
    after the race.  "The superfical flexor tendon was severed completely.
    A piece was knocked out of the deep flexor tendon and the tendon sheath
    was eliminated.  The suspensory ligament was o.k.
    
    "The big thing we're having to fight is infection.  We can't close it
    (the wound) up, and we have to keep flushing and cleansing it.  His
    condition is guarded."
    
    Dr. Stephen Selway was at Gulfstream Park on Nov. 4 for Breeders' Cup
    Day, and he treated the five-year-old horse, which was removed from the
    track by a horse ambulance.  The following day, On the Line was shipped 
    by air to New York.  The earner of $1,125,810 was scheduled to
    recuperate at Dr. Selway's equine clinic on the grounds of Belmont
    Park.
    
    From The Blood Horse date Nov. 11, 1898 page 6291. 
481.65Breeders awardsGENRAL::LEECHPat Leech CX01/02 DTN 522-6044Tue Nov 14 1989 17:4723
    
    
    Following are the largest stallion nominator awards earned from results
    of the Breeders' Cup races:
    
    
    Halo			$75,000
    Kris S.			$50,000
    Alydar			$43,500
    Deputy Minister		$31,000
    Mr. Prospector		$25,000
    Nijinsky II			$25,000
    
    The following received the most money in foal-nominator awards from the
    Cup Day events:
    
    Oak Cliff Thoroughbreds	$75,000
    Ogden Phipps		$62,500
    Mr. and Mrs. Frank Whitham	$50,000  for supplementing Bayakoa
    North Ridge Farm		$30,500
    
    
    Bayakoa's supplementary fee was $200,000.
481.66Surgery for Sunday SilenceDELNI::KEIRANWed Nov 15 1989 12:3136
    The following is reprinted without permission from the Boston Herald:
    
    Sunday Silence, who recently captured the Breeders Cup Classic and is
    the likely pick for horse of the year is scheduled to undergo surgery
    tommorow to remove a bone chip in his right knee.
    
    Charlie Whittingham, the horses trainer said he believe Sunday Silence
    was injured in the Nov 4 Classic, in which he defeated archrival Easy
    Goer by a neck.
    
    "We know he didn't have it going into the race, and yet the chip is so
    small it didn't show until we'd galloped him two or three days after he
    got home"  Whittingham said.
    
    The surgery will require about five months rehabilitation before Sunday
    Silence can race again, but he is expected to recover fully from the 40
    minute procedure to be performed at Hollywood Park Equine Clinic.
    
    "If he had to have a chip, this is the best kind to have," said Dr.
    Greg Ferraro who will operate on the colt.  "Unless something else is
    found, this type of chip has the best prognosis.
    
    Sunday Silence won the Kentucky Derby and the Preakness before being 
    beaten by Easy Goer in the Belmont Stakes.
    
    The colt will have to forgo the $500,000 Strub Stakes in February and
    the $1,000,000 Santa Anita Handicap in March while recovering.
    
    Also in the Herald:
    
    The inventor of a James Bond-style ultrasonic gun that stuns racehorses
    was convicted in London of being involved in a complex drug plot.
    James Laming a 49 year old car dealer was found guilty on two charges
    of taking part in a conspiracy to supply cocaine.  He was also
    convicted of posessing half a kilogram of cocaine with intent to
    supply.
481.67Surgury for On the Line.GENRAL::LEECHPat Leech CX01/02 DTN 522-6044Mon Nov 27 1989 14:5317
    
    
    Eugene V. Klien's On the Line, which sustained a severe leg injury in
    the Nov. 4 Breeder's Cup Sprint (gr.I), was scheduled to undergo
    surgury during the week of Nov. 12.  In a muti-horse collision after
    the start of the Sprint, On the Line severed the superficial flexor
    tendon of his right foreleg and damaged other tendons.  Surgury was
    required not to stitch the tendon together, but to "cut away dead
    tissue," said Kiaran McLaughlin, assistant to trainer D. Wayne Lukas.
    
    The surgury on the 5-year-old horse, an earner of $1,125,810 was to be 
    done at Dr. Stephen Selway's equine clinic on the grounds of Belmont
    Park.
    
    From the Blood Horse dated Nov. 18, 1989. page 6374.
    
    
481.681990 Kentucky Derby Odds.GENRAL::LEECHPat Leech CX01/02 DTN 522-6044Mon Nov 27 1989 15:0519
    
    
    With less than six months until the 1990 Kentucky Derby (gr. I), 
    bookmakers at two Las Vegas, Nev., casinos have chosen two different
    horses--Rhythem and Summer Squall--as favorites to win the classic.
    
    Breeder's Cup Juvinal (gr. I) winner Rhythm, is the 10-1 favorite of
    Bob Gregorka, oddsmaker at the Sands Hotel Casino, to win next years
    Kenucky Derby.  At 12-1 are Grand Canyon, Polish Numbers, and Slavic,
    followed by 15-1 choices Adjudicating and Red Ransom.
    
    Lenny Del Genio, oddsmaker at Frontier Hotel and Gambling Hall, chose
    undefeated Summer Squall, which has not races since last August, as the
    10-1 favorite for next year's Derby.  Rhythm is the 15-1 second choice
    along with Red Ransom and Magical Mile.  Breeder's Cup Juvinile Fillies 
    (gr. I) winner Go for Wand is 20-1, and Adjudicating is 25-1.
    
    From The Blood Horse dated Nov. 18, 1989 page 6374.
     
481.69Summer Squall back in training.GENRAL::LEECHPat Leech CX01/02 DTN 522-6044Mon Nov 27 1989 15:099
    
    
    Dogwood Stable's undefeated Summer Squall recently returned to training
    at Dogwood's Aiken, S.C., facility.  Dogwood president W. Cothran
    Campbell said the 2-year-old Storm Bird colt, sidelined since October
    with a hairline fracture of the cannon bone, would rejoin trainer Neil
    Howard in January at Gulfstream Park.
    
    
481.70keep up the news pat DNEAST::BUTTERMAN_HOMon Nov 27 1989 16:178
    
    Thanks for these updates Pat.... I really enjoy reading about the
    thoroughbreds, and what's happening in their world!
    
    	appreciatative_new_englander
    
    	h
    
481.71Fernando Valenzuala suspended.GENRAL::LEECHPat Leech CX01/02 DTN 522-6044Tue Nov 28 1989 13:3020
    
    
    Fenando Valenzuela was suspended for 60 days by Hollywood Park stewards 
    after a drug test came back positive for cocaine and marijuana. 
    Valenzuala's cousin Patrick Valenzuela missed the Breeders' Cup Classic
    (gr. I) when he was handed a similar suspension on Oct. 27 after
    testing positive for cocaine.
    
    Fenando Valenzuala was tested for "probable cause" at Oak Tree on Nov.
    11 after appearing late for a riding assignment.  On five occasions at
    the 18-day Fairplex Park meeting earlier, the 20-year-old rider arrived 
    late to the jockeys' room or did not arrive at all.
    
    Valenzuela won with eight of 196 mounts at Hollywood Park this summer
    and with three of 52 mounts at Del Mar.  He lost his five-pound
    apprentice allowance last spring.
    
    From The Blood Horse dated Nov.25, 1989 page 6536.
    
     
481.72Leroy Moyers suspended.GENRAL::LEECHPat Leech CX01/02 DTN 522-6044Tue Nov 28 1989 13:3412
    Veteran jockey Leroy Moyers appealed a one-year suspension imposed by
    stewards at Philadelphia Park "for failure to expend his best efforts
    to win" with a mount on Nov. 3.  The appeal stayed the ban, which had
    been scheduled to take effect on Nov. 28, pending a hearing before the
    Pennsylvania State Horse Racing Commission.
    
    The 52-year-old Moyers, a professional rider for 31 years, has won more
    than 3,700 races and his mounts have earned in excess of $21 million. 
    He finished third in the race in question.
    
    From The Blood Horse dated Nov. 25, 1989 page 6536.
    
481.73Suffolk Downs GENRAL::LEECHPat Leech CX01/02 DTN 522-6044Tue Nov 28 1989 14:0361
    
    
    Suffolk Downs could be closed by the end of the year, if not sooner.
    the outlook for the 54-year-old Massachusetts track was bleak after
    negotiations between representatives of Ladbroke and Edward (Buddy)
    LeRoux, who heads Belle Isle Corp. (owner of the land on which the
    track stands), broke down following a meeting between the two parties
    on Nov. 14.
    
    Begun in June of 1986 when his partnership purchased Suffolk from Ogden
    Corp., LeRoux; term of ownership will end on Dec. 31.  Also ending then
    will be the terms of legislation passed in early 1988that gave the
    track a larger share of the takeout from Suffolk's parimutual handle.
    
    Ladbroke's United States chairman, David Goodwill, issued a two
    sentance statement: "Ladbroke Racing Corporation has been undertaking
    negotiations with Belle Isle regarding Suffolk Downs.  We met with them 
    once again on Tuesday, Nov. 14, and were not able to arrive at an
    agreement."  Ladbroke had sought to lease Suffolk and and had
    considered the possibility of building a track on another site in
    Massachusetts.  Ladbroke representative Paul Silverglied, who was
    involved in negotiations with LeRoux, made no comment on what
    transpired at the meeting.
    
    The day after the meeting, the Massachusetts Racing Commission granted
    Suffolk the one racing date it requested for 1990, mandating that the
    date had to be conducted on Jan. 1.  At that time, the current license
    held by Belle Isle Corp. and the track's lessee, New Suffolk Downs,
    will expire.
    
    "After Jan 1," said commissioner Henry O'Donnell, "we will welcome
    qualified applicants who want to conduct racing" at the facility.
    Legislation would be needed before any new applicants could be granted
    any additional dates.  
    
    "We gave them the Jan. 1 date to give them the rest of the year and
    Jan. 1 to come up with a lease," O'Donnell said.  "We don't want this
    thing to drag on."
    
    O'Donnell also said that he had received no reply when he asked if
    Leroux intended to continue looking into potetial lease applications.
    Leroux has stated on Boston-area television that he plans to develope
    the track site, his plans including an 82,000-seat domed sports arena.
    
    the racing commission denied Suffolk's request for an extension to the
    deadline for winterizing the track, meaning that suffolk is being fined 
    $10,000 by the commission for every racing day past the Nov. 15 deadline.
    the commission scheduled a show-cause hearing on the matter for Dec.
    13.  In the event the track freezes and racing is cancelled, by law
    Suffolk can be fined $15,000 for each day it does not conduct a racing
    program.
    
    Before the announcement of the negotiation breakdowns, Suffolk already
    had lost approximatly 100 horses to Hialeah, which opened on Nov. 18.
    Suffolk is operating on a day-to-day basis, depending on the
    availability of horses and the condition of the track.  Suffolk
    officials implemented a four-day racing week, eliminating Wednesdays,
    in an effort to fill cards.
    
    From The Blood Horse dated Nov. 25, 1989.  Pages 6541,6542.
    
481.74Eclipse Award Broadcast Jan. 27, 1990GENRAL::LEECHPat Leech CX01/02 DTN 522-6044Tue Nov 28 1989 14:0913
    
    
    Racing fans can learn the 1989 Eclipse Award winners for Horse of the
    Year, outstanding trainer, and outstanding jockey by watching
    television on Saturday, Jan. 27, 1990.  The honerees will be announced
    during a live broadcast from Santa Anita on ABC's "Wide World of
    Sports."  Jim McKay will serve as host for the Eclipse Award segment of
    the program.
    
    The Eclipse Awards are sponsered by the Thproughbred Racing
    Associations, the DAILY RACING FORM, and the National Turf Writers 
    Association.
     
481.75Sunday Silence has knee surgury.GENRAL::LEECHPat Leech CX01/02 DTN 522-6044Tue Nov 28 1989 14:2128
    
    
    Afterr a 40-minute operation on his right knee on Nov. 16, Breeders'
    Cup Classic (gr. I) winner Sunday Silence was resting quietly in his
    stall.
    
    "There were no problems from start to finish," sadi Dr. Gregory
    Ferraro, who performed the arthroscopic surgury.  "We discovered
    another small floating chip when we took X rays before we went in.  It
    was in the same joint, but on the opposite side."
    
    Sunday Silence was to spend three days confined to his stall in Charlie
    Whittingham's Hollywood Park barn, then begin walking.
    
    "Exercise helps them recover faster," said Whittingham.  "We were
    looking at the Strub (gr. I) and Santa Anita Handicap (gr. I) for him,
    but now we will just concentrate on getting him healthy."
    
    Dr. Ferraro, assisted by Dr. Steve Buttgenbach, made two
    three-quarter-inch incisions on either side of the upper bone of the
    colt's tripartite carpal joint.  The arthroscope was inserted through
    on incision site, the removal instrument through the other.
    
    "There was some cartilage damage, which is to be expected under the
    circumstances, but the operation went very smoothly," Dr. Ferraro said.
    "He will be off three to four months, but there is no reason why he
    shouldn't return to the races by the middle of next year.
     
481.77Tax deductionsGENRAL::LEECHPat Leech CX01/02 DTN 522-6044Tue Dec 05 1989 13:5024
    
    
    To realize tax benefits such as deduction of expenses, a Thoroughbred 
    owner must operate in a businesslike manner with a for-profit
    objective.  An unusual case decided recently by the U.S. Tax Court
    gives insight into how the government determines whether a business is
    a profit-seeking activity or a non-deductable hobby.
    
    Charles O. Givens of Mount Vernon, Ind., is an investment broker.  He
    bred Tennessee Walking Horses for six years, raised cattle for four
    years, and never ralized a profit from either venture.  Givens claimed
    losses of $42,455, but the Internal Revenue Service denied the
    deductions.
    
    The Tax Court, however, ruled that Givens managed his horse operation
    in a businesslike manner by maintaining detailed accounts, consulting 
    experts, devoting several hours daily to the activity, etc.  The court, 
    though, concluded that Givens did not devote similar attention to the
    cattle operation.  The special judge in the case ruled that Givens can
    deduct $30,180 of losses from the horse operation, but cannot claim
    deductions of $12,275 from the cattle enterprise.
    
    From The Blood Horse datedDec. 2, 1989.
     
481.79Stunning convictionGENRAL::LEECHPat Leech CX01/02 DTN 522-6044Tue Dec 05 1989 14:0622
    
    
    The man who claimed to have invented a "sonic gun" that can alter the
    outcome of horse races has been convicted of drug charges in England.
    Car dealer James Laming was convicted by a Southwark Crown Court jury
    on Nov. 14 of conspiring to supply cocaine, as was Peruvian drug baron
    Rene Black.
    
    During Laming's four week trial, an alleged race-fixing scheme
    involving the sonic gun was introduced as a line of defence for Laming. 
    The defense claimed that Black funded the invention, but that Laming
    did not know about Black's cocaine operation.
    
    Laming said the gun was hidden in a pair of binoculars and that he used
    the device to prevent Ile de Chypre from winning the King George V
    Stakes (Eng-III) in June 1988 at Royal Ascot.  The gun allegedly
    produced a high-pitched sound, inaudible to humans, that frightened the 
    runner.  Ile de Chypre swearved sharply while on the lead inside the
    race's final furlong and threw his rider, Greville Starkey.
    
    From The Blood Horse dated Dec. 2, 1989.
      
481.80A new track in Kansas City.GENRAL::LEECHPat Leech CX01/02 DTN 522-6044Tue Dec 05 1989 20:4412
    
    
    The Woodlands, the country's first facility for both horse and dog
    racing, began offering Greyhound competitionon Sept. 14 in Kansa City,
    Kansas.  The Woodlands Turf Club presently is under construction and
    will open on May 24 of next year for a 77-day Thoroughbred and Quarter
    Horse meeting.  The Woodlands horse track will consist of a one-mile
    oval, with six-furlong and 550-yard chutes, and the grandstand and
    infield areas will hold from 15,000 to 20,000 people. R.D. Hubbard
    is The Woodlands' principle owner.
    
    From The Blood Horse dated Dec. 2, 1989.
481.81On the Line on to recoveryGENRAL::LEECHPat Leech CX01/02 DTN 522-6044Wed Dec 06 1989 14:1036
    
    
    "We're not out of the woods, but we can see the clearing a little
    better," said veterinarian Stephen Selway  23 days after his patient,
    On the Line, suffered a severe leg injury during the Nov. 4 running of
    the Breeders' Cup Sprint (gr. I).
    
    On the Line was recuperating in the barn of trainer D. Wayne Lukas at
    Belmont Park in New York.  Surgical procedures to remove dead tissue
    had been performed on the 4-year-old colt three times since he injured
    his right foreleg.  In the most receant operation, which took place at
    Dr. Selway's equine clinic on the Belmont Prk grounds, Dr. Selway was
    able to partially cover the open wound with a flap of skin.  Other
    treatments included attaching a frog support to On the Line's left
    front hoof as a preventative measure against the possibility of
    stress-related laminitis.
    
    On the Line's leg was in a cast for part of the treatment period.  The 
    injured portion of the limb, as of Nov. 27, was covered with a support
    bandage and an antibiotic dressing.  Treatment with systemic
    antibiotics had been discontinued.
    
    "He's doing reasonably well, but he's still a little lame," Dr. Selway
    said. "We were very worried about infection, but none has developed."
    
    Owned by Eugene V. Klein, On the Line won 14 of 37 career starts and
    earned $1,125,810.  His efforts included victories in the 1988 San
    Fenando Stakes (gr. I) and the 1989 Carter Handicap (gr. I).
    
    Prior ro the injury, the colt was scheduled to be sold in the dispersal
    of Klein's stock at Keenland in Kentucky on Nov. 6.  the goal now is to
    save On the Line for stud duty.
    
    From The Blood Horse dated Dec. 2, 1989.
    
     
481.82Racing's leadersGENRAL::LEECHPat Leech CX01/02 DTN 522-6044Wed Dec 06 1989 14:2537
    
    
    If D. Wayne Lucas maintains his earnings lead among trainers, he will
    capture the North American title among leading money-winning trainers
    for the seventh consecutive season.  As of Nov. 19, according to DAILY
    RACING FORM figures, horses conditioned by Lucas had earned $14,595,655
    in 1989.
    
    The total does not include prize money earned by the four stakes
    winners Lukas sent out over the Nov. 25-26 weekend: Grand Canyon,
    Captain Starbuck, Sir Richard Lewis, and Pat Copelan.
    
    Lukas' closest rival through Nov. 19 was Charlie Whittingham, whose
    trainees had collected $10,809,576.  rounding out the top five were
    Shug McGaughey, $8,292,692;Neil Drysdale, $5,224,440; and Ron McAnnaly,
    $4,293,553.
    
    Lukas has set a North American record for earnings each year since
    1984.  This year, his horses must earn more than $3 million by the end
    of the year to eclipse his 1988 mark, $17,842,358.
    
    Leading jockey in 1989 in money won by mounts was Pat Day, whose
    mounts had collected $13,313,747 through Nov. 19.  Other riders ranked
    among the top five were Jose Santos, $12,649,211; Angel Cordero Jr.,
    $10,725,330; Eddie Delahoussey, $10,690,296; and Laffit Pincay Jr.,
    $10,560,580.
    
    Day decided to take a break from ridding in mid-November to have a
    sinus conditiont treated.  He has been North America's leading rider in 
    races won four times--in 1982, 1983,1984, and 1986--but he never has
    captured an earnings title.  Santos has been North America's top money
    winner rider for three consecutive seasons.  His record total in 1988
    was $14,877,298.
    
    From The Blood Horse dated Dec. 2, 1989.
    
    
481.83Boarding rates in Europe.GENRAL::LEECHPat Leech CX01/02 DTN 522-6044Tue Dec 12 1989 14:0618
    
    
    In England, the Newmarket Stud Farmers Association recommended "keep
    rates" for the boarding of bloodstock at Thoroughbred nursuries.  The 
    recommended per-day boarding prices are revised annually, based on the
    inflation rate and other cosideration.  Presently, the recommended 
    per-day boarding rates are 14.75 pounds (about $23.60) for foaling 
    mares, and 12.65 pounds ($20.25) for maiden and barren mares.  The
    recommended "sitting up fee," in which a night worker at a stud farm
    personally monitors an in-foal mare around the clock, is 31 pounds
    ($49.00) per night.  The recommended "foaling charge" is for a mare at
    a boarding farm is 180 pounds ($288.00).
    
    In France, per-diem boarding rates for mare typically range from 80-120
    francs ($13-$20) at stud farms in the Normandy region of the country.
    
    From The Blood Horse dated Dec. 9, 1989
    
481.84Stud fees in 1990GENRAL::LEECHPat Leech CX01/02 DTN 522-6044Tue Dec 12 1989 14:3524
    
    
    After general declines in recent years, there appears to be a trend
    toward stabilization of stud fees.  Based on a year-to-year comparison
    of stallions which had advertised fees published in THE BLOOD HORSE
    STALLION REGISTER FOR 1989 and the recently published STALLION REGISTER
    FOR 1990, the trend is strongest among middle- and upper-middle-market
    stallions whose fees range from $10,000 to $60,000.  Of 66 stallions
    with published fees in that range, 61 (92 percent) have the same
    published fee for the 1990 breeding season as they did for the 1989
    season.
    
    It is difficult to determine if such a trend is being experienced at
    the very top of the stallion market, because stallion with the highest
    fees ($60,000 and higher) typically do not have advertised fees.  At 
    the other end of the market (stallions with annual fees below $10,000),
    a downward trend appears to have slowed.  For instance, of 123
    stallions with stud fees between  $4,000-$10,000, a total of 102 (83
    percent) have the same published fees for 1990 as they did for 1989.
    Fifeteen stallions have lower fees and six stallions have higher fees
    in 1990 than they did in 1989.
    
    From The Blood Horse dated Dec. 9, 1989.
    
481.85Problems for HialeahGENRAL::LEECHPat Leech CX01/02 DTN 522-6044Tue Dec 12 1989 14:5645
    
    
    The current racing meeting at Hialeah might be ending sooner than
    scheduled.  Hialeah  president John Brunetti, racing head-to-head 
    against Calder Race Course and scheduled later to race opposite 
    Gulfstream Park, has asked the Florida Pari-Mutual Commision to allow
    him to close the track because of financial difficulties stemming from
    low attendance and track handle.
    
    In a letter to chairman Joseph Priede-Rodriguez dated Dec. 1, Brunetti
    asked the commission to convene an emergency meeting on Dev. 4 or 5
    "for the purpose of considering a request by Hialeah for permission to 
    conclude its current meet, effective immediately."
    
    Since racing concurrently with Calder, Hialeah has been losing some
    $65,000 per day since it began its current meeting on Nov. 18. Through
    the first part of December, the track had recorded per diem averages of
    2,447 patrons and $208,940 in handle.
    
    Brunetti also wrote the decision to temporarily prohibit the
    simulcasting of races from other states also contributed to his
    decision.
    
    "We attempted to compensate for the lack of quality horses by
    simulcasting from several out-of-state tracks.  However, Tropical Park
    Inc. has succeeded in obtaining a temporary injunction from the Circuit
    Court for the Second Judicial Circuit prohibiting Hialeah from
    continuing to accept wagers on simulcast racing."
    
    The commission is not likely to convene before its scheduled meeting on
    Dec. 13. Attorneys for the state will try to determine if the
    commission can rule legally on the track's request.  If the commission 
    members do not get permission to rule, or if they do and refuse
    Brunetti's request, Brunetti must continue to operate the track or risk
    losing his permit by closing.
    
    When asked about the proposed closing date, Brunetti said, "As far as
    when we are closing, I don't know.  We're not just going to stop at
    some random point."
    
    Brunetti added that he would allow trainers the opportunity to stay at
    the track if an agreement could be worked out that would cover costs.
    
    From The Blood HOrse dated Dec. 9, 1989.
    
481.86A record payoff.GENRAL::LEECHPat Leech CX01/02 DTN 522-6044Tue Dec 19 1989 18:2011
    
    
    A $2 win ticket paid a record $2,922 on Dec. 8 at Ak-Sar-Ben in
    Nebraska on a $7,500 claiming race simulcast from Fair Grounds in 
    Louisiana.  The tracks maintain seperate mutual pools, and the winner,
    Power to Geaux, paid $96.60 at Fair Grounds.  The AMERICAN RACING
    MANUAL lists a return of $1,885.50 for Wishing Ring at old Latonia (in
    Kentucky) in 1912 as the largest previous win payoff.
    
    From The Blood Horse dated Dec.16,1989.
    
481.87A wish and goodbyeGENRAL::LEECHPat Leech CX01/02 DTN 522-6044Wed Dec 20 1989 18:4917
    
    
    Major winner Goodbye Halo and dual classics winner Sunday Silence's dam
    Wishing Well, are among the 1,048 horses cataloged for Keenland's
    January horses of all ages sale.  The auction is scheduled for Jan.
    8-10, 1990.
    
    Owned by Arthur B. Hancock III and Alex Cambell, Jr.,4-year-old Goodbye
    Halo (by Halo) won 11 of 24 races and earned $1,706,702.  The 10 added-
    money events she captured included the 1989 Coaching Club American Oaks
    (gr. I), and the 1988 Mother Goose Stakes (gr. I).
    
    Wishing Well, a graded stakes winner, will be sold as part of the Oak
    Cliff Breeding Partnerships dispersal.  The 14-year-old daughter of
    Understanding captured 12 of 38 starts and earned $381,625.
    
    From The Blood Horse dated Dec. 16,1989.
481.88A dead heat.GENRAL::LEECHPat Leech CX01/02 DTN 522-6044Wed Dec 20 1989 19:0125
    
    
    A racing oddity occured on Dec. 10 at Aqueduct in the sixth race, a
    1 1/16th mile claiming event for 2-year-olds, when two sons of Silent
    Screen dead-heated for first over a fast track.  The two juviniles are 
    Silent Scream (Silent Screen-Introspect, by Brian G.), a gelding bred
    by Peter Ladd and raced by S Kay S Stable, and Quietly Organized
    (Silent Screen-Well Organized, by Damascus), which races as a home-bred
    for Viola Sommer.
    
    Quietly Organized rallied from sixth in the nine-horse field, and
    Silent Scream came from second place before the pair crossed the wire
    together, completing the 1 1/16-mile race in 1:48 1/5.  Sir Landseer,
    which had lead from the start until the deep stretch, finished a
    half-length behind the two winners.
    
    Silent Scream now has won three of his six career races, while Quietly
    Organized has won two races from nine career outings.  The two sons of
    Silent Screen met one other time prior to their dead heat, in a 5 1/2-
    furlong maiden claiming race on July 15 at Belmont Park.  Silent Scream
    won that race by 1 3/4 lengths, while Quietly Organized finished sixth
    in the 10 horse field.
    
    From The Blood Horse dated Dec. 16,1989
      
481.89More trouble for Suffolk Downs.GENRAL::LEECHPat Leech CX01/02 DTN 522-6044Wed Dec 20 1989 19:2952
    
    
    The sad state of affairs at Suffolk Downs has been chronicled in these
    pages over the last several years.  Each event seems to consign the
    drama deeper into the side of tragedy.  A recent editorial in the
    Boston GLOBE unleashed emotion, invective, and dispair, with a complete
    abandonment of subtlety:
    
    "The imminent death of Thoroughbred racing in Massachusetts is a tale
    of villainy, blindness, and ineptitude.  On the day that horses stop 
    racing at Suffolk Downs, the state will lose current and potetial
    revenue, thousands of men and women will lose their jobs, racing fans
    will lose a pastime, and open space that might have prospered as
    farmland for horse breeding will be lost from the tax rolls."
    
    That was merely the introduction.
    
    "The villan of the tale," the GLOBE went on, warming to the subject,
    "is Buddy LaRoux, the managing general partner fo the company that owns
    Suffolk Downs.  In a commonwealth overflowing with rouges and sharpies,
    Le Roux has earned his reputation as a champion of chicanery."
    
    In general, the editorial alleges, LeRoux pursued a short-term policy
    of milking "the track for every dollar he could squeeze from it," while
    eventually seeking "to be rid of racing so that he can develope a site 
    burdened with problems of access and hazerdous waste."
    
    The paper alleges that LeRoux was merely masquerading in his stated
    attempts to find "a lessor who would conduct racing racing at Suffolk
    Downs for the three to five years it would take to find another site
    and build another race track."
    
    The GLOBE appended that, "the Dukakis administration, for its part, has
    been blind to racing's revenue potential."
    
    Peter Fuller, one of the most knowledgeable and outspoken among leaders
    of the New England Thoroughbred industry, applauded the GLOBE in a
    letter published on Nov. 30:
    
    "...I gave Frank De Francis (certainly the foremost race track operator
    in the United States before his death last August) his first tour of
    Suffolk Downs about two years ago.  He was appalled at the conditions 
    he saw but was also tremendously excited about the potential of Suffolk
    Downs...but like everyone else interested in buying or leasing Suffolk,
    he was 'danced around and finally rejected...
    
    "The sooner LeRoux leaves and Massachusetts licenses a true racing
    operator, the better for those thousands of us fanss of the sport of
    kings."
    
    From the editorial column of The Blood Horse dated Dec. 16, 1989
        
481.90RKM Winter meet passesNANOOK::RAWDENIItywimwybmad?Thu Dec 28 1989 23:2413
    Rockingham Park, in sunny Salem NH, is offering grandstand passes
    to the Winter Meeting free with every paid admission from Friday,
    Dec. 29 through New Year's Day.  The winter meeting begins on New
    Year's Day and runs through April 16, Patriots' Day.
    
    "This is Rockingham's way of saying Happy Holidays to the thoroughbred
    racing fans of New England." said general manager Ed Callahan. 
    "We would like to begin 1990 on a positive note."

    (From the New Hampshire Sunday News, 12/24)
            
    Bill    
    
481.91Bedford Park in Calif. to close.GENRAL::LEECHPat Leech CX01/02 DTN 522-6044Tue Jan 02 1990 15:5012
    
    
    Bedford Properties, owner of Galway Downs in southern Riverside County
    in California, announced it will close the 400-stall Throughbred track
    and training center effective Jan.15, 1990.  A spokesman for the
    company said it would not be profitable to for the operation to
    continue due to the present market rates in Southern California for
    boarding and traing.  Plans are indefinite for the 200-acre facility,
    which was purchased by Bedford in the fall of 1988.
    
    From The Blood Horse dated Dec. 23, 1989.
     
481.92Secritariat rightsGENRAL::LEECHPat Leech CX01/02 DTN 522-6044Tue Jan 02 1990 15:5717
    
    
    Exclusive publicity rights to 1973 Triple Crown winner and Horse of the
    Year Secretariat, which died in October, have been granted to the
    Grayson-Jockey Club Research Foundation by the horses's syndicate
    members. Included in the publicity rights are all copyrights,
    trademarks, logos, and likenesses, in all mediums, such as photographs,
    paintings and sculptures.
    
    Throughbred Racing Communications will serve as the licensing agent for
    the manufacturing and distribution of products which have the
    Secretariat identification.  For its services, the TRC will receive a
    share of the proceeds from the venture.  The remainder of the money 
    raised will go to the Secretatiat Memorial Fund, which will sponser 
    research on laminitus and studies of other equine health problems.
    
    From The Blood Horse dated Dec. 23, 1989.
481.93More problems at Suffolk Park.GENRAL::LEECHPat Leech CX01/02 DTN 522-6044Tue Jan 02 1990 16:0623
    
    
    The Horsemen's Benevolent and Protective Association worked out an
    agreement in mid-December that allowed the horsemen's association to
    remain in two trailers at Suffolk Downs until relocating to Rockingham
    Park in New Hampshire at the end of January.  Sufolk management
    originally planned to evict the association's local division on Dec.
    15.
    
    With its closing imminent and horses in short supply, Suffolk continued
    its struggle to complete its 1989 meeting.  A snowstorm early on Dec.
    16 forced Suffolk to cancel live racing and to accept a simulcast of
    the entire racing card from Philidelphia Park in Pennsylvania.  Henry 
    O'Donnell, chairman of the Massachusetts State Racing Commission, had
    said previously that Suffolk would be allowed topick up a full
    simulcast card only in the event of inclement weather.
    
    Suffolk returned to offering live racing cards on Dec. 17 and 18. 
    Suffolk had been forced to cancel racing on three Wednesdays-Nov. 22,
    Nov. 29, and Dec. 13.  The Dec. 18 program was the 242nd of a scheduled
    250.
    
    From The Blood Horse dated Dec. 23, 1989.
481.94On the Racing Front.GENRAL::LEECHPat Leech CX01/02 DTN 522-6044Tue Jan 02 1990 16:1318
    
    
    * Phillip DiLeo's Slew the Knight captured a 1 1/16 mile allowance race
    at Aqueduct on Dec. 15 in his second race since winning the Hill Prince
    Stakes (gr. IIIT) in July.
    
    
    * Ole',the first foal from champion Princess Rooney, won a one-mile
    maiden race at Hollywood Park on Dec. 16.  Bred by Wichita Equine, the 
    3-year-old colt by Danzig races as a lessee for Cameron Aubin.
    
    * Gloria J. Lombardio's Bonario, a half-brother to Italian classic
    winner Quadrupler, won a six-furlong maiden race at Thistledown on Dec.
    10.  The  3-year-old gelding by Riverman-Alota Calories was bred by
    Nelson Bunker Hunt.
    
    From The Blood Horse dated Dec. 23, 1989.
    
481.95WTH APPROVAL VOTED CANADIAN HORSE OF THE YEAR.GENRAL::LEECHPat Leech CX01/02 DTN 522-6044Tue Jan 02 1990 16:3947
    
    
    With Approval, which raced through Canada's Triple Crown with two
    narrow victories and one runaway, was named his country's Horse of the 
    Year for 1989.  The Kinghaven Farms homebred was announced as Canada's
    overall champion at the 15th annual Sovereign awards dinner on Dec. 12.
    
    The Sovereign Awards, designators of champions in Canada, are conferred
    by the Jockey Club of Canada.  For most catagories, three candidates
    are named in advance and announcement of the winner is not made until
    the evening of the awards dinner.
    
    With Approval was the ring leader in a Kinghaven evening which totaled 
    five Sovereigns, plus one for the stables rider and another for the
    dam, now owned by Holtsinger, Inc.  D. G. (Bud) Wilmot and his son,
    David, also accepted awards for best 3-year-old, With Approval;
    champion older male, Steady Power; owner of the year, and outstanding
    breeder.  Moreover, Kinghaven trainer Roger Attfield was voted
    outstanding trainer, and Don Seymour, who rode With Approval to his
    Triple Crown triumphs, was named outstanding jockey.
    
    With Approval, (Caro-Passing Mood, by Buckpasser) is a grandson of Cool
    Mood, a Northern Dancer filly which won the Canadian Oaks as one of
    Kinghaven's first major winners.  With Approval launched his Triple
    Crown bid on July 9,  when he won the Queen's Plate (Can-IR).  He edged
    Most Valient, which races for Kinghaven's consistent rival, Ernest
    Samual's Sam-Son Farm.
    
    Next leg of the Canadian Triple Crown is the Prince of Wales Stake
    (Can-IR), which again involved a photo finishas With Approval won by a
    head from Damasca Dan.
    
    The Bank of Montreal this year sponsered the first $1-million bonus for
    winning the Canadian Triple Crown, and the final enactment came on Aug.
    20.  Making his first start on grass, With Approval shed the cloak of
    doing just what was necessary to win and drew off in the stretch.  At
    the finish of the 1 1/2 mile Breeder's Stakes (Can-IRT), he was 7 1/2
    lengths ahead of runner-up Most Valiant.
    
    An injury sidelined him for the rest of the year, and he closed his 
    3-year-old campaign with six wins among 10 starts and earnings of 
    $1,772,150 for the season.  His total was instrumental in Kinghaven
    leading all North American breeders in earnings with more than $4.7
    million, through the first 10 months of the year.  With Approval is
    being readied for a return to the races at four.
    
    From The Blood Horse dated Dec. 23, 1989. 
481.96Horse NotesGENRAL::LEECHPat Leech CX01/02 DTN 522-6044Thu Jan 04 1990 15:1133
    
    
    
    * Hollywood Futurity (gr. I) winner Grand Canyon has been made the 8-1
    favorite for the 1990 Kentucky Derby (gr. I) by Bob Gregorka, oddsmaker
    at the Sands Resort and Casino in Las Vegas, Nev.
    
    * Dogwood Stable's major winner Summer Squall has arrived at Gulfstream
    Park, where he might make his first start since August of 1989 in the
    Feb. 10 Hutchenson Stakes (gr. III).
    
    * Mystery Gate recently equaled a 1974 track record at Delta Downs,
    covering 4 1/2 furlongs in :52 2/5.
    
    * Major winner Brown Bess is being given a rest and is scheduled to be
    returned to competition in March of 1990.
    
    * Breeder's Cup Distaff (gr. I) winner Bayakoa and Breeder's Cup Mile
    (gr. IT) winner Steinlen are among the 40 horses which have been
    nominated to the $1-million Santa Anita Handicap (gr. I) on March 4,
    1990.
    
    * Pessimist, a former race horse whose registered name is Criterion's
    Best, recently won the $50,000 Mercedes-Benz World Cup for
    International Teams and Open Jumpers at Royal Agriculture Winter Fair
    Horse Show in Toronto, Canada.  The eight-year-old gelding, which was
    the show's Open Jumper Champion in points won, is owned by Pierre
    Levensque, chairman of the Sport and Leisure Committee of the Ontario
    division of the Canadian Thoroughbred Horse Society, in partnership
    with rider and trainer Mac Cone.
    
    
    From The Blood Horse dated Dec. 30, 1989. 
481.97Santa Anita opens.GENRAL::LEECHPat Leech CX01/02 DTN 522-6044Thu Jan 04 1990 15:2625
    
    
    While much of the nation was coping with lingering snow and artic
    weather the day after Christmas, an opening day crowd at Santa Anita
    enjoyed mild Southern California weather and quality racing.  Wagering
    totaled $8.2 million.
    
    Music Merci, a career earner of more than $1.1 million which had not
    raced since August at Del Mar, was impressive in winning the $112,000
    Malibu Stakes (gr. II) under Laffit Pincay, Jr.  The 3-year-old gelding
    by Stop the Music rellied from off the pace, took command with
    authority in deep streatch, and completed seven furlongs in 1:21 3/5.
    Exemplary Leader, a 3-year-old Vigors colt, was second, 1 1/2 lengths
    behind the winner. Doncareer, a 3-year-old colt by Don B., was third.
    
    The Malibu is the first racve in the Strub Series.  Music Merci is
    being pointed for the subsequent grade I stakes that complete the
    series: The nine-furlong San Fernando on Jan. 14, and the 1 1/4 mile
    Charles H. Strub on Feb. 4. Bred in Canada by George Strawbridge Jr.,
    Music Merci races for Lawerence C. Pendleton ( a businessman from
    Newport Beach, Calif.) and Royal T Stable, the latter operated by
    Harvey C. and Thea Cohen of Encino, Calif.  Cohen is an attorney.
    
    From The Blood Horse dated Dec. 30, 1989.
     
481.98Medication and foals.GENRAL::LEECHPat Leech CX01/02 DTN 522-6044Thu Jan 04 1990 15:5452
    
    
    
    Arthritic conditions and cronic orthopedic problems in broodmares
    appear to become more severe late in pregnancy and soon after milk
    production begins.  One method of coping with the ailments has been to
    dose the animals with phenylbutazone ( Butazolidin), a nonsteroidal,
    anti-inflammatory drug.
    
    Phenylbutazone generally has been considered to be a relatively safe
    theraputic agent in the horse with minimal side effects.  However, that
    belief is being re-examined because recent studies demonstrating an
    association between phenylbutazone administration and the presence of
    ulcers in foals and weanlings.
    
    Dr. Mark V. Crisman of the Virginia-Maryland Regional College of
    Veterinary Medicine and his colleagues have been trying to determine if
    phenylbutazone given to mares in theraputic doses is toxic to their
    foals.
    
    The first study focused on lactating mares with healty foals at their
    sides.  The mares were dosed with phenylbutazone twice a day for seven
    consecutive days.  Blood samples were drawn from each mare and foal
    before, during, and after the treatment period.  Samples also were
    taken of each mare's milk at the same times.
    
    Among the findings were that phenylbutazone concentrations in the
    mare's milk were small, and the concentrations in the foals' blood were
    below detectable limits at all sample times.
    
    "This would indicate that phenylbutazone can be administered in
    theraputic doses to lactating mares with no side effects on the nursing
    foals," said Dr. Crisman at the American Association of Equine
    Practioners' 35th annual convention in early December.
    
    The phenybutazone dose used in the study was 4.4 milligrams per
    kilogram of body weight.  This dose amount also was used in another
    project in which healthy pregnant mares were treated with the drug twice
    a day until they gave birth.  Blood samples were drawn from both mares
    and foals.
    
    "The result from the preliminary study suggested that phenylbutazone
    does cross the placental barrier in significant concentrations, and it
    persists in neonatal foals for extended periods of time," Dr. Crisman
    said.  "At this point, we think you should be really cautious when
    dosing pregnant mares, especially late during their gestational periods
    and maybe anytime during gestation, with phenybutazone.  We plan to
    continue this part of the study and do endoscopic examinations and
    other things of that nature.
    
    From The Blood Horse dated Dec. 30, 1989.
     
481.99New Rockingham scheduleNANOOK::RAWDENRound up the usual suspects!Mon Jan 08 1990 16:598
Starting on Monday Jan. 15 (Martin Luther King Day) Rockingham (Salem,
NH) will have racing on Mondays and Wednesdays with Tuesday and Thursday
as the dark days.

Post time every day, Mon, Wed, Fri, Sat and Sun. (until sometime in the
spring) will be 1:00.

Bill    
481.100Who left this money on the table?NANOOK::RAWDENRound up the usual suspects!Mon Jan 08 1990 17:0032
ELEVEN SHARE TOP PRIZE IN BREEDERS' CUP CONTEST

Eleven individuals from more than 312,000 entrants share the $375,000 
top prize in the recent Breeders' Cup National Pick Seven Contest.

The contest required entrants to select the winners of each of the seven 
Breeders' Cup races on Nov. 4 at Gelfstream Park from a list of 
preentered horses that appeared in 42 daily newspapers and industry 
publications throughout the US the week prior to the event.  A $150,000 
grand prize pool was offered for all entries selecting all seven winners 
correctly, a $225,000 prize pool was to be split among all those 
correctly selecting six winners, and $50,000 was distributed among all 
entries correctly selecting five winners.

No contestant succeeded in correctly selecting all seven winners, 
therefore, the 11 persons selecting six Breeders' Cup winners shared the 
top two prize pools.  Each grand prize winner will receive 
$20,445.55.

....Six of the 11 winners failed to select Breeders' Cup Sprint winner 
Dancing Spree.  Of the remaining five entrants, three incorrectly 
selected Easy Goer in the Breeders' Cup Classic, one failed to tab 
Juvenile Fillies winner Go For Wand, and another did not select Rhythm 
in the Juvenile.

In addition to the aforementioned winners, 212 entrants correctly 
selected five Breeders' Cup Day winners and will each receive $235.85.

From The Thoroughbred Times, 12/29/89

Bill
        
481.101Eclipse Award WinnersGENRAL::LEECHPat Leech CX01/02 DTN 522-6044Tue Jan 09 1990 14:3322
                      
    			Eclipse Champions 1989
    
    Rhythm			2-year-old colt
    Sunday Silence		3-year-old colt
    Go For Wand    		2-year-old filly
    Open Mind			3-year-old filly      (repeat champion)
    Blushing John		Older male
    Bayakoa			Older female
    Steinlen			Male turf
    Brown Bess			Female turf
    Safely Kept			Sprinter (3-year-old filly)
    
    Ogden Phipps 		Outstanding owner for the second straight
    				year
    
    Horse of the year, trainer, and jockey awards will be announced Jan. 27
    on ABC's "Wide World of Sports" .
    
    From the Gazette Telegraph Sports section.  1/9/90
    
    
481.102Leading Sires By 1989 EarningsGENRAL::LEECHPat Leech CX01/02 DTN 522-6044Thu Jan 11 1990 17:5216
    
         Horse	       Sire		Chief Earner	  	1989 Earnings
    
    1.	Halo, 		Hail to Reason 	Sunday Silence		$7,537,651
    2.	Alydar 		Raise A Native	Easy Goer	        $6,839,158
    3.	Bushing Groom   Red God		Nashwan (Eng)		$4,736,226
    4.	Fappiano	Mr. Prospector	Cryptoclearance         $4,648,486
    5.	Danzig		Northern Dancer	Polish Precedent (Fr)   $4,566,158
    6.	Caro		Fortino		With Approval		$3,978,283
    7.	Mr. Prospector	Raise A Native	Rhythm			$3,896,377
    8.	Seattle Slew	Bold Reasoning	Slew City Slew		$3,560,744
    9.	Nijinski II	Northern Dancer	Dancing Spree		$3,523,052
    10.	Nureyev		Northern Dancer	Zilzal (Eng)		$3,512,785
    
    
    From The Blood Horse  dated Jan. 6, 1990
481.103Leading Active Sires--LifetimeGENRAL::LEECHPat Leech CX01/02 DTN 522-6044Thu Jan 11 1990 18:0217
    
    
    	Horse		Foaled	     Sire	    Champions
    
    1.	Alydar		1975	Raise A Native		4
    2.	Danzig		1977	Northern Dancer		2
    3.	Nureyev		1977	Northern Dancer		8
    4.	Seattle Slew	1974	Bold Reasoning		4
    5.	Fappiano	1977	Mr. Prospector		1
    6.	Nijinsky II	1967	Northern Dancer		14
    7.	Mr. Prospector	1970	Raise A Native		11
    8.	Deputy Minister	1979	Vice Regent             1
    9.	Private Account 1976	Damascus		1
    10.	Relaunch	1976	In Reality		1
    
    From The Blood Horse dated Jan. 6, 1990.
     
481.104Sires Of Broodmares--CumulativeGENRAL::LEECHPat Leech CX01/02 DTN 522-6044Thu Jan 11 1990 18:1416
    
    
    	Horse		Foaled	     Sire	 Average Earnings Index
    
    1.	Hoist The Flag	1968-80	   Tom Rolf		4.61
    2.	Buckpasser	1963-78	   Tom Fool		4.03
    3.  Val De Lor	1959-74	   Vieux Manoir		3.43
    4.	Graustark	1963-88	   Ribot		3.36
    5.	Key To The Mint 1969	   Graustark		3.22
    6.	Secritariat	1970-89	   Bold Ruler		3.09
    7.	Nijinski II	1967	   Northern Dancer	2.92
    8.	Le Haar		1954-82	   Vieux Manoir		2.83
    9.	Dr. Fager	1964-76	   Rough'n Tumble 	2.79
    10.	Mr. Prospector	1970	   Raise A Native	2.76
    
    From The Blood Horse dated Jan. 6, 1989
481.105Leading EarnersGENRAL::LEECHPat Leech CX01/02 DTN 522-6044Thu Jan 11 1990 19:4819
    
    
    	Horse		Foaled 	Sire		Earnings
    
    1.	Alysheba	1984	Alydar		$6,679,242
    2.	John Henry	1975	Ole Bob Bowers	$6,591,860
    3.	Sunday Silence	1986	Halo		$4,600,154   	*
    4.	Easy Goer	1986	Alydar		$4,534,650	*
    5.	Spend A Buck	1982	Buckaroo	$4,220,689
    6.	Creme Fraiche	1982	Rich Cream	$4,024,727
    7.	Ferdinand	1983	Nijinski II	$3,777,978
    8.	Slew O'Gold	1980	Seattle Slew	$3,533,534
    9.	Precisionist	1981	Crozier		$3,485,398
    10.	Snow Chief	1983	Reflected Glory	$3,383,210
    
    * denotes still racing
    
    From The Blood Horse dated Jan. 6, 1990.
    
481.106A Longtime FanGENRAL::LEECHPat Leech CX01/02 DTN 522-6044Wed Jan 17 1990 14:1215
    
    
    Carl Bonham recently continued a tradition begun the year Santa Anita
    opened in 1934.  The 105-year-old attended the races on Jan. 7 to
    celebrate his birthday the following day, when the track was dark.
    
    Bonham grew up in Montpelier, Ind., where his father owned the livery
    stable.  He moved to California in 1924 and now resides in Oceanside,
    80 miles south of Los Angeles.
    
    Santa Anita's oldest racing fan, Bonham has celebrated his birthday and
    attended opening day every year since 1934, with only two exceptions.
    
    From The Blood Horse dated Jan. 13, 1990.
    
481.107Mysterious Deaths in AustraliaGENRAL::LEECHPat Leech CX01/02 DTN 522-6044Wed Jan 17 1990 14:2015
    
    
    Contaminated food is suspected to have caused the deaths of prominent
    Australian sire Arch Sculptor and three yearlings at Colin Hays'
    breeding and training farm, Lindsay Park, near Adelaide.  Arch
    Sculptor, a 17-year-old son of Habitat, is a half-brother to the
    deceased sire Mummy's Pet, one of Great Britain's leading sires prior
    to his death in 1986.
    
    For 1984-85 in Australia, Arch Sculptor earned the title of leading sire
    of individual winners of 2-year-old races.  Among his 19 stakes winners
    was the undefeated group stakes-winning filly Sculpture's Blue.
    
    From The Blood Horse dated Jan. 13, 1990.
     
481.108Trainer D. Wayne Lukas at the top.GENRAL::LEECHPat Leech CX01/02 DTN 522-6044Wed Jan 17 1990 14:248
    
    
    Trainer D. Wayne Lukas should become the first trainer to surpass
    $100-million mark in career stable earnings sometime this year.  He
    finished 1989 with career earnings of more than $95 million.
    
    From The Blood Horse dated Jan. 13, 1990.
    
481.109Stun Gun conviction.GENRAL::LEECHPat Leech CX01/02 DTN 522-6044Wed Jan 17 1990 14:2815
    
    
    In England, James Laming, alleged inventor of an ultrasonic stun gun
    that can affect the outcome of horse races, was sentenced to 14 years
    in prison two counts of conspiracy to supply cocain and one count of
    possession of cocain with intent to supply.
    
    Co-conspirator Rene Black, who pleaded guilty to to heading the
    $20-million cocain conspiracy ring, was sentenced to 15 years.  Black, 
    who Laming's defense claimed funded the stun gun invention, said the
    device was total fiction.
    
    From The Blood Horse dated Jan. 13, 1990.
    
    
481.110Royal Hong Kong Jockey Club.GENRAL::LEECHPat Leech CX01/02 DTN 522-6044Wed Jan 17 1990 14:4639
    
    
    The history of horse racing in Hong Kong is at least 1 1/2 centuries
    old.  The sport was introduced by early British Settlers, and while the
    exact date is not known, the CHINA MAIL (Hong Kong's first newspaper)
    carried an announcement of two race meetings held in 1846.
    
    By 1884, the sport had become established, and that year the Hong Kong
    Jockey Club was formed.  The modern, non-profit Jockey Club, which was
    given the Royal prefix by Queen Elizabeth II of England in 1960,
    continues to control and operate Thoroughbred racing and betting in
    Hong Kong.
    
    
    The Royal Hong Kong Jockey Club, with 12,500 members, is directed by 12
    stewards, a sort of board of directors who provide their services
    without renumeration.  Daily management of racing and wagering at Happy
    Valley and Sha Tin race courses is delegated to professional
    executives, headed by a chief executive.  There are about 14,000
    salaried and hourly staff employees of The Royal Hong Kong Jockey Club.
    
    Since his appointment in late 1985, Major General G. H. Watkins has
    been the Jockey Club's chief executive.  Watkins, 56, has served as
    director general in the British Army.  A former amateur jockey, he rode
    briefly in Hong Kong in the 1960s.
    
    
    From The Blood Horse dated Jan. 13, 1989.
    
    
    
    --------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    The Royal Hong Kong Jockey Club is a major user of DEC equipment and
    has visited here at the CSC in Colorado Springs.
    
    
    --------------------------------------------------------------------------
      
481.111Julie KroneGENRAL::LEECHPat Leech CX01/02 DTN 522-6044Fri Jan 26 1990 13:3618
    
    
    Leading female rider Julie Krone, whose broken left arm is not healing
    as expected, could be sidelined until June.  The jockey suffered the
    injury on Nov. 24, 1989, in a spill at Meadowlands in New Jersy. 
    Complications have arisen because a bone graft Krone received has not
    taken proplerly and the small blood vessels that were injured have
    hampered blood flow.
    
    A receant X ray was said by a doctor "to look exactly like the one he
    took after the injury," Krone reported.  
    
    Krone last year established single-season records for a female rider in
    victories (368) and earnings ($8,031,445), according to DAILY RACING
    FORM.  The totals broke the records she had set in 1988.
    
    From The Blood Horse dated Jan. 20, 1990.
     
481.112Titles of 1989.GENRAL::LEECHPat Leech CX01/02 DTN 522-6044Fri Jan 26 1990 13:5625
    
    
    North American racing statistics, compiled by DAILY RACING FORM,
    included four records in 1989:
    
    * Sunday Silence established a record for the most money earned by a
      horse in a single season, $4,578,454.
    
    * Kent Desormeaux won the most races ever in a single season, 597,
      breaking Chris McCarron's mark of 546 set in 1974.  Desormeaux also
      became only the third jockey ever to lead North America in races won
      for three consecutive years.  The others were Bill Hartack, 1955-57,
      and Pat Day, 1982-84.
    
    * Julie Krone erased her own year-old marks for female riders, riding
      the winners of 368 races and the earners of $8,031,445.
    
    * D. Wayne Lukas, who led trainerrs in victories (305), stable earnings
      ($16,103,998), stakes won (33), and money earned in stakes
      ($11,403,739).  Lukas has been North America's leading trainer in
      money earned each season since 1983.  He established a record in
      1988, with stable earnings of $17,842,358.  Lukas earned his third
      consecutive races won title in 1989.
    
    From The Blood Horse dated Jan. 20, 1990.    
481.113Goodby Halo goes to Japan.GENRAL::LEECHPat Leech CX01/02 DTN 522-6044Fri Jan 26 1990 14:1844
    
    
    The market at Keenland's January horses of all ages sale did not soar
    like an eagle, but the results of the Central Kentucky vendue
    heightened expectations for a steady auction flight leval during the
    remainder of 1990.
    
    The Japanese buying contingent in January was headed by Morio Sakurai,
    whose clients include golf course developer and manager Yoshio Asakawa.
    Sakurai was the sale's leading buyer in terms of gross expenditures,
    purchasing 12 horses for $2,608,500.  Among horses Sakurai bought for 
    Asakawa was major winner Goodby Halo, which brought the sale's top
    price of $2.1 million.
    
    Goodby Halo, the January vendue's top-priced horse, was sold on the
    sale's second day.  The 5-year-old chestnut mare was consigned by
    Arthur B. Hancock III's Stone Farm near Paris, Ky., as agent for
    Hancock and Lexington business man Alex Campbell Jr.
    
    Racing for the Hancock-Campbell partnership for much of her career,
    Goodby Halo (Halo-Pound Foolish, by Sir Ivor) won 11 of 24 career
    races and earned $1,706,702.  She captured 10 stakes, including seven
    grade I events. Goodby Halo last competed on Nov. 4, 1989, when she
    finished sixth in champion Bayakoa's Breeders' Cup Distaff (gr. I).
    
    "She is like a fine Swiss watch or a diamond.  It's better that some
    emperor owns stuff like that, not some Bourbon County farmer like me,"
    Hancock said.  "I couldn't really afford to keep her because I have
    lots of payments and expenses, but I hated to sell her because she's
    been a big part of our lives for the past couple of years.  She has so
    much courage and heart."
    
    Another factor in the decision to sell Goodby Halo, according to
    Hancock, were the high prices brought by champions Open Mind ($4.6
    million) and Winning Colors ($4.1 million) at Keenland in November.
    Hancock said before the sale that he and Campbell were hoping that
    Goodby Halo would sell for $2 million or more.
    
    After signing the $2.1 million sale ticket for Goodby Halo, Sakurai
    said she would not be raced again.  The mare will be sent to Japan,
    where she will be bred this year to Nasr El Arab (by Al Nasr).
    
    From The Blood Horse dated Jan. 20 1990.
    
481.114International Classifications Of 1989. FRIDAY::LEECHPat Leech CX01/02 DTN 522-6044Fri Jan 26 1990 14:5752
                         
    
    				Two year olds
    
    
    Rating	Horse			Owner			Earnings
    125 	Machiavellian	        Stavros Niarchos	$  259,785
    120		Argentum		K. Kahn			$   51,163
    120		Digression		Khaled Abdullah		$  122,396
    120 	Jade Robbery		Zenya Yoshida		$  240,410
    119		Contract Law		Kennet Valley TB's	$   89,382
    
    
    			Three year olds 5-6 1/2 furlongs
    
    123		Danehill		Kahled Abdullah		$  312,466
    119		Statoblast		Richard L. Duchossois 	$  105,018
    119		Tigani			Capt. Marcos Lemos     	$   54,814
    116		Dancing Dissident	Shaikh Mohammed		$   94,681
    112		Or Acier		Henri Chalhoub		$   77,625
    
    			Three year olds 7-9 furlongs
    
    134		Zilzal			Mana al Maktoum		$  734,836
    129		Polish Precedent 	Shaikh Mohammed		$  578,305
    128		Golden Opinion (filly)	Shaikh Mohammed		$  415,675
    124		Distant Relative	Wafic Said		$  325,147
    124		Kendor			Adolf Bader		$  305,035
    
    			Three year olds 9 1/2-10 1/2 furlongs
    
    131		Nashwan			Hamden al Maktoum	$1,420,149
    125		Dancehall		Tomohiro Wada		$  529,398
    124		Creator			Shaikh Mohammed		$  209,538
    123		Legal Case		Sir Gordon White	$  510,884
    122		Dolpour			The Aga Kahn		$  198,401
    
    			Three year olds 11-13 1/2 furlongs
    
    134		Old Vic			Shaikh Mohammed		$1,080,370
    128		Cacoehtes		Lady Harrison		$  500,721
    124		Mondrian		Stall Hanse		$  343,351
    123		Behera (filly)		The Aga Kahn		$  589,784
    122		Aliysa (filly)		The Aga Kahn		$  283,188
    
    			Three year olds 14 furlongs and up
    
    123		Michelozzo		C. A. B. St. George	$  351,330
    116		Turgeon			George Strawbridge Jr.	$  102,911
    116		Weld			Lord John H. deWalden   $  166,177
    115		Mardonius		Shaikh Mohammed		$   95,480
    113		Lou Biella		D. M. Kendall 		$   35,107
481.115Arlucea purchased.GENRAL::LEECHPat Leech CX01/02 DTN 522-6044Thu Feb 01 1990 14:2014
    
    
    Stakes winner Arlucea, dam of 1989 champion older female Bayokoa, has
    been purchased privately by J. Mack Robinson of Atlanta, Georgia.  The
    mare is carrying a full sibling, by Consultant's Bid, to the Eclipse
    Award winner.
    
    Bred in Argentina by Ojo de Agua, 16-year-old Arlucea (Good
    Manners-Izarra, by Right of Way) arrived from South America in late
    December of 1989.  She is boarded at John A. Bell III's Jonabell Farm
    near Lexington.
    
    From The Blood Horse dated Jan. 27, 1990.
     
481.116Hawaii dead at age 26.GENRAL::LEECHPat Leech CX01/02 DTN 522-6044Thu Feb 01 1990 14:239
    
    Champion Hawaii, sire of 35 stakes winners, was destroyed on Jan. 16 at
    age 26 at Claiborne Farm (Seth Hancock, president) near Paris, Ky.,
    because of the infirmities of old age.  The South African-bred son of
    Utrillo II-Ethane, by Mehrali, has been pensioned since Oct. 1, 1989.
    
    From The Blood Horse dated Jan. 27, 1989.
    
     
481.117Shoemakers last ride.GENRAL::LEECHPat Leech CX01/02 DTN 522-6044Thu Feb 01 1990 14:4724
    Bill Shoemaker, victorious in an exciting race at Gulfstream Park on
    Jan. 20, will make his final ride at Sant Anita in a $100,000 stakes
    that will be run only once.  The race is being called the Legend's Last
    Ride.  
    
    Shoemaker, 58, will retire on Feb. 3 after the nationally televised
    race, his only ride of the afternoon at Santa Anita in California. The
    stakes will be run at a mile on turf for 4-year-olds and up.  Racing 
    secretary Tom Robbins wrote an unusual clause into the race's
    conditions that is binding on all owners and trainers who nominate.  In
    essence, it provides Shoemaker with a backup mount in case his horse is
    scratched, evan as late as when it is being loaded into the gate.
    
    At entry time, Feb. 1, the Shoe will be named on his principle mount by
    agent Bill Barisoff, at the same time indicating a second and a third
    choice.  If his mount is scratched, he will be put aboard his next
    choice, and the jockey losing his mount will be compensated.
    
    The Legend's Last Ride will be run as the fifth race on the card, with
    an approximate post time of 5:45 p.m. (EST).
    
    From The Blood Horse dated Jan. 27, 1989.
    
    
481.118Santa Anita Fracas.GENRAL::LEECHPat Leech CX01/02 DTN 522-6044Thu Feb 01 1990 14:5215
    
    
    Jockey Pat Valenzuela was suspended for five racing days (Jan. 20-26)
    and rider Chris McCarron was fined $200 by Santa Anita stewards
    following an incident on Jan. 15.  Valenzuela's mount came in and
    interfered with McCarron's mount , and McCarron reached over and struck
    Valenzuela with his whip.
    
    The ban was the second Valenzuela had received since returning to
    riding on Dec. 26 following a 60-day suspension for a cocain positive
    test.  On his first day back, Valenzuela was suspended five days after
    his mount, Flom, impeded Ms. Leroy.
    
    From The Blood Horse dated Jan. 27, 1990.
    
481.119SHOEAKOV13::LESAGEFri Feb 02 1990 17:203
    Saturday 2-3-90 Willie shoemaker rides his last race.  The race will be
    televised on ABC Wide World of Sports.  I wonder if they will let him
    win?
481.120Not with pari-mutual bettingGENRAL::LEECHPat Leech CX01/02 DTN 522-6044Fri Feb 02 1990 19:458
    
    
    With the race listed as a money added stakes race and pari-mutual 
    betting on the outcome the race will be run as any other race on that
    days card.  Any attempt to "let" him win will be considered race fixing
    and be prosecuted by the California racing commission.
    
    Pat
481.121last rideAKOV13::LESAGESat Feb 03 1990 00:262
    Many races are fixed.  I was just wondering if the other jockeys might
    not try so hard.  Anyway, we will see Saturday.
481.122Bill Shoemaker finished fourthGENRAL::LEECHPat Leech CX01/02 DTN 522-6044Mon Feb 05 1990 15:467
    
    
    Bill Shoemaker came in fourth in the Legends Last Race on a horse
    called Patchy Groundfog.  Both Shoemaker and Patchy Groundfog tried 
    hard, but got caught at the wire in a photo for third.
    
    Pat
481.123Classic Hopefuls at GulfstreamNANOOK::RAWDENRound up the usual suspects!Mon Feb 05 1990 23:2813
    From the Daily Racing Form, Sun. 2/4.
    
    Classic Hopefuls Drill at Gulf for Debuts
    
    Four of America's top classics hopefuls worked at Gulfstream Park
    Friday morning for their 1990 debuts.
    
    Dogwood Farm's Summer Squall went a half-mile in :48 1/5, Rokeby
    Stable's Red Ransom was timed five furlongs in 1:00 2/5; Nedlaw
    Statle's Roanoke went the same distance in :59 1/5 and Ogden Mills
    Phipps Adjudicating got a half-mile in :50.
    
    
481.124Beulah tragedy.GENRAL::LEECHPat Leech CX01/02 DTN 522-6044Tue Feb 06 1990 18:0316
    
    
    A four-horse, chain-reaction spill on Jan. 26 at Beulah Park resulted
    in the death of jockey Jeffery Righter, who suffered massive head
    injuries.  Righter, who underwent brain surgury, died the following
    day.
    
    The 27-year-old jockey was aboard Styloid, which was running near the
    middle of the pack in the turn, and appeared to clip heels with the 
    5 1/2-furlong event's eventual winner, Ruth's Babe.  Styloid fell,
    tossing Righter, and three other horses which could not avoid the
    accident also went down.  No serious injuries to those animals or their
    riders, Robert McWhorter, Eric Bruce, and Tim Gross, were reported.
    
    
    From The Blood Horse Feb. 3, 1990.
481.125Crown CandidatesGENRAL::LEECHPat Leech CX01/02 DTN 522-6044Tue Feb 06 1990 18:0916
    
    
    Ogden Mill Phipps' homebred Rhythm, champion two-year-old colt of 1989,
    is among the nominees to this years Triple Crown races--Kentucky Derby
    (Gr. I), Preekness Stakes (Gr. I). and Belmont Stakes (Gr. I).  Triple
    Crown productions released a list of 17 nominees in mid-January.  A
    complete list will be made available on Feb. 10.
    
    The 16 other tw0-year-olds listed by Triple Crown Productions as
    nominees were Grand Canyon, Summer Squall, Adjudicating,
    Champagneforashley, Drag Race, Magical Mile, Polish Numbers, Red
    Ransom, Richard R., Roanoke, Run Turn, Secret Hello, Senor Pete, silver
    Ending, Slavic and Yonder.
    
    From The Blood Horse dated Feb. 3, 1990
    
481.126The Foggiest IdeaGENRAL::LEECHPat Leech CX01/02 DTN 522-6044Tue Feb 06 1990 20:5229
    
    
    A $2,500 claimer at Delta Downs named Landing Officer resembled
    Secretariat on Jan. 11 when he charged down the streatch to win a race
    by 24 lengths.  Stewards immediately questioned the victory, Landing
    Officer's first in nearly a year, then disqualified the runner when
    they determined jockey Silvester Carmouche Jr. and Landing Officer had
    not covered the one-mile distance of the race, but had hidden in heavy
    fog covering most of the track while the other horses continued the
    race. 
    
    The one-mile race began from a chute at the top of the stretch of the 
    six-furlong track.  After the start, Carmouche stopped Landing Officer
    while the other horses continued.  When the field passed the finish
    line the first time, stewards counted only eight horses, instead of the
    nine which started, and they suspected a trick.
    
    When the field turned for home, Carmouche and Landing Officer emereged
    from the fog and effortlessly bounded home.  
    
    "He was running like a Quarter Horse, not like a Thoroughbred who had
    just run a mile," director of security J. L. Vincent said of Landing
    Officer.
    
    Stewards suspended Carmouche, 28, for the ramainder of the Delta Downs
    meeting, which ends April 1, and referred the case to the Louisiana
    State Racing Committee.
    
    From The Blood Horse dated Feb. 3, 1990.
481.127Genuine Risk loses foal.GENRAL::LEECHPat Leech CX01/02 DTN 522-6044Thu Feb 08 1990 15:4015
    
    
    A representative for Mr. and Mrs. Bertram R. Firestone has reported
    that 1980 Kentucky Derby (gr. I) winner Genuine Risk no longer is in
    foal to Cure the Blues, she having lost the foal in the early part of
    January.  Boarded at the Fireston's Big Sink Farm near Versailles, Ky.,
    Eclipse Award winner Genuine Risk is scheduled to be bred back to major
    winner Cure the Blues, which was bred and raced by the Firestones.
    
    Genuine Risk has yet to produce a live foal.  In her first attempt, she
    delivered a stillborn chestnut colt by Triple Crown winner Secretariat
    at the Fierstone's Catocitn Stud near Waterford, Va., in 1983.
    
    From The Blood Horse dated Feb. 3, 1990.
    
481.128Glasnost and riding honors.GENRAL::LEECHPat Leech CX01/02 DTN 522-6044Tue Feb 13 1990 13:5634
    
    
    Members of the Amature Riders Club of America and amature riders from
    the Soviet Union will compete in the first Galsnost Amature Challange
    at Turf Paradise on Feb. 25, marking the first appeareance of Soviet
    Amature riders in the United States.  The challange, part of Turf
    Paradise's Festival of the Horse weekend, will continue when the U.S. 
    riders travel to Moscow on June 20.
    
    The outstanding ARCA flat and steeplechase riders of 1989 recently were
    honored, and the Alec Wildenstein Awards were presented to leading male
    flat rider Joe Gillet and leading male steeplechase Colvin Ryan.  The
    Micheline Leurson Awards for championship female riders were presented
    to leading flat rider Sanna Neilson and leading steeplechase rider
    Blythe Miller.
    
    Leurson, head handicapper of the Societe d'Encouragement (France's
    Jockey Club), was the leading amature European rider for 12 seasons in
    the 1960s and 1970s.  She helped arrange for the leading amature female
    rider of the last two years to ride for two of France's leading
    trainers, Francois Boutin and Alec Head.  Neilson this year will
    compete in France.
    
    Other events on the 1990 ARCA schedule, according to Pierre Bellocq,
    including the Cannes-Hollywood Challange against amature French riders
    on March 4 at Cagnes-Sur-Mer race course near Cannes, France, and on
    July 15 at Hollywood Park.  Other ARCA races will be held in
    Czechoslovakia, England, Germany, Italy, Holland, Sweden, Spain,
    Belgium, Switzerland, and Madagascar.  In the United STates, amature
    races will be held in conjunction with the Arlington Million (gr.IT),
    Maryland Million, and Budweiser International (gr. IT).
    
    From The Blood Horse dated Feb. 10, 1990.
    
481.129On the Line destroyed.GENRAL::LEECHPat Leech CX01/02 DTN 522-6044Tue Feb 13 1990 14:1434
    
    
    Mr. and Mrs. Eugene V. Kleine's On the Line, which suffered a severe
    injury to his right foreleg during the running of the 1989 Breeder's
    Cup Sprint (gr. I), was destroyed at Belmont Park on Jan. 30 after
    contracting laminitus in his left foreleg,  The five-year-old horse
    had been operated on several times to repair serious damage of his
    superficial flexor tendon, deep flexor tendon, and tendon sheath caused
    during a chain reaction collision shortly after the start of the
    Sprint.
    
    On the Line was returned to trainer D. Wayne Lukas' barn at Belmont
    Park for surgury required three times to remove dead tissue from his
    injured leg.  He was attended by Dr. Steven Selway during the surgeries
    and by Dr. Selway and Dr. Jim Hunt during his recuperation.  A frog
    support was attached to his left foreleg to prevent the possibility of
    laminitus occurring, but because the horse put all of his weight on
    that leg, he nevertheless contracted laminitis.
    
    "He seemed to be doing much better," Lukas' New York assistant, Kiaran
    McLaughlin, said.  "His injured leg had a brace on it, and it was
    healing up quite well.  We fought off infection and colic, but from the
    first day, we knew that foundering in his left front would be the main
    problem.  The last 10 days, he just really went downhill with that
    foot. Dr. Selway and Dr. Hunt were working together on the horse, and
    it was a mutual agreement to humanely destroy him."
    
    Bred in Florida by International Thoroughbred Breeders, On the Line
    (Mehmet-Male Strike, by Speak John) won 14 of 37 career races,
    including the 1989 Carterr Handicap (gr. I), and earned $1,125,810.  
    
    From The Blood Horse dated. Feb. 10, 1990.
    
    
481.130Australia findings.GENRAL::LEECHPat Leech CX01/02 DTN 522-6044Tue Feb 13 1990 14:2732
    
    
    Nearly three months after Cole Diesal finished a shocking 16th in
    Australia's prestigious Melboure Cup (Aus-I), the Australian Jockey
    Club laboratory determined that the runner might have been doped with
    timolol, which is prescribed to humans to control high blood pressure
    or angina.  Timolol deadens the body's response to activity or
    excitement.  The AJC laboratory recently perfected a method to unmask
    the drug, which might have been administed to as many as 19 horses in
    the country.
    
    On the day of the Melbourne Cup, rumors that Cole Diesal had been doped
    circulated around the track, and police were investigating two
    telephone calls to the runner's connections threatening to kill Cole
    Diesal.  After the race, stewards ordered and immediate veterinary
    inspection of the horse, but no signs of foul play were found.
    
    The unmasking of timolol by the AJC laboratory has sent shivers through
    the entire Australian racing and breeding industry.  Race club
    adminstrators and the police have been alerted to the positive findings
    by the AJC, and all clubs have tightened security.  The two groups have
    organized a massive hunt to smash what is thought to be a gang of horse
    dopers.
    
    The Oval, Consort, and Signal-three other horses in which Timolol was
    found-were beaten by margins ranging from 12 to 23 1/4 lengths in races
    in which they were the favorites.  The horses were given the ususal
    pre-race tests, but the drug did not show up until exhastive testing
    took place in the laboratory.  Positive test from two of the horses
    came from frozen urine and blood samples.
                                  
    From The Blood Horse dated Feb. 10, 1990.
481.131Farewell to Fairway Fortune.GENRAL::LEECHPat Leech CX01/02 DTN 522-6044Tue Feb 13 1990 14:4628
    
    
    A son of Norther Dancer is set to make history.  Fairway Fortune, an
    unraced son of the pensioned champpion, is scheduled to be sent to
    Voskhed Stud in the Soviet Union on Feb. 14, following quarentine.  He
    is believed to be the first United States-bred Thoroughbred purchased
    by the Soviets in some 30 years.  Among the horses which were bred at
    Voskhed was international performer Anilin, which stood at the farm for
    six years prior to his death.
    
    Ten-year-old Fairway Fortune (Northern Dancer-Out in the Cold, by Beau
    Purple) was selected by Kazbek Dsalaev during a visit to Spenthrift
    Farm in May of 1989.  Dsalaev is a director of the Central Central
    Moscow Hippodrome and president of the International Horse Breeding
    Congress of the socialist countries.
    
    Sire of graded stakes winner Storm Predictions, Fairway Fortune was
    owned by Spendthrift and William Floyd. Charles Boden of Cane Ridge
    Thoroughbred Company near Lexington and Kim Ewonus of Heritage Sports
    in Ohio helped represent Floyd and Spendthrift in the transaction.
    
    During the negotiations, complecations arose over the method of payment
    and thje manner in which the payment would be made.  The Soviet ruble
    is non-convertable, and the Soviets did not want to pay until the horse
    arrived in the Soviet Union.  Both problems reportedly have been
    resolved.
    
    From The Blood Horse dated Feb. 10, 1990.
481.132Grand Canyon Sidelined.GENRAL::LEECHPat Leech CX01/02 DTN 522-6044Wed Feb 21 1990 15:0731
    
    
    
    Kentucky Derby (gr. I) winterbook favorite Grand Canyon will be away
    from the races four months with strained flexor muscles in the left
    knee.  The injury also resulted in secondary inflamation of the carpal
    sheath covering the tendon.
    
    Grand Canyon bruised the carpal sheath when he stumbled while being
    pulled up after winning the the Hollywood Futurity (gr. I) last fall.
    Rumors had circulated all winter about Grand Canyon's condition.  His
    first work of the year, a half-mile in :48 4/5 on February 6,
    aggravated the earlier injury.
    
    "The vet said we could have gone on with him, byt we'd just as soon
    give him time to heal to be ready for the races at the end of the
    year," said trainer D. Wayne Lukas, who owns the colt in partnership
    W. T. Young's Overbrook Farm.
    
    Grand Canyon, runner-up to Rhythem in Eclipse award balloting for
    champion 2-year-old colt of 1989, will be sent to Lukas' training
    center in Del Mar.
    
    "Dr. (Gregory) Ferraro said that there was no need to stop on him
    completely, so we'll ride him at a walk under tack," Lukas said.
    
    Grand Canyon, an $825,000 yearling, won foour of eight races last year
    and finished second to Rhythm in the Breeders' Cup Juvinile (gr. I). He
    has earned $1,019,540.
    
    From The Blood Horse dated Feb. 17, 1990.  
481.133Java Gold's first.GENRAL::LEECHPat Leech CX01/02 DTN 522-6044Wed Feb 21 1990 15:1311
    
    
    The first foal sired by multiple grade I winner Java Gold was born on 
    Jan. 23 at Dr. and Mrs. R. Smiser Wests's Waterford Farm near Midway, 
    Kentucky.  The foal was produced from Edward Kessly's and Dr. Spike
    Kirby's The Minstrel mare, Key to the Minstrel, which will be bred to 
    Alysheba.
    
    
    
    From The Blood Horse dated Feb. 17, 1990.
481.134Sunday Silence resumes training.GENRAL::LEECHPat Leech CX01/02 DTN 522-6044Wed Feb 21 1990 16:128
    
    
    Horse of the Year Sunday Silence, which soon will begin light training
    in preparation for his return to racing after surgury to remove a bone
    chip, is among 62 horses nominated to the May 12 Pimlico Special (gr.
    I).  The others include champion Easy Goer.
    
    From The Blood Horse dated Feb. 17, 1990.
481.135More trouble for Suffolk DownsGENRAL::LEECHPat Leech CX01/02 DTN 522-6044Wed Feb 21 1990 16:2223
    
    
    Although Suffolk Downs has been closed for more than a month, the
    troubles of the track are far from over.  At a hearing on Jan. 31
    before the Massachusetts State Racing Commission, Suffolk vice
    president Robert O'Malleymwas asked to prove why New Suffolk Downs, the
    track lessee, should not be fined for failing to winterize the racing
    surface by the Nov. 15, 1989, deadline and for falling three days short
    of its 250-day schedule for last year.
    
    Alan Hoffman, an attorney representing New Suffolk Downs, argued that
    because the racing legislation passed in early 1988 had expired on Dec.
    31 of last year, the racing commission no longerhad the authority to
    impose the fines.  O'Malley cited a lack of available funds as one
    reason the track was not winterized.
    
    The commission is expected to rule on the matter by March 7.  New
    Suffolk Downs faces fines of $10,000 for each of the 26 racing days the
    track surface was not winterized and $15,000 for the three days short
    of 250 that Suffolk did not run.
    
    From The Blood Horse dated Feb. 17, 1990.
    
481.136Medication violations in New York.GENRAL::LEECHPat Leech CX01/02 DTN 522-6044Wed Feb 21 1990 16:2610
    
    
    On Feb. 2, the first day Peter Ferriola returned to training after
    serving a 120 day suspension for medication violations, a horse he
    trains was scratched from a race at Aqueduct after testing positive for
    the anagesic Flunixin, prohibited in New York.  The New York State
    Racing and Wagering Board will investigate the finding.
    
    
    From The Blood Horse dated Feb. 17, 1990.
481.137Horse drugging in Texas.GENRAL::LEECHCustomer Services Engineer ** We do the job **Wed Feb 28 1990 17:0613
    
    
    Sidney Thomas Zarges, an El Paso, Texas, veterinarian accused of
    drugging a Quarter Horse which raced in the 1987 All American Futurity,
    has pleaded no contest to ordering an assistant to prepare a false
    document.  In exchange for the plea, federal prosecuters have agreed to
    drop an eight-count indictment charging Zargas with drugging horses
    before races.  Zargas faces a $4.6-million civil suit that was filed by
    the owner of another horse which competed in the 1987 All American
    Futurity.
    
    From The Blood Horse dated Feb. 24, 1990.
    
481.138Hansen warned off.GENRAL::LEECHCustomer Services Engineer ** We do the job **Wed Feb 28 1990 17:1216
    
    
    Attempted bribary allegations, one dating back to 1986, were behind the
    banning of jockey Ron Hansen from Golden Gate Fields in early
    February.  The allegations were discolsed during an administrative
    before the California Horse Racing Board on Feb. 16.  Benjamin Felton,
    a former board member who served as a referee for the hearing, hoped to
    issue a recommendation on the matter in time for the board's monthly
    meeting on Feb. 23.
    
    After being banned from Golden Gate Fields, Hansen was denied access to
    Santa Anita.  Hansen is seeking reinstatement through the CHRB as well
    as through Alameda County Superior Court.
    
    From The Blood Horse dated Feb. 24, 1990.
    
481.139Full sister to Suday SilenceGENRAL::LEECHCustomer Services Engineer ** We do the job **Wed Feb 28 1990 17:258
      
    
    Horse of the Year Sunday Silence's full sister arrived on Feb. 8 at Oak
    Tree near Lexington.  The Halo-Wishing Well filly is owned by Way Oak
    Cliff Ltd.  Her dam is to be bred to Halo.
    
    From The Blood Horse dated Feb.24, 1990.
    
481.140Anew track for Massachusetts.GENRAL::LEECHCustomer Services Engineer ** We do the job **Wed Feb 28 1990 17:3932
    
    
    An informal meeting was held in Wrentham, Mass., on Feb. 12 to discuss 
    plans for King Phillip Downs, a track proposed by road developer Ben
    Simeone.
    
    The meeting, sponsored by the Wrentham Citizans Alliance, included a
    panel made up of Henry O'Donnell, chairman of the Massachusets' racing
    commission; Gary Saccocia, vice-president of the local division of the 
    Horsemen's Benevolent and Protective Association; Susan Walsh, chairman
    of the Massachusetts Thoroughbred Breeders Association; veterinarian
    Dr. Richard Sheehan; and members of the King Phillip Downs developement
    team.  The panel responded to questions from Wrentham residents
    concerning security, traffic problems, noise, waste disposal, and
    environmental impact.
    
    Massachusetts State Senator Thomas Norton, under whose jurisdiction the
    track would fall, attended the meeting and expressed optimism for the
    plan, but cautioned that no off-track betting legislation would be
    filed in the state until a solid proposal for a Thoroubred track was in
    the works.  Plans call for King Phillip Downs, which will have a
    capacity of 5,000, to be a part of a simulcast system involving eight
    to 10 teletheaters scattered throughout Massachusetts.
    
    A meeting regarding zoning language will take place on March 7, and a
    task force consisting of community leaders and citizens studying the
    track project is expected to report its findings on March 29.  A town
    meeting to vote on the project could be scheduled for as soon as early 
    April.
    
    From The Blood Horse dated Feb.24, 1990.
      
481.141Hay alert.GENRAL::LEECHCustomer Services Engineer ** We do the job **Wed Feb 28 1990 17:4826
    
    
    According to a report in the Feb. 15 JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN VETERINARY
    MEDICAL ASSOCIATION, a problem with botulism in horses in California in
    late 1989 was attributed to contamination with a Clostridium botulism
    organism in alfalfa hay cubes.  Forty-five horses were reported to have
    been affected, with 32 deaths.
    
    The toxin interferes with proper function of a horse's nerve endings. 
    Symptoms of botulism can range from mild locomotor abnormalities to
    death within a short period of time.
    
    Contamination with a Clostridium botulinum organism can occur in
    decaying or decomposed animal or plant material.  If hay is baled too
    wet, and is baled compactly (which prevent oxygen from entering the
    bale), then it could promote growth of the organism from the
    contamination source.
    
    Animals, such as rodents, occasionally are killed in the process of
    baling hay, and dead animals are a prime source of the Clostridium
    botulinum toxin.  Therefore, all tightly baled hay should be broken
    open and inspected for animal skeletons or skins before being fed to
    horses.  Hay that contains animals should be discarded.
    
    From The Blood Horse dated Feb.24, 1989.
    
481.142Personal Ensign foals.GENRAL::LEECHCustomer Services Engineer ** We do the job **Wed Feb 28 1990 17:5612
    
    
    Ogden Phipps' Personal Ensign produced her first foal, a Mr. Prospector
    colt, on Feb. 15, at Claiborne Farm (Seth Hancock, president) near
    Paris, Kentucky.  Champion older distaffer of 1988, Personal Ensign
    retired unbeaten in 13 starts in her career after she won the Breeders'
    Cup Distaff (gr. I).  That event was voted Race of the Year for 1988 by
    readers of THE BLOOD HORSE.  Personal Ensign is scheduled to be bred
    this year to Danzig.
    
    From The Blood Horse dated Feb. 24, 1990.
    
481.143Not so exotic anymore.GENRAL::LEECHCustomer Services Engineer ** We do the job **Wed Feb 28 1990 18:3742
    
    
    Various combination wagers, traditionally called exotic wagering, as
    distinguished from straight win-place-show wagering, were addressed
    during a TRA seminar.  As New York Times racing columnist Steven Crist 
    remarked, the term exotic is now a misnomer. 
    
    "On a recent afternoon at Gulfstream Park," Crist pointed out,
    "$650,000 was bet on win, place, and show, and $1.25 million was bet on
    so-called exotics.
    
    "If we stopped exotic wagering, we would not have racing, in some
    cases," noted Crist., a panel member who spoke up strongly for the
    concept of combination wagers.  Crist added that he believes bettors
    should have a $1 bet option on multiple wagers.
    
    "Many customers won't spend $24 for a three-horse exacta box (with a $2
    bet minimum), but they would spend $6 (with a $1 bet minimum)," Crist
    said.  He also disputed fears that multiple race combinations reduce
    the churn by tying up a bettor's money longer than betting one race at
    a time.  He said he doubts that bettors will place bets on multiple
    race combinations and then stand idly by and watch the program unfold
    without also having some action on each individual race.
    
    Crist urged tracks to recognize that they are in the "business of
    selling parimutual tickets" and to continue to provide exotic wagers,
    especially multiple-race bets.
    
    The proposition that exotic wagering is now actually mainstream
    wagering was bourne out by a study reported on by Tim Schmad, assistant
    general maager of Ak-Sar-Ben.  Schmad, however, said his track's survey
    had found "mixed reviews" and a focus group indicated "real
    handicappers are pretty well split on the subject, which suprised us".
    
    At the Nebraska track's live meeting, 55 per cent of the betting was on
    exotics and 45 per cent on straight betting.  At a recently concluded
    session of only simulcasting (from Fairgrounds), however, the
    percentage bet on exotics was higher, 63 per cent. with 37 per cent bet
    on straight wagers.
    
    From The Blood Horse dated Feb. 24, 1990.
     
481.144Plans for Epsom DownsGENRAL::LEECHCustomer Services Engineer ** We do the job **Wed Feb 28 1990 19:0836
481.145Record win at Remington.GENRAL::LEECHCustomer Services Engineer ** We do the job **Tue Mar 06 1990 13:3110
    
    
    One winning ticket in Remington Park's Pick Six on Feb. 24 was worth
    $1,070,482.  Remington's handle for the entire day's program was a
    record $ 2,808,243.  Attendance was 23,280, second-highest in the
    history of the Oklahoma track.
    
    From The Blood Horse dated Mar. 3, 1990.
    
    
481.146Another honor for the Shoe.GENRAL::LEECHCustomer Services Engineer ** We do the job **Tue Mar 06 1990 13:3715
    
    
    Hollywood Park has changed the name of the Premiere Handicap (gr. IIT)
    to the Shoemaker Handicap in honor of recently retired Hall-of-Fame
    rider Bill shoemaker, who captured his 1,000th career stakes win when
    he won the 1989 Premiere aboard Peace.  The eight-furlong,
    $100,000-added race for three-year-olds will be run on April 29.
    
    Shoemaker also won the Premiere, first run in 1938, aboard Special
    Touch (1951), Pet Bully (1953), Stranglehold (1954), Fleet Discovery
    (1967), and Farnesio (1979).  He is scheduled to make his training
    debut when the Hollywood meeting opens on April 25.
    
    From The Blood Horse dated Mar. 3, 1990.
    
481.147Churchill Stakes.GENRAL::LEECHCustomer Services Engineer ** We do the job **Tue Mar 06 1990 13:5619
    
    
    Preceding the 116th Kentuckey Derby (gr. I) on May 5, Churchill Downs
    will contest nine stakes, including the April 28 Derby Trial Stakes
    (gr. III) and the May 4 Kentucky Oaks (gr. I).  Those three races are
    among eight graded events on Churchill's 22-stakes schedule , worth a
    total of $2-million, for the track's spring meeting (April 28-July 1).
    
    The Kentucky Derby, first event in racing's Triple Crown, is a 1
    1/4-mile race for three-year-olds worth $350,000-added.  One of the
    final Derby prep races, the Derby Trial is a one-mile race.  Run the
    same day as the $200,000-added Kentucky Oaks, a 1 1/8-mile race for
    3-year-old fillies, is the $150,000-added Louisville Budweiser 
    Breeders' Cup Handicap (gr. II), a 1 1/16-mile race for fillies and
    mares, 3-year-old and up.
    
    From The Blood Horse dated Mar. 3, 1990.
    
    
481.148A New Derby Prep.GENRAL::LEECHCustomer Services Engineer ** We do the job **Tue Mar 06 1990 15:2015
    
    
    Because of the closing of Hialeah, one of the traditional prep races
    for the Kentucky Derby (gr. I), the Falmingo Stakes, will not be run on
    April 7.  To provide trainers with another opportunity to race their
    classic candidates in Florida, Gulfstream is offering a $200,000-added
    race called the Preview Stakes on April 7.  The 1 1/8-mile Preview will
    fall three weeks after the Florida Derby (gr. I) and a month before the
    Kentucky Derby.
    
    The Preview will be run the same day as the Gotham Stakes (gr. II) and
    the Santa Anita Derby (gr. I).  The race will be televised on ABC's
    "Wide World of Sports".
    
    
481.149Sky Classic out of the Derby.GENRAL::LEECHCustomer Services Engineer ** We do the job **Tue Mar 06 1990 15:2614
    
    
    Ernie Samual's Sam-Son Farm and trainer Jim Day lost their leading
    United States Triple Crown candidate when the 1989 Canadian champion
    2-year-old, Sky Classic, was found to have a hair-line fracture of his
    right hind pastern after he won the Grey Stakes (gr. III) last October.
    The half-brother to Canadian champions Classy 'n Smart, Grey Classic,
    and Regal Classic is recuperating at Sam-Son's Ocala, Fla., farm and is
    being pointed to the Canadian Triple Crown, which commences with the
    Queen's Plate (Can-IR) in July.
    
    From The Blood Horse dated Mar. 3, 1990.
    
    
481.150Gold Digger Dead.GENRAL::LEECHCustomer Services Engineer ** We do the job **Tue Mar 06 1990 15:4028
    
    
    Gold Digger, dam of major winner and leading sire Mr. Prospector, was
    destroyed on Feb. 21 at Spendthrift Farm (Cap Hershey, president) near
    Lexington because of the infirmities of old age.  She was buried in the
    Lion's Circle cemetery at the farm.
    
    Bred by Spendthrift founder Leslie Combs II in partnership with his
    uncle, Brownell Combs, Gold Digger won five stakes and earned $127,255
    while racing in the name of Mrs. Leslie Combs II.  Her second foal, Mr.
    Prospector (by Raise A Native) was purchased by A.I. (Butch) Savin for 
    $220,000 at the 1971 Keenland summer yearling sale.  The price was the
    second-highest paid for a yearling in 1971.
    
    Mr. Prospector excelled at sprinting, running six furlongs in 1:07 4/5
    at Gulfstream Park.  The 20-year-old stallion, which twice has topped
    the leading sires' list, has sired 94 stakes winners, including 13
    champions.
    
    Some four weeks after Mr. Prospector won the 1974 Gravesend Handicap,
    his yearling full brother was sold for a then-record $625,000 at the
    Keenland summer sale.  Named Kentucky Gold, the colt won one of seven
    races.  Six years later, a Northern Dancer-Gold Digger yearling colt
    was sold for $1.4 million at the Keenland July sale.  Only two other
    yearlings of 1980 commanded a higher price.
    
    From The Blood Horse dated Mar. 3, 1990.
     
481.151Cryptoclearance retired.GENRAL::LEECHCustomer Services Engineer ** We do the job **Tue Mar 06 1990 15:5327
    
    
    Phil Teinowitz' major winner Cryptoclearance, racing's 11th-leading
    money earnerto have raced in North America, has been retired from
    racing after suffering a pulled digital sesamoid ligament on the inside
    of his left foreleg during a workout at Gulfstream Park on Feb. 18. 
    The 6-year-old horse worked six furlongs in 1:14 in preparation fot the 
    Feb. 24 Donn Handicap (gr. I) under the direction of trainer Flint S.
    (Scotty) Schulhofer.
    
    Cryptoclearance (Fappiano-Naval Orange, by Hoist the Flag) was bred in
    Kentucky by Thomas P. Whitney.  Teiniwitz purchased Cryptoclearance for
    $190,000 at the 1985 Keenland September yearling sale from the
    consignment of Eaton-Williams, agent.
    
    Cryptoclearance developed a reputation as a game come-from-behind
    competitor by finishing in the top three in 25 added-money races.  He
    won eight graded stakes, including the 1987 Florida Derby (gr. I) and 
    Pegasus Handicap (gr. I) and the 1989 Donn and Weidner (gr. I)
    Handicaps.
    
    Cryptoclearance placed in 11 grade I stakes, including the 1987
    Belmont, Preakness, Flamingo, and Travers stakes and the 1989 Jockey
    Club Gold Cup.  He also ran fourth in the Kenyucky Derby (gr. I).  He
    was retired with 12 wins from 44 races and earnings of $3,376,327.
    
    From The Blood Horse Mar. 3, 1990.
481.152Aliysa retired.GENRAL::LEECHCustomer Services Engineer ** We do the job **Tue Mar 06 1990 16:0019
    
    
    The Aag Khan's homebred 1989 English champion filly Aliysa has been
    retired from racing.  Stabled at Duncan, Ben, and Frank Taylor's Taylor
    Made Farm near Nicholasville, Ky., the 4-year-old filly is scheduled to
    be bred to Blushing Groom, which raced for the Aga Khan.
    
    Irish-bred Aliysa (Darshaan-Alanya, by Relko) won the 1989 Oaks Stakes
    (Eng-I) and Oaks Trial Stakes.  She later tested positive for the drup
    camphor following her classic win.  According to David Pipe, a
    representative for the English Jockey Clu, an inquiry is scheduled to
    be held this spring to decide whether she should be disqualified.
    
    In her two other races last year, Aliysa ran second in the Irish Oaks
    (Ire-I) and finished unplaced in the Prix de l'Arc de Triomphe (Fr-I).
    She retired with three wins from five races and earnings of $286,155.
    
    From The Blood Horse Mar. 3, 1990.
    
481.153New foals for Forty Niner and Risen Star.GENRAL::LEECHCustomer Services Engineer ** We do the job **Tue Mar 06 1990 17:2211
    
    
    Divisional rivals as 3-year-olds in 1988, champion Risen Star and major
    winner Forty Niner recently sired their forst foals.  The Forty Niner
    foal, a filly from Berth, was foaled at Claiborne Farms near Paris,
    Ky., on Feb. 6 and was bred by Cherry Valley Farm and William Haggin
    Perry.  The Risen Star foal, a colt from Mazatleca, was foaled at Three
    chimneys Farm near Midway Ky., on Jan. 29 and was bred by Axmer Stable.
    
    The Blood Horse Mar. 3, 1990.
    
481.154Eugene Klein dead at 69.GENRAL::LEECHCustomer Services Engineer ** We do the job **Tue Mar 13 1990 18:2328
    
    
    Gene Klein, who reached sports pinnacles as owner of the San Diego
    Chargers and a Kentucky Derby winner, died Monday.  He was 69.
    
    Klein, who owned the Chargers for 18 years before selling the club in
    1984, was stricken at his home.  He was pronounced dead at a hospital.
    
    Klein reportedly was suffering from an irregular heartbeat.  He had a 
    history of heart problems, including a 1981 seizure on the witness
    stand in Los Angeles during the Raiders antitrust suit against the NFL.
    
    One of Klein's last acts as Chargers owner was to help persuade other
    owners to award San Diego its first Super Bowl game, which was played
    at Jack Murphy Stadium in 1988.  But Klein left football disillusioned
    by labor and drug problems and his feud with Raiders managing general
    partner Al Davis.
    
    After the sale of the club, Klein became heavily involved in
    Thoroughbred racing.  He often said that he didn't have to worry about
    a horse demanding to renegotiate a contract or staging a holdout for
    more hay.
    
    One of Klein's fillies, Winning Colors, captured the 1988 Kentucky
    Derby.  His horses also won seven Breeders' Cup races.
    
    From the Gazette Telegraph Mar. 13, 1990.
    
481.155Fedinands first foal.GENRAL::LEECHCustomer Services Engineer ** We do the job **Fri Mar 16 1990 00:0413
    
    
    Multiple stakes winner Agitated Lady produced the first Ferdinand foal,
    a chestnut filly, on Jan. 19 at M. W. Miller's Deer Lawn Farm near
    Winchester, Ky.  Agitated Lady, owned by the partnership of Deer Lawn
    Farm, John W. Russell, and Robert Mayes, will be bred to Majestic
    Light.  Ferdinand, 1987 Horse of the Year and champion older horse,
    earned $3,777978 during his career.  His wins include triumphs in the
    1986 Kentucky Derby (gr. I) and 1987 Breeders' Cup Classic (gr. I).
    
    The Blood Horse Mar. 10, 1990.
    
    
481.156A million in gold.GENRAL::LEECHCustomer Services Engineer ** We do the job **Fri Mar 16 1990 00:1321
    
    
    The purse of the Hollywood Gold Cup Handicap (gr. I) has been increased
    $5000,000 to $1 million, making the race one of 15 grade I races
    currently run in the United States that are worth $1 million or more.
    Hollywood Park is the only track in the country to offer two $1 million 
    races, the other being the Hollywood Futurity (gr. I) for 2-year-olds.
    
    The 51st Gold Cup, a 10-furlong race for three-year-olds and up, will
    be run on June 24, and prospective starters include Horse of the Year
    Sunday Silence.  Racing secretary Eual G. Wyatt Jr. said that horsemen
    who keep Gold Cup nominees eligible with a sustaining payment of $3,000
    on or before May 9 will not have to pay a nomination or starting fees
    to race those horses in the May 20 Mervin LeRoy Handicap (gr. I) or the
    June 3 California Stakes (gr. I).
    
    The Gold Cup is one of 35 stakes worth $5.9 million to be run during
    Hollywood's spring/summer meeting from April 25 through July 23.  Nine
    of the stakes are grade I events.
    
    The Blood Horse Mar. 10, 1990. 
481.157Fraud found out.GENRAL::LEECHCustomer Services Engineer ** We do the job **Fri Mar 16 1990 00:2120
    
    
    A three-month investigation by the Thoroughbred Racing Protective
    Bureau, the FBI, and the Kentucky State Police into a sceme to kill
    race horses to collect insurance money has resulted in the arrest of
    Dr. Joseph James Brown at Calder Race Course.  When Dr. Brown, a
    dentist from Shelby County, Ky., was arrested on Feb. 17, he had two
    vials of a clear, unnamed liquid and two syringes hidden in his socks,
    according to the FBI report.
    
    Through the work of the TRPB undercover agent Chris Blubaugh, Dr.
    Brown's scheme was revealed early in the year.  Dr. Brown was to have
    received $15,000 for killing one horse by injection when he was
    arrested.  Three days later, he was released on a $5,000 bond.  Dr.
    Brown has named as his attorney his brother, Bart Brown of Cincinnati,
    Ohio.  If he is convicted, he could receive a five-year prison sentence
    and as much as a $1,000 fine.
    
    The Blood Horse Mar. 10, 1990.
    
481.158Roaring and SleepingGENRAL::LEECHCustomer Services Engineer ** We do the job **Fri Mar 16 1990 00:3639
    
    
    New information has been provided to help decide whether left laryngeal
    hemiplegia (roaring) is inherited.  The Cornell University College of
    Veterinay Medicine's March issue of ANIMAL HEALTH NEWSLETTER reported
    researchers in Switzerland have issued a preliminary report on a
    possible genetic basis for the condition.
    
    The research involved endoscoping 47 offspring of an affected stallion
    and a control group of 50 unrelated horses to compare the occurance of
    the condition.  The researchers reported 47 percent of the related
    group were affected or suspected of having the condition, compared to
    10 percent in the control group.  the result seems to support the
    theory of a genetic link.
    
    Researchers also noted the affected offspring were "significantly
    taller than the sound offspring, reaffirming the long-held association
    between laryngeal hemiplegia and height."
    
    The Cornell publication also included a report on a study by Linda
    Hunter and Katherine A. Houpt on bedding prefeneces of equines.  Using
    ponies and video monitoring, the researchers determined the animals
    preferred bedded stalls over non-bedded concrete stalls.  There were
    some individual preferences in type of bedding such as straw vs. wood
    shavings.  The keynote to the study was that although equines spend
    only a small porion of their time lying down, that time is critical.
    
    "REM (rapid eye movement) or paradoxical sleep can only take place when
    the animal is lying down, and REM sleep is essential for good health,"
    the report stated.  "Thus, a bedded stall can be considered a
    prerequisite for REM sleep.
    
    "A horse given only concrete or a muddy paddock may well wind up not
    getting adequate REM sleep.  And it might well be that some of the
    so-called behavorial problems seen in horses stalled without adequate
    bedding are due to insufficient REM sleep."
    
    The Blood Horse Mar. 10, 1990.
     
481.159Arlington Stakes.GENRAL::LEECHCustomer Services Engineer ** We do the job **Fri Mar 16 1990 00:5028
481.160Million Dollar Date.GENRAL::LEECHCustomer Services Engineer ** We do the job **Fri Mar 16 1990 13:4217
481.161Pinhooking at Calder.GENRAL::LEECHCustomer Services Engineer ** We do the job **Fri Mar 16 1990 13:5118
    
    
    Statistics on pinhooking reveal that buying horses for resale at public
    auction is a thriving business within the Thoroughbred industry. 
    Pinhooking can be a risky venture, however, because of training
    expenditures and the multitude of things that can go wrong before it is
    time to resell the animal.  Despite the risks, the number of horses
    purchased for resale continues to grow, and for the professional, it
    can be a lucrative business.
    
    Of the 190 juvinals sold at the Fasig-Tipton Florida sale of
    2-year-olds in training from Feb. 26-March 1 at Calder Race Course, 127
    were sold last year as yearlings.  Average price brought by the 127
    last year as yearlings was $35,264.  At the four-day Calder sale, that
    group sold for an average of $72,614, an increase of 51 per cent.
    
    The Blood Horse March 10, 1990.
    
481.162Jockey finds it rough going at Los Al...DELNI::KEIRANMon Mar 19 1990 15:4922
    Los Alamitos Harness invited eight top thoroughbred jockeys from
    Santa Anita to participate in a charity driving exhibition at the
    southern California track late in January.  As its part in the 
    proceedings, Los Alamitos donated $10,000 to the Don MacBeth
    Memorial Fund for disabled jockeys-and one of the participants
    in the exhibition nearly became a qualified recipient of the fund!
    
    In the exhibitions four-horse raceoff, pacer Trixie Norton, driven
    by renowned jock Laffit Pincay stumbled leaving the gate from the
    three-hole and pitched Pincay out of the jog cart.  He sustained a
    fractured right collarbone and was expected to miss riding assignments
    for at least a month.  Jockeys Chris McCarron, Gary Stevens, and
    Rafael Meza managed to avoid the fallen horse and driver.
    
    The exhibition race drew one of the largest crowds of the season at
    Los Alamitos, but track officials believe the $1.15 million in
    handle would have been higher except for a temporary malfunction
    of the mutuel windows in the grandstand.  Despite the setbacks,
    track publicist Dick Feinberg says Los Alamitos hopes to host a
    similar exhibition again in the future.
    
    Copied from the March 1990 issue of Hoofbeats
481.163No Rehearsal.GENRAL::LEECHCustomer Services Engineer ** We do the job **Thu Mar 22 1990 18:2136
    
    
    Jockey Lori Strickland thought a horse was running loose on the track
    during the 11th race at Charles Town on Feb. 28.  She and her mount
    were racing last in the 10-horse field when she heard another jockey,
    Lillian Kuykendall, yell, "Loose horse!"
    
    Strickland then saw outriders coming toward the field, and a few
    strides later on, she saw what happened.  The starting gate had not
    been moved and was blocking the track, and the horses still had almost
    a lap to go in a 1 1/16-mile race over the six furlong track.
    
    A one-inch thick locking pin that connects the starting gate to a
    waiting tractor had broken, preventing the gate crew from removing the
    equipment from its position across the backstreatch.  Starter Joe
    Graham radioed the stewards, who informed announcer Costy Caras and
    outriders Art Muzzy and Clyde Best of the situation.
    
    "I couldn't hear him (Caras)," Strickland said, "but he was telling the
    riders to pull up.  No one was sure what had happened."  
    
    Galloping the wrong way to meet the field head on, the outriders
    gathered the pony riders, and the troop charged along the outside of
    the track to help the jockeys pullup their mounts.
    
    "Within 40 seconds everybody was under control," state steward Joe
    Servis said.  "That's nothing you can rehearse."
    
    Stewards declared the race no contest, and the track refunded $47,673
    wagered.  Now the starting gate is equipped with a locking pin at each
    end.  The incident cost Charles Town's leading rider, Tim Marchant, a
    chance at winning a race for the seventh consecutive day.  Marchant's
    mount was making a move to the lead when the race was halted.
    
    The Blood Horse Mar. 17, 1990.
    
481.164A Silent Interest.GENRAL::LEECHCustomer Services Engineer ** We do the job **Thu Mar 22 1990 18:3231
    
    
    Zenya Yoshida, one of Japan's leading breeders, has purchased a
    25-percent interest in 1989 Horse of the Year Sunday Silance, majority
    owner Arthur Hancock announced on March 8.  The purchase price was
    reported to be $2.25 million.
    
    Hancock said he and Sunday Silence's other owners, trainer Charlie
    Whittingham and Dr. Ernest Gaillard, were approched several weeks ago
    about selling the horse to Yoshida, his son Teruya Yoshida, and other
    Japanese interest.  Hancock said he and his partners turned down an
    initial offer of $7 million by the group and another offer of $10
    million made by the elder Yoshida.
    
    Acceptance of the first two offers would have meant that Sunday Silence
    would have raced in this country this year, then be exported to Japan
    for stud duty.  Under the agreement that was made, Sunday Silence will
    complete his racing career in this country, then will enter stud at
    Hancock's Stone Farm near Paris, Ky., where the colt was foaled and
    raised.  The dual classic winner has been returned to training and is
    scheduled to make his 4-year-old debut during the Hollywood Park
    meeting, which begins on April 25.
    
    Zenya Yoshida has been a prominent buyer in this country for nearly two
    decades.  In 1973, Yoshida was part of a four-man partnership that
    purchased Wajima for a then-record $600,000 at the Keenland summer
    yearling sale. At the Keenland summer yearling sale last year, Yoshida
    paid $2.8 million to purchase the last Norther Dancer colt sold at
    public austion.
    
    The Blood Horse Mar. 17, 1990. 
481.165Lost Code's first foal.GENRAL::LEECHCustomer Services Engineer ** We do the job **Thu Mar 22 1990 18:3612
    
    
    The first foal by mahor winner Lost Code was born on Jan. 17 at Mr. and
    Mrs. David Mowat's Fawn Leap Farm near Midway Ky.  The colt was
    produced from stakes winner Oh So Precious.  Conditioned by Bill
    Donovan, Lost Code won a dozen added-money events while racing at three
    and four for Wendover Stable.  Oh So Precious will be bred to Stom
    Bird.
    
    The Blood Horse Mar. 17, 1990.
    
    
481.166A Prized Syndication.GENRAL::LEECHCustomer Services Engineer ** We do the job **Thu Mar 22 1990 18:4117
    
    
    Breederrs cup Turf (gr. IT) winner Prized, which captured the March 4
    Arcadia Handicap (gr. IIIT), is being syndicated into 40 shares, worth
    $150,000 each.  The colt's current owners, Clover Racing Stable and
    Meadowbrook Farms, will retain half the shares.
    
    Prized, which will continue to remain in training with Neil Drysdale,
    will make his next start in the March 25 San Luis Rey Stakes (ge. IT)
    at Santa Anita.  His future races might include the Hollywood Gold Cup 
    Handicap (gr. I), Arlington Million (gr. IT), and Breeders' Cup Turf.
    Syndicate members will decide wheter the colt will remain in training
    next year or will be retired to stud.  Barbara LeCroix, whose
    Meadowbrook also bred Prized, hopes the colt will stand in Florida.
    
    The Blood Horse Mar. 17, 1990.
    
481.167Miesque first foal.GENRAL::LEECHCustomer Services Engineer ** We do the job **Thu Mar 22 1990 19:0011
    
    
    
    Flaxman Holdings Limir=ted's Miesque, a multiple champion in Europe and
    this country, produced her first foal, a Mr. Prospector colt, on Feb.
    19, at William S. Farrish's Lane's End Farm near Versailles, Ky.  An
    earner of $2,096,517, Miesque won 10 grade or group I races, including
    consecutive runnings of the Breeders' Cup Mile (gr. IT) and was
    awarded nine championships.
    
    The Blood Horse Mar. 17, 1990.
481.168Pleas entered in horse murder.GENRAL::LEECHCustomer Services Engineer ** We do the job **Mon Mar 26 1990 19:3327
    
    
    Joseph James Brown, a Kentucky dentist, and Robert Turner West, a
    Kentucky bloodstock agent, each pled guilty to a conspiracy charge in
    connection with the killing of a race horse to collect on a $100,000
    insurance policy in 1987.  The pleas were entered in U. S. District
    Court in Lexington on March 16.
    
    A federal investigation into the crime is continuing, said Assistant U.
    S. Attorney Jane Graham, who would not name the dead horse or its
    owners.
    
    Brown and West each pled guilty to one count of conspiracy to commit
    wire and mail fraud based on a plea agreement worked out on March 8. 
    Both men face up to five years in prison and a $250,000 fine. 
    Sentencing was delayed indefinitely at Graham's request.
    
    Brown will not be prosecuted by the federal government further in the
    Thoroughbred's death or on any charges stemming from a sting operation
    conducted by the FBI that caught Brown and West in February at Calder
    Race Course in Florida.
    
    Brown was charged with wire fraud in U. S. District Court in Miami,
    Fla., in the wake of a sting, but the charge was dismissed on March 1.
    West was not charged in that incident.
    
    The Blood Horse Mar. 24, 1990. 
481.169Julie Krone has surgery.GENRAL::LEECHCustomer Services Engineer ** We do the job **Mon Mar 26 1990 19:3612
    
    
    Top female jockey Julie Krone might not ride again until July.  She
    recently underwent her second bone graft operation since breaking her
    left forearm in a spill at Meadowlands in November of 1989.
    
    During the March 8 surgury, performed at the Hackensack Medical Center
    in New Jersey, doctors grafted bone from her hip to the injured arm and
    inserted a metal plate.
    
    The Blood Horse Mar. 24, 1990.
    
481.170Blushing Groom's book reduced.GENRAL::LEECHCustomer Services Engineer ** We do the job **Mon Mar 26 1990 20:1233
    
    
    Mjor sire Blushing Groom, which stands at Graham Beck's Gainesway Farm
    near Lexington, has had the number of mares in his book reduced from 45
    to 22 for the 1990 breeding season.  Recommendation for the reduction
    came from Gainesway's resident veterinarian, Dr. Norman Umphenour, and
    Dr. Tom Riddle of Rood & Riddle veterinary clinic.
    
    Blushing Groom already has covered the 22 mares sinbce the breeding
    season began in mid-February.  Eleven of the mares were tested by
    ultrasound examination, which revealed that none of them were in foal
    to the 16-year-old stallion.
    
    "We have carefully monitored Blushing Groom's situation," said
    Gainesway executive vice president Roger J. Wolf.  "It is believed that
    with proper management, the horse can continue to cover the reduced
    book and hav ethe best possibile opportunity to achieve a satisfactory
    percentage of mares in foal without adversely risking the stallion's
    future fertility."
    
    Blushin Groom in 1988 underwent surgery to remove on testicle
    containing a malignant tumor.  The stallion returned to complete the
    1988 breeding season and also bred successfully last year.  Under the
    terms of Blushing Groom's syndicate agreement, shareholders excluded
    this year because of the reduced book will be the first ones eligible
    to breed to the stallion in 1991.
    
    Blushing Groom has sired 61 stakes winners.  The stallion was
    represented by a dozen stakes winners in 1989, including champion
    Nashwan in England and champion older male Blushing John in this
    country.
    
    The Blood Horse Mar. 24, 1990.  
481.171Zilzal and El Gran Senor.GENRAL::LEECHCustomer Services Engineer ** We do the job **Mon Mar 26 1990 20:2127
    
    
    Mares have been bred and reported in foal to the stallions El Gran
    Senor and Zilzal, both of which have suffered from fertility problems.
    Zilzal, which is standing at Shaikh Maktoum's Gainsborough Farm near
    Versailles, Ky., was found to have a low sperm count following his
    retirement in November of last year.  The 1989 English cahmpion was
    bred to major winner Prayers'n Promises and group II winner Greenland
    Park, and both mares have been pronounced in foal.
    
    Since the beginning of this year, Zilzal has been fitted with a pump
    that suppliments GnRH, a hormone necessary for sperm production.  With
    two mares pronounced in foal to Zilzal, Gainsborough Farm manager Allan
    Kershaw said additional mares will be sent to the stallion.  Kershaw
    said the mares will come from owners who supported the farms other
    stallion, Shadeed.
    
    European champion El Gran Senor, which entered stud in 1985 and
    currently stands at Ashford Stud near Versailles, Ky., has been
    represented by small foal crops after suffering from fertility problems
    during his first two seasons at stud.  El Gran Senor's fertility has
    improved each year, and the stallion has sired five stakes winners,
    including 1990 added-money winner Bright Candles.  Each of the first
    four mares bred to El Gran Senor this year have been pronounced in
    foal.
    
    The Blood Horse Mar. 24, 1990.
481.172Suspension upheld.GENRAL::LEECHCustomer Services Engineer ** We do the job **Tue Apr 03 1990 15:3622
    
    
    The Kentucky State Racing Commission recently upheld the 180-day
    suspension of a blacksmith who allegedly removed the shoes of a horse
    without the owner's permission prior to a race last fall at Keenland. 
    The ban, issued by Keenland stewards, was appealed by farrier James W.
    Thomas.
    
    Elijah Hogge, the racing commission's hearing officer, recommended to
    the commission that the stewards' ruling be affirmed.  Rio's Lark's
    shoes were removed prior to the Keenland Breeders' Cup Stakes (gr.
    IIIT) on Oct. 21 at Keenland, and the race's start was delayed while
    the horse was reshod in the paddock.  Rio's Lark. sent off at 16-1
    odds, finished seventh in the field of 10.
    
    According to Hogge's report, the stewards record stated that Thomas
    claimed that Rio's Lark's trainer and breeder, Lowell T. Stevens, owed
    him money for farrier services.  Thomas had made threats to remove the
    shoes if the debt was not satisfied.
    
    The Blood Horse Mar.31, 1990
     
481.173Thoroughbred intern program.GENRAL::LEECHCustomer Services Engineer ** We do the job **Tue Apr 03 1990 16:0245
    
    
    The Taylor Made Thoroughbred Intern Program has been established to
    provide training for future horsemen.  The practical experience offered
    by the program will involve working on Taylor Made Farm near
    Nicholasville, Ky. under the supervision of the program director,
    Satish Seemar, and divisional managers.  
    
    A native of India, Seemar has a degree in horse husbandry from Shast
    College in Northern California, and he studied animal scienc at
    California Polytechnic State University, where he completed the
    Thoroughbred Enterprise Project.  Seemar studied equine reproduction at 
    Colorado State Universityand interned with horseman Monty Roberts
    before he moved to Kentucky.
    
    Ten students per year will be accepted for the program that will begin
    on Feb. 1 and require 18 months for completion..  The program has no
    tuition fees and includes free accomodations and a salery of $200.00
    per week.  The program's managing and advisory committeeincludes
    Seemar, and Joe, Duncan, Ben, and Frank Taylor, plus Dr. Michael
    Osborne, Monty Roberts, Dr. Ward Crow, Dr. Jim Moorhead, and Dr. Scott
    Pierce.
    
    "We want to improve the standards of the horse business," Seemar said,
    "and our goal is to have ambassadors for Taylor Made in different parts
    of the world."
    
    Requirements for completion of the program include six multiple-choice
    exams, attendance at guest-speaker engagements, and four written
    reports by the student on Taylor Made history, farm layout, work
    routines, foaling management, yearling preparation, bloodstock and farm
    management.  Each student also will be assessed by the program director
    regarding abilities in stable management, horse handling, pasture
    management, property maintenance, lanscaping skills, and machinery
    operation and maintenance.
    
    Deadline for application will be Oct. 30.  Requirements and
    qualifications for admission include one to two years of previous
    experience on a farm and a positive attitude toward the program and
    Thoroughbred industry.  A foreign student must be able to write and
    speak the English language and have his proper legal documentation.
    
    The Blood Horse Mar. 31, 1990.
    
    
481.174More Triple Crown Nominees.GENRAL::LEECHCustomer Services Engineer ** We do the job **Tue Apr 03 1990 16:1519
    
    
    For a $3,000 late nomination fee, 33 more 3-year-olds were made
    eligable for the Triple Crown by the final March 17 deadline.  The
    total was a record for late nominees since the nomination procedure was 
    changed in 1986 to include all three clasic: The Kentucky Derby (gr.
    I), Preakness Stakes (gr. I), and Belmont Stakes (gr. I).
    
    Among this year's late nominees were Hail Atlantis, winner of the Santa
    Anita Oaks (gr. I); Real Cash, winner of the San Felipe Handicap (gr.
    II); Heaven Again, winner of the Louisiana Derby (gr. III); and Wicked
    Destiny, winner of the Remington Park Derby.  Other late nominees
    Tarascon, Stalker, Spiced Coffee, and Seasabb.
    
    With late nominations, a total of 348 runners are eligible for the 1990
    Triple Crown.  The figure is the lowest since the three-race nomination
    procedure was implemented.
    
    The Blood Horse Mar. 31. 1990.   
481.175Triple Crown setbacks.GENRAL::LEECHCustomer Services Engineer ** We do the job **Tue Apr 03 1990 16:2216
    
    
    Triple Crown candidates Champagneforashley and Adjudicating underwent
    recent setbacks.  Champagneforashley, owned by Robert Baker, Howard
    Kaskel, and Leon J. Feinbloom, apparently suffered a mild colic attack
    on March 20, two days after capturing the Tampa Bay Derby.  Trainer
    Howad Tesher reported on March 22 that the colt's condition was
    improving, but that he was still not eating normally.
    
    Ogden Mills Phipps' homebred Adjudicating, which finished second in the
    Southwest Stakes at Oaklawn Park on March 10, was sidelined by a viral
    illness.  Trainer Shug McGaughey said the colt will miss the Kentuck
    Derby (gr. I).
    
    The Blood Horse Mar. 31, 1990.
    
481.176The babies are coming!GENRAL::LEECHCustomer Services Engineer ** We do the job **Tue Apr 03 1990 20:5533
    
    
    *	A full brother to Canadian chmpion Bessarabian was foaled on Jan.
    	23 at Harry and Lynne Hindmarsh's farm near Hillsburgh, Ontario. 
    	The Vice Regent colt was produced from the Hindmarshes' Tete de
    	Linotte.
    
    *	Richard L. Duchossois' stakes-winning Hot Milk produced a colt by
    	Horse of the Year Fedinand on Feb. 28 at Duchossois Hill 'N Dale
        Farm near Barrington, Illinois.  Hot Milk will be bred to Blushing
    	John.
    
    *	Frances A. Genter's millionaire and major winner Tappiano produced
    	her first foal, a filly by Dr. Carter, on March 7 at Graham Beck's 
    	Gainsway Farm near Lexington.
    
    *	On March 4, the day Mr. and Mrs. Jerome S. Moss' Ruhlmann won the
    	Santa Anita Handicap (gr. I), the winners dam, Indian Maiden, 
    	produced a filly by Fappiano at Dick Randolph's Randolph Farm near
    	Versailles, Ky.
    
    *	Dahlia, a champion in Europe and North America, produced a Lyphard
    	colt on Feb. 27 at Allen Paulson's Brookside Farms near Versailles,
    	Ky.  The foal is a full brother to major winner Dahar and a
   	half-brother to major winner Rivlia and stakes winner Delegant. 
    	Dahlia was scheduled to be bred back to Lyphard.
    
    *	Epitome, champion juvinile filly of 1987, produced a Mr. Prospector
    	colt on March 13 at John A. Bell III's Jonabell Farm near
    	Lexington. Epitome was scheduled to be bred back to Nureyev.
    
    The Blood Horse Mar. 31, 1990
    
481.177The 1990 Arlington Million.GENRAL::LEECHCustomer Services Engineer ** We do the job **Tue Apr 03 1990 21:0010
    
    
    Horse of the Year Sunday Silence, champion Steinlen, and 1989 Breeders
    Cup Turf (gr. IT) winner Prized are ampng the 185 horses nominated to
    the 10th Arlington Million (gr. IT), to be run Sept. 2 at Arlington
    International Racecourse.  Steinlen won the race in 1989.
    
    The Blood Horse March 31, 1990.
    
    
481.178Stakes, Derbys, etc....when are they?HPSMEG::SKABOWed Apr 04 1990 17:394
    Could someone please list the major thoroughbred races in the US that
    are held yearly, such as The Preakness and The Florida Derby?  The
    race, track, date, purse, length, and whether or not the race is
    televised.... Thanks.
481.179Thoroughbreds on TVNANOOK::RAWDENWater flowing underground...Thu Apr 05 1990 01:1254
    Here's the calendar for television coverage of major races, with
    the race, date, and track.  I can't speak for the networks selections.
    They do have the biggest races, but there are also some significant
    omissions.

(ABC* times are approximate; usually a segment on a "Wide World of 
Sports" broadcast)

4/7	Gotham Stakes (g2)		4:30 ESPN Aqu
4/7	Preview Stakes			5:15 ABC* Gulfstream
4/7	Santa Anita Derby (g1)		5:40 ABC*
4/14	Oaklawn Handicap (g1)		5:00 ESPS
4/14	Blue Grass Stakes (g2)		5:30 ABC* Keeneland
4/21	Arkansas Derby Stakes (g2)	5:00 ESPN Oaklawn
4/21	Wood Memorial (g1)		5:15 ABC* Aqu
4/24	Lexington Stakes (g2)		4:00 ESPN Keeneland
4/28	Derby Trial (g3)		5:25 ABC* Churchill
5/4	Kentucky Oaks (g1)		6:00 ESPN Churchill Downs
5/5	Kentucky Derby Special		2:30 ESPN "
	Kentucky Derby (g1)		3:30 ABC
5/12	Pimlico Special Hdcp (g1)	5:25 ABC*
5/19	Preakness stakes special	3:30 ESPN Pimlico
	Preakness Stakes		4:30 ABC
6/9	Belmont Stakes special		3:30 ESPN Bel
	Belmont Stakes			4:30 ABC
6/16	Ohio Derby (g2)			5:00 ESPN Thistledown
7/1	Idaho Centennial Brdrs Classic	4:00 ESPN Les Bois Park
7/21	Caesars Intr. Hdcp (g2)		5:30 ABC* Atlantic City
7/28	Haskell Invitational hdcp (g1)	5:00 ESPN Monmouth
8/4	Whitney Hdcp (g1)		5:00 ESPN Saratoga
8/4	Arlington Inv. Stakes		5:20 ABC* Arlington
8/18	Travers				5:35 ABC* Saratoga
9/2	Arlington Million		5:00 ABC
9/9	Maryland Million		3:30 ESPN Pimlico
9/23	Super Derby (g1)		6:00 ESPN Louisiana Downs
9/30	West Virginia Brdrs Classic	Midnight ESPN Charles Town
10/6	Jockey Club Gold Cup (g1)	6:00 ESPN Bel
10/7	Turf Classic Stakes (g1)	6:00 ESPN Bel
10/20	Breeders's Cup Steeplchase	5:20 NBC* tba
10/21	Budweiser Intr.			5:00 ABC  Laurel
10/27	Breeders' Cup Special		Midnight ESPN Bel
10/27	Breeders' Cup Day		1:30 NBC
11/4	California Cup			6:30 ESPN Santa Anita
12/15	Bay Meadows Hdcp (g2)		6:30 ESPN Bay Meadows

				all times pm / eastern

Weekly wrap-up shows:

Thoroughbred Action	Tues. 6:30-7:00 PM, Sports Channel
Thoroughbred Digest	Weds. 3:30-4:00 PM, ESPN
			 (repeated Thurs. 11-11:30 PM, Fri. 9-9:30 AM)

    
481.180Graded Stakes for 1990NANOOK::RAWDENWater flowing underground...Thu Apr 05 1990 02:08113
    Could someone please list the major thoroughbred races in the US that
    are held yearly, such as The Preakness and The Florida Derby?  The
    race, track, date, purse, length, and whether or not the race is
    televised.... Thanks.

    Well, here goes...
    
    There are 450 "grades stakes" this year, 94 grade I, 128 grade II,
    and 228 grade III.  "The Blood Horse" prints a guide to the races
    organized by conditions and date.  At the time of printing in January
    many of the dates had not been firmly set but they're listed in
    roughly chronological order.  Here's some I would
    consider most important (all grade I):
    
    Stake			Track   Added Money  Furlongs Date
					( $K )
        2-year-olds
    
    Hollywood Futurity		Hol	$1,000	8
    Hopeful S			Sar	$200	6.5 	Aug.
    Champagne Stakes		Bel	$500	8
    Norfolk S			SA	$200	8.5
    Breeders' Cp Juvenile	Bel	$1,000	8.5 	Oct.27

    	2-year-old fillies
    
    Spinaway S			Sar	$200	6
    Frizette S			Bel	$250	8
    Breeders' Cp Juvenille F.	Bel	$1,000	8.5	Oct. 27
    Hollywood Starlet S		Hol	$500	8
    
    	3-year-olds
    
    Florida Derby		GP	$500	9	March 17
    Santa Anita Derby		SA	$500	9	April 7
    Wood Mem. Invitational S	Aqu	$500	9	April 2
    Kentucky Derby		CD	$350	9	May 5
    Preakness S			Pim	$500	9.5	May 19
    Belmont S			Bel	$500	12	June 9
    Haskell Inv. Hdcp		Mth	$500	9
    Travers S			Sar	$1,000	10	Aug. 18
    Super Derby			LaD	$1,000	10	Sept. 23
    Hollywood Derby		Hol	$200	9T(urf)
    
    3-year-old fillies
    
    Santa Anita Oaks		SA	$200	8.5	March 17
    Ashland S			Kee	$200	8.5	April 21
    Kentucky Oaks		CD	$200	9	May 4
    Acorn S			Bel	$150	8
    Mother Goose S		Bel	$200	9
    Coaching Club Amer. Oaks	Bel	$250	12
    Hollywood Oaks		Hol	$150	9
    Alabama S			Sar	$200	10
    
    3-year-olds and Up
    
    Charles H. Strub S		SA	$500	10	Feb. 4
    Santa Anita H		SA	$1,000	10	Mar. 4
    Oaklawn H			OP	$500	9	April 14
    San Juan Capistrano Inv. H	SA	$500	abt14T	April 22
    Pimlico Special H		Pim	$1,000	9.5	May 12
    Hollywood Turf H		Hol	$500	10T
    Whitney H			Sar	$250	9
    Arlington Million		AP	$1,000	12T	Sept 2
    Woodward H			Bel	$750	10
    Jockey Club Gold Cup	Bel	$1,000	12
    Turf Classic		Bel	$600	12T
    Meadowlands Cup H		Med	$500	10
    Oak Tree Inv. S		SA	$500	12T
    NYRA Mile H			Aqu	$500	8
    Rothmans International H	WO	$900	12T
    Wash. DC International	Lrl	$750	10T
    Breeders' Cup Classic	Bel	$3,000	10	Oct. 27
    "		" Sprint	"	$1,000	6	"
    "		" Mile		"	$1,000	8	"
    "		" Turf		"	$2,000	12T	"
    Hollywood Turf Cup H	Hol	$500	12T
    
    3-years-olds and Up (fillies and mares)
    
    Santa Margarita Inv. H	SA	$300	9	Feb. 18
    Santa Barbara H		SA	$200	10T	Apr. 28
    Vanity H			Hol	$200	9
    Ruffian H			Bel	$200	9
    Beldame S			Bel	$250	9
    Spinster S			Kee	$250	9	Oct. 6
    Breeders' Cup Distaff	Bel	$1,000	9	Oct. 27
    Yellow Ribbon S		SA	$400	10T
    
Track abbreviations:
    
    	Aqu	Aqueduct	(Queens) NY, NY
	CD	Churchill Downs	Louisville, KY
	Hol	Hollywood Park	Hollywood (LA), CA
    	Sar	Saratoga	Saratoga, NY
	Bel	Belmont Park	Elmont (Long Island), NY
	SA	Santa Anita	Los Angeles
	GP	Gulfstrem Park	Hallendale (Miami), Fla.
	Pim	Pimlico		Baltimore, MD
    	Lrl	Laurel		Laurel (Baltimore/Washington), MD
	Mth	Monmouth	Monmouth, NJ
	LaD	Louisiana Downs	New Orleans, LA
	Kee	Keeneland	Lexington, KY
	OP	Oaklawn Park	Oaklawn, Arkansas
	AP	Arlington Int.	Chicago, IL
	Med	Meadowlands	NJ/NY City    
	WO	Woodbine	Toronto


    The terms "graded stakes" and "graded races" are federally registered
    trademarks of the Thoroughbred Owners and Breeders Association.
        
481.181Racing's Final Fourteen.GENRAL::LEECHCustomer Services Engineer ** We do the job **Thu Apr 12 1990 15:1222
    
    
    The Final Fourteen, the championship race in a tournament-style
    competition developed by the Horsemen's Benevolent and Protective
    Association, will be held at Bay Meadows in Northern Clifornia on Oct.
    14.  The 1 1/8 mile event will be worth $250,000.
    
    To qualify for the Final Fourteen, a horse must finish first or second
    in one of seven 1 1/16- mile regional races,each with a purse of
    $50,000.  The races are for 3-year-olds and up which have not won a
    grade I or grade II stakes.
    
    Regional races will be held at Canturbury Downs on Sept. 8; Belmont
    Park, Sept. 9; Philadelphia Park, Sept. 15; Ladbroke DRC, Sept. 22;
    Louisiana Downs, Sept. 29; and Bay Meadows, Sept. 30.  If a horse has
    finished first or second in a regional race subsequently wins a grade I
    or grade II event, that horse will not be permitted to start and he
    will be replaced by the third-place regional finisher in his regional
    race.
    
    
    The Blood Horse April 7, 1990.
481.182Breeders' Cup Stakes.GENRAL::LEECHCustomer Services Engineer ** We do the job **Thu Apr 12 1990 15:3026
    
    
    The 1990 Breeders' Cup Budweiser Special Stakes Program is comprised of
    51 races funded cooperatively by the Breeders' Cup Fund and 40
    participating race tracks in North America.  Seventeen of the added-money
    events have graded status, six more than in 1989.
    
    The Breeders' Cup Ltd. has alloted $4.25 million for the program this
    year.  Distributed through the Breeders' Cup Fund, the money represents 
    a portion of the fees paid by North American owners and breeders to
    make their runners eligible for the program. The combined purses from
    the Breeders' Cup and the race tracks will total more than $6.6 million
    for horses which are nominated to the Breeders' Cup.
    
    For 34 of the races, the Breeders' Cup will contribute $100,000 toward
    the purse while the host track will provide a minimum of $50,000.  In 
    17 races the Breeders' Cup is offering $50,000 and the host track will
    provide no less than $25,000.
    
    In all Special Stakes, horses nominated to the Breeders' Cup program
    race for the full purse, while non-nominated horses compete only for
    the money provided by the track.  The Breederrs' Cup Budweiser Special
    Stakes Program is in its fifth year.
    
    The Blood Horse April 7, 1990.
     
481.183East meets West in Germany.GENRAL::LEECHCustomer Services Engineer ** We do the job **Thu Apr 12 1990 15:5741
    
    
    The historic race course at Hoppegarten in East Berlin on March 31
    staged the first meeting between East and West German horses since the
    Berlin Wall was built in 1961.  The event was a tremendous success,
    with an attendance of 45,000 (approximatly double Hoppegarten's
    post-World War II record crowd) on a beautiful, sunny, spring
    afternoon.  The betting handle of more than $1 million also was a
    record for East Germany.
    
    The only dissapointment for the East Germans was that the racing was
    completely one-sided in favor of their visitors from the west.  In
    fact, the home team did not manage a single success in any of the nine
    races on the card.
    
    However, the Hoppegarten crowd was delighted that the first race of the
    afternoon went to Domingo, ridden by three-time West German champion
    jockey Lutz Mader.  Sixteen years ago, Mader, who had been a star
    apprentice rider at Hoppegarten, managed to escape to the west in his
    second attempt.  He spent nine months in prison after failing in his
    first escape attempt.
    
    Leading West German trainer Heinz Jentzsch, who receantly celebrated
    his 70th birthday, began his training career at Hoppegarten and was
    making his first visit there since before the war.  Jentzsch sent out 
    three runners and won with all of them, including the 4-year-old
    Procorum (Waht a Guest-Prioritat)in the principle race, the
    Mercedes-Benz Preis.  Runners trained by Jentzsch also finished second,
    third, and fourth in the race.
    
    Praise came from many visitors at the track, which had its excellent
    turf course in prime condition.  Many of the buildings at Hoppegarten,
    however, now are antiquated, and if East Germany wishes to get on terms 
    with its Western friends, then a great deal of expenditure will be
    necessary to get everything up to date.  There are rumors that Westt
    German speculators already are keeping a close watch on Hoppegarten,
    which could be worth a fortune as building land for new houses and
    apartments.
    
    The Blood Horse April 7, 1990.
    
481.184Sunday Silence back in training.GENRAL::LEECHCustomer Services Engineer ** We do the job **Fri Apr 20 1990 19:2114
    
    
    Sunday Silence, Horse of the Year and topweight on THE BLOOD HORSE Free
    handicap for 3-year-olds of 1989, recently worked for the first time
    since undergoing surgury in November of last year.  The 4-year-old colt
    breezed three furlongs in :39 4/5 at Sant Anita on April 25.
    
    Sunday Silence is being pointed for an early summer return to the
    races.  Bone chips were removed from his right knee during last year's
    operation.
    
    The Blood Horse April 14, 1989.
    
    
481.185Strains and Pains.GENRAL::LEECHCustomer Services Engineer ** We do the job **Fri Apr 20 1990 19:2927
    
    
    William Haggin Perry's graded stakes winner Slavic, among leading
    candidates for the Kentuckey Derby (gr. I), has been sidelined by a
    strained distal sesamodian ligament in his right front leg.  The colt
    will miss the Run for the Roses, said trainer Scotty Schulhofer on
    April 6.
    
    The injury probably happened during a March 31 workout at Keenland,
    according to Schulhofer.  Slavic was being treated with poultices and
    daily hosing of the injured leg.
    
    Slavic, bred by Claibourne Farm and The Gamely Corporation, has won
    three of nine races and has earned $416,422.  He captured the 1989
    Breeders' Futurity (gr. II).  Other efforts included a second-place
    finish in the 1990 Florida Derby (gr. I).
    
    Another talented3-year-old, Nedlaw Stable's Roanoke, is being given a
    30-day break from training.  Ted A. Sprinkler, Nedlaw's president and
    general partner, said Roanoke came out of the Florida Derby with a
    kidney infection and various bumps and bruises.
    
    Roanoke, winner of three of eight races and an earner of $236,937,
    captured the 1989 Young America Stakes (gr. II).
    
    the Blood Horse April 14, 1990.
    
481.186Dogwood Stables Reduction.GENRAL::LEECHCustomer Services Engineer ** We do the job **Mon Apr 23 1990 14:2738
    
    
    A reduction in size is planned for Dogwood Stables, which races major
    winner and Triple Crown candidate Summer Squall.  The goals are to
    decrease the complications and demands of the business, explained
    Dogwood president Cot Campbell.
    
    "Eighteen years ago, I went into the horse business because I love
    Thoroughbred race horses," Campbell said.  "Luckily, Dogwood has
    enjoyed great sucess and growth.  However, I now find that the
    management of a big 60-horse stable and a staff of 27, and the
    complexities of tax, banking, communications, and security regulatory
    matters--all of which go with forming race horse partnership--consume
    more of me than I want consumed."
    
    Dogwood's 31-stall training complex at the Aiken Training Track in
    Aiken, S.C., will be taken over by Ron Stevens, Dogwood's longtime
    head trainer and vice president.  Stevens will become a public trainer,
    and Dogwood will be his major client.
    
    Other Dogwood plans are to reduce gradually the racing stable size from
    60 to 40 horses and to reduce--"very selectively," said Campbell--the 
    size of its national client base from 200 to less than 100.  Dogwood's
    Chafee Lane office in Aiken will be maintained, but the staff will be
    trimmed as the workload is reduced.     
    
    
    Dogwood specializes in organizing limited partnerships and syndicates
    for race horse ownership purposes.  The stable has races 34 stakes
    winners, including Summer Squall,which was scheduled to compete in the
    Blue Grass Stakes (gr. II) at Keenland on April 14.  Summer Squall was
    kicked by an outrider's pony after winning the March 31 Jim Beam Stakes
    (gr. II) at Turfway Park and suffer a scrape and a small cut on the
    stifle of his left hind leg.  Three days following the Jim Beam,
    Campbell reported the injuries were "healing perfectly" and would not
    disrupt the 3-year-old colt's training schedule.
    
    The Blood Horse April 14, 1990.
481.187The Triple Crown TrailGENRAL::LEECHCustomer Services Engineer ** We do the job **Mon Apr 30 1990 16:3824
    
    
    Following are the results of a national poll ranking contenders for the
    Kentucky Derby (gr. I), Preaknes (gr. I), and Belmont Stakes (gr. I) as
    selected by 34 sports and Thoroughbred racing media representatives. 
    The weekly poll is conducted by Thoroughbred Racing communications.
    
    Listed are the name and rank of each horse, the number of first place
    votes it recieved (in Parenteses), and total points awarded on a
    polling format of 10-9-8-7-6-5-4-3-2-1.
    
           Horse				  Winner of 
    
    1.	Mister Frisky 		(17)	320	Santa Anita Derby
    2.	Summer Squall 		(15)	319     Jim Beam Stakes
    3.	Champagneforashley      ( 2)	264     Tampa Bay Derby
    4.	Unbridled		....	207     Florida Derby
    5.	Land Rush		....	182
    6.	Thirty Six Red		....	122     Gothem Stakes
    7.	Bright Again		....	102     
    8.	Housebuster		....	 58     Hutcheson St, Lafayette St
    9.	Hail Atlantis		....	 42
    10. Senor Pete		....	 39
                                                
481.188Lucian Laurin retires.GENRAL::LEECHCustomer Services Engineer ** We do the job **Wed May 02 1990 20:0722
    
    
    Lucian Lauren, who saddled Secritariet and 35 other stakes winners,
    retired recently from training.  Laurin, who celebrated his 78th
    birthday on March 8, is a member of racing's hall of fame.  
    
    "I won't be training again.  No way."Laurin told DAILY RACING FORM. 
    Since Secritariet's racing career ended, Laurin's conditioning
    conditioning career had been marked by several periods of retirement
    and semi-retirement.  
    
    The lack of dependibility of today's stable help was cited by Laurin as
    a factor in his latest retirement decision.  He plans to remain active
    as a breeder and as an owner.
    
    Laurin said he has a partner and they will build a stable of seasoned
    runners through private purchase and claiming.  The horses will be
    trained by Larry Geiger and will be raced this summer at Calder Race
    Course.
    
    The Blood Horse April 28, 1990.
    
481.189Money sought in wrongful death of horse.GENRAL::LEECHCustomer Services Engineer ** We do the job **Wed May 02 1990 20:2134
    
    
    The prominent insurance firm Lloyd's of London is seeking the nearly
    $100,000 it paid out on an allegedly fraudulant claim.  The claim
    involved an unraced colt named McBlush (Blushing Groom-Cizana, by
    Judgable), which was three at the time of his death.
    
    Joseph James Brown, a Kentucky dentist, and Robert Turner West, a
    Kentucky bloodstock agent, each recently pleaded guilty to one count of
    conspirecy to commit wire and mail fraud in connection with the killing
    of a horse which was determined by Lloyd's of London investigators to
    be McBlush.  The horse was not identified at the time that the pleas
    were entered in United States District Court in Lexington.
    
    The Lexington HERALD-LEADER reported that McBlush was owned by
    Shannon Brook Farms Partnership VI, a Lexington-based limited
    partnership formed in 1983.  The base of the partnership was McBlush's
    dam, Cizana, which was syndicated into 40 shares valued at $18,380
    apiece.
    
    The insurance claim allegedly stated that McBlush died of natural
    causes.  William Renner, former president of Shannon Brook Farms Inc.,
    and coporate secretary of its parent company, Worldwide Equine Corp.,
    said the partnership had not done "anything wrong".  He said he has
    advised partnership members  "to immediately counterclaim against the
    responsible individuals  (Brown and West) for restitution to the
    partnership" if there is any legal action. 
    
    Stephen O'Brien, a Lexington-based attorney representing Lloyd's, said
    the insurance firm is seeking to identify the investors in the
    partnership so that it can try to recover the paid claim.  The
    settlement was reported to have been $99,975.
    
    The Blood Horse April 28, 1990.  
481.190Kentucky Derby - May 5TLE::DINGEEThis isn't a rehearsal, you know.Thu May 03 1990 13:547
    
    
    	Kentucky Derby runs Saturday - May 5 - televised on Ch. 5 in
    	the Boston area. I believe that's CBS? I don't know what 
    	time, but in the past they usually began background/interest
    	stories around 1:30 in the afternoon, up til post time.
    
481.191DerbyAKOV13::LESAGEThu May 03 1990 18:182
    ESPN is covering the racing schedule up to 4:30 on derby day from
    Churchhill Downs.   At 4:30 ABC Ch. 5 is covering the Derby.
481.192Your pick for the Derby?DECWET::DADDAMIOTesting proves testing worksThu May 03 1990 21:1112
    So anyone willing to say who they like to win the Derby?
    
    I'm still flipping between Mr. Frisky and Summer Squall.  I'm a bit
    worried about the heat that developed in Mr. Frisky's ankle last week
    (anyone hear anything about it since then?).  Last I heard he was OK
    the next day, but you never can tell with stuff like that.  I do like
    to see the "cheaper" horses win every now and then.  Will he be another
    Seattle Slew?  I was impressed with Summer Squall's last race - his
    time was better than Mr. Frisky's in the Santa Anita Derby and Summer
    Squall ran on an off track.
    
    						Jan
481.19332 REDDNEAST::BUTTERMAN_HOFri May 04 1990 12:4113
    
    
    	Sure Jan... I'm going out on a bit of a limb... 32RED!!
    
    	I *REALLY* like him - I like the way he looks - I like
    	the way he runs - and I like his breeding..............
    
    	Soo... here's Holly... hanging out there on a long shot.
    
    	p.s.  And, if Mr Frisky wins it will be cuz he blows them
    	      all away completly.  (I must be leaning towards the
    	      chestnut horses this year)...
    
481.194Derby Post Position newsDECWET::DADDAMIOTesting proves testing worksFri May 04 1990 18:4612
    My husband heard some news about post positions for the Derby
    yesterday.  Apparently Mr. Frisky is in post position 5 and Laz Barrera
    thinks that's great - post position 5 in a race run on 5/5!  John said
    that Summer Squall has a post position on the outside but couldn't
    remember exactly what it was.  He didn't remember any of the other
    positions.  Anyone else know?  Seems like this would give Mr. Frisky
    an advantage.  If Summer Squall can win from a far outside post
    position, then he's probably a real super horse!
    
    Holly - 32 Red did run a good race in the Wood.  He's my 3rd choice.
    
    						Jan
481.195Derby Post PositionsNANOOK::RAWDEN$2 invested at 10% per 2min+1secFri May 04 1990 19:0120
Derby Post Positions and Churchill Downs' morning line:

1  Dr. Bobby A		Nick Santagate		50-1
2  Killer Diller	James Bruin		50-1
3  Pendelton Ridge	Laffit Pincay, Jr.	20-1
4  Video Ranger		Ron Hansen		30-1
5  Mister Frisky	Gary Stevens		8-5
6  Real Cash		Alex Solis		8-1
7  Fighting Fantasy	Shane Sellers		50-1
8  Country Day		Jose Santos		50-1
9  Unbridled		Craig Perret		12-1
10 Pleasant Tap		Kent Desmoreaux		30-1
11 Silver Ending	Chris McCarron		12-1
12 Thirty Six Red	Mike Smith		10-1
13 Burnt Hills		Pat Valenzuela		20-1
14 Summer Squall	Pat Day			7-5
15 Land Rush		Angel Cordero, Jr.	8-1
16 Power Lunch		Randy Romero		8-1

    
481.196DECWET::DADDAMIOTesting proves testing worksFri May 04 1990 23:266
    Thanks for posting the post positions and odds.  Looks like 36 Red is
    toward the outside, too (Holly and I both got his name wrong before,
    but we were close :-).  Anyone hear why Champagneforashley isn't in the
    race?
    
    						Jan
481.197A horse named UnbridledDNEAST::BUTTERMAN_HOMon May 07 1990 11:4814
    
    	Wellllll  Jan... we could have called him any number "Red" and
    	he *WAS* impressive in the 1st half.  Where did that UNBRIDLED
    	come from anyway???  I still like him, but it looks like a whole
    	new ball game.......
    
    	Only a 'scridgen' of my memory says that Champagneforashley was
    	never planned to run in the Derby but setting up for the next
    	two.... (Preakness/Belmont)... and got beaten the last time
    	out as well............................
    
    	
    
    
481.198More on the DerbyDECWET::DADDAMIOTesting proves testing worksMon May 07 1990 18:3319
    Unbridled won the Florida Derby and was impressive in that race, but
    not in his last race - he was third, Summer Squall was first.  I
    figured Summer Squall was the better of the two since Pat Day rode both
    and chose to ride Summer Squall in the Derby.  Out of my guesses for
    places 1-4 in the Derby, the only one I got right was Summer Squall for
    2nd.  Maybe I'll do better with the Preakness.
    
    For anyone who didn't see the race (it was a very impressive stretch
    run by Unbridled), the top 4 finishers were:
    
    	1 Unbridled
    	2 Summer Squall
    	3 Pleasant Tap
    	4 Video Ranger
    
    Mr. Frisky "died" in the stretch and ended up 8th.  I think Thirty Six
    Red was 9th.
    
    						Jan
481.199Thoroughbred Ownership Registry.GENRAL::LEECHCustomer Services Engineer ** We do the job **Wed May 09 1990 21:3518
    
    
    The Jockey Club's Ownership Registration Program will be implemented in
    Florida when Calder Race Courses's upcoming meeting opens May 5.  The
    program involves maintaining information on the ownership of
    Thoroughbred race horses in a single-access, computerized system. 
    
    Under the program, every change of the horses's ownership is recorded. 
    Such comprehensive registries long have been maintained by the
    Standardbred and Quarter Horse industries.
    
    The ownership registry program started at Aqueduct in New York in 1988.
    In addition to New York, other states with ownership registries include
    Oklahoma and California, which began participating in the program early
    this year.
    
    The Blood Horse May 5, 1990.
    
481.200Kentucky Derby attendance and handle.GENRAL::LEECHCustomer Services Engineer ** We do the job **Tue May 15 1990 17:5513
    
    
    A Churchill Downs crowd of 128,257 attended this year's Kentucky Derby
    (gr.I).  The on-track patrons wagered $14,775,103 on the 10-race
    program, an increase over the $13.8 million wagered last year.  The
    on-track total is the second-highest ever, following the $15.4 million
    wagered in 1988.  This year, $6,948,762 was wagered at Churchill on the
    Derby alone.  (A record 201 simulcastsites received this year's Derby,
    and the handle was expected to surpass last year's total of $23
    million).
    
    The Blood Horse May 12, 1990.
    
481.201Woody Stephens hospitalizedGENRAL::LEECHCustomer Services Engineer ** We do the job **Tue May 15 1990 18:009
    
    
    Hall-of-Fame trainer Woody Stevens was hospitalized in Louisville's
    Norton General Hospital prior to the Kentucky Derby (gr.I) because of
    reoccuring problems with emphysema.  Stephens' filly De La Devil
    finished fourth in Seaside Attraction's Kentucky Oaks (gr. I).
    
    The Blood Horse May 12, 1990.
    
481.202A full brother for Alysheba.GENRAL::LEECHCustomer Services Engineer ** We do the job **Tue May 15 1990 18:027
    
    
    A full brother to 1988 Horse of the Year Alysheba was foaled on Feb. 22
    at Preston Madden's Hamburg Place near Lexington.  The Alydar foal was
    produced from Madden's Bel Sheba, which has been bred to Fappiano.
    
    The Blood Horse may 12, 1990.
481.203Planned Assault foiled in Louisville.GENRAL::LEECHCustomer Services Engineer ** We do the job **Tue May 15 1990 18:0814
    
    
    A man who was free on bond after having been arrested in Louisville,
    Ky., in January for burning a cross in front of a black family's home
    was back in custody on Thursday, May 3, after allegedly threatening to
    kill others and himself at Churchill Downs on the morning of the
    Kentucky Derby (gr. I).According to reports in the Lexington HERALD
    LEADER and the DAILY RACING FORM, Richard Keller was charged on May 4
    with possesion of ammunition by a felon.  He was to be held in
    Jefferson County jail until May 16, when he will be sentenced for the
    cross-burning incident, a violation of the federal civil rights act.
    
    The Blood Horse May 12, 1990.
     
481.204Royal Colors at Arlington.GENRAL::LEECHCustomer Services Engineer ** We do the job **Tue May 15 1990 18:1317
    
    
    A set of racing silks bearing the colors of Queen Elizabeth II was
    scheduled to be presented by the Consul General of England to Arlington
    International Racecourse chairman Richard Duchossois on May 9, opening
    day at Arlington.  The royal colors were registered in 1875.
    
    Last year, the Queen's runner Unkown Quantity scored an upset over
    major winner Blushing John in the Arlington Handicap (gr. IT).  that
    race marked the first time Her Majesty had run a horse in the United
    States since 1954.
    
    Arlington's 134-day meeting will include the 10th Arlington Million
    (gr. IT), part of the tracks three-day (Sept. 1-3) International
    Festival of Racing.
    
    The Blood Horse May 12, 1990.
481.205Looking Toward Baltimore.GENRAL::LEECHCustomer Services Engineer ** We do the job **Tue May 15 1990 18:3428
    
    
    Trainer Carl Nafzger watched Kentucky Derby (gr.I) winner Unbridled jog
    an easy mile the morning after the classic, then said the colt in all
    likelihood would race next in the 1 3/16-mile Preakness Stakes (gr. I)
    on May 19 and pursue the Triple Crown.  Unbridled probably will face
    the beaten favorites in the Derby--second-place finisher Summer Squall
    and eigth-place finisher Mr. Frisky--at Pimlico.
    
    Trainer D. Wayne Lukas said two of his three Kentucky Derby starters,
    Land Rush and Real Cash, are possibilities for the Preakness.  Another
    possible starter, he said was Kentucky Jazz, which won a 1 1/16-mile 
    allowance race at Churchill Downs on Derby day.
    
    Pleasant Tap, which finished third in the Derby, was being shipped to
    Baltimore to train, but the decision on whether to race in the
    Preakness was to be made later by trainer Cris Speckert.  Video Ranger,
    which finished fourth, and Thirty Six Red, which finished ninth, were 
    being pointed for the Belmont Stakes (gr.I) on June 9.
    
    Other possible contenders for the Preakness which did not race in the
    Derby are Champagnefor ashley, Fighting Notion, Music Prospector, and
    Baron De Vaux.  Derby starters which will not race in the Preakness
    include Silver Ending, Pendleton Ridge, and Burnt Hills, all of which
    were being returned to California.
    
    The Blood Horse May 12, 1990.
    
481.206THE THOROUGHBRED RECORD folds.GENRAL::LEECHCustomer Services Engineer ** We do the job **Tue May 15 1990 18:408
    
    
    THE THOROUGHBRED RECORD magazine, originated as the LIVE STOCK RECORD
    in 1875, is ceasing publication.  the magazine's last issue, the May
    edition, recently was mailed.
    
    The Blood Horse, May 12, 1990.
    
481.207The Preakness Stakes on T.V.GENRAL::LEECHCustomer Services Engineer ** We do the job **Tue May 15 1990 18:526
    
    
    The Preakness Stakes (gr. I) will be broadcast May 19, 1990, on ESPN
    at 3:30 p.m. EDT and on ABC from 4:30 to 6:00 p.m. EDT.
    
    The Blood Horse May 12, 1990.
481.208Preakness prepsNANOOK::RAWDENWater flowing underground...Wed May 16 1990 16:27120
    (posted with permission of the mailer)
    
From:	GRANMA::PSHAFER      "Vulture Capitalist" 16-MAY-1990 08:42:22.26
To:	NANOOK::RAWDEN
CC:	PSHAFER
Subj:	Reprinted without permission from the Baltimore Sun

			Trees sway in workout at Pimlico


	If there were trees along the backstretch at Pimlico and if Charlie
Hatton were still writing for the Daily Racing Form, his dispatch might have
read like this:

	"Pleasant Tap worked at Pimlico yesterday.  The trees swayed."

	That's how Hatton the celebrated racing columnist, wrote about the
great colt Raise a Native on a warm July morning in 1964.  Raise a Native
broke down after four races and never ran again.

	Pleasant Tap, who ran third to Unbridled and Summer Squall in the
Kentucky Derby and is not known for fast workouts, blazed through five
furlongs in 57 3/5 seconds.

	Trainer Chris Speckert, stunned by the time, said, "The track is
lightning, but so is this horse."  He said he wasn't worried because the
son of Pleasant Colony had done it so easily.

	Only two other horses are believed to have worked faster at Pimlico
over five furlongs.

	One was Fight Over, who went that distance in 56 4/5 back in 1984
before setting the pace in the Preakness, then finishing third to Gate
Dancer.

	The other was the great colt, Secretariat, who worked the same distance
in 57 2/5 on a Sunday morning before the 1973 Preakness with an estimated
1,000 cheering him on.

	Secretariat went on the sweep the Triple Crown.

	Pleasant Tap's trip was two-fifths of a second off the track record
set in 1971 by Tyrant, a multiple Stakes winner.

	His fractional times each eighth of a mile were equally exciting.  They
were 11 1/5. 22 3/5, 33 3/5 and 45 3/5.  He galloped out to six furlongs in
1 minute, 12 seconds.

	"I had expected him to work in about 59 [seconds]," the trainer said.
"If they like the track, they go fast.  If they don't like it, they don't go
fast.  I don't mind what they go in as long as they do it well and gallop out
and they don't come back stressed and strained and then you don't mind.  He's
a classic horse.  He should be able to do it."

	Speckert will lift Kent Desormeaux aboard Pleasant Tap, who is listed
as a fifth choice at 8-1 in the Preakness.

	The trainer  said Pleasant Tap was not at his best for the Derby.

	"He needed the Derby, and this should set him up perfectly," he said.
"He's a much lighter horse now than he was.  He was a big, fat horse going into
the Derby, and he still ran a great race.  He had to get leg-weary at the end
because that was a lot of weight to carry."

	Asked if Pleasant Tap might race closer to the pace than he did in
the Derby, Speckert acknowledged that the workout might get the colt a little
closer.

	"But I can't get in the gate and push him out," said the trainer.  "His
daddy [1981 Preakness winner Pleasant Colony] ran like this.  You can't change
him.  He does run fast at the end, but you can't make him do anything he doesn't
want to do."

	Speckert had said originally that Pleasant Tap would train at Pimlico,
but a decision to start would depend on his performance on what was a busy day
for Preakness contenders.

	Summer Squall also worked five-eighths of a mile at Pimlico.  He was
timed in 59 4/5 seconds, faster than trainer Neil Howard wanted for the Derby
runner-up.

	"He went faster than we talked about, but I think it was relative [sic]
the way the track was," said Howard.  "I thought it was a good move.  He did it
real nice and handled the track great.  That always makes you feel good."

	Summer Squall is the last of the three top 2-year-old campaigners in
1989 to continue racing on a championship basis.  Both Rhythm and Grand Canyon
have been stymied by injuries.

	Summer Squall still stands with both front legs in a tub of ice during
part of the day.  That's the result of a hairline fracture of the cannonbone
of the right front leg, suffered last August.

	"We used the ultrasound [machine] and the ice," Howard said.  "We've
done that ever since we started him back.  It's just for my own peace of
mind.  We do it every day to him.  I'll ice him on the days he walks."

	Handlers of the colt are continually concerned about the possibility
of him bleeding through the nostrils after a workout or race, the way he did
in Florida.

	Because he cannot be treated with the bleeder medication, Lasix, in
New York, Howard and Cot Campbell, manager of the syndicate that owns Summer
Squall, have announced that he will not race in the Belmont Stakes, regardless
of what happens in the Preakness.

	At Churchill Downs yesterday, unbridled, the Derby champ, went out
for a five-eighths-mile drill.  He reached the finish line in 1:00 2/5 and
galloped out to six furlongs in 1:14.

	The colt heads for Pimlico today.

	Craig Perret, who rode Unbridled in the Derby, came in from New York to
work the colt with trainer Carl Nafzger watching.

	"The work was right on schedule," said Nafzger.  "The horse needed what
he got.  He got the last quarter the same as he did in the Derby.  He did it
easy.  We're happy with him.  He was just right."
    
481.209Injuries devour two Preakness hopefuls.GENRAL::LEECHCustomer Services Engineer ** We do the job **Fri May 18 1990 16:1349
    
    
    The Preakness lost two bona fide contenders Thursday when
    Champagneforashley and Pleasant Tap were withdrawn because of possible
    career-ending injuries.
    
    Champagneforashley, whose only loss came in a close third-place finish
    in last month's Wood Memorial Stakes, suffered a base fractureof his
    right front sesamoid ( near the rear of the foot) Thursday morning as
    he galloped on a fast track at Pimlico.  Pleasant Tap, third in the
    Kentucky Derby, strained the tendon sheath in his left front foreleg.
    
    Each injury is considered serious enough to force early retirement,
    although neither is life-threatening.
    
    The defections leave nine horsesin Saturday's Preakness, the second leg
    of the Triple Crown. Kentucky Derby winner Unbridled drewpost position
    six Thursday and was made the 7-5 favorite, chief opponents Summer
    Squall and Mister Frisky drew posts 7 and 9 respectively.
    
    After the Wood Memorial ended Champagneforashley's five-race unbeaten
    streak, trainer Howie Tesher persuaded the colt's owners to skip the
    Derby.  Heading for the Preakness with a fresh 3-year-old, Tesher said
    Wednesday, "I feel a lot better about this than any race this year."
    
    Less than 24 hours later, he watched in dismay as Champagneforashley
    pulled up lame after a routine 1 1/4 mile gallop under exercise rider
    Mike Colfer.
    
    "I could see him cock his head to the outside," Tesher said.  "The
    first thing I said to myself was, 'Oh, no.' You don't want to believe
    this is happening.
    
    "At first we were hoping that the shoe they put on him yesterday might
    have been ta little bit too tight.  There was nothing I could say
    happened in the gallop."
    
    Colfer quickly dismounted and Champagneforashley walked back to the
    barn.  X-rays revealed a clean break of the sesamoid.  Surgury is not
    an option.
    
    Pleasant Tap was the talk of Pimlico on Tuesday when he worked five
    furlongs in a sizzling 57.6 seconds.  Thursday trainer Chris Speckert
    said the workout did not caus Pleasant Tap's injury.
    
    "These things come over a period of time," he said.
    
    The Gazette Telegraph sports section May 18, 1990.
     
481.210Post positionsfor the Preakness stakes. GENRAL::LEECHCustomer Services Engineer ** We do the job **Fri May 18 1990 16:1715
    
    
    Post positions and entries for the 115th Preakness Stakes.
    
    1.	Music Prospector	30-1 	Oliveras
    2.	Land Rush		10-1	Cordero
    3.	Baron de Vaux		20-1	Rocco
    4.	Kentuckey Jazz		15-1	Desormeaux
    5.	Fighting Notion		30-1	Delgado
    6.	Unbridled		7-5	Perret
    7.	Summer Squall		2-1	Day
    8.	J.R.'s Horizon		50-1	Johnston
    9.	Mister Frisky		3-1	Stevens
    
    	
481.211MISTER FRISKYBOSOX::LROYFri May 18 1990 17:317
    NO PREDICTIONS? WELL I'LL MAKE ONE
    
    MISTER FRISKY
    
    WORD IS FAST TRACK SHOULD FAVOR SPEED
    
    LEO
481.212Definitely undecided!DECWET::DADDAMIOTesting proves testing worksFri May 18 1990 22:0612
    RE: last few on Preakness
    
    Thanks for posting all of that information!  Now I'm so confused.  I
    liked the way Unbridled went in the Derby.  Haven't decided between him
    and Summer Squall (and yes, Mister Frisky is still in the back of my
    mind!).  If they suddenly get a lot of rain and the track is muddy,
    then I'll go with Summer Squall - I have no idea about the weather back
    east (I'm in WA).  Talk about indecision!  I probably won't make up my
    mind till the post parade.
    
    Too bad about Champagneforashley and Pleasant Tap.  Things sure change
    from one day to the next.
481.213Steven Ford to work at Turfway.GENRAL::LEECHCustomer Services Engineer ** We do the job **Tue May 22 1990 20:5122
    
    
    Steven Ford, former actor and the son of former President Gerald Ford, 
    will become an ambassador of horse racing as the new associate vice
    president of Turfway Park in Florence, Kentucky.
    
    The 34-year-old former soap opera actor has spent the past 12 years in
    the thoroughbred industry as an owner and working with breeders setting
    up thoroughbred partnerships.
    
    "I've been an owner," Ford said.  "I've worked with trainers.  This
    gives me a chance to get to know the other side of the business."
    
    His job will include promoting Turfway and racing in general at
    conferences and meetings throughout the country, building Turfway's
    audience, and promoting the track through advertising and pubilicity
    projects.
    
    Ford visited Turfway this spring to help promote the Jim Beam Stakes. 
    His father was the guest speaker at the Call to the Post luncheon.
    
    The GAzette Telegraph May 22, 1990.
481.214Woody Stephens has heart surgery.GENRAL::LEECHCustomer Services Engineer ** We do the job **Tue May 22 1990 21:0615
    
    
    Holl-of-Fame trainer Woody Stevens, who underwent open heart surgury on
    May 11,was reported to be "resting comfortably" three days later at
    Norton hospital in Louisville, Ky., according to Pam Greer-Ullrich, a
    hospital representative.  Stephens, 76, originally had been hospitilized 
    because of complications from emphysema.  Quadruple bypass surgery was
    performed after heart problems developed.
    
    Two days following the operation Stephens' condition was upgraded from
    critical to serious, and he was taken off the respirator.  He remained
    in the hospital's intensive care unit.
    
    The Blood Horse May 19, 1990.
    
481.215Summer Squall to be rested.GENRAL::LEECHCustomer Services Engineer ** We do the job **Tue May 22 1990 21:1934
    
    
    Dogwood Stable's Summer Squall, which finished second in the Kentucky
    Derby (gr.I), was to run in the May 19 Preakness Stakes (gr. I), then
    get a rest .  Dogwood president Cot Campbell said the colt would bypass
    the June 9 Belmont Stakes (gr.I), regardless of the outcome of the
    Preakness.
    
    "Due to the bleeding incident on Feb. 19 in Florida, we've been on an
    agressive schedule with the colt," Campbell said.  "The Preakness will
    be his fifth race in nine weeks.  Even though he is bright, sound, and
    sharp, and we couldn't be happier with his condition coming up to the
    Preakness, it is not fair to ask him for more in the Belmont Stakes."
    
    Since the Feb. 19 bleeding incident, Summer Squall has run on the
    diuretic furosemid (Lasix), which was determined by a recent study
    commissioned by The Jockey Club to enhance horses' performance.  By not
    running in the Belmont, Summer Squall will relinquish a chance to win
    the Chrysler Triple Crown Challenge, which includes a $1-million to the
    horse which races in all three classics and amasses the most points.
    
    "Trainer Neil Howard and I agree that if we are to run without Lasix,"
    Campbell said, "it would have to be after a good summer's rest. 
    Therefore, with much regret, we will pass up an appearance in New York
    in the immediate future,  feeling that he could compete there in the
    fall."
    
    Campbell said that after the Preakness, Summer Squall will be sent back
    to Churchill Downs, where he will be rested, then prepared for his fall
    campaign.  Breeders' Cup Day is scheduled for Oct. 27 at Belmont Park.
    
    The Blood Horse May 19, 1990.
    
     
481.216An International Series.GENRAL::LEECHCustomer Services Engineer ** We do the job **Tue May 22 1990 21:3931
    
    
    Richard L. Duchossois, chairman and owner of Arlington International
    Racecourse in Illinois, said on May 14 that Arlington and Longchamp
    race course in France will join forces this season to present an
    international race seies offering bonuses and purses totaling more than 
    $5.5 million.  Named the Intercontinental Thoroghbred Challenge, the
    series will provide bonuses for owners and trainers during the
    Arlington International Festival of Racing, Sept. 1-3, and the Ciga
    Weekend at Longchamp, Oct. 6 and 7.
    
    The top bonus of $1 million will go to the owner of the horse which
    wins the Arlington Million (gr. IT) and the Prix de l'Arc de Triomphe
    (Fr-I).
    
    "This is a cooperative creation of Louis Romanet, the director of the
    French Jockey Club, and myself," Duchossois said.  "It is designed to
    creategreater interest and participation in racing on an international
    leval.  With the Challenge, we are offering each other our very finest
    races so as to promote goodwill throughout the Thoroughbred world."
    
    Besides the Arlington Million and the Arc, the other series races will
    be the Secretariat (gr. IT) and Beverly D. Stakes at Arlington and the
    following events at Longchamp: Prix Dollar (Fr-II), Prix du Rond-Point
    (Fr-II), and Prix de l'Opera (Fr-II).
    
    "Horses from all other major racing countries in the world are eligible
    to compete," Duchossois said.  "The series is not restricted to the
    U. S. and France."
    
    The Blood Horse May 19, 1990.
481.217Krone's recovery.GENRAL::LEECHCustomer Services Engineer ** We do the job **Thu May 31 1990 20:2418
481.218DAILY RACING FORM free handicap rankings.GENRAL::LEECHCustomer Services Engineer ** We do the job **Thu May 31 1990 20:3828
    
    
    Horse of the Year and champion 3-year-old male Sunday Silence and
    champion older female Bayakoa received the highest weight assignments
    on the DAILY RACING FORM free handicap for 1989.  The 37th edition of
    the handicap was compiled by Eual F. Wyatt Jr., director of racing and
    racing secretary at Hollywood Park.
    
    Sunday Silence was the top-weighted runner in the ranking for
    3-year-old males with an assignment of 129 pounds.  Easy Goer was
    ranked second at 128 pounds.
    
    Bayakoa received top weight of 129 pounds among females, 4-year-olds
    and up.  Bankers Lady and Goodby Halo each received 123 pounds, the
    catagory's second-highest weight.
    
    Gorgeous and divisional champion Open Mind each received 126 pounds to
    top the ranking for 3-year-old fillies.  On the Line received 125
    pounds as the top-weighted male sprinter, 3 years-old and up.
    
    Champion older male Blushing John topped the ranking for males,
    4-year-olds and up, with an assignment of 124 pounds.  Champion
    sprinter Safely Kept was assigned top weight of 126 pounds among female
    sprinters, 3-year-olds and up.
    
    Among turf runners, champion Brown Bess was the top-rated female at 124
    pounds, and champion Steinlen was the top-weighted male at 126 pounds.
                           
481.219Horse notes.GENRAL::LEECHCustomer Services Engineer ** We do the job **Thu May 31 1990 20:4417
    
    Lady's Secret, 1986 Horse of the Year, produced an Alydar filly at
    Issam Fares' Fares Farm near Lexington on April 27.  The mare was
    scheduled to be bred to Mr. Prospector.  Lady's Secret was purchased
    for $3.8 million by Fares during the dispersal of Eugene V. Klein's
    stock at Keenland's November breeding stock sale last year.
    
    
    
    
    Five mares owned by Queen Elizabeth II were bred this year to Kentuckey
    stallions.  Christchurch was bred to Al Nasr, Expansive to Shadeed,
    Gentle Persuasion to Diesis, Highclere to Manila, and Sleeping Beauty
    to Danzig Connection.
    
    The Blood Horse May 26, 1990.
    
481.220Shoemaker's first runner.GENRAL::LEECHCustomer Services Engineer ** We do the job **Thu May 31 1990 20:5630
    
    
    Bill Shoemaker sassled his first runner on May 18 at Hollywood Park. 
    His 3-year-old filly Star Child, making her North American debut,
    finished sixth under Eddie Delahoussaye in the fifthe race.  Shoemaker,
    58, retired from the saddle on Feb. 3 at Santa Anita with 8,833 wins
    from 40,350 mounts.
    
    "Everyone is making so much of this race because she is my first
    runner," he said the day before the race, "but after I've started 10 or
    12, no one will be paying any attention to the stable."
    
    Shomaker, who finished fourth in his final ride, was not dissapointed
    with Star Child's five-length defeat.
    
    "She broke a little slow and had a little traffic problem, but she ran
    a good race," said Shoemaker.  "She's going to be okay.  We'll find
    another race like that for her, and we'll be in business."
    
    Delehoussaye said Star Child "just got a little tired.  She's been away
    for awhile.  She moved up around the turn and made a bid, then ran
    evenly the last eigth of a mile."
    
    Shoemaker, who has been galloping Star Child in the mornings, saddled
    the horse for Madeline Jason.  He trains about 24 horses for a dozen
    owners.
    
    The Blood Horse May 26,1990.
    
    
481.221Triple dead heat at Arlington.GENRAL::LEECHCustomer Services Engineer ** We do the job **Thu May 31 1990 21:0727
    
    
    The day after Pat Day won the Preakness Stakes (gr. I) on summer
    Squall, he was aboard All Worked Up when that runner finished in a
    triple dead heat for first with Marsha's Affair and Survival in the
    ninth race at Arlington International Race Course.  Also at Arlington
    the day before the triple dead heat, Dispersal and Pentelicus finished
    in a dead heat for first in the Johhny Morris Handicap.  (Pentelicus is
    a half-brother to Gana Facil, dam of Kentucky Derby, gr. I winner and
    Preakness runner-up Unbridled.)
    
    The May 20 triple dead heat was the third in modern Illinois
    Thoroughbred history and the second at Arlington.  The first involved
    Royal Redress, Livingston, and Mr. S. Chance on August 19, 1963.  The
    other triple dead heat, with Paddy O'Rock, Me Will Win, and Miss
    Brendy, occured at Sportsman's Park on Nov. 18, 1965.
    
    The only North American triple dead heat in a stakes came in the Carter
    Handicap at Aqueduct on June 10, 1944.  The camera could not seperate
    Brownie, Bossuet, and Wait a Bit.
    
    There have been 18 triple-dead-heat finishes in North America in Modern
    history.  In the recent Arlington dead heat, Marsha's Affair was ridden
    by Juvenal Diaz, Survival by Jorge Valesquez.  The race was a 
    seven-furlong allowance event for 3-year-olds.
    
    The Blood Horse May 26, 1990.  
481.222Belmont Stakes and LasixDECWET::DADDAMIOTesting proves testing worksWed Jun 27 1990 00:0133
    I've been meaning to enter this since the Belmont, but haven't had the
    chance!  The Belmont telecast made a big issue over the use of Lasix
    and the NYRA not allowing horses to run on Lasix.  At the same time the
    Cornell Animal Newsletter came out with an article on the performance
    enhancement of Lasix in race horses.  Basically the research was done
    on geldings, so they point out that it might not apply across the board
    to all horses.  They found that horses did run better on Lasix because
    of it diuretic property (i.e. the horses were running with 20 lbs. less
    urine giving them a weight advantage of horses not using Lasix).  They
    also pointed out that Lasix has never been proven to be effective
    against bleeding (but obviously it does help since so many people do
    use it for that purpose).
    
    The Belmont "seemed" to show that Unbridled didn't run as well without
    Lasix since he came in 4th.  I'd like to see if he runs at Saratoga and
    in the Breeders Cup (being held at Belmont) and compare performances,
    though.  I just watched my tape of 1987 races and the similarity with
    Alysheba was amazing (although Alysheba also won the Preakness). 
    Alysheba came in 4th in the Belmont with the same kind of performance
    as Unbridled.  The sportscasters also made a big deal about Lasix that
    year, too.  They really seem to be pushing to have horses being able to
    race on Lasix everywhere since there is so much demand for horses to
    race, and (they seem to claim) not enough horses.  Anyone here have any
    opinion on that?
    
    My husband read that horses in Europe are not allowed to run on any
    drugs at all.  They seem to have enough of horses to fill the demand
    (my opinion from seeing some of the European races on TV).  Being
    basically a purist when it comes to animal breeding (mostly dogs and
    horses), I would like to see the same rules apply in the US - i.e. no
    race day drugs.
    
    						Jan
481.223Lasix debateNANOOK::RAWDENWater flowing underground...Fri Jun 29 1990 15:1652
I hadn't heard of the Cornell study.  The Univ. of Pa. released a study 
right after the Kentucky Derby that has been heavily debated (and is 
still being debated) in the Thoroughbred magazines.  The UP study of 
Lasix (appropriate name?) followed 150 or so horses through three of their 
races.  They used Lasix on both horses who were known to bleed and those 
who hadn't been considered bleeders before.  They found that most of the 
horses, bleeders and non-bleeders alike, bled at some point during the 
study, and that Lasix didn't seem to really help stop bleeding.  They 
found that the most statistically significant effect was on geldings.  
Their theory is that these tended to be older than the non-geldings, and 
that the effect was related to age rather than sex.
    
The study is controversial because it was funded by the New York Racing 
Assoc., which is not an unbiased observer, and which has 
now proposed a ban that would be phased in throughout the country over 
the next 3 years.  This would be the end of the NYRA's current problem 
of horses that avoid their races because of the medication restrictions.

Proponents of Lasix claim that the diuretic effect thins the blood and 
reduces blood pressure (the drug in Lasix is used in humans to reduce 
clotting and lower blood pressure), and the reduction means less stress 
on the lining of the lung, and therefore less chance of rupturing the 
blood vessels lining the lungs.

Opponents say that it's effect on bleeding is marginal and that the 
primary effect is to mildly hype the horse up, and therefore they run 
faster.

The debate is centering on:
- Whether using the drug gives racing a bad image (I think it does),
- Whether "bleeders" running more inconsistently without it, which would
  make the races more erratic, would be a turn off for many 
  fans/gamblers, and
- Whether the incentive to use alternatives (reducing feed and water long
  before the race, or the surreptitous use of hormones or other drugs) 
  would be more harmful to the horses than the use of Lasix.

One thing that has surprised me about the debate is that the NY trainers 
do use Lasix during training.  I didn't realize that this was allowed 
and used.  Few people, other than track owners, are actually arguing that 
the fields would be smaller without Lasix.  There are plenty of other
reasons that horses don't run, and this wouldn't change all those other
reasons.
  
As far as the Belmont goes, I see no reason to be surprised that a 
fresh, well trained horse with good credentials was able to beat a field 
of horses that were either in over their heads, or had run through a 
very tiring racing campaign.

Bill

    
481.224how much blood?TLE::DINGEEThis isn't a rehearsal, you know.Mon Jul 02 1990 17:5011
    
    Regarding Lasix and bleeding, can someone explain just how much
    "bleeding" is normal? I heard an interview with one of the owners
    who said he "didn't know" if his horse bled during the Derby because
    they didn't "pipe" (I think that was the term they used) him. I get
    the impression they put a little tube/light/camera into the horse's
    nose and down toward the lungs to see if he bled; and that one tiny
    drop of blood seen this way constitutes bleeding?
    
    thanks,
    -julie
481.225lasixKAHALA::HOLMESTue Jul 03 1990 14:4113
    No idea what normal would be.  Years ago in the paddock at Foxboro
    when I was grooming my fathers horse, the driver pointed out
    a horse nearby and you could see the blood at the opening
    of the nose.  

    RE: .223
    At the end of Foxboro's racing the track required that Lasix be
    givin to the horse by the track vet at a certain time.
    Something like 10 hourse before that horse was to race.  I must
    not last to long if it is used in training in NY

    Bill
481.226TOMLIN::ROMBERGhow long 'til the next holiday?Tue Jul 03 1990 16:2614
The term is 'scope', short for endoscope, which is basically a flexible tube
with a light source and optical fibers to see what the light source sees, kind
of like a flexible microscope. The tube is inserted through the nose, and 
guided down into the lungs.  The same process as tube worming, but with a 
different destination (lungs vs. stomach)

I don't know how much blood is normal.  My sister's horse got nosebleeds a 
couple of times when I evented him (once during a lesson).  From the endoscopic
exam, we were ablt to tell that the bleeding was indeed from his lungs, and not
from his head, which would have meant a different prognosis completely.  When I 
had Inverness, it was suggested that the 'scoping should be done within 24 hours
of the bleeding, in order to accurately determine the source.  The vet was able
to actually show me the traces of blood still in Inverness' lungs at the time 
of the 'scope.
481.227VMSSPT::PAANANENTue Jul 03 1990 16:344
  See also note 471 which discusses the topic of bleeding from
  lungs.

481.228RE: SONIC BOOMOZROCK::GARRATTThu Jul 05 1990 04:0515
    I just thought I would add to this note.  I am new to the notes
    conference so I know this is a bit late in coming.
    
    I was actually in England when this happened.  One of the local
    television programmes I was watching did a test with the sonic gun. 
    They chose a very quiet riding school pony which you could put anyone
    on, children, adults, beginneers ect.  They put an experienced adult on
    this 13.2h pony, then fired the sonic gun at it.  The pony went mad,
    the rider took at least 45 seconds to take control of it again.
    
    This proved the point that it really did work.
    
    Makes you think doesn't it?
    
    Suzanne
481.229Easy Goer retires (reprinted from the Herald)DELNI::KEIRANThu Jul 19 1990 12:3835
    
    
    Easy Goer, the Belmont Stakes winner who denied Sunday Silence the
    1989 Triple Crown, was retired yesterday because of a chipped sesamoid
    bone, costing the 4 year old colt another shot at his archrival in the
    Aug 4 Arlington Challenge cup.
    
    Easy Goer, the 1988 2 year old champion and the fourth leading money
    winner in thoroughbred history, apparently chipped the sesamoid in his
    right foreleg during a routine gallop at Belmont Park on sunday
    morning, according to Shug McGaughey.
    
    "He came back and cooled out fine but then in the afternoon, he got a 
    little ouchy and we had him xrayed." he said.
    
    The x-rays were sent to Dr. Larry Bramladge in Kentucky and McGaughey
    said the decision to retire Easy Goer was made tuesday after
    consultation with the veterinarian and owner Ogden Phipps.
    
    McGuaghey said the injury was not life threatining and that Easy Goer
    was not in any great discomfort. 
    
    "He's just a little off, but he's outside being hand walked right now"
    he said.
    
    Though details have not been finalized, McGaughey said Easy Goer will
    return to Claiborne Farms in Paris, KY where he was foaled to begin a
    new career as a stallion.
    
    Easy Goer's retirement ruins the highly anticipated million dollar
    showdown among him, Sunday Silence and Criminal Type.
    
    Easy Goer retires with a record of 14 victories, five seconds and one
    third in 20 lifetime starts with a total purse earnings of $4,873,770.
    He was 9-4-1 in 14 Grade I stakes and 2-2-0 in four $1 million races.
481.230A record in perspective.GENRAL::LEECHCustomer Services Engineer ** We do the job **Tue Aug 07 1990 01:148
    
    
    Combined earnings for Thoroughbred racing's two leading earners total
    $13,271,102 (Alysheba, $6,679242; John Henry, $6,591,860).  This total
    is slightly highr than the record price of $13.1 million paid for a
    yearling at Keeneland in 1985.
    
    The Blood Horse, Aug. 4, 1990.
481.231Don't Leave The Stall Without It.GENRAL::LEECHCustomer Services Engineer ** We do the job **Tue Aug 07 1990 01:3034
    
    
    Andrew Adlam wanted to buy a race horse and had no money, so the native
    of Jamaicasolved the problem in a very American way.  He bought horses
    and kept them in training using credit cards, according to a story in
    the Miami HERALD.
    
    Adlam bought a maiden three-year-old filly for $2,000 and fellow
    Jamaican Carl Cunningham, as assistant trainer anxious to be on his
    own, agreed to train the horse for nothing.  The filly never won, and
    Adlam used credit cards to pay for feed and other expenses.  When he
    won a Trifecta last year, he decided to use the winnings to buy another
    horse, instead of pay off his credit cards.
    
    The horse he wanted, a 4-year-old gelding, could be claimed for a
    $8,250 tag, by Adlam only had $6,000.  The resourceful gambler then
    convinced four different banks to issue him a credit card with a $1,000
    limit, and using the cash advances allowed on the cards, he claimed
    Greg At Bat on Oct. 4, 1989, at Calder Race Course.
    
    Greg At Bat won for Adlam in claiming and allowance company, then was
    injured in a three-horse spill and had to be rested for three months, 
    during which time Adlam relied heavily on his credit cards.  Upon
    returning to action, Greg At Bat ran fifthe in a race, won a pair of
    allowance races at Gulfstream Park, then took the $50,000-added Cooper
    City Handicap on June 16 at Calder.
    
    The winner's share of the Cooper City, $32,160, helped Adlam pay off
    half of the debt on his credit cards.  the gelding next ran third in
    the July 7 Broward Handicap at Calder, and Adlam has vowed to cut up
    his credit cards in the winner's circle the next time that Greg At Bat
    wins.
    
    The Blood Horse, Aug. 4, 1990.
481.232Horsemen notes.GENRAL::LEECHCustomer Services Engineer ** We do the job **Tue Aug 07 1990 02:1541
481.233Rhythm takes the Travers in his own good time.GENRAL::LEECHCustomer Services Engineer ** We do the job **Sun Aug 19 1990 17:2927
    
    
    Rhythm called the tune Saturday--with trainer Shug McGaughy's blessing.
    
    Dissapointed with the colt's second-place finish in the Dwyer and
    third-place finish in the Haskell Handicap, McGaughey decided "maybe
    he wants the rider to let him alone to do what he wants."
    
    "I thought maybe he's a grind it out horse," McGaughey said.  "Get him
    eight or nine lengths behind and see what happens.  Maybe he wants to
    do it all at once."
    
    Rhythm, the 2-year-old champion last year who had won twice in seven
    previous starts this year, was dead last under Craig Perret in the
    13-horse field after the first half-mile.
    
    On the turn, however, he began to move--and he did it all at
    once,sweeping past horses and taking the lead just inside the 1/16th
    pole to beat Shot Gun Scott by 3 1/2 lengths before a crowd of 43,989.
    
    Sir Richard Lewis was third, a neck behind Shot Gun Scott.
    
    Rhythm, owned by Ogden Mills Phipps, completed the 1 1/4 miles on a
    fast track in 2:02.6.  He paid $15, $7.80 and $5.60 in earning $707,100
    from a purse of $1,178,500.
    
    From the Gazette Telegraph Sports section Aug. 19, 1990.
481.2341990 Fall racingDECWET::DADDAMIOTesting proves testing worksMon Oct 01 1990 19:1930
    Anyone know what's been happening in the fall races since the Travers?
    I'm looking for results from the Woodward, Marlboro, and Jockey Club
    Gold Cup.  The last races I saw were the Molson Export Million and the
    Arlington Million.
    
    The Molson Export Million was won by Izvestia who is this year's 
    Canadian Triple Crown winner.  He set records in the Triple Crown races,
    however, the record times weren't as fast as US record times, but they
    would have been very good times in the US.  He just about walked away
    with the Molson Million - made the other horses look like they were
    standing still.  Supposedly he will be (was?) in the Jockey Club Gold
    Cup, then go to the Breeders' Cup.  He looks better to me than any of
    the US three-year-olds, so it should be an interesing Breeders' Cup
    race.
    
    In the Arlington Million Golden Pheasant beat out With Approval by a
    length or so (?? can't quite remember the distance) and those two were
    well ahead of the rest of the field (also both were sired by Caro who
    was the sire of Winning Colors).  With Approval is last year's Canadian
    Triple Crown winner and from the same farm as Izvestia.  He set a world
    record on the turf at Belmont earlier this year (can't remember the
    race, anyone else know?).  Don't know much about Golden Pheasant other
    than he's part owned by Wayne Gretzky and trained by Charlie
    Whittinghan.  I got the impression that at least With Approval will be 
    in one of the Breeders' Cup turf races.  Didn't hear much about any of
    the other horses in the field which included Steinlen and Prized.
    
    Hope someone can provide more info on what's been going on!  Thanks.
    
    						Jan
481.235Breeders' Cup EntriesYOBILL::RAWDENWater flowing underground...Tue Oct 23 1990 17:51164
Here's the pre-entries for the Breeders' Cup races.  They'll be televised on NBC
this Saturday from 1:00?-6PM.  Final entries and post positions will be drawn on
Weds.  Horses marked * below are the expected starters.  Horses marked (*) are
waiting to get into full races (those with more than 14 entries) or haven't
committed to the other races yet.

Also, a few comments about who these horses are, from what I remember.

BC Sprint (6 furlongs, $1M):

1*	Mr. Nickerson	5-1
2	Home at Last	8-1	
3*	Dancing Spree	5-1
4*	Safely Kept	6-1
5	Beau Genius	12-1
6*	Prospectors Gamble 4-1
7	Dispersal	10-1
8*	Adjudicating	15-1
9*	Carson City	8-1	Won recent Graded race - Woodward?
10*	Black Tie Affair 30-1
11*	Glitterman	20-1
12*	Corwyn Bay	15-1
13*	Shaker Knit	20-1
14	Pro for Sure	20-1
15*	Dargai		20-1
16*	Daijur		5-2	Europeans call him "world's fastest horse"
17	Northern Wolf	30-1
18(*)	Paley Prince	10-1
19*	Potentiality	20-1
20*	Senor Speedy	20-1

BC Juv Fillies (1 1/16M, $1M):

1*	Meadow Star	3-5	Won Frizette and everything else run in NY
2*	Garden Gal	8-1
3*	Lite Light	8-1
4*	Beyond Perfection 5-1
5*	Through Flight	15-1
6*	Flawlessly	15-1
7*	Chanpagne Glow	15-1
8*	Private Treasure 20-1
9*	Sweet Sarita	20-1
10*	Verbasle	20-1
11*	Wilderness Song	20-1
12*	Wild for Traci	20-1
13*	Dance Smartly	30-1
14*	Doradoradora	30-1

BC Distaff (1 1/8M, $1M):

1*	Go for Wand	6-5
2*	Bayakoa		8-5
3*	Gorgeous	5-1
4*	Luthier's Launch 12-1
5*	Mistaurian	12-1
6	Valay Maid	20-1	
7*	Colonial Waters	15-1
8*	Flags Waving	20-1

BC Mile (1M, $1M):

1*	Steinlen	9-2
2	With Approval	5-1
3*	Shot Gun Scott	20-1
4	Thirty Six Red	20-1
5*	Itsallgreektome	12-1
6	Izvestia	8-1
7	Fieldy		20-1
8	Foresta		20-1
9*	Who's to Pay	10-1
10*	Great Normand	30-1	Won Meadowlands Cup (Gr 1) a couple weeks ago.
				Paid $360+ for $2 to win.  Highest Graded
				race win pay-off ever.
11*	Go Dutch	15-1
12*	Jalaajel	20-1
13	Pleasant Tap	20-1
14*	Colway Rally	30-1
15	Sky Classic	20-1
16	Corwyn Bay	20-1
17*	Expensive Decision 15-1
18	Great Commotion	5-1
19	Pro for Sure	20-1
20	Colchis Island	20-1
21	Colour Chart	15-1
22*	Distant Relative 6-1
23	Green Line Express 12-1
24	Houseproud	15-1
25	In Excess	20-1
26	Kanatiyr	20-1
27*	Lady Winner	20-1
28*	Markofdistinction 4-1
29*	Priolo		8-1
30*	Royal Academy	6-1
31	Septieme Ciel	20-1
32	Zoman		20-1

BC Juvenile (1 1/16M, $1M):

1*	Deposit Ticket	9-2
2	Hansel		6-1
3*	Best Pal	4-1
4*	Wall Street Dancer 10-1
5*	Fire in Ice	8-1
6*	Fly so Free	3-1	Won Champagne
7*	Happy Jazz Band	8-1
8*	Wildly Special	8-1
9*	Eternity Star	15-1
10*	Hot Date	20-1
11*	Lost Mountain	15-1
12(*)	Mr. Peregrine	15-1
13*	Take me Out	20-1
14*	Time Gentlemen	15-1

BC Turf (1 1/2M, $2M):

1*	With Approval	5-1
2	Shot Gun Scott	20-1
3*	Thirty Six Red	20-1
4	Golden Pheasant	3-1
5	Shy Tom		15-1
6*	Alwuhush	10-1
7*	El Senor	10-1
8*	Pleasant Tap	20-1
9*	Cacoethes	5-1	Big win on Turf @Bel in first US start
10(*)	French Glory	8-1
11*	Sky Classic	20-1
12	Ode		12-1
13*	Belmez		6-1
14*	Colchis Island	20-1
15	Ibn Bey		20-1
16*	In the Wings	8-1
17*	Saumarez	4-1

BC Classic (1 1/4M, $3M):

1*	Unbridled	5-1	Second in last two starts (Arlington
				Million ? and Super Derby) to stablemates
2*	De Roche	15-1
3*	Flying Continental 4-1  Winner of Jockey Club Gold Cup (@1 1/4 this yr.)
4*	Rhythm		6-1
5*	Opening Verse	10-1
6*	Home at Last	10-1	Won Super Derby; was an entry w/Unbridled
				who finished second
7	Shot Gun Scott	20-1
8	Thirty Six Red	15-1
9*	Beau Genius	12-1
10	Golden Pheasant	12-1	Injured while training recently
11*	Mi Selecto	15-1
12*	Shy Tom		20-1
13*	Dispersal	9-2
14(*)	Quiet American	8-1
15	Baron De Vaux	20-1
16*	Izvestia	8-1	3rd. in Jockey Club Gold Cup
17*	Lively One	12-1
18	Adjudicating	15-1
19	Pleasant Tap	20-1
20(*)	Defensive Play	8-1
21*	Go and Go	8-1
22	Anshan		15-1
23*	Ibn Bey		15-1
24	Pirate Army	15-1
25	Priolo		12-1

481.236DECWET::DADDAMIOTesting proves testing worksWed Oct 24 1990 19:097
    Thanks for posting the Breeders' Cup entries!  One note on Unbridled -
    he didn't run in the Arlington Million.  That race was won by Golden
    Pheasant with With Approval second (don't remember 3rd).  Please post
    final entries if you get them!  We're getting ready for a great day of
    racing!
    
    						Jan
481.237Breeders' Cup resultsDECWET::DADDAMIOTesting proves testing worksMon Oct 29 1990 18:2959
		     Breeders' Cup Results (and comments)
    		(see note 1384 for discussion on the accidents which
    		occurred during these races)

	Sprint

1.  Safely Kept
2.  Dayjur  (jumped at shadows in the stretch causing him to lose)
3.  Black Tie Affair
4.  Adjudicating
    (Mr. Nickerson went down supposedly due to a heart attack and Shaker
    Knit fell over him.  Chris Antley (Mr. Nickerson's rider) suffered a
    broken collar bone, Jose Santos (Shaker Knit) was uninjured.)

	Juvenile Fillies

1.  Meadow Star (this win makes 7 out of 7 for her!)
2.  Private Treasure
3.  Dance Smartly
4.  Verbasle

	Distaff

1.  Bayakoa
2.  Colonial Waters
3.  Valay Maid
    (Go For Wand broke her leg in the stretch run, she and Bayakoa were
    both running well and it looked like Go For Wand might win before the
    accident occurred.  Randy Romero was uninjured.  I didn't catch the 4th 
    place finisher.)
    
	Turf Mile

1.  Royal Academy (Lester Piggot's comeback victory)
2.  Itsallgreektome
3.  Priolo
4.  Steinlen

	Juvenile Colts

1.  Fly So Free
2.  Take Me Out
3.  Lost Mountain
4.  Happy Jazz Band

	Turf

1.  In The Wings
2.  With Approval
3.  El Senor
4.  Alwuhush

	Classic
    
1.  Unbridled (made a great run, just like in the Derby except w/ Pat
    Day up)
2.  Ibn Bey
3.  Thirty Six Red
4.  Lively One
481.238Unbridled close upREGENT::WIMBERGThu Nov 01 1990 13:5710
    
    Got to spend tuesday morning (Oct 30th) on the backside at Churchill
    Downs! What fun. Crisp fall morning and all the horses working.
    
    Unbridled (sp) was back at the Downs after his victory in the Classic.
    Very nice unassuming looking colt. Didn't see him work, just cooling
    out. Good to see Pat Day back at Churchill Downs. 
    
    They are racing there thru the end of November.
    
481.239Northern Dancer and Alydar goneDECWET::DADDAMIOTesting proves testing worksMon Nov 19 1990 18:2510
    Heard Saturday on a Canadian sports broadcast that Northern Dancer and 
    Alydar were both put down that day.  They said that Northern Dancer had
    suffered from colic, but didn't say anything about Alydar's condition. 
    There was nothing in the Sunday papers about it out here (Seattle) and
    nothing on any of the network newscasts this weekend.  Has anyone else
    heard about this?  I'd appreciate any more details.  If my calculations
    are correct, Northern Dancer was 29 years old and Alydar was 15.  It's
    too bad about both of them.  I know they hadn't bred Northern Dancer in
    quite a few years, but Alydar was really becoming an excellent sire. 
    Too bad to lose him so quickly.
481.241TOMLIN::ROMBERGhow long 'til the next holiday?Mon Nov 19 1990 19:355
I'd heard that Alydar had broken a leg. They operated on him and he cam through 
the surgery well, only to rebreak the leg. (Some horses don't tolerate casts and
kick/stomp hard enough to undo any good that has been done) I thought I also 
heard he didn't 'appreciate the sling'.

481.242DELNI::KEIRANTue Nov 20 1990 10:221
    I heard that Alydar broke his leg kicking the wall in his stall.
481.243according to the racing formREGENT::WIMBERGTue Nov 20 1990 12:0416
    
    Read the racing form from saturday the 17th. Alydar kicked the stall,
    broke his cannon bone. As stated in the last reply, surgery went well
    but he re-injuried the leg because he did not appreciate the sling.
    Alydar was one of the leading sires - His offspring include Easy Goer,
    and Alyseda (sp). He was standing at stud at Calument Farm. He was not
    syndicated and in his first year at stud the fee was $40,000 with a
    live foal guarantee. Last year his services went for $200K+ no
    guarantees. The farm felt that by not syndicating him, they could pick
    the best mares to breed - Evidenently they were right.
    
    About Northern Dancer - the paper said he initially responded to
    treatment but had a relapse of the colic. Due to his age (29) the
    elected to forgo surgery and put him down.
    
    
481.244alydar insured for $35 million.GENRAL::LEECHNEVER assume anything.Wed Dec 12 1990 03:5210
    
    
    Reports from various sources indicated that some $35 million is being
    paid in insurance claims on Alydar.  Of that amount, some $30 million
    was insured on the London market.  Parties with insurance on the
    stallion were his owner and also holders of lifetime breeding rights.
    
    The Blood Horse December 8, 1990.
    
    
481.245Cash Asmussen wins fifth French riding title.GENRAL::LEECHNEVER assume anything.Wed Dec 12 1990 04:1922
    
    
    American expatriate Cash Asmussen clinched his fifth French riding
    title when he took the Prix Charles and Henry Rouher at Sanit-Cloud
    aboard Passionaria on Nov. 26.  Asmussen ended the European racing 
    season with 140 victories.  He will compete in the international
    Jockeys' Championship in Japan before spending the winter at his
    family's ranch and traing center near Laredo, Texas.
    
    Asmussen, 28, won the 1979 Eclipse award for outstanding apprentice. 
    He left the United States in 1982 to ride for Greek shipping magnate
    Stavros Niarchos in Europe, and won his first French riding
    championship in 1985.  He rode in 1986 for Mahmoud Fustok, then in
    1987, rode in England and Ireland for Vincent O'Brien.  Asmussen parted
    company with O'Brien in 1988, the year he set a record as the first
    jockey in France to win more than 200 races in a season.  Since 1988, 
    he has ridden for Barry Hills, Andre Fabre, and Robert Sangster. 
    Asmussen will ride as a free lance jockey next season.
    
    The Blood Horse December 8, 1990.
    
     
481.246Dancing Spree to France.GENRAL::LEECHNEVER assume anything.Wed Dec 12 1990 04:2819
    
    
    Major winner Dancing Spree has been retiered and will stand the 1991
    season at Baron Guy de Rothschild's Haras de Meautry near Deauville,
    France.  George Harris Bloodstock of New York handled the sale of
    Dancing Spree (Nijinski II-Blitey, by Riva Ridge) to Rothschild.
    
    Dancing Spree was bred by Ogden Phipps and raced by Phipps in
    partnership with David Thompson's Cheveley Park Stud of England. 
    Thompson purchased a half-interest in Dancing Spree prior to his
    triumph in the 1989 Breeders' Cup Sprint (gr.I).
    
    Dancing Spree has been syndicated into 45 shares at $53,123 per share,
    and he will stand for a fee of $15,740.  An eaner of $1,470,484, the
    five-year-old also won the grade 1 Suburban and Carter Handicaps. 
    Dancing Spree will be shipped to France in late December.
    
    The Blood Horse Dec. 8, 1990.
    
481.247Racing applications denied in Mass.GENRAL::LEECHNEVER assume anything.Wed Dec 12 1990 04:4418
    
    
    
    The Massachusetts State Racing Commission has rejected the Thoroughbred
    racing applications of the Boston Turf Club (closely alignedwith the
    management of the of the defunct Suffolk Downs) and Foxboro Park, which
    had wanted to establish a meeting at a former Standardbred track.
    
    Boston Turf Club officials said the group's application depended on
    relief in the state takeout structure, and Foxboro based its proposal
    on takeout relief and favorable terms on off-track betting.  The
    applications were denied because both were contingent upon factors
    beyond the commission's authority.  Both tax relief and off-track
    betting establishment would require legislative action.
    
    The Blood Horse Dec. 8, 1990.
    
     
481.248A true loser keeps on trying.GENRAL::LEECHNEVER assume anything.Wed Jan 09 1991 01:1912
    
    
    Trainer and co-owner Frank Posada was contemplating the racing future
    of Sallie Blue, which has lost all 69 of her career races.  When Sallie
    Blue finished fifth in a claiming race on Dec. 26 at Calder Race
    Course, she became ineligible to race in Florida after Jan. 1, because
    maidens beyond the age of four are not allowed to compete in the state.
    States in which Sallie Blue would be eligible to race include New York
    and Kentucky.
    
    The Blood Horse Jan. 5, 1991.
     
481.249Major Sire and Champion Ack Ack deadGENRAL::LEECHNEVER assume anything.Wed Jan 09 1991 01:5139
481.250Rockingham ParkAKOCOA::LESAGEFri Jan 25 1991 14:323
    THE paper this week announced Rockingham park will be hosting
    a $500,000.00 race this year in conjunction with the ABC Sports racing
    series. I believe the race will be in july.
481.251Winning Colors first foal.GENRAL::LEECHNEVER assume anything.Sat Feb 23 1991 15:5111
    
    
    Winning Colors, which in 1988 became the third filly to win the
    Kentucky Derby, produced her first foal on Jan. 15 at Graham Beck's
    Gainesway Farm near Lexington.  The foal is a filly by Mr. Prospector. 
    Winning Colors is owned by Beck's Gainesway Thoroughbreds Ltd.
    
    
    The Blood Horse Jan. 26, 1991.
    
    
481.252Early Triple Crown Nominations.GENRAL::LEECHNEVER assume anything.Sat Feb 23 1991 17:0423
    
    
    Fly so Free, which captured last year's Breeders' Cup Juvenile (gr. I),
    and undefeated Meadow Star, winner of the Breeders' Cup Juvenile
    Fillies (gr. I), are among the early nominees for this years Triple
    Crown.  The deadline for early nominations, which cost $600 per horse,
    was Jan. 16.  The late nomination deadline is April 8, when the fee
    will be $4,500.  Horses can also be supplimented to the Kentucky Derby,
    (gr. I), Preakness Stakes (gr. I), and Belmont Stakes (gr. I).
    
    
    Other 3-year-olds on a preliminary list of early nominees, released on
    Jan. 23 by Triple Crown Productions, were Best Pal, Excavate, Hansel,
    Jackie Wackie, Richman, Scan and To Freedom.  The complete list of
    early nominees for the Triple Crown will be announced on Feb. 2.   It
    appeared the total would be at least 360, well above the 315 of a yuear
    ago, said Ed Seigenfeld, executive director of Triple Crown
    Productions.
    
    
    The Blood Horse Feb. 2, 1991.
     
     
481.253Rockingham race to be on ABC.GENRAL::LEECHNEVER assume anything.Sat Feb 23 1991 17:0913
    
    
    Rockingham Park's New England Classic, a %500,000 race for
    three-year-olds and up at 1 1/8 miles, has been added to the American
    Racing Championship Series.  The new race, to be run on July 20, filled
    the void created when Arlington dropped out of the series.  
    
    The New England Classic will be the seventh race in the 10-race series, 
    which is being inaugurated this year and will be televised nationally
    this year by ABC.  It has not yet been decided whether the Rockingham
    race will be run under allowance conditions or as a handicap.
    
    The Blood Horse Feb. 2, 1991. 
481.254Churchill plans for Derby Week.GENRAL::LEECHNEVER assume anything.Sat Feb 23 1991 17:1515
    
    
    Ten stakes, with purces totaling a record $1.36 million in added money,
    will be offered at Chuchill Downes during Kentucky Derby (gr. I) week,
    April 27 - May 4. The Derby, to be raced on May 4, has been increased
    from $350,000 to $500,000 added.
    
    The purse for the May 3 Kentucky Oaks (gr. I) has been raised from
    $200,000 added to $250,000 added.  Horsemen will be able to make
    supplemental nominations to the 1 1/8 mile Oaks until the time of
    closing on May 1.  The cost to supplement will be $25,000 per filly.
    
    The Blood Horse Feb. 2, 1991.
    
     
481.2551991 Eclipse Award Winners.GENRAL::LEECHNEVER assume anything.Mon Feb 25 1991 23:5920
    
    
    Champion 2-year-old male		Fly So Free
    Champion 2-year-old female		Meadow Star
    
    Champion 3-year-old male		Unbridled
    Champion 3-year-old female		Go For Wand
    
    Champion Older male 		Criminal Type	*HORSE OF THE YEAR*
    Champion Older female		Bayakoa
    
    Champion Sprinter			Housebuster
    Champion Steeplechaser		Morley Street
    
    Champion Turf male			Itsallgreektome
    Champion Turf female		Laugh and Be Merry
    
    
    The Blood Horse Feb. 16, 1991.
    
481.256Alathea foals a Nashwan colt.GENRAL::LEECHNEVER assume anything.Mon Mar 11 1991 20:5810
    
    
    European champion Nashwan was represented by his first foal in this
    country when Alathea, dam of of group-winning full brothers Lead On
    Time and Great Commotion, produced a colt on Feb. 18 at Shaikh Maktoum
    bin Rashid al Maktoum's Gainsborough Farm near Versailles, Ky.  Alathea
    is scheduled to be bred to Gainsborough's Zilzal this season.
    
    The Blood Horse March 9, 1991.
     
481.257Racing returns to Mass.GENRAL::LEECHNEVER assume anything.Sat Mar 23 1991 01:0517
    
    
    Two parties are involved in negotiations with the ownership with
    Suffolk Downs to reopen the Massachusettstrack, which closed at the end
    of 1989.  Henry O'Donnell, chairman of the Massachusetts racing
    commission, said earlier this month that he expected something to
    happen soon regarding a lease agreement that would involve either James
    Mosely, a former Massachusetts racing commissioner, or Greyhound track
    executive Charles Sarkis.
    
    O'Donnell said he "firmly believes that Buddy LeRoux, who heads the
    Belle Isle partnership which owns the track, "is sincere about putting
    a package together for Suffolk."
    
    The Blood Horse, March 16, 1991.
    
    
481.258Match race at Santa Anita.GENRAL::LEECHNEVER assume anything.Sat Mar 23 1991 01:0916
    
    
    The first match race at Santa Anita will pit a Thoroughbred sprinter
    against a Quarter Horse.  The four-furlong contest, scheduled for April
    14 at the Souther California track, will offer a winner-take-all purse
    of $100,000.
    
    Sunny Blossom, the Thoroughbred competitor, is a multiple graded stakes
    winner which holds Santa Anita's track record for six furlongs, 1:07
    1/5.  Grisold, the Quarter Horse competitor, holds the worlds record
    for 870 yards, :43:99.  Each runner will cary 120 pounds in the match
    race.
    
    The Blood Horse, March 16, 1991.
    
     
481.259Verbatim dead at 26.GENRAL::LEECHNEVER assume anything.Tue Mar 26 1991 03:2431
    
    
    Major winner and sire Verbatim was destroyed on March 15 at Spendthrift
    Farm, (Cap Hershey, president) because of the infirmities of old age. 
    The 26-year-old stallion had entered stud following his racing career
    at Elmendorf Farm in 1971, then was removed to Spendthrift in late 1989
    after Elmendorf discontinued its breeding operation.  Verbatim stood
    his final season in 1990, when he was bred to a limited number of
    mares.  He was buried at Spendthrift.
    
    Verbatim (Speak John-Well Kept, by Never Say Die) raced as a homebred
    for Elmendorf, which at that time was owned by the late Maxwell Gluck.
    Stakes-placed as a juvinile in 1967, Verbatim emerged as a classics
    contender after winning the Bahamas, Bay Shore, and Gotham Stakes the 
    following year.  
    
    He ran third in the Wood Memorial and Derby Trial Stakes before 13th of
    14 in the Kentucky Derby.
    
    Verbatim's runners earned more than $1 million each season for a dozen
    years, twice going over the $2-million mark (in 1984 and 1986).
    Verbatim sired 53 stakes winners, including millionaire and champion
    Princess Rooney, which won the inaugural Breeders' Cup Distaff (gr. I).
    Verbatim's other added-money winners included additional millionaires 
    Alphabatim and Hopeful Word, plus 1981 Belmont Stakes (gr. I) winner
    Summing (sire of champion and Breeders' Cup Juvinile Fillies, gr. I
    winner Epitome).
    
    The Blood Horse, March 23, 1991.
    
    
481.260Racing to return to Suffolk Downs.GENRAL::LEECHNEVER assume anything.Tue Mar 26 1991 03:3329
    
    
    James Moseley has signed a letter of intent to lease Suffolk Downs in
    Massachusettsfor 20 years, with an option for another 10 years, from
    Belle Isle Limited Partnership.  Moseley, a resident of Hamilton, Mass.,
    and a past state racing commisioner and state representative, heads a
    group called Sterkling Racecourse, Limited.  He hopes to divide racing
    dates in Massachusetts between Suffolk and and a track he plans to
    build in Sterling near Worchester.
    
    Legaslative hearings regarding offtrack betting, a license to race in
    1991, and a change in the state take-out structure are scheduled to
    begin on March 26.  Moseley has indicated he does not need off-track
    betting in place to bring back racing to Suffolk.
    
    In mid-March, Moseley was "cautiously optimistic" about a lease being
    signed sometime within the next 10 days to 2 weeks.
    
    "Because of the economic situation in Massachusetts, the idea of 2,000
    to 3,000 jobs putting people back to work and the impact on the economy
    makes it attractive for the legislature and the administration to get
    behind it,"  he said.
    
    The track, which has not offered racing since the end of 1989, could be
    back in operation by the beginning of July.
    
    The Blood Horse, March 23, 1991.
    
    
481.261Meadow Star wins at Aqueduct.GENRAL::LEECHNEVER assume anything.Tue Mar 26 1991 03:4318
    
    
    Carl Icahn's Meadow Star, the first 2-year-oldfilly champion of the
    1990's, made her 3-year-old debut on March 16 at Aqueduct in New York. 
    She turned in a solid performance, cruising to a 4 3/4 length victory
    in the $41,000-added Queen of the Stage Stakes.
    
    Meadow Star (Meadowlake-Inreality Star, by In Reality)is nominated to
    the Triple Crown.  Only three of her sex have won the series first leg,
    the Kentucky Derby (gr.I), and one of them, Genuine Risk, was
    conditioned by Meadow Star's trainer, LeRoy Jolly.
    
    Meadow Star's effort in the Queen of the Stage raised her unblemished
    record to eight victories, and her $26,460 share of the purse pushed
    her earnings over the $1-million mark.
    
    The Blood Horse, March 23, 1991.
    
481.262Kentucky Derby feverDECWET::DADDAMIOTesting proves testing worksMon Apr 29 1991 19:2523
    Well it's time to speculate on the Kentucky Derby again!  Lots of
    things have been happening in the past few weeks (not in order):
    
    	Dinard won the Santa Anita Derby beating Best Pal
    	Strike the Gold beat Fly So Free in the Blue Grass Stakes(?)
    	Cahill Road (full brother to Unbridled) won the Wood Memorial only
    	  to pull up lame (I believe it was a suspensory problem);  Meadow
    	  Star suffered her first defeat in this race coming in 4th
    	Alydavid won the Derby Trial fairly impressively
    
    According to ABC Sports on Saturday (and assuming I remembered all of
    this correctly!) the following horses are planning on going to
    the Derby:  Fly So Free, Best Pal, Strike the Gold.  Haven't heard
    about Meadow Star.  I think Dinard may also have suspensory problems
    but I can't remember which horse they were talking about at the time. 
    Alydavid may also go to the Derby, but they won't decide till later
    this week.
    
    So anyone want to take a guess as to who will win?  I was impressed
    with Strike the Gold (and am partial to Alydar offspring) so he's my
    pick.
    
    						Jan
481.263DerbyAKOCOA::LESAGETue Apr 30 1991 16:525
    If I knew all the horses in the race I would make a prediction, however
    I will say a long shot will win.  Going by the races this spring no
    horse has dominated.  
    
    Does Lucas have a horse in this years derby?
481.264Corporate Report will start for Lukas.GENRAL::LEECHNEVER assume anything.Thu May 02 1991 02:248
    
    
    D. Wayne Lukas has a horse in the Derby this year.  His name is
    Corporate Report and he was unraced as a two-year-old and has had only 
    4 races as a three-year-old.  He will be Lukas's 19th starter in 11
    years in the Derby.
    
    Pat
481.265Top Derby finishersDECWET::DADDAMIOTesting proves testing worksMon May 06 1991 18:5111
    For those of you who didn't get a chance to watch, here are the top
    finishers:
    
    	1 - Strike the Gold
    	2 - Best Pal
    	3 - Mane Minister
    	4 - Green Alligator
    	5 - Fly So Free
    
    That's all I can remember.  Mane Minister and Green Alligator were
    longshots.  It was a pretty good race.  On to the Preakness!
481.26680 to 1REGENT::WIMBERGWed May 08 1991 15:009
    
    Mane Minster went off at 80 to 1 and paid $25.50 on a $2 show ticket.
    
    Green Alligator was part of the pari-mutel field and went off at 16 to
    1.
    
    Kentucky Oaks was run on friday May 3rd - mile and 1/8 for 3 yr old
    fillies was won by Lite Light is spectacular style! Lots of class.
    
481.267HanselAKOCOA::LESAGEWed May 15 1991 12:422
    There is a 8 horse field in the Preakness Saturday.  The paper said
    Hansel will be entered even though he finished 9th in the Derby.
481.268Shoemaker progressing in his rehabilitation.GENRAL::LEECHNEVER assume anything.Tue Jun 25 1991 02:5239
    
    
    Bill Shoemaker continues to progress after an April 8 automobile
    accident near Los Angeles left him paralyzed from the shoulders down.
    
    "The big news last week was that he was taken off the respirator
    full-time," said Marlene Casini, director of public relations at Craig
    Hospital in Englewood, Colo.  "That was a major goal for him, and it
    has been a long and tedious process."
    
    Shoemaker, 59, gradually was weaned from the respirator, which
    assisted his breathing.  He remains in a "halo" neck brace to
    immobilize the area of his spine that was injured.
    
    "He'll remain in that until the injury is healed," Casini said. "At the
    moment, he still can't use his arms and legs, but he does have
    sensation from his shoulder to his thumb in the left arm, but still no
    movement.  that is always a good dign, but it's not always a
    predictor."
    
    The neck brace enables Shoemaker to sit up and get into more active
    rehabilitation, rather than having to lie flat until the injury heals.
    
    "We can get him into a wheelchair sooner," Casini said.  "His progress
    is about average.  He and his physician are both pleased, and he
    (Shoemaker) is extremly pleased with getting off the respirator."
    
    "It (rehabilitaion) will take a couple of months more," she added. 
    "Our goal with all of our patients is to get them to the point where
    they and their families are independent enough to go home."
    
    Shoemaker is talking on the phone to friends in Southern California,
    and his speech is "fine," according to Casini.  In a prepared statement
    on June 13, Shoemaker announced his intention to resume his training
    career when his rehabilitation in complete.  He is a member of racing's
    Hall of Fame for his accomplishments as a rider.
    
    The Blood Horse June 22, 1991.
     
481.269Calumet Farm in financial trouble.GENRAL::LEECHNEVER assume anything.Tue Jun 25 1991 03:1358
    
    
    Historic Calumet Farm, struggling under a massive debt load, received
    more bad news during the second week of June.  Two lawsuits, each
    seeking to remove a stallion from the Central Kentucky farm, were
    filed, and a deal to sell 77 acres of the nursery was reported to have
    fallen through.
    
    J.T. Lundy, Calumet's former president, was joined by Black Chip
    Stables and others in a lawsuit asking that the stallion Wild Again be
    turned over to Lundy as stallion manager.
    
    In the other lawsuit, Northern Equine Thoroughbred Productions Ltd.,
    headed by John Sikura Jr. asked the court to order Calumet to return
    the stallion Talinum.  According to the lawsuit, Calumet defaulted on
    the terms of 1988 sales agreement in which the nursery acquired Talinum
    for $3.6 million.
    
    Both lawsuits were filed in Kentucky in Fayette Circuit Court.
    
    Omega Proerties Inc., lead by Sikura, had been involved in a deal
    announced in April to buy 77 acres of Calumet land.  However, John T.
    Ward Jr., Calumet's chief operating officer, said the deal, which would
    have brought the farm between $3.5 and $4 million, was dead.
    
    Calumet's debts are estimated at around $70 million.  At least seven
    lawsuits and 20 liens have been filed against the nursery, which is
    operated as a corporation formed by Bertha Wright, widow of Warren
    Wright Jr. (who died in 1978), and the couples four children.
    
    Following are summaries of the lawsuits against Calumet, in addition to
    the two listed previously:
    
    * Peter Brant, who owns White Birch Farm in Connecticut, has sued for
      nearly $3.4 million, claiming that Calumet has defaulted on its
      purchase of the stallion Mogambo.  (Calumet has filed a suit against
      White Birch stating Calumet paid $4.8 million of its $6.5 million debt
      to White Birch.)
    
    * Manganaro Stables of Massachusetts has sued for $300,000.  A note to
      that entity singed on Jan. 9 became due on March 31.
    
    * Banc One of Lexington has sued Calumet and Lundy for $221,662, plus
      loan fees, that were due on March 15 on a $450,000 short term note
      renewed by Lundy.
    
    * Kathy Lundy, sister of the former Calumet president and owner of
      Equus Unlimited, and equine insurance agency, has sued Calumet and
      CommerceNational Bank for failing to pay $1.2 million in premiums and
      fees. 
    
    * Axmar Stables, former partner with Calumet in the ownership of nine
      horses, sued Calumet and Lundy for more than $3.3 million.  According
      to the lawsuit, Calumet pledged breeding rites and money that it owed
      Axmar to other creditors.
    
    
    The Blood Horse, June 22, 1991. 
481.270Travers Date?ESCROW::ROBERTSTue Jun 25 1991 13:164
    Does anyone know the date for the Travers this year?
    
    
    -ellie
481.271Travers is August 17CSSE32::GRAEMEWater flowing underground...Mon Jul 01 1991 01:304
    The Travers in August 17.  The Whitney is August 3rd and for
    steeplechase fans the NY Turf Writers Steeplechase is August 16.
    
    
481.272Horse racing to return to Suffolk Downs.GENRAL::LEECHNEVER assume anything.Tue Jul 09 1991 01:1812
    
    
    Long-awaited racing legislation was passed by the House and Sente in
    late June.  The bill wuld provide Suffolk Downs 200 Thoroughbred dates
    in 1992 and would give the Massachusetts Racing Commision the authority
    to grant the track racing dates in 1991.  The bill also grants Foxboro
    Raceway near Boston 200 racing dates in 1992, 75 for Thoroughbreds and
    125 for harness racing.
    
    The Blood Horse, July 6, 1991.
    
    
481.273Short trackAKOCOA::LESAGETue Jul 09 1991 17:434
    I wonder how a 5/8th mile track is going to do.  There is going to be
    considerable competition bewtween Suffolk, Rockingham and Foxboro's
    trotters, that I can not see how a short track is going to be able to
    compete in this area.  
481.274What is a donnybrooke?STRATA::BARBIERIGod can be so appreciated!Tue Oct 15 1991 14:455
      We are having a discussion here at our office about horse racing.
      We were wondering what they call a horserace that ends in a three 
      way tie? A 4 way tie? A two way tie?
    
      Also,  What is a donnybrooke?      Thanks,     Tony 
481.275CSLALL::LCOBURNSpare a horse,ride a cowboyTue Oct 15 1991 14:495
    A tie is a dead heat. Or a triple dead heat, etc, etc.
    
    Never heard of a donnybrooke. Sounds like a stable name. What context
    was it used in??
    
481.276here's one answerBOSACT::HELVEALL-IN-*what?*Tue Oct 15 1991 17:256
    
    A donnybrook is a term used to describe a fight, a riot, or even to
    describe a person who causes a fight. 
    
    It is also a stable name, particularly Donnybrook Arabians in NH.
    
481.277The Irish enjoy a good fight!A1VAX::GUNNI couldn't possibly commentTue Oct 15 1991 18:4311
    From Webster's dictionary:
    
    	donnybrook - [colloquialism from Donnybrook Fair] a rough rowdy
    		     fight or free-for-all
    
    	Donnybrook Fair - a yearly fair formerly held at Donnybrook, near
    			  Dublin, Ireland, during which there was much
    			  brawling and rowdiness
    
    and most Irish fairs had to do with horse trading as well as other
    activities!
481.278Update on Bill ShoemakerDECWET::JDADDAMIOMon Oct 28 1991 18:1611
    I read in a recent Blood-Horse that Bill Shoemaker is back in CA and
    has resumed training horses. His physical therapy continues in CA. He
    is still paralyzed from the armpits down. 
    
    The article also said that Shoe says that too much has been made of
    his blood alcohol content in the press. He said that he had only drunk
    2 beers that night. He also said that the accident happened while he
    was doing something(I forget exactly what it was) with his car phone. 
    
    I hope his recovery continues but I would recommend that he stay away
    from beer and car phones in the future!
481.279Corporate Report RetiredDECWET::JDADDAMIOAdmire spirit in horses &amp; women!Sat Dec 07 1991 23:3333
Millionaire Corporate Report, winner of the 1991 Travers Stakes(gr. I) will 
enter stud at W.T. Young's Overbrook Farm near Lexington. Owned by Young,
Corporate Report will stand fot $7,500 live foal. The colt suffered a 
FRACTURED COFFIN BONE in his left front foot during a workout in 
preparation for the Super Derby(gr. I) in September.
 

Corporate Report(Private Account-Ten Cents a Kiss, by Key to the Mint) was 
bred in Kentucky by Equigroup Throughbreds. Consigned by Arthur B Hancock 
III's Stone Farm on behalf of the breeder, Corporate Report was purchased as a 
weanling for $225,000 by Jim Eigel at the 1988 Keeneland November Mixed Sale.
Ten months later, Eigel's Rosemont Farm consigned Corporate Report to the 1989 
Keeneland Fall Yearling Sale, where D. Wayne Lukas purchased the colt for 
$350,000.

Corporate Report raced for Lukas and Young, winning 3 of 10 races and earning 
$1,067,908. The colt won the Travers from Hansel, Fly So Free, Strike the Gold 
Lost Mountain, and Tong Po.

Unraced at two because of a FRACTURED COFFIN BONE, Corporate Report placed 
second in the Preakness(gr. I), Swaps(gr II) and Rebel Stakes(gr III), the
Haskeel Invitational Handicap(gr I) and Arkansas Derby(Gr II)

"The Blood Horse", November 30 1991


    Guess if Corporate Report can survive two broken coffin bones and
    win the Travers after recovering from the first one, my guy can comeback 
    to full use too!
    
    John

John
481.280Oldest Racer RetiresDECWET::JDADDAMIOAdmire spirit in horses &amp; women!Sat Dec 07 1991 23:3412
"He's just out running around now, resting and partying," said John Bachechi 
of Curribot, a 14 year old gelding which was retired from racing in September 
in New Mexico. Curribot was believed to be the oldest competing Thoroughbred 
race horse at the time his career ended. 

Owner of a bar in Albuquerque, Bachechi described Curribot as his "all-time 
favorite horse." Bachechi claimed the gelding in order to retire him. The 
gelding which is living at Bachechi's farm, failed to win in seven 1991 
starts.

An earner of $491,527, Curribot raced for 12 seasons, winning 37 of his 139 
races. He won 22 added-money events.
481.281The absolute end of a dynastyDECWET::JDADDAMIOMontar con orgullo!Thu Feb 06 1992 17:0722
    
    Many of you know that the Calumet Farm, a famous TB breeding farm for
    decades(Maybe half a century), has gone bankrupt. The end is TRULY near
    for the farm. Alydar died a year and a half ago. The young stock and
    mares left a couple months ago. All the stallions are gone. I picked up 
    the following from the Feb 1 issue of The Blood Horse:
    
    "Details were being worked out so that the last horses at bankrupt
    Calumet Farm near Lexington, 27-year-old Royal Entrance and 25-year-old
    Moonbeam, could be moved to a farm owned by the family of Calumet's
    former resident veterinarian. Royal Entrance is the dam of champion
    Davona Dale, and Moonbeam is the dam of champion Before Dawn."
    
    At least the old mares are being allowed to live out their final years
    with some dignity. Personally, I very sad to see Calumet gone. They have 
    been a racing dynasty all my life. The second season I watched racing, 
    their Tim Tam won the 1958 Kentucky Derby and Preakness only to pull up 
    lame after finishing second in the Belmont Stakes. And they had been
    around a while then...I think they won their first major race back in
    the 40's
    
    John
481.282CARTUN::MISTOVICHThu Feb 06 1992 17:117
    John, they may have been older than that.  Someone please correct me if
    I'm wrong, but wasn't Man O'War bred at Calumet?  Admittedly sold as a
    yearly to Samuel Riddle (forget the name of his stable), but still,
    (assuming it was Calumet) they were already breeding top horses in the
    early 1900s.
    
    Mary
481.283More Calumet racing historyDECWET::JDADDAMIOMontar con orgullo!Fri Feb 07 1992 16:5336
    Mary, 
    
    Neither of us was completely correct. 
    
    Man o'War was bred by August Belmont at his Nursery Stud in Kentucky
    and sold to Samuel Riddle as a yearling. Riddle's farm was called Glen
    Riddle (Not to be confused with Nelson Riddle, the big band leader ;-).
    The Belmont Stakes and race track were founded by August Belmont's
    father, who's name I can't remember.
    
    But Calumet Farm was even older than I thought. Warren Wright founded
    the farm in 1931. What I was remembering about the 40's was that they
    had won 2 Triple Crowns in the 40's I think it was Whirlaway in 1941
    and Citation in 1948(?). So for 60+ years they were a major stud farm
    and racing stable.
    
    The other thing I had forgotten was that Calumet was the breeder/owner
    of the horse who won the first Derby I saw. That was Iron Leige in '57.
    I remember that race mostly because there was a big uproar about
    Shoemaker's error in the stretch. He cam out of his crouch on Gallant
    Man for a stride or two becuse he thought the race was over. He
    realized his mistake and Gallant Man responded. The horse ran very hard
    and lost by a short head or a nose. The stewards suspended Shoe for
    improper riding which affected the outcome of the race or something
    "official" sounding...In plain English, he messed up. Gallant Man and
    Shoe teamed up for a Belmont Stakes win 5 weeks later. But I had
    forgotten that Calumet bred Iron Leige.
    
    Wright made his fortune from baking soda and named the farm Calumet
    after the brand name of baking soda that his company made. Wright died
    in 1950 and his widow,Lucille, ran the farm until her death. She had 
    remarried to a Navy Admiral named Markey. On her death, the heirs who
    were not horse people took over and now it's history.
    
    Ironically the year they filed for bankruptcy, Calumet Farm was named
    the breeder of the year by one of the Kentucky breeders groups.
481.284health of racing ?KAHALA::HOLMESTue Feb 11 1992 16:2522
    Any thought's on the health of racing in general ?

    My dad, who owns a Standardbred thinks racing is a dying
    industry and will be gone in 15 or 20 years.

    The handle (ammount of money bet) has dropped at all tracks
    the last couple of years.
    
    To much competation with other forms of gambling and
    entertainment, state lotteries, etc.

    You can almost get a free trip and meals to Las Vegas.
    Go to the track and pay to park, pay to get in, pay to
    sit down.....

    How do you think that will effect all horse related activities ?

    Vets, farriers, feed, tack, etc.  The demise of racing could make
    horse ownership that much more expensive.

    Bill
    
481.285Not too healthy(IMHO)DECWET::JDADDAMIOMontar con orgullo!Tue Feb 11 1992 16:3912
    If TB racing doesn't clean up it's image and practices, it will be
    dead. That was Hancock's point in the speech that started the debate
    between him and The Blood Horse's editor(Edward L Bowen).
    
    Right now, attendance at the tracks is down partly because of the
    recession. That's also the cause of lot's of people getting out of
    racing/breeding TB rachorses etc. The financial practices of the 80's
    brought many big commercial breeders down(Calumet, Tom Gentry, Margaux
    Stud and many others)...
    
    Between the recession and its own inherent problems, I'd say TB racing
    is in trouble.
481.286Ode to Calumet, "BOW TO THE LADY"DECWET::JDADDAMIOMontar con orgullo!Tue Feb 11 1992 17:0065
    This was a letter to the editor in this week's The Blood Horse:
    
    "Editor:
    
    Attached please find the words to a song that my wife and I have
    written in tribute to Calumet Farm. Calumet was my home since I was 3
    years of age, when my dad,Ewell Rice, then the yearling trainer, moved
    our family there. I knew every stretch of road, fence and pasture...The
    poem is dedicated to my family, all former employees of Calumet, the
    horses that once grazed her fields, horse racing fans, the Commonwealth
    of Kentucky, and the late Mrs Gene Markey.
    
                      BOW TO THE LADY
    Rolling hills of blue and green
    Oaks that touch the sky
    Newborn foals in white laced fields
    A memory of days gone bye
    
    Steepled white barns and devils red trim
    Home to many legends
    Bull Lea's blood and Whirlaway's tail          
    Citation's deed and Iron Liege's win
    
    So, bow to the lady, Alydar
    Bow to her once more
    And pray that she will find a way
    For all her glory to restore
    
    Headstones speak for those at rest
    Glory days retold
    Hear the hooves across the wire
    Of champions who claimed the gold
    
    Bred and owned by Calumet
    Words that symboled pride
    All her sixty yesteryears
    A record strong and never tied
    
    So, bow to the lady, Alydar
    Bow to her once more
    And shed a tear for her today
    And all her glory days before
    
    History has no value
    Stall doors bear no names
    Greener grass no longer seen
    No victories for her to claim
    
    Calumet is not a park
    To run a human race
    But home to those that run in May
    For blankets red that roses grace
    
    So, bow to the lady, Alydar
    Bow to her once more
    And shed a tear upon her grave
    For all her glory days no more
    
    Bow to the lady, once more
    
    Paul and Kaylyn Rice
    Versailles, KY"
    
    
    Whirlaway was nicknamed "Mr Long Tail"
481.287Last two mares gone from CalumetDECWET::JDADDAMIOMontar con orgullo!Tue Feb 11 1992 17:1330
    From the Feb 8 issue of The Blood Horse:
    
    "Two pensioned mares, 25-year-old Moonbeam and 27-year-old Royal
    Entrance, were the last horses to be moved from historic Calumet Farm
    when they were removed on Jan. 27. Both daughters of 1958 champion 
    Tim Tam, the mares officially were retired before the 1991 breeding
    season. Moonbeam produced the 1981 champion 2-year-old filly Before Dawn
    and Royal Entrance produced the 1979 champion 3-year-old filly Davona
    Dale.
    
    "They have quite a special place in the history of Calumet's
    bloodlines," said Dr. Lynda Rhodes-Stewart, resident veterinarian at
    Calumet for the past 2 years. "They are a little arthritic but
    otherwise in good health."
    
    When the decision was made to retire the two mares, Dr. Rhodes-Stewart
    spoke with Willam Allen, the mares' owner, and expressed interest in
    the mares' future. She recently received ownership of the mares from
    Allen.
    
    Moonbeam and Royal Entrance were moved to the farm of Dr.
    Rhodes-Stewart's mother-in-law, Mrs. Betty Stewart's Tri Oak Farm near
    Lexington.
    
    My mother-in-law's Standardbred mare needed company," said  Dr.
    Rhodes-Stewart, "so the situation worked well."
    
    A native of Kendallville, Ind, Dr. Rhodes-Stewart received her
    veterinary degree from Purdue University in 1986. She still resides at
    Calumet and has a private practice."
481.288Horse race betting.MISFIT::KINNEYDAruba Bound Soon!!Mon Feb 24 1992 19:0330
    This may not seem like the typical note in this file, but I am what you
    may call a Horse Racing enthusiast. Throghbreds. I actually just got
    into it last season when a buddy and I started frequenting the local
    track, Finger Lakes, about every other weekend of the summer. We are
    strickly small time but to tell the truth I just love the track. It's a
    great way to spend a Saturday in the sun and lose some cash to boot!!
    
    The bottom line is I don't really know beans about horses, I just watch
    the odds and scan the stats for my key points. Then depending on the
    pools, I bet accordingly. 
    
    My buddy does the same but also puts quite a bit of emphasis on the way
    the horse looks, acts and carries itself in the paddock and entering
    the track. So, in his mind, a horse that seems energetic warming up
    will run faster or is more eager to run than one who is not. Is this
    true?
    
    Also, he puts a lot of emphasis on equipment. For instance, if the
    horse is wearing blinders for the first time, he bets heavy for it to
    win. Why would this be an advantage, especially the first time? 
    
    Are there any other attributes to watch for when sizing up a winner?
    
    I feel that no matter what the horse looks or acts like, it's still a
    horse race and anything can happen, but I would be interested in what
    the experts think.
    
    Curiously,
    
    Dave Kinney
481.289Body language & racing performanceDECWET::JDADDAMIOMontar con orgullo!Mon Feb 24 1992 19:2328
    
    Yes, a horse's body language including it's warmup may give you clues
    about how it will perform on a given day. There's a good book on the
    subject by Bonnie Ledbetter(sp ?) which discusses what the body
    language of horses in general and specifically addresses clues to racing
    performance. I think the title is "Body Language of Horses" or
    something like that. I'll check the title and ISBN and post it
    tomorrow. 
    
    There's a whole bunch of reasons for equipment on racehorses and a
    different theory for each piece. Shadow rolls(those furry bands around
    their muzzle) are supposed to keep a horse from seeing shadows or tire
    prints in the track. Some horses(like Dayjur in the 1990 Breeders' Cup
    Sprint) will jump shadows, etc which interferes with their normal
    stride and causes them to lose all chance.
    
    Blinkers keep the horse from seeing what's behind it. Some horses get
    nervous if they can see another horse coming at them. Others get lazy
    if they can see that there are no other horses near them, etc
    
    I wouldn't put TOO much faith in equipment changes. Usually trainers
    are trying different equipment because what they were doing last time
    didn't work. In other words, the first time they run w/blinkers is an
    experiment to see if the horse will run better with the blinkers than
    without. It doesn't always work. Sometimes, they take 'em back off!
    
    Have fun
    John
481.290The Body Language of HorsesDECWET::JDADDAMIOMontar con orgullo!Tue Feb 25 1992 16:4334
    
    The Body Language of Horses, Bonnie Ledbetter and Tom Ainslie,
    published by Morrow, ISBN 0-688-03620, $19 (What a ripoff! I paid $10
    for my copy...but that was 1980!)
    
    This is NOT a book about race handicapping. It is a book about horses which
    may help hanidcappers. The subtitle is "Revealing the nature of equine
    needs, wishes and emotions and how horses communicate them. For owners,
    breeders trainers, riders and other horse lovers including
    handicappers"
    
    Bonnie Ledbetter is the horseperson in that pair and provides real
    insight into the behavior of horses. Ainslie is a handicapper and writes 
    about handicapping techniques. He collaborated on this work because he
    wanted to learn what Ledbetter could teach him about horses.
    
    Ledbetter has also made two video tapes on this subject for
    handicappers. They are "The Body Language of the Racehorse" ($50 & 60
    minutes) and "How to Spot the Sore and Unfit Horse" (35 minutes & $30)
    They might be more use since you're not a horseperson & therefore not
    familiar with the behaviors described in the book.
    
    The book and the videos are available from the Pegasos
    Press(1-800-537-8558) catalog among other places. The pegasos catlog
    item numbers are: #270 for the book, #719 and #720 respectively for the
    videos.
    
    BTW, Pegasos does have literally dozens of books specifically about
    handicapping the races. You might be interested in some of them. But,
    don't ask me for a recommendation. I don't bet on racing. Betting
    spoils the fun for me.
    
    Have fun
    John
481.291Part I management of bettingKAHALA::HOLMESWed Feb 26 1992 00:52109
>>       <<< Note 481.288 by MISFIT::KINNEYD "Aruba Bound Soon!!" >>>
>>                            -< Horse race betting. >-

This came from a harness magazine but is really a reply to 481.288
Wasn't 481.288 entered as 479.n or has this month been even worse
than I thought ?
Bill

*****                                 ************
*This article, written from the track managers   *
*point of view discusses the business of betting.*
*It is alittle long so I will enter it in parts. *
*I find this to be another of those "eye opener" *
*articles.         Hoof Beats November 1991.     *
*****                                 ************

        Are Short Prices Killing Bettors' Dreams?
        by Bill Heller

        "People don't play the lottery to win lunch money.  They
        want to win freedom.  So you've got a mindset -- a dollar     
        and a dream.  You can't escape that.  It's hitting the big 
        one.  It's quitting your job.  It's buying a home in Majorca,
        owning a Maserati.  They sell the dream."

        Warren DeSantis, Saratoga Harness.


The impact of short-priced winners in harness racing is debatable.  Their 
presence, particularly on half-mile tracks, is indisputable.

"We look at it as a fact of life," Rosecroft general manager Tom Barry said.
"I'm not talking about Rosecroft.  I'm talking about anywhere".

We all know the score: $4.20, $3.60, $5.00.  When the parade of short prices 
lasts an entire evening, well, even loyal fans get discouraged, if not dis-
gusted.  Nobody in the realistic wagering world wants to play 4-5 shots race 
after race.  Or bet against them.

Short prices can dominate tracks for one night or many nights.  Finding a
summer sample (Table 1) wasn't difficult.

                                Table I.
                             CHALKY NIGHTS

Blue Bonnets, July 27    8 of 11 winners paid $6 or less.
Buffalo, July 21         10 of 11 winners paid $8 or less; 5 paid $4 or less
        [11 entries skipped]
Saratoga, July 21        6 of 10 winners paid $4.60 or less
        [3 more lines skipped]
Yonkers, July 31         8 of 11 winners paid $6.80 or less; 5 paid 3.60 or less

*****                                 *****
*There are alot of tables in this article *
*and it would take me that much longer to *
*enter them in full.                      *
*****                                 *****

"Short prices are a double-edged sword," Yonkers general manager Bob Galterio
said.  "In one instance, theoretically, there are more winners, which allows
money to be churned.  On the other hand, nobody wants an exacta that pays $12."

Harness tracks are prone to more favorites than Thoroughbred establishments
(Table 2), which makes sense since harness racing has a near-constant race
distance (one mile), only one racing surface (dirt), and - a majority of the
time - smaller fields.

                                Table II
                PERCENTAGE OF WINNING FAVORITES IN 1991.

    Thoroughbred Tracks            Harness Tracks
     All in mid-August         All late July - August
Atlantic City        33%        Louisville        46.1%
Finger Lakes         32%        Saratoge          44.7%
Saratoga             26%        Vernon            36.3%

*****                                 *****
*The TB table contained 12 entries and 2  *
*Harness tables contained 12 enteries     *
*(different time frames per table)        *
*****                                 *****

More winning favorites breed more short prices.  Is that good or bad ?

Other questions persist.  Who do they affest the most - small, moderate, or
big bettors ?  What of the principle of "churn," bettors using their winnings 
to re-invest the same night ?  Do short prices affect per-capita wagering ?  
Do they turn off potential new customers ?

Finally, if anything needs fixing, what can be done ?

"We always thought, theoretically, if you have 10 guys hit a $4 winner,
that's good because 10 guys have $4 to bet," Galterio said.  "If you have 
only one of the 10 guys hit a $40 winner, that guy might not spend the money,
or he might spend $20 and put the other $20 in his pocket to take home."

Yonkers president Tim Rooney voiced ambivalent feelings: "It's better to have
people winning than loosing.  If people win, they have money to bet back.
The more favorites that win, the money is being churned better.  That's the
good side of it.  The bad side is, if the payoffs are to low, then there isn't
enough of an inducement for your sophisticated handicappers.  They're
taking the worst of it.  They have to have a decent payoff.  You must have some
mix of favorites winning.  When the prices are to short, the rewards aren't
high enough for the handicappers.

*****                                 *****
**Seems like a good place to stop for now**
*****                                 *****

481.292Part II, management of bettingKAHALA::HOLMESMon Mar 02 1992 01:27148
*****                                 ************
* Continued from note 481.291                    *
*****                                 ************

"There's a big difference between favorites and odds-on favorites.  When I'm
talking favorites, I'm talking 2-1 or 5-2.  Odds-on favorites don't do
anybody any good.  At Yonkers, we have to many of them winning."

"What's happened to us is that speed has held up more in the last five
years.  By that, bettors just lay into speed that's on the inside."

Accordingly, the odds come tumbling down.

"It's very frustrating," said Bobby (an alias), who lives in Queens and has
been attending Younkers for 21 years.  "I used to go five or six nights a 
week in a summer.  Now I go three.  Basically, short prices are taking the
fun out of the game.  It's not the quality of the horses; it's the
importance of post position.  Racing is controlled by inside speed".

He's got a point.  Just compare Yonkers (half-mile track) and The Meadowlands
(one-mile track) in Table 3.  Yonkers has higher winning percentages from
posts 1-4 and lower percentages from posts 5-8.

                                Table III
                    The IMPORTANCE of POST POSITION

                 Percentage of winners by post position
                 -minimum pf 50 starts at each position-
Track    Trk Size    1     2     3     4     5     6    7    8    9    10
Meadowlands  1     13.4% 12.7% 10.8%  9.7% 14.8% 11.9% 9.4% 9.5% 7.4% 6.6%
Yonkers     1/2    22.1% 15.5% 15.9% 15.1% 12.3%  8.5% 7.8% 4.9%

*****                                 ************
* You can all guess how painful it is to type in *
* that table !  There are 15 entries total.      *
* Saratoga has moved the start of the race closer*
* to the start line (harness has a moving start- *
* ing gate) to address the inside byass of a 1/2 *
* mile track                                     *
*****                                 ************

Bobby is a small bettor who spends a maximum of $60 per night and seldom 
plays a horse under 3-1.  "As a small bettor, I can't take shots with exactas
and tripples," he said.  "From the small bettors perspective, you want
decent win payoffs.  Every win doesn't have to be a $12 horse or a $20
one, but you need some of them."

Stan Bergstein, executive vice-president of Harness Tracks of America,
agrees: "I just don't think people go to the track to win $3.40.  They go to 
win a meaningful return.  People don't want to see a parade of 4-5 shots.

Do short prices affect churn ?

"Churn is at the opposite point on the spectrum," Rosecroft's Barry said.
"Churn is going to keep money at the track.  You may get moans about short
prices, but it works for people who bet them.  It keeps them alive.
You can kill your patronage because you give them the opportunity to make
big bets that, although they pay bigger prices, the degree of difficulty
increases significantly.  The deeper you get into exotics, the closer you
come to taking away churn.

"What exotics can do to people is wipe them out.  I believe this very
strongly.  People start looking for the big score.  They'd be better off betting
to win.  That's my personal opinion.

Rosecroft offers five tripples nightly, except for Wednesday and Friday
when it offers tripples on all 12 races.  "What's attractive to a bettor
isn't necessarily the best thing for the bettor or for the racetrack,"
Barry said.

In Chicago, Sportsman's Park is also commited to exotics, but President
William Johnson sounds as if he went to the same school as Barry: "To me,
they're a necessary evil.  The gimmicks don't get churn.  Churn makes the
racetrack work.  You've got to have churn.  Why do you think everybody's
going to 11 races ?  The lower the prices, the more the churn.

"We think the most important thing is for bettors to have a winner.  Even if it 
is a short-priced horse, it beats the hell out of ripping up tickets.  Winners
bring people back to the track.  It'd be wonderful if they could win alot of
money, but obiviously that doesn't work out.  While it's nice for a horse to pay
$7 or $8 instead of $4.40, it's more crucial they win something at all."

Winning it all, however, was the lure of Sportsman's defunct Super Bet, which
challenged bettors to nail two winning perfectas and the winning trifects in
three consecutive races, with all bets in before the first race.  "It was 
popular for awhile," Johnston said.  "We got up to a million dollars three
or four times with carryover.  The trouble was getting the jackpot built up".

Even defining short prices is difficult, an exercise in subjectivity.  To the 
small bettor, it might be under 3-1, an $8 payoff.  A larger bettor might say
under 2-1, a $6 return.  The biggest bettors might say under even money, 1-1, 
a $4 return.  Or everyone could say $4 or less.  Every bettor has a boundary
line on acceptable odds he or she won't cross.  Short prices invade exotics,
too - the $10 daily double, the $12 exacta, the $40 tripple.

Tables 4 and 5 are samples from arbitrary dates.  In early July (Table 4),
18 tracks put on 94 cards of racing.  Of the 94, there was one card - at
Monticello - which did not have at least one $4 or less winner.  Delmarva
had two cards with six such winners, and Greenwood, Los Alamitos, and Yonkers
each had one card apiece.  Rosecroft had one night with eight such winners.

*****                                 ************
* I'm not going to include Tables 4 and 5.       *
*****                                 ************

Table 5 examines 78 cards in late July from 16 tracks.  Of the 78, there were
three, each at The Meadowlands, without at least one $4-or-less winner.  Scioto
had six on one card.

From the combined 172 cards, only 4 didn't contain at least one $4-or-less
winner.

Monticello stood out.  Of its 12 combined cards, it was the only track which
didn't have a card with more than two such winners.

But the numbers that count are in the handle.  How do bettors respond ?

"There are 12 to 15 people at any racetrack who are very important," Rooney
said.  "Our heavy bettors, who wager over a couple of thousand a night,
prefer betting a horse at 2-1 or 3-1 rather than getting a 60-cent profit
from a $2.60 winner."

Allen Gutterman, former assistant general manager at The Meadowlands, offered
his assessment: "The short prices are terrific for a small amount of guys
betting a lot of monet.  Big money will ride on horses with low odds."

Gutterman, who started with The Meadowlands in 1976, a year before it opened,
left in August to become director of marketing for the New York Racing
Association's Thoroughbred tracks (Saratoga, Belmont, and Aqueduct).  He shared
his perspective of The Meadowlands' relationship with short prices: "One
of the hallmarks for The Meadlowlands in its early years, one of the charms,
was people not knowing who was going to win.  Favorites wern't dominating.
At Yonkers, it was to predictable.  At The Meadowlands, horses would come 
flying from everywhere.  This led to larger payoffs.  I don't know if the
percentage of favorites was lower, but it seemed that way."

*****                                 ************
*  This is where the skill of the handicapper    *
*  comes in.  Over time people learn the horses, *
*  drivers, and trainers.  Unlike just like in   *
*  picking a number.                             *
*****                                 ************


*****                                 ************
*  To be continued                               *
*****                                 ************
481.293Telephone betting, now thats entertainmentMISFIT::KINNEYDAruba Bound Soon!!Mon Mar 02 1992 11:0711
    Rochester, NY. Times Union; Bob Matthews
    
    Finger Lakes Race Track apparently will be spared the horse shortage
    from which most of the racing industry is suffering. FL director of
    racing, Jack Bubolx says he received 1500 applications for the tracks
    1,216 stalls. "We have the New York state breeding program to thank for
    that", he says. FL opens for training Monday, and live racing starts
    April 4. Finger Lakes hopes to offer som sort of telephone betting this
    season.
    
    
481.294Breeder's Cup Preview Day on NBCDECWET::JDADDAMIOMontar con orgulloFri Apr 03 1992 17:4817
    I read in The Blood Horse for March 28, 1992 that Belmont Park in NY
    will be the host site for this year's Breeder's Cup Steeplechase on Oct
    10th. 
    
    The BIG news(as far as I'm concerned) is that Belmont has created a new
    multi-race package that they're calling "Breeder's Cup Preview Day" and
    will present it on the same day. The races in the package are all Gr. I
    stakes that have been around for years. They include  Jockey Club Gold
    Cup(1 1/4 mi for 3 yo & up), Champagne Stakes(2 yo colts), Beldame
    Stakes(fillies & mares 3 yo & up), and Frizette Stakes(2 yo fillies).
    
    Before the Breeder's Cup, these races frequently decided the divisional
    championships for the year. Many of them haven't been on network TV
    since the inaugural Breeder's Cup! Talk about loss of prestige!
    
    NBC will telecast the Breeder's Cup Preview Day races from 4:30 to 6:30
    PM(Eastern Time) on Oct 10th
481.295Julie Krone wins Gulfstream titleDECWET::JDADDAMIOMontar con orgulloThu Apr 09 1992 19:3711
    
    A short item from the April 4 Blood Horse, Julie Krone won the riding
    title at Gulfstream's winter meeting with 72 wins. She's the first
    woman to win a riding title at a major Florida track.
    
    BTW, Julie Krone also show jumps on a TB! I remember reading about it 
    in the Blood Horse a month or 2 ago. One day, Krone went to a show in
    the morning and won 3 ribbons jumping her TB called Chicago. In the
    afternoon, she went to the track and was in the money 3 times with the
    same placings as in her showjumping! Not a bad day's riding! :-)
    
481.296Calumet sold. Will return!DECWET::JDADDAMIOMontar con orgulloThu Apr 09 1992 19:5324
    Another item from the April 4 Blood Horse relates to Calumet.
    
    The auction was held about a week and a half ago. Henry de Kwiatowski
    purchased the farm and the Calumet name. He plans on keeping it a
    breeding farm with the same name. He paid $17 million for the main
    farm, $175,000 for another tract of land and $250,000 for the Calumet
    name. According to the article, Mr. de Kwiatowski told Woody Stephens,
    who trains de Kwiatowski's big stars, that someday he(de Kwiatowski)
    would buy Calumet. Woody is quoted as saying after the auction, "So, he
    did." Must be nice to have that kind of cash available! Imagine how
    neat a farm any of us could run just on the interest from that kind of
    money! Even ordinary interest rates like 5% would produce $850,000 a
    year!
    
    Mr. de Kwiatowski has been involved in TB racing for nearly 20 years.
    He owned and raced 2 Belmont Stakes winners(Conquistador Cielo and
    Danzig Connection) and a female turf champion whose name I can't recall
    at the moment. He currently owns something like 200 horses and has most
    of them based at Claiborne Farms.
    
    Mr. de Kwiatowski is an immigrant who made a fortune in aviation here
    in the US. He bought Calumet because he felt the other plans for it 
    were an insult to himself as well as all horsemen. Real rags-to-riches 
    stuff. This is a fairy tale ending to a sad event.
481.297\DKAS::RIVERSI'm too sexy for my node!Thu Apr 09 1992 21:164
    I think Arazi started this week in a race in France.  Any word on that,
    and if it has been run, how'd he do?
    
    
481.298Arazi wins in FranceDECWET::JDADDAMIOMontar con orgulloSun Apr 12 1992 16:5853
A note or two back, somebody asked about Arazi which won the Breeder's Cup 
Juvenile Colts last year for Allen Paulsen. Although many thought that race 
was THE race of the year, I was not overly impressed with the race. Sure, 
Arazi wove his way from the back of the pack, through the field and was the 
only horse running. But the overall time of the race was appallingly slow 
compared to other races that day on the same track. It was not significantly 
different than the Juvenile Fillies race. Conclusion? A good horse(Arazi)
devastated an inferior field.

Over the winter, we got a tape of 1991 European races. Here, Arazi's true form
showed through. He beat everything everywhere under just about all conditions.
His European campaign impressed me FAR more than his Breeder's Cup race.

For those who are interested, Arazi underwent arthroscopic surgery on his 
knees this winter to remove tiny bone chips. His veterinarian says that the 
chips were not causing any trouble and that the surgery was done to prevent 
the possibility that the chips would cause trouble later. Arazi was rested 
after the surgery and just returned to training about 2 months ago.

This past Tuesday(Apr 7), Arazi returned to the races in France at Hippodrome 
Saint-Cloud. He raced in the Prix Ominium with two entrymates. The other 
horses were entered as "pacemakers" as the Europeans call them. We in the US 
call such entrymates "rabbits". Boutin(Arazi's trainer) said the other horses 
were entered for 2 reasons: 1) To simulate a pace similar to that of American 
races(European races are typically slower in the early part of the race and 
faster later on) and 2) To insure that Arazi had to work hard enough to get 
some conditioning out of the race(Talk about CONFIDENCE!) BTW, the Prix 
Ominium at St-CLoud was chosen because it is a left handed course like all 
the American courses. European courses are frequently right handed with some 
left handed courses. So, European horses have to learn to race in both 
directions.

Arazi, who is now jointly owned by Paulsen and Sheik Mohammed al Maktoum of 
Dubai, broke slowly under Steve Cauthen. The course was fairly soft due to 
rain and Cauthen raced Arazi in fifth for most of the race. Around the turn, 
Arazi started PULLING Cauthen to the leaders even though Cauthen was sitting 
quietly. As they straightened out in the stretch, Cauthen started moving his 
hands and allowed Arazi to go on. Arazi quickly accelerated leaving the field
5 lengths or more behind. It looked like Cauthen was easing Arazi up as they
approached the finish(Nothing was coming at them) and he could easily have won
by a larger margin. After the race, Boutin said he was disappointed with 
Arazi's acceleration when asked to run and that the horse had only achieved 
only about 70% of his normal condition. He predicted that Arazi would be 100% 
fit by the Kentucky Derby. Cauthen said that this is the best horse he has 
ridden since Affirmed on which he won the American Triple Crown in 1977. 
Cauthen went on to say that he considered Affirmed the best horse he's ever 
ridden.

Cauthen will not get the mount on Arazi in the Kentucky Derby. He is Sheik 
Mohammed al Maktoum's contract rider in Europe. The co-owners agreed that 
the horse would be ridden by Cauthen in European races. In the US, Arazi will
be ridden by Paulsen's contract rider, Pat Valenzuela, who rode the horse in 
the 1991 Breeder's Cup.
481.299Prominent contenders for 1992 KY DerbyDECWET::JDADDAMIOMontar con orgulloSun Apr 12 1992 17:0219
The US picture for the Kentucky Derby is clearing up. There is only one
significant prep race left(The Wood Memorial) and that's scheduled for 
Saturday, Apr 18.

Earlier in the season, it looked like rap star Hammer and his family had
a serious contender in Dance Floor. But, it now looks like Dance FLoor's best 
distance is 1 mile. He has not won beyond 1 1/16th miles.

Technology(Florida Derby and Tropical Park Derby), Pistols and Roses(Flamingo 
Stakes and Blue Grass Stakes) and AP Indy(San Rafael Stakes and Santa Anita
Derby) are the major winners who will contest the race with Arazi. 
Bertrando, winner of the San Felipe Stakes and a respectable second to 
Pistols and Roses in the Blue Grass, should also be competitive.

With his late turn of foot, Arazi may be the most exciting horse in the field 
but with the development that these horses have shown this Spring, Arazi will
have some stiff competion on the first Saturday in May. It will not be the 
same lackluster field he demolished in the 1991 Breeder's Cup Juvenile. It's
shaping up as a very good field for the 1992 Kentucky Derby.
481.300Nijinsky II DECWET::JDADDAMIOMontar con orgulloSat Apr 18 1992 14:5422
    
    Sadly, Nijinsky II had to be put down on Weds(15 Apr 1992) due to the
    infirmities of old age. He was 25.
    
    Nijinsky II(Northern Dancer x Flaming Page) was in 1970 the first
    winner of the UK's Triple Crown in 35 years. Undefeated in 5 races as a 
    2 year-old and in his first 6 starts as a 3 year-old, Nijinsky II was
    retired after placing second by a head in the Prix de l'Arc de Triomphe
    and the Champion Stakes.
    
    As a stallion, Nijinsky II was outstanding. He sired more than 130
    stakes winners, multiple champions, and many valued broodmares and
    stallions. Nijinsky II progeny tend to resemble their sire being well-made 
    but tall and rangy horses. Nijinsky II's branch of the Northern Dancer
    line is significantly different than the other branches of the family.
    
    Northern Dancer, who died in 1990 a few months before his 30th birthday,
    was a short compact horse. He looked more like a typical sprinter. He
    wasn't. Most of the Northern Dancer stock is small and compact.


 
481.301Best PalDECWET::JDADDAMIOMontar con orgulloSat Apr 18 1992 15:0617
    
    Best Pal has again demonstrated his superiority over the other older 
    horses in racing. He won the Oaklawn Handicap(part of the American
    Championship Racing Series) over Sea Cadet and other good horses. He
    set a stakes record doing it and he did it on 2 feet! Best Pal suffered
    a quarter crack a few weeks ago. It was patched by his farrier. He tore
    the patch off in his first workout at Oaklawn. A couple days later, he
    turned out to have gravel in another foot. FYI, gravel is an abscess in
    the hoof which drains at the coronet band. The initial injury is
    belived to be caused by a stone or sandy gravel. The gravel was treated
    and Best Pal seemed sound. He sure ran like nothing hurt!
    
    Best Pal (4 years old) is undefeated in 1992. Best Pal has won over 
    $1 million(US) in each of his 3 years on the track. He has only run 5 
    times this year and he's already won more than $1,000,000. Of course, 
    winning the Santa Anita Handicap alone put about $600,000 in his
    account! He's by far the best older horse in training.
481.302Final Derby PrepsDECWET::JDADDAMIOMontar con orgulloSun Apr 19 1992 18:4831
    The final prep races for the Kentucky Derby were run yesterday.
    Pine Bluff won the Arkansas Derby with the Jim Beam Stakes winner, 
    Lil E Tee second. Both are scheduled to start in the Derby.
    
    The Wood Memorial was won easily by Devil His Due in 149 1/5 on a
    sloppy track. Interestingly enough, Devil His Due was unraced as a 2
    year-old and finished in a dead heat with Lure in the Gotham Mile 
    on April 4. His trainer, Alan Jerkens said he was unsure whether or not
    Devil His Due would go to Kentucky. West by West was second and English
    runner Rokeby was third. The winning time of this race was identical to
    AP Indy's win in the Santa Anita Derby which was also run on a track
    deadened by rain.
    
    So, the Derby picture is complete. We have some good speed horses like 
    Pistols and Roses or Bertrando, some that race near the leaders like AP Indy
    and late runners like Arazi and Technology. 
    
    Arazi DOES NOT lead the Apr 11 Triple Crown poll 
    conducted by Throughbred Racing Communications. The poll of 33 sports and 
    TB racing media people places AP Indy on top. AP Indy has been on top
    for several weeks even though Arazi had previously gotten more 1st
    place votes. This week's poll showed AP Indy with 22 1st place votes
    with Arazi getting the other 11. The previous week, Arazi had 15 to Ap
    Indy's 11 with Bertrando getting six. I wonder how that will change
    after the poll takes Arazi's Apr 7th win into account. I should
    exmplain that the poll was taken before the 7th as the Apr 11 date is 
    the issue date of The Blood Horse wherein the poll is published. The Blood 
    Horse is mailed on Weds(the 8th) to arrive on the issue date which is the 
    following Saturday(the 11th). 
    
    It should be a good race. 
481.303Latest TRC Triple Crown PollDECWET::JDADDAMIOMontar con orgulloTue Apr 21 1992 18:1628
    Well, I should have waited a couple days before entering that last
    pre-Derby update. I recently got the latest TRC Triple Crown Poll of 33
    "experts". They are a fickle lot! The scoring goes 10 points for each
    first place vote, 9 for second, etc down to 1 for 10th. This week's poll 
    looks like this:
    
    1. Arazi             320
    2. A.P. Indy         305
    3. Technology        223
    4. Bertrando         210 ***Bertrando has a virus and has been scratched
    5. Pistols and Roses 161
    6. Pine Bluff        149
    7. Casual Lies       130
    8. Treekster          61
    9. Lil E Tee          57
    9. Lure               57
    
    So, Devil His Due(if he races) should move up into the top 10 after his
    win in the Wood Memorial and Bertrando's scratch are taken into
    account.
    
    Arazi is still not the overwhelming favorite among the racing writers
    and broadcasters. His 320 points could have been had from as few as 23
    first place votes of the 33 experts. That's strong favoritism
    but...there are too many factors. Arazi may not be 100% fit by Derby
    time. He may not ship well this trip over the Atlantic. A lot of the
    experts have been saying something like we won't know about Arazi until
    2 minutes after post time on May 2!
481.3041992 KY Derby Post PositionsDECWET::JDADDAMIOMay the horse be with you!Fri May 01 1992 17:5741
    The Kentucky Derby post positions were drawn yesterday. On paper, the
    horses to beat are Arazi(8 wins of 9 races) and A.P. Indy(5 wins of 6
    races). Both have drawn far oustide post positions which in the past
    has spelled trouble for the favorites. Since both these horses come
    from off the pace, it may not be much of a factor for them.
    
    The post positions set up a possible speed duel with front running with
    "Devil His Due" and "Pistols and Roses" right next to each other in the
    6 and 7 positions. Technology drew a the 2 spot which will give him a
    chance to be near the lead and on the rail. Here is a complete list of post
    positions including jockey and the morning line odds set by the track's
    official handicapper:
    
    1	Al Sabin	Corey Nakatami		20-1
    2	Technology	Jerry Bailey		 8-1
    3	Snappy Landing	Jorge Velasquez		10-1
    4	Casual Lies	Gary Stevens		20-1
    5	Thyer		Christie Rock		10-1
    6	Devil His Due	Mike Smith		15-1
    7	Pistols and Roses Jorge Vasquez		15-1
    8	Conte Di Savoya	Shane Sellers		30-1
    9	Sir Pinder	Randy Romero		10-1
    10	Lil E Tee	Pat Day			20-1
    11	West By West	Jean-Luc Samyn		10-1
    12	Pine Bluff	Craig Perret		12-1
    13	Ecstatic Ride	Julie Krone		10-1
    14	My Luck Runs North Ricardo Lopez	10-1
    15	Dr Devious	Chris McCarron		15-1
    16	AP Indy		Eddie Dellahoussaye	 7-2
    17	Dance Floor	Chris Antley		20-1
    18	Arazi		Pat Valenzuela		 6-5
    19	Disposal	Alex Solis		10-1
    
    Conspicious by his absence is jockey Angel Cordero. He has been out
    with an injury for 6 months. His physical rehabilitation is taking a
    very long time. At age 49, he is uncertain whether or not he will be
    able to return to riding races after his recuperation or whether he
    will turn to training. His wife has been training horses for sometime
    and he may just set up shop in the next shedrow.
    
    I wish every horse and jockey a safe trip.
481.3051992 Derby ResultsDECWET::JDADDAMIOMay the horse be with you!Mon May 04 1992 17:5988
    For anyone who is interested and missed it, the Kentucky Derby didn't
    go according to script. The horses made liars out of all the "experts"
    and ignored their past races.
    
    A.P. Indy was wisely scratched due to a bruised foot. Bertrando had
    been scratched a week before the race due to a respiratory infection.
    
    Although some expert handicappers(especially those that use "speed
    profiles")  had been predicting that Arazi was not a super horse and 
    would not win the Derby, they were predicting horses like Pine Bluff
    would win the Derby. Arazi made a huge move to move from last to third
    at the top of the stretch. Then he ran out of steam and faded to 8th
    place by the finish. He didn't seem injured but he showed that he either 
    was not fit enough to race the 1.25 mile distance or that he doesn't
    have the innate stamina to go that far.
    
    None of the other horses who were considered top contenders based on
    their recent races ran well in the Derby. Neither Technology or Pistols 
    and Roses ever entered the race. Devil His Due came up empty after 2
    hard races in NY and was no were to be seen after the first half mile.
    
    Instead a consistent but so far uninspiring performer named Lil E Tee
    won by a length over another consistent performer, Casual Lies. Both
    have human interest stories. Lil E Tee(which won the Jim Beam
    Stakes(Gr II) and placed second in the Arkansas Derby(Gr II)) is owned
    by Cal Partee who has been in racing seemingly forever. His only other
    Derby starter in all these years of racing was At The Threshold who
    placed poorly. Ironically, Lil E Tee is sired by Mr Partee's At The
    Threshold.
    
    Casual Lies is owned and trained by Shelly Riley. She bought the colt
    as a yearling for $7,500 with the intent of breaking him and selling him 
    as 2 year-old-in-training. Nobody wanted to buy the colt for the value she
    put on him so she decided to race him herself. She now thanks all the
    people who turned him down because she had the time of her life going
    to the Derby with him. Ms Riley reportedly collapsed in her seat from
    excitement when Casual Lies was on the lead with 1/16 of a mile to run
    and only Lil E Tee within striking distance. Unfortunately for her, it
    was jockey Pat Day's dream which came true.
    
    Day, who in the past has been criticised and accused of choking for not
    winning the Derby even though mounted on favorites like Easy Goer, was 
    largely responsible for the victory. He broke the horse quickly from
    the gate and got him into a good position 1 horse off the rail in mid
    pack. He saved a lot of ground and energy that way. When Arazi made his
    move and circled the field of 18 runners, Day moved right behind him.
    After Arazi went by Lil E Tee, Day swung Lil E Tee oustide Arazi at
    the top of the stretch and drove hard to catch Casual Lies about 50
    yards from the finish line. The race was incredibly slow at 2:04 with
    modest intermediate times(24.4, 47.8, 1:12.2, 137.6) for the 1/4, 1/2
    3/4 and 1 mile marks respectively. The only Ky Derbys that I can think
    of that were slower were Sunday Silence(1989) and Tim Tam(1958) and
    BOTH of those were run on MUDDY tracks which usually slow down a race
    considerably. Most Ky Derbys are run in something like 2:01 or 2:02
    with the 3 fastest being Secretariat(1:59.6 in 1973), Northern
    Dancer(2:00 in 1964) and Spend A Buck(2:00.4 in 1985)
    
    The TV commentators at the race as well as all the experts make a lot of 
    noise about how no favorite has won the Derby since Spectacular Bid in 1979,
    favorites average ninth place in the last 13 Derbys and no horse has won 
    the Gotham Mile and Wood Memorial(like Devil His Due did) or similar 
    statistics. What I have yet to hear them mention is that NO HORSE has won 
    the Breeder's Cup Juvenile and performed well in the 3 year-old Triple 
    Crown races! Very few Juvenile winners even win major stakes at 3. It 
    seems to me that more horses who finished THIRD in the Juvenile have much 
    better careers at 3 than the winners! Some examples that spring to mind 
    are Alysheba and Spend A Buck who both finished third in their respective 
    Juvenile outings and then won the KY Derby the following spring.
    
    The complete order of finish:
    1. Lil E Tee
    2. Casual Lies
    3. Dance FLoor
    4. Conte Di Savoya
    5. Pine Bluff
    6. Al SAbin
    7. Dr Devious
    8. Arazi
    9. My Luck RUns North
    10. Technology
    11. West By West
    12. Devil His Due
    13. Thyer
    14. Ecstatic Ride
    15. Sir Pinder
    16. Pistols and Roses
    17. Snappy Landing
    18. Disposal
481.306CSLALL::LCOBURNIm the leader,which way did they go?Mon May 04 1992 19:0615
    Just a personal observation and opinion, but I was a bit disgusted by
    the coverage after the race. I feel that precious little attention
    was given the winner, by the commentators for ABC that is. Even while 
    showing the scene of Lil E Tee in the winners circle, they were
    discussing Arazi's lose. That's really all they talked about the entire
    post-race coverage....what happened to Arazi? What went wrong for
    Arazi? I felt bad for the neglected owners/trainer of the winner, he
    won it fair and square and I think he deserved  considerably more
    attention and credit than was given him (by the ABC commentators at
    least). 
    
    End of light-hearted flame. :-) The 3 Triple Crown races are the
    only ones I pay any attention too, but I always pray for one of the
    long shots to win! :-)
    
481.307Nice race, tho'BOOVX2::MANDILEAlways carry a rainbow in your pocketMon May 04 1992 19:218
    I was a little put off by Lil E Tee's jockey spouting off
    about how Jesus/God was the reason he won.
    
    Ahem....how about thanking the horse?  I think the horse
    had a little something to do with it....
    
    
    L-
481.308exDECWET::JDADDAMIOMay the horse be with you!Tue May 05 1992 18:1910
    I too was a little put off by Pat Day's little speech until I
    remembered that he was a born-again Christian who had been saved from
    the "wild life" of hard boozing, drugs, etc by his religion and that he 
    was in a very emotional state. So, I guess I can live with an occassional 
    quote from the Bible when such a person wins their first KY Derby. 
    
    But, Lynne's absolutely right. He did thank everybody except the horse!
    
    
    
481.309BummerDKAS::RIVERSI'm too sexy for my node!Wed May 06 1992 15:184
    Disappointing finish.  It'd be nice to have a 'superstar' in racing
    again.  
    
    kim
481.310Limit those superstars!PIPPER::NICKERSONBob Nickerson DTN 282-1663 :^)Thu May 07 1992 16:259
    If there were a triple crown winner every couple of years, then old
    folks like me couldn't say...
    
       I remember seeing <fill in your favorite> run back in `57', they
    don't breed em like that anymore!
    
    :^)
    
    
481.311Not asking muchDKAS::RIVERSI'm too sexy for my node!Fri May 08 1992 14:134
    Well, it's been what...14 years?  
    
    
    kim
481.312Arazi deemed ill-prepared for the DerbyDECWET::JDADDAMIOMay the horse be with you!Fri May 08 1992 17:1639
    Actually, a lot of the racing insiders STILL think Arazi is a super
    horse and blame his loss on trainer Francois Boutin. All of them are
    saying that the horse was imply not fit enough. Boutin admits that the
    horse was unfit and said that he thinks it was a mistake to bring him
    over versus training and racing in Europe. 
    
    The experts point to Arazi's fast middle fractions and claim that just 
    about ANY good horse who was fit could have run the final quarter mile 
    faster than the 27 seconds in which it was actually run. And that if 
    Arazi had been fit enough, he could easily have won the race from his 
    third place position at the top of the stretch because of his remarkable 
    acceleration ability. 
    
    Jockey Pat Valenzuela said much the same thing. He still thinks the horse 
    is the best he has ever ridden and that the horse just got tired after 
    circling the field. Pat Valenzuela won the KY Derby with Sunday Silence 
    in 1989 which puts Arazi in pretty good company.
    
    Some of the commentary I've heard since the race as much as called Boutin
    incompetent for not being able to get the horse ready for a 1.25 mile
    race in the 3 months the horse has been back in training. The
    commentators claim that just about ANY of the top American trainers
    could have done so. I say that's BS and I'm not talking about college
    degrees either! ;-)
    
    Ohters say something like, "Maybe he's just a outstanding miler
    which would account for both his success at 2 and his race in the
    Derby."
    
    Even great horses like Secretariat, Man O'War, John Henry, Seattle
    Slew,(I assume that's what you meant by the 14 year reference) etc lose 
    once in a while.(Except for Personal Ensign!) They are not machines but 
    living beings just as we are. They have days when they just aren't able 
    to perform to their max, just like we do. So, don't write a horse off 
    on the basis of one race. Wait and see how the rest of his season goes. 
    Arazi's expected to run in some major European races this summer and fall 
    and perhaps the Breeders' Cup Classic back here in the States.
    
    John
481.313King of Saratoga RetiresDECWET::JDADDAMIOMay the horse be with you!Fri May 08 1992 17:3529
    Hall of Fame jockey Angel Cordero, Jr who was injured in a Jan 12 1992
    3 horse spill in a race at Aqueduct announced his retirement from riding
    yesterday. He sustained multiple serious injuries which were life
    threatening. His doctors advised him not to ride for the rest of the year. 
    Cordero, who will soon turn 50, said that he decided this would be the 
    best time for him to retire from riding and turn to training which has
    been a lifelong dream.
    
    He plans to set up training with his wife Marjorie who already trains
    out of Barn 40 at Belmont. Trainer D. Wayne Lukas announced that he is
    sending one of his personally owned horses to Cordero to be trained.
    
    Some of the highlights of Cordero's career include:
    
    More than 7,000 wins in 31 years race riding. (Exact count is disputed
                               because of his early career in Puerto Rico)
    3 Kentucky Derby wins(I can't recall his record in other Triple Crown races)
    11 consecutive riding titles at the Saratoga August race meeting
                               This earned him the nickname "King of Saratoga"
    Multiple Breeders' Cup race wins including wins in back to back races
                               on the same Breeders' Cup day
    
    
    In an interview a couple weeks ago, Cordero said that riding races is very
    dangerous as you could come back from any race dead, crippled or badly
    injured but if you are good you have a good life and make good money.
    He should know. He's done both. I can recall at least two other
    occasions in which Cordero was badly injured in races and he has
    certainly won lots of money with his mounts.
481.314Strike The Gold beats Best PalDECWET::JDADDAMIOMay the horse be with you!Mon May 11 1992 20:5237
Strike The Gold, the gorgeous 4 year-old son of Alydar and winner of the
1991 KY Derby, has had a hard year. He lost the 1991 Belmont Stakes to Hansel 
by a head. In fact, he lost his next 12 races after the Derby. His owners 
started bickering and continued bickering until they dissolved the partnership. 
Two of the three owners agreed and tried to buy out the third. He refused and 
insisted that they dissolve the partnership by public auction of all their 
horses, including Strike The Gold.

Strike The Gold was auctioned on Tuesday, May 5. He was only the second Derby 
winner ever to be sold at public auction. (The other was the 1988 winner, 
Winning Colors who was sold after her owner, Eugene Klein, died.) The two 
agreeing owners bought back Strike The Gold for $2.9 Million.

Strike The Gold justified their faith in him by winning won Saturday's(May 5th) 
running of the Pimlico Special. The Pimlico Special is for 4 year-old & older 
horses and is run at the same distance as this week's Preakness Stakes(1 and 
3/16 miles). Of course, the Preakness Stakes is part of the US's 3 year-old 
Triple Crown.

Strike The Gold had been winless since his KY Derby win although he had
run to many impressive second placings. Throughout his winless streak, he had 
run impressively. He always drives hard in the last part of the race coming 
from well off the pace of the leaders. He's frequently last after the first 
half mile of a race.

Saturday, he came from last behind a moderately fast pace and at the top of 
the stretch, you KNEW he was going to win it. He was the only horse running.
Strike The Gold won the Pimlico Special in a respectable time of 1:54.8.

The favorite, Best Pal, who had been previously undefeated this year placed 
fourth. There were reports before the race that Best Pal did not like the 
racing surface at Pimlico. Commentators said that he had shown a dislike for 
the track in most of his workouts there. Best Pal's workouts were substantially 
sub-par for him. Best Pal had shown a similar dislike for Pimlico last year 
while preparing for the Preakness Stakes but his owner felt that the horse was 
more mature and would adapt to the track now. Apparently, Best Pal did not 
adapt as his trainer said he had no excuses.
481.315Here's a trivia question for you... TOLKIN::COOKSave the SkeetsTue May 12 1992 16:4613
Since 1973, how many Triple Crown winners have there been?  Who were they?
What year did they win the TC?

One was Seattle Slew, right?  But what year?

John, you know all this stuff -- Who's favored for Saturday's race?

Does anyone but me completely identify with the woman who owns Casual Lies
(what a great name!)?

ok, so it's more than one question.  

gwen
481.316Three Triple Crown since 1973DECWET::JDADDAMIOMay the horse be with you!Tue May 12 1992 17:2218
    Triple Crown Winners since 1973 are:
    
    Secretariat, 1973, with the fastest races ever in each of the 3 events,
                 1:59.4 for 1.25 miles in the KY Derby; Second fastest
                        Derby was Northern Dancer 2:00 in 1964, Third
                        fastest, Spend A Buck, 2:00.6 in 1985
                 1:52.4 for 1 3/16 in the Preakness(Mis-timed officially)
                 2:24   for 1.5 miles in the Belmont; Second fastest: Easy
                        Goer 2:26 in 1989, Third Fastest: Risen Star(sired
                        by Secretariat) 2:26.4 in 1988
    
    Seattle Slew 1977; Only horse to be undefeated when he won the Triple
                       Crown. However, he did lose a few later on in his
                       career
    
    Affrimed     1978 with Alydar second in each race by a total of less
                 than two lengths for ALL THREE Races!
    
481.317And Furthermore!DECWET::JDADDAMIOMay the horse be with you!Tue May 12 1992 17:295
    There have been only three other Triple Crown Winners in the lifetime of
    even more the senior noters of this notes file. They are Whirlaway in 1941, 
    Assault in 1946 and Citation 1948. I don't think we have anybody
    significantly over 50 in this conference(as of today) so I won't
    mention the earlier winners of the Triple Crown.
481.318The stuff dreams are made of!DECWET::JDADDAMIOMay the horse be with you!Tue May 12 1992 17:3916
    According to the TRC Triple Crown Poll of 33 racing media
    people(...geez ya can't even say sportswriters anymore because so few
    of them WRITE)...
    
    A.P. Indy(which was scratched from the Derby due to a bruised hoof) is
    the horse to beat in Saturday's Preakness Stakes.
    
    And, yes, probably everybody who rides identifies with Casual Lies and
    his owner/trainer... Imagine if suddenly, YOU were on the Olympic Team
    in your sport; or not only completing the Tevis Cup 100 mile ride but
    being on of the leaders; etc.
    
    That kind of unexpected success is an exmaple of reality following
    childhood fantasy that we still carry with us...Come on admit it. You
    like "National Velvet" and "The Black Stallion" as much now as you did
    when you were 12! I know I do.
481.319More PleaseCGOOA::LMILLERhasten slowlyTue May 12 1992 17:413
    Go on .....
    
    Sir Barton - 1919?
481.320Casual LiesTOLKIN::COOKSave the SkeetsTue May 12 1992 18:4019
Well, I personalize the story even more, being the improverished owner of
a magnificent stallion.  I've loved him since he was a week old, owned him
since he was 15 months old, and supported him lo these past 9 years.  He's
not a race horse but a show horse.  In his whole life (with the exception of
the 1991 Region 16 finals [the horse show from HELL]) he's never come home
less than Reserve Champion - in halter, pleasure driving, and country english
pleasure.

So, I know how it feels to win with a horse you've sweat blood for.

National Velvet, ALL the Black Stallion books, and every other horse story
I could find in the library!  Remember "Justin Morgan Had a Horse"?


gwen

p.s.  should have titled this reply "Not Thoroughbred Horse Racing"

	or "Thoroughbred Horse Racing...NOT"
481.321re. National Velvet, Flicka, Fury, etc.GRANMA::JWOODTue May 12 1992 20:261
    When it comes to horses, I'm still 12.
481.322Secretariat's PreaknessDECWET::JDADDAMIOMay the horse be with you!Wed May 13 1992 18:2031
Before we go on with the Triple Crown discussion, I need to correct the 
time I posted for Secretariat's Preakness and tell you the whole story about 
that timing debacle.

There is NO question that the electronic timer malfunctioned that day. The
electronic timer showed a final time of 1:55 with a first quarter in :25 
seconds even though the horse on the lead was hustled. The track's official 
handicapper hand-timed the race in 1:54.4 which is a full 3/5 of a second 
faster than the electronic timer.

Before the race, Bob(?) Beyer who is the guru of all speed handicappers, 
predicted that Secretariat would win the Preakness and run it in 1:53.4.
Two different experienced railbirds who worked for The Daily Racing Form
hand-timed the race in exactly 1:53.4 from different vantage points. This is 
standard practice for The Daily Racing Form in major races.

CBS-TV compared films of Canonero's Preakness record win in 1:54 and 
Secretariat's Preakness on a frame by frame basis. They showed Secretariat
getting to the finish line more than 2 lengths in front of Canonero which 
means he was more than .4 seconds faster.

Track officials were convinced that the timer had malfunctioned but refused to 
take any evidence other than the official handicapper's time. The Daily Racing 
Form has always published its time which is a full second faster. I remembered 
the story correctly but subtracted the 1 second correction twice. 

I also made an error in reporting Spend A Buck's Derby time. The correct time 
is 2:00.2... I think I converted from fifths of  a second to tenths of a 
second twice or something equally stupid.

John
481.323US Triple Crown WinnersDECWET::JDADDAMIOMay the horse be with you!Wed May 13 1992 18:2166
I'll continue the discussion of the US Triple Crown with a complete list 
winners today and the "Two-Thirds Club" tomorrow. FOr those who are interested 
in a good videotape about the Triple Crown winners, I highly recommend the
tape put out by ABC Sports. Jim McKay(ABC guru of sportscasting) is a 
breeder/owner and did a real good job putting together film of all the Triple 
Crown winners. Jan got it for me for my birthday about 4 years ago and it's
the best $20 we ever spent! It's called "Jewels of the Triple Crown" costs
$19.95 + shipping. ABC Sports sells them directly or you can get them through
Pegosos Press, EQUIVID or lots of other mail order places.

The complete list US Triple Crown winners is:

1919 	Sir Barton
	Winless before the Derby. Grumpy, hated people and horses. Man O'War
	"blew his doors off" in a match race in 1920. Failure at stud as sire 
	of racehorses. Stood at a US Government Remount station in Wyoming
	until his death.

1930 	Gallant Fox
	Only TC winner to sire another TC winner! I think the Preakness was 
	run 4 days before the Derby that year. It was fairly common for a 
	horse to run on just 3 days rest in those days.

1935	Omaha
	Sired by Gallant Fox. First horse to win the TC after it was 
        first called The Triple Crown by Charles Hatton who was a long time
	writer/editor for The Daily Racing Form. Failure at stud; sent to
	Nebraska; pensioned near city of Omaha and buried at Ak-Sar-Ben 
	racetrack in Nebraska;(Ak-Sar-Ben = Nebraska spelled backwards)

1937	War Admiral
	Sire by Man O'War(more about him later!); Topped Man O'War's earnings
	Very successful sire; Very small horse. Lived, died and is buried in 
	the shadow of his sire's fame despite his own achievements. Literally!
	He's buried at the foot of a statue of his father.

1941	Whirlaway
	Mr Longtail. Eddie Aracaro's First TC. Erratic and difficult horse
	In his early career, he would frequently bolt to the outside rail...
	But he'd win anyway! Ben Jones cut away part of Whirlaway's blinker 
	in that paddock on Derby day even though he had never tried it before.
	Aracaro says the horse went better from then on.

1943	Count Fleet
	How could I have forgotten him? Our old vet used to supervise 
	Count Fleet's breeding during the vet's early days in KY. Owned and 
	raced by Hetz of car rental fame. Cooled out lame after the Belmont
	while setting a new record of 2:28.2 seconds w/ 25 length margin of
	victory. The ankle never recovered sufficiently to race and he was 
	retired to stud.

1946	Assault
	Owned and raced by King Ranch in TX. Deformed foot caused by injury
	as a yearling caused people to doubt his ability. Failure at stud.

1948	Citation
	Aracaro's second TC as a jockey. Aracaro claims this is the best 
	horse he ever rode and the best 3 year-old he has ever seen.
	Set a Derby record which stood until 1962. Tied Count Fleet's 
	Belmont record of 2:28.2;

1973	Secretariat

1977	Seattle Slew

1978	Affirmed
481.324Timing controversy in '92 Kentucky Derby, tooDECWET::DADDAMIODesign Twice, Code OnceWed May 13 1992 20:5316
    Re: .322
    
    It's Andy Beyer who does the speed figures in the Daily Racing Form.
    
    There is also a lot of controversy over the time for this year's
    Kentucky Derby.  Many people at the Derby timed it in 2:03 and several 
    have timed it from videotape getting the same result.  They think the
    timer malfunctioned and started early.  Apparently the race isn't timed
    from when the horses leave the starting gate, but is started when the
    horses trip a starting mechanism (light beam?) at the quarter pole. 
    The people who claim the race was mistimed, even included the time it
    takes to get from the starting gate to the quarter pole and still got a
    time faster than the "official" clock.  I haven't heard if anything
    will be done as far as changing the official time or not.
    
    						Jan
481.325Not always at the same spotDECWET::JDADDAMIOMay the horse be with you!Wed May 13 1992 21:4222
    
    Jan's comment is slightly misleading. The electronic timer is not at ALWAYS 
    at the quarter pole! The electronic timer is set 1 or 2 strides in front 
    of the starting gate. It just happens that the starting gate is placed 
    near the quarter pole for the KY Derby. 
    
    Andy, Bob, what's the difference? As long as I don't call my spouse by
    the wrong name! In any event, The Daily Racing Form just started
    including Mr Beyer's magic numbers in their race performance records
    which has nothing to do with Secretariat's Preakness in 1973. Beyer had
    just developed his rating system in 1973. He had tested his system by
    analyzing previous Derby winners prep races. He used those figures to 
    "predict" their Derby time successfully. 
    
    BTW, Beyer is one of the people who predicted that Arazi wouldn't win.
    His system uses a profile of past winners of the race to select horses
    in the current race with similar profiles. This year, he had a couple
    horses which fit the profile. He picked Pine Bluff over Lil E Tee for
    some arcane reasons that I didn't understand. He was much humbled when 
    Lil E Tee came home the winner!
    
    
481.326DKAS::RIVERSMaster of the full swing buntThu May 14 1992 13:3112
    re. some back
    
    
    What I meant about superhorses was that it would be nice to have a
    horse come in, take the triple crown, etc.
    
    I don't doubt Arazi's ability at all.  I am less than impressed by
    current crops running for the triple crown.  I think racing could use a
    'hero' that really outshines the competition, that's all.  
    
    
    kim
481.3275th's and 10th'sKAHALA::HOLMESThu May 14 1992 13:5123
re: .322

>seconds even though the horse on the lead was hustled. The track's official 
>handicapper hand-timed the race in 1:54.4 which is a full 3/5 of a second 
>faster than the electronic timer.

    1:54.4 + 1/5 = 1:55 doesn't it ?

>Secretariat's Preakness on a frame by frame basis. They showed Secretariat
>getting to the finish line more than 2 lengths in front of Canonero which 
>means he was more than .4 seconds faster.

    I had to think about this one for awhile but now I get it.
    Mixing 5th's and 10th's is very confusing !


    Do the flats consider 1 length to equal 1/5 th of a second ?

    The reason I'm asking if because Harness does also and with a
    Standardbred pacing/trotting a mile in 2:00 and a TB running a
    mile in 1:30-something, I don't think it all adds up !

    Bill
481.328Speed FiguresESCROW::ROBERTSThu May 14 1992 17:5111
    I thought speed figures have always been included in the Daily Racing
    form past performance stats.  Although, now that I think a bit more, I
    think they have always (which means for a while 8^}) been included in
    the Eastern editions but not in the Western ones.  I seem to rember
    reading something to this effect when I spent a summer trying to make
    money at the track, and read *lots* or handicapping books.
    
    Came up with a good system, but it's more trouble than it's worth for
    the payback.  Sigh.  So here I am at Digital....
    
    -ellie
481.329Re times, speeds etcDECWET::JDADDAMIOMay the horse be with you!Thu May 14 1992 18:2228
    Sorry about the confusion on the timings. Jan beat me up about that
    while we were cleaning stalls so I'm all set with an explanation! I was 
    using tenths of a second because its easier to type ".6" than " 3/5", etc
    
    But, in the discussion on Secretariat, I wanted to treat the difference
    between the electronic timed and hand-timed results as units. SO, I
    used fifths for the difference and probably confused the bejesees out
    of everybody except me who already knew what I meant.
    
    So, Secretariat is generally believed to have run his Preakness in 1:53
    and 2/5 seconds. He was timed by the official track handicapper at 
    1:54 and 2/5 seconds. He was timed by the electronic timer at 1:55 and
    0/5 seconds.
    
    Yes, 1/5 is considered about 1 length in flat racing. A TB on the flat
    will run a mile in 1:35 to 1:37 depending on the final distance of the
    race. In other words, a 1 mile race will be run in about 1:35 while the
    first mile of a 1.5 mile race will be between 1:36 and 1:37. 
    
    As to the difference between that and a 2 minute lick for a trotter, 
    consider the speeds. A 2 minute lick is 30 MPH. A 1:36 mile is 37.5 MPH. 
    The difference in how far a horse will travel in 1/5 of a second at 
    30 MPH and 37.5 MPH isn't much! About 9 feet versus 11 feet respectively.
    
    Re speed figures. You're probably right about speed figures being in
    the Form for a long time but they were probably somebody else's
    numbers. The Form just started advertising this guy Beyer's figures as a 
    new feature recently in the NY edition
481.330The Two-Thirds ClubDECWET::JDADDAMIOMay the horse be with you!Thu May 14 1992 18:24116
So far, there have been 11 US Triple Crown winners. The Two-Thirds 
Club(winners of 2 of the 3 races) isn't as exclusive. There have been about 
3 times that many horses that have one 2 of the 3 races.

There have been about a dozen that either lost or didn't enter the Belmont 
Stakes after winning the Derby and Preakness. Another 10 have won the Derby 
and the Belmont. There are about 14 horses which have won the Preakness and 
the Belmont after not winning the Derby. 

Winners of KY Derby and Preakness that did not win the Belmont.
1932	Burgoo King	Not entered
1936	Bold Venture	Not entered; sire of 1946 Triple Crown winner, Assault
1944	Pensive		Lost to Bounding Home
1958	Tim Tam		Lost to the Irish runner, Cavan; Tim Tam placed second
			despite breaking his sesamoids in the Belmont; retired
			to successful stud career
1961	Carry Back	Lost to Sherluck
1964	Northern Dancer	Ran second to Quadrangle; went home to Canada and won
			the first leg of the Canadian Triple Crown(Queen's 
			Plate) just 3 weeks later; Injured while training for 
			the remainder of the Canadian Triple Crown; retired to
			the most successful stud career in history
1966	Kauai King	Lost to Amberoid
1968	Forward Pass	Ran second to Dancer's Image in Derby. Dancer's Image 
			disqualified. Forward Pass declared Derby winner.
			Forward Pass then won the Preakness but lost the 
			Belmont to Stage Door Johnny.
1969	Majestic Prince	Lost to Arts and Letters
1971	Canonero II	Lost to Pass Catcher
1979	Spectacular Bid	Lost to Coastal; Shoemaker later road Spectacular Bid
			in his CA races and said it's the best horse he ever 
			rode; His trainer Bud Delp said Bid was the greatest 
			horse to ever look through a bridle
1981	Pleasant Colony	Lost to Summing; Now siring good stakes horses like 
			Pleasant Tap and Pleasant Stage
1987	Alysheba 	Placed fourth & lost $1,000,000 bonus to Bet Twice 
			which won the Belmont and the Triple Crown bonus)
1989	Sunday Silence 	Second; 15 lengths behind Easy Goer's second fastest 
			Belmont in history (2:26 for 1.5 miles); $1,000,000 
			Triple Crown Bonus


Winners of KY Derby and Belmont that lost the Preakness
1923	Zev		Lost to Vigil
1931	Twenty Grand	Lost to Mate
1939	Johnstown	Lost to Challedon
1942	Shut Out	Lost to Alsab
1950	Middleground	Lost to Hill Prince
1956	Needles		Lost to Fabius
1963	Chateaugay	Lost to Candy Spots
1972	Riva Ridge	Lost to Bee Bee Bee
1976	Bold Forbes	Lost to Elocutionist
1984	Swale		Lost to ; and died of heart failure 3 days after the 
			Belmont


The most famous horse that didn't win the Triple Crown is undoubtedly Man 
O'War. He didn't win the 1920 KY Derby because his owner(Samuel D Riddle)
refused to enter the horse in the race. He thought it was too far too early in 
the 3 year old season. He also reportedly had some prejudice against racing in 
Western KY. Most people at the time thought Man O'War would have easily won 
the 1920 KY Derby if he had been entered.

There were seven horses which were not entered in the KY Derby during 
their 3 year-old year. All of them were 1922 and earlier. Apparently, the 
KY Derby didn't have as much prestige before Charlie Hatton defined it to be 
the first leg of the Triple Crown in the 1930's.


Not entered in KY Derby but won Preakness and Belmont.
1877	Cloverbrook
1878	Duke of Magenta
1880	Grenada
1881	Saunterer
1895	Belmar
1920	Man O'War 
1922	Pillory


Won the Preakness and Belmont Stakes after losing the KY Derby
1940	Bimelch		Lost to Gallahadion
1949	Capot		Lost to Ponder
1953	Native Dancer	Lost to Dark Star
1955	Nashua		Lost to Swaps(who went home to CA after the Derby w/o
			running in the other Triple Crown races)
1974	Little Current	Lost Derby to Cannonade
1988	Risen Star 	Third in the Derby after getting boxed in and bumped;
			Sired by Secretariat; Second fastest Belmont at the 
			time (2:26.4); Now third fastest as Easy Goer ran 
			2:26 in 1989; $1,000,000 Triple Crown Bonus
1991	Hansel		Favorite for the Derby; placed 11th; injured in Travers
			while challenging for the lead but ran on for second; 
			retired to stud); $1,000,000 Triple Crown Bonus


Just to show how fickle the finger of fate is, let's consider what might have 
been. Gallant Fox is the only Triple Crown winner to have sired another Triple 
Crown winner. That doesn't mean that he was the greatest sire in the history 
of the world! That club would not be so exclusive had the fickle finger 
wiggled just a little differently.

Man O'War was not entered in the Derby. He was widely believed capaable of 
winning it. Had he been entered and won, Man O'War and his son, War Admiral
would have entered the father&son club.

Likewise with Bold Venture, the sire of 1946 Triple Crown winner, Assault. 
Bold Venture was not entered in the 1936 Belmont. Had he entered and won, 
Bold Venture and Assault would have entered the father&son club.

If Risen Star had had a little better racing luck in the 1988 Derby, he might
have gotten to Winning Colors. If he had, Secretariat and Risen Star would 
have entered the father&son club.

If Northern Dancer had won the Belmont instead of placing second, he would be 
the only stallion to have won the US Triple Crown and sired a winner of the 
UK Triple Crown...etc, etc
481.3311992 Preakness fieldDECWET::JDADDAMIOMay the horse be with you!Thu May 14 1992 18:2437
The Preakness is expected to have a full field of 14 starters. A.P. Indy
will not start as his bruised foot has still not healed completely.

The first 5 finishers in the KY Derby(Lil E Tee, Casual Lies, Dance Floor,
Conte Di Savoya and Pine Bluff) as well as Technology and My Luck Runs North.

The fresh horse will be Canadian runner, Alydeed which won the Derby Trial a 
week before the KY Derby. Alydeed is sired by English classic winner and 
champion Shadeed who was sired by the late, great Nijinsky. Alydeed's mom 
was sired by the late Alydar. Alydeed is a front running horse and believed by 
many to be the best horse in the field. The expert commentary says that, if a 
speed duel develops between Speaker Phone, Fortunes Gone and Alydeed, the 
horses that come from off the pace like Lil E Tee and Casual Lies will beat
Alydeed. If the pace is moderate, they expect Alydeed to win.

Because the speed duel on the front end is likely, Lil E Tee is a deserved 
favorite. The fickle media now have him at the top of the TRC Triple Crown 
Poll with 20 first place votes and 10 second place votes for a total of 290 
points out of a possible 300. His trainer, Lynn Whiting, says that Lil E Tee 
has enough tactical speed to be closer to the front runners than he was in 
the Derby. Jockey Pat Day says that Lil E Tee loafs when he gets to the lead 
and that the colt wasn't really putting out full effort in the last part of 
the Derby. My guess is that their strategy will be to have Day position the 
horse in mid-field(e.g. 6th through 8th) so he'll be closer to the pace and 
move for the lead as close to the finish as they dare.

Casual Lies' owner/trainer, Shelley Riley is predicting a win for her colt now 
that he has recovered completely from his bedding induced colic episode the 
week before the Derby. Jockey Gary Stevens said that Casual Lies is the first 
horse he's ridden that he felt could endure the gruelling Triple Crown. Of the 
Derby and Casual Lies' chances in the Preakness, Stevens said: "They were 
walking. The entire race the fractions were very slow. If we pick up the pace 
some in the Preakness, this colt is for real." 

With a faster pace, Conte Di Savoya which closed very fast in the Derby and 
his previous races is expected to do well in the Preakness. He liked the 
longer distance and his trainer thinks he's ready to win a big one.
481.332DKAS::RIVERSMaster of the full swing buntMon May 18 1992 17:0930
    Winner of the 1992 Preakness Stakes:
    
    Pine Bluff (the favorite)
    
    Second:  Alydeed   (impressive horse)
    
    
    Third: Casual Lies  (very consistent)
    
    
    Fourth: Dance Floor  
    
    
    
    A much more interesting race (I think) than the Derby.  Track was
    labelled Good.  Don't recal time of race.
    
    
    re. a couple back
    
    
    If I recall correctly, didn't Spectacular Bid bypass either the
    Preakness or the Belmont to participate in, at the time, a very rich
    race (up in Arlington?)?  It created quite a controversy, but following
    this, the Triple Crown Bonus was set up to help ensure contenders to
    stick around.
    
    
    
    kim
481.333Triple Crown ChallengeDECWET::JDADDAMIOMay the horse be with you!Mon May 18 1992 17:5929
    Nope, that wasn't Spectacular Bid! It was Spend A Buck in 1985 who won the 
    KY Derby and by-passed BOTH the Preakness and Belmont to run in the Jersey
    Derby in NJ. There was a $2,000,000 bonus put up by the NJ track and/or
    racing commission for the first horse to win the KY Derby and Jersey
    Derby.
    
    The Triple Crown Challenge ($5,000,000 bonus for a Triple Crown or
    $1,000,000 to the horse running in all 3 races and scoring the most
    points) was started in 1986 or '87 because of Spend A Buck 
    
    BTW, The Triple Crown Challenge scoring system has changed. Originally,
    the winner got 5 points, 3 for second and 1 for third. Now, first place
    gets 10 points, second 5, third 3 and fourth 1 point... Under the new
    scoring system, Alysheba which won the first two legs and finished
    fourth in the Belmont would have won the $1,000,000. Under the scoring
    system then used, he had a total of 10 points for 2 firsts while Bet
    Twice which finished second in the first two legs and won the Belmont
    had 11 points. Under the new system, Alysheba would have had 21 points
    and Bet Twice would have had 20.
    
    Personally, I can't see Pine Bluff! Why? Because the public
    handicappers and expert commentators like him too much! That's usually
    the kiss of death especially when Harvey Pack(who used to do the
    handicapping stuff on the Breeders Cup shows) picks him! I can't
    remember Harvey Pack EVER picking th ewinner of a major stakes race!
    
    Oh well, everybody gets lucky sometimes....\
    
    Who's betting on Casual Lies for the Belmont?
481.334DKAS::RIVERSMaster of the full swing buntMon May 18 1992 20:1919
    Aha.  Well, I was close.  :)
    
    
    
    Pine Bluff seemed to be drawing off, and I didn't notice (of course, I
    didn't study this in depth) any other strong closers at the end of the
    race.  If it'd been 1.5 miles instead of 1 3/16's, and all things being
    the same, I guess Pine Bluff was the strongest at the end and may well
    be able to go the distance.  
    
    Casual Lies didn't seem to have quite enough oomph in either the Derby
    or the Preakness to impress me enough to pull of the Belmont.  Quite
    frankly, I think it's a crapshoot.  Any of them are good enough to win
    against the others, and who wins, who knows?   :)
    
    
    kim
    
    
481.335Casual Lies and Alydeed in PreaknessDECWET::JDADDAMIOMay the horse be with you!Wed May 20 1992 23:3213
    When I saw Casual Lies chargin up on the rail in the Preakness, I
    thought he was gonna get farther than he did with his late run. He was
    closing faster than Pine Bluff but Casual Lies tired in the deep going
    on the rail(Which is the heaviest going when the track is wet). If Gary
    Stevens had chosen the  middle of the track like the jockeys with more 
    experience at Pimlico did, Casual Lies could easily have been second.
    
    IMHO, he could easily have run down Pine Bluff in another 5/16 mile on
    a dry track. 
    
    I was really rooting for Alydeed, the Canadian horse. The experts like
    his chances in the Belmont and the Canadian Triple Crown. 
    
481.336The Canadian Triple Crown winnersDECWET::JDADDAMIOMay the horse be with you!Wed May 20 1992 23:4229
    For those who aren't familar with the Canadian Triple Crown, the
    distances are the same as the US Triple Crown but the last race
    is on turf. Another good aspect of the Canadian Triple Crown is that
    the races are all separated by 3 weeks which gives the horses a little
    more rest between major races.
    
    The Canadian Triple Crown consists of:
    
    The Queen's Plate		1 1/4 miles on dirt at Woodbine
    The Prince of Wales 	1 3/16 miles on dirt at Fort Erie(may be
    				moved to Woodbine this year)
    The Breeders Stakes		1.5 miles on TURF at Woodbine
    
    
    
    There have only been 5 Canadian Triple Crown winners. Remarkably, 3 of
    the 5 ran in the past 5 years! They were:
    
    1989 With Approval		Gorgeous gray horse aka "Coronary Kid" for
    				his habit of letting horses come up to him
    				in the stretch before winning by a nose; He
    				only did that on DIRT! After the Triple
    				Crown, they kept him on turf and he set
    				course records winning by many lengths
    1990 Izvestia
    1991 Dance Smartly		The only filly to ever win it. Won
    				Breeder's Cup Distaff against older mares
    				and The Molson Export Million against US 3
    				year-old males
481.337Blushing Groom dead at 18DECWET::JDADDAMIOMay the horse be with you!Wed May 20 1992 23:4333
Blushing Groom, champion miler in England and France, died on May 6 1992. He 
had been foaled in France in 1974. He died of cancer at Gainesway Farm in KY 
where he had stood at stud since his retirement.

Blushing Groom had had a cancerous testicle removed in 1988. He continued to 
stand stud to a reduced number of mares. He got 35 mares in foal in 1989 and 
13 in 1990. He was pensioned off after failing to impregnate any of his 19 
mares in 1991.

Although only 18, Blushing Groom had been a sire of great renown. He sired
more than 70 stakes winners and sired many stakes producing daughters. He was 
the sire of 14 foals named champions at the time of his death. There may be 
more among his last few crops. His foals already named champion include:
Al Bhatri
Arazi		Champion Juvenile just about everywhere he raced
Blushing John	Champion older male in US; Set course and stakes record of
		1:53 1/5 at Pimlico for 1 3/16 miles in Pimlico Special which 
		was even faster than Secretariat's unofficial time of 1:53 2/5
		in the Preakness at the same distance.
Blushing Katy
Classic Tale
Crystal Glitters
Fire The Groom
Groom Dancer
Heart of Groom
Kefaah
Nashwan		1989 Two Thousand Guineas, Derby Stakes, Ecplipse Stakes
		and the King George VI and Queen Elizabeth DIamond Stakes in 
		England
Rainbow Quest	1985 Prix de l'Arc de Triomphe in France
Runaway Groom	Canadian champion


481.338Pimlico Special stakes and track recordDECWET::JDADDAMIOMay the horse be with you!Wed May 27 1992 18:395
    Lest my last note about Blushing Groom's death leave you with the
    impression that Blushing John holds the stakes and track record for the
    Pimlico Special, Farma Way holds those records. In 1991, Farma Way
    "cooked" the Pimlico Special field and ran the 1 3/16 miles in 1:52 2/5
    
481.339A.P. Indy preps for the Belmont.DECWET::JDADDAMIOMay the horse be with you!Wed May 27 1992 19:0423
    I almost forgot, A.P. Indy is back to the races. He won the Gr II Peter
    Pan (1 1/8 miles) over the long weekend. He blew off the field and ran
    it in 1:47 and change. This is significantly faster than his last
    outing in the Santa Anita Derby which he ran in 1:49 and change.
    
    A.P. Indy had been sidelined with a bruised foot since the day before
    the KY Derby and had not raced in 2 months. His trainer intended the
    Peter Pan to be a tune-up race for the Belmont which is Saturday, June
    6th. The NY bettors are expected to make A.P. Indy the favorite in the
    Belmont.
    
    Lil E Tee is not expected to start in the Belmont due to having bled
    in the Preakness. Interestingly enough, that leaves Casual Lies(8
    points) and Pine Bluff(10 points) to battle it out for the $1,000,000 
    bonus. The bonus goes to the horse which finishes all 3 races and has the 
    highest point total for placements within the races.
    
    If Casual Lies comes in third or better and ahead of Pine Bluff, 
    Casual Lies gets the bonus. If Pine Bluff finishes ahead of Casual
    Lies(reardless of placing), Pine Bluff gets the bonus. If neither of
    them enters and finishes the Belmont, Dance Floor(4 points for his 3rd
    in the Derby and 4th in the Preakness) could take home the $1,000,000
    just by finishing the race even if he comes in LAST!
481.340Foxboro Park reopensDELNI::KEIRANThu May 28 1992 11:1910
    Foxboro Park in Foxboro Mass was reopened last night after being
    closed for the past 6 years.  Charles Sarkis and the Westwood group
    have put about 8 million dollars into the renovations of the track
    which has been leased by them for the next 35 years.  Sarkis' father
    in law, Patrick Hennessey origionally opened the track in 1946.  
    
    The thoroughbreds have 75 racing dates, the first being last night,
    and the harness horses will begin racing on Sept 18th and run through
    December 4th.  Though there is still some more work to do, the track
    and grandstands are beautiful!  
481.341Weekly TV Shows on TB racingDECWET::JDADDAMIOMay the horse be with you!Thu May 28 1992 17:3759
I know there are a people who are interested in TB racing but don't 
subscribe to racing periodicals like The Blood Horse for various 
reasons. The main one is that it costs $75.50 for 1 year! That's expensive 
even for a high class weekly(which it is).

However, there are some weekly TV shows that will keep you current if you
get cable or have a satellite dish. Actually, there are 3 reasonably good
half-hour weekly shows which vary somewhat in style and emphasis.

1. Inside Racing; Sports Channel; Originates in NY but carried by most
                  Sports Channel stations; Many of the SC stations air
                  this show on Tues at 6:30 PM Eastern; some repeat it later 
                  in the week.
	a. Wire to wire coverage of major stakes races of the week
	b. Commentary/analysis on special races like the Triple Crown
	c. Studio interviews w/personalities(jockeys, trainers, officials, and 
                  handicappers)
	d. Little or no handicapping information(e.g. no odds or pay-out info)
This is my personal favorite despite their low budget atmosphere mainly 
because of the wire to wire coverage and low-key approach. Emphasis on the 
sport w/ business aspects secondary.

2. Thoroughbred Digest; ESPN; Airs at 5:30 PM Eastern on Thurs; repeats at
                        2 AM Fri(11 PM Pacific) and at least once more on Fri 
                        or Sat.
	a. Footage of major stakes races of the week. Usually NOT wire-wire
	b. Some handicapping information(e.g. odds and pay-out info)
	c. Field interviews with owners, moguls of racing industry, trainers
                  jockeys, etc
More glitz and less depth than "Inside Racing." Everything from the
graphics and the studio set to the field interviews says "money!" This show is 
sponsored by important corporations, businesses and state agencies which are 
involved in racing. It shows in the product. The primary emphasis here seems 
to be on keeping powerful, influential people happy and stroked. Secondary
emphasis on the sport. The big advantage is that ESPN is available 
nationwide, wherever there is cable. Sports Channel isn't available in many 
parts of the US(unless you have a satellte dish).

3. Post Time; Sports Channel; Aired at various times during the week on 
different Sports Channel stations. I think the new show is first aired
on Fridays at 7 PM Eastern time on several Sports Channel stations. Also 
carried on some regional sports networks/cable stations

	a. Handicappers delight! Handicapping info & monthly viewer 
           handicapping contest with $5,000 in prize money. I think the 
	   contest is a "900" phone number kind of thing where you place 
	   "bets" on an account that starts out with a certain number of points
	   that are wagered like dollars & winning bets are "paid" in points
	   at the same rate the track pays out dollars. The contestant with
	   highest point total for the month gets the big prize.
	b. Footage of major stakes races
	c. Vacuous commentary from a pretty blonde female exercise rider. 
	   IMHO, she's there as eyewash since the host is a gray complexioned 
	   middle aged male.
	d. Sponsored by a handicapping system which also provides most of the
	   handicapping commentary. They'll try to sell you their system, 
	   instructional video tapes, handicapping forms/graphs and all.

481.342Belmont Scratches etcDECWET::JDADDAMIOMay the horse be with you!Fri May 29 1992 18:0426
    Well, Lil E Tee, Dance Floor and Alydeed are not running in the Belmont
    next week.
    
    Lil E Tee was found to have a lung infection which caused his bleeding
    incident in the Preakness.
    
    Alydeed's owners decided to pass the Belmont and prepare for the
    Canadian Triple Crown which begins in late June or early July.
    
    I don't know why Dance Floor was scratched but he can't go the 1.5 mile
    distance so it's wise to pass rather than be embarassed.
    
    So, the ONLY contenders for the $1,000,000 Triple Crown bonus this year 
    are Casual Lies and Pine Bluff. Some racing historian said on TV last
    week that he found lots of similarities between this years Triple Crown
    and 1974(I think that's what he said but memory fails; but that would
    have been Little Current). The horse that
    won the Derby that year(Canonade in 1974) faded to the same place 
    Lil E Tee did. The horse that was 5th in the Derby won the Preakness with 
    a new jockey. The old jockey placed second on a fresh horse etc...So 
    because that horse went on to win the Belmont, he expects Pine Bluff
    to win the Belmont.
    
    Personally, I can't see Pine Bluff. I'm rooting for Casual Lies and AP
    Indy... I'm disappointed that Alydeed has been scratched 'cause I'd
    have been cheering for him too.
481.343Belmont Horse Fair DECWET::JDADDAMIOMay the horse be with you!Fri May 29 1992 19:3819
    BTW, Belmont Park is having its "Horse Fair" with the Belmont Stakes 
    again this year. It's a little different this time around. It's split 
    over this weekend (May 30-31) as well as 3 days next week 
    (Fri June 5 - Sun June 6). The Belmont Stakes are on Saturday, June 6
    
    It's a general horse thing with various breeds showing their stuff.
    The Friday date is designated kids day and they're having all sorts of
    demos etc.
    
    Lots of the racing people who are doing horse stuff outside racing will
    put on demos. For example, retired jocke Angel Cordero Jr will be
    bringing miniature horses. Jockey Julie Krone will be demonstrating
    jumping with her TB showjumper. Jockey Diane Nelson will put on a
    dressage demonstration. Canadian trainer, Jim Day was an Olympic team
    member in showjumping and they're trying to get him to bring a horse.
    There will be draft horses, etc ...
    
    If you live in the region or are planning a trip to NYC or LI for the
    Belmont or some other reason, check out the Horse Fair!
481.344Belmont Stakes PreviewDECWET::JDADDAMIOMay the horse be with you!Wed Jun 03 1992 18:4267
    The Belmont Stakes is this Saturday.  To me, the Belmont has been the
    most important of the 3 races in our Triple Crown. It requires stamina
    as well as speed from the horse. It also requires strategy and clear
    thinking from the jockey. 
    
    Contrary to what you might expect, the 1.5 mile Belmont is not a race
    in which a "come-from-behind" horse can win easily. No horse in the past 
    20 years has won the Belmont without being 3rd or better at the top of 
    the stretch! And only 1 horse(Temperance Hill) has been that far back. 
    Thirteen of the past 20 winners have been on the front when they reach 
    the stretch.
    
    My personal theory is that in the 1.5 mile and longer races, the front 
    runners run the early parts of a race a little slower than in shorter
    races. A slower pace makes it hard for a horse to come from 10-15 lengths 
    behind in the stretch and win. So an "off-the-pace" horse has to run 
    closer to the leaders and begin a forward move on the turn in order to have 
    a shot at winning.
    
    This sets it up perfectly for a horse like A.P. Indy who runs just
    behind the leaders and showed a similar move in winning the Peter Pan
    at Belmont Park two weeks ago. He's the pick of several public
    handicappers because: he's fresh(1 race in the last two months); he has
    a race over the track and won well while making "the move"; his pedigree 
    screams BELMONT, CLASSICS and NEW YORK(He's by Seattle Slew out 
    of a mare by Secretariat; second dam by Buckpasser who was a great
    broodmare sire and won the Travers after being out of Triple Crown
    races due to injury)
    
    Some of the other public handicappers are picking Pine Bluff because
    he's already won a classic race; had a great workout over the Belmont
    track a couple days ago; they think he's peaking at just the right
    time.
    
    They also give Casual Lies a good chance because he's tough and can go
    all day. They also give him credit for a good move in the heavy going
    on the rail in the Preakness which only got him up for third.
    
    Because the point scale for the $1,000,000 bonus is set up (10 points for 
    winning, 5 for second, 3 for third and 1 for 4th), there are several
    things that could happen. It is very likely that Pine Bluff(10 points) 
    will get at least part of the bonus as he has a 2 point advantage over 
    Casual Lies(8 points). But Casual Lies could take it all or they could
    split it.
    
    If Pine Bluff places ahead of Casual Lies, Pine Bluff gets the bonus. If 
    Casual Lies WINS the Belmont(18 point total), Casual Lies gets the
    bonus even if Pine Bluff is second(15 point total). 
    
    If Casual Lies places third or second and beats Pine Bluff by 2 places, 
    Casual Lies gets the bonus. If Casual Lies places third or second and only 
    beats Pine Bluff by 1 place, they split the bonus.
    
    For example, Casual Lies would have a total of 13 for a second place
    finish. If Pine Bluff finishes fourth, his total would be 11 and Casual
    Lies is $1,000,000 richer. However, if Pine Bluff finishes third, his 
    total would be 13 and they split the bonus. Similar results for
    Casual Lies third(11 total) with Pine Bluff fourth(11 total) or
    worse(10 total).
    
    Unfortunately, Jan and I have the same thoughts as the public
    handicappers which usually means that some unheard of longshot will win!
    However, both of us think Casual Lies will place ahead of Pine Bluff.
    So, our rooting section will be supporting A.P. Indy and Casual Lies.
    However, we'll be cheering whoever comes down the lane first!
    
    John
481.345Some off subject local stats FWIWMISFIT::KINNEYDAngst for the memoriesThu Jun 04 1992 19:0163
FingerLakes Race Track April 4 to May 30 Inclusive
--------------------------------------------------

Favorites Win % so far this year 	39%
Favorites Win % this time last year	32%

Favorites in the Money so far this year	71%
Favorites Win % this time last year	70%


Winning % Post Positions 
(starts/wins/win %)

Pole		Sprints		Routes
Position	Under 1 mi	1 mi & up
-------------------------------------------------
1		315/36/.11	75/17/.23
2		315/42/.13	75/09/.12
3		315/40/.13	75/10/.13
4		315/46/.15	75/12/.16
5		315/42/.13	74/12/.16
6		315/43/.14	70/03/.04
7		234/25/.11	50/05/.10
8		172/26/.15	30/05/.17
9		104/09/.09	16/02/.13
10		 56/06/.11	04/00/.00
11		 12/01/.08	00/00/.00
12+		 06/01/.17	00/00/.00



			Best of Jockey Standings

		Mounts	1st	2nd	3rd	win%	$$%

Dominguez,C V	 44	12	 7	 3	.27	.50
Whitley,K	145	33	22	17	.23	.50


			Best of Trainer Standings

		Starts	1st	2nd	3rd	win%	$$%

Vardon,R	25	 8	 6	 2	.32	.64
Rosado,R	34	10	 4	 6	.29	.58
Jacobs,S	18	 5	 3	 1	.28	.50
Acquilano,J	63	17	10	 9	.27	.57
Bond,H		23	 6	 3	 4	.26	.56
Perdue,E	55	13	11	 6	.24	.54
Lambert,J	49	12	 7	 9	.24	.57


There just a few people putting together some very impressive numbers at 
Finger Lakes this year. So if the favorite is in the #1 pp in a route and is 
trained by Vardon or Rosado and ridden by Dominquez or Whitley, bet the farm. 
Otherwise you're on your own! Truth be known, when at the track, I always put 
an * next to any horse trained or ridden by these jockeys just to make sure I 
take a close look. If I'm ever hurting for a 3rd horse in an exacta
box or a trifecta key, I always go with these four guys if I can, FWIW. 

Does anyone understand the speed ratings and the track varient in listed in 
the program for each horse and each race?
481.346Re local statsDECWET::JDADDAMIOMay the horse be with you!Fri Jun 05 1992 17:2816
    Re: local stats on trainers jockeys, etc
    
    On the "Post Time" TV show the other week, they talked about such
    stats. They suggested that handicappers who use them should break them
    down a little finer than overall % wins by jockey, trainer, etc
    
    For example, some trainers may be outstanding with turf horses going a
    route (for example) but have a lousy overall % because they aren't as
    successful win $5,000 sprinters. Same with jockeys, some are better at
    sprints, others excell at routes, some on the turf some can do
    anything. In other words,when looking at a specific race consider only 
    the trainer/jockey records in races w/ similar conditions.
    
    Sounds good on paper but I don't know how the handicapper is supposed
    to get such stuff w/o keeping personal records of every race result for
    the year! Enjoy!
481.347Last minute, pre-Belmont ramblingsDECWET::JDADDAMIOMay the horse be with you!Fri Jun 05 1992 17:4931
    Here are some last minute updates on the Belmont Stakes and some
    unrelated ramblings:
    
    The post position draw was held yesterday. The 3 top contenders(A.P.
    Indy, Pine Bluff and Casual Lies) drew post positions 1, 2 and 3
    respectively! That might make for some interesting riding strategy.
    Conte Di Savoya will not run unless both Pine Bluff and Casual Lies
    scratch. (That way he'd get the bonus)
    
    A.P. Indy's ears must be burning! The Blood Horse referred to A.P. Indy 
    as "uninspiring" with "none of the brillance of his half brother, Summer 
    Squall". They say he's probably the best US 3 year-old as he was "born 
    into a weak crop." I'd hate to hear what they have to say about Pine Bluff 
    and Casual Lies!
    
    Shelly Riley says she's doing a "Drought Dance" so that the track will
    be fast as Casual Lies didn't like the off track at Pimlico.
    Unfortunately, the weather forecast for Fri in NY is 100% chance of
    rain with possibility of it tapering off into scattered showers Sat.
    
    Steve Cauthen(Affirmed's Triple Crown rider) will be riding in the
    Belmont aboard an English horse whose name I can't recall at the moment.
    
    Dr Devious(the English based horse owned by diet mogul Jenny Craig)
    which finished 7th in the KY Derby won the Epsom Derby easily by 5
    lengths!
    
    Jockey Jacinto Vasquez recently won his 5,000th race at Calder. Jockey Eddie
    Maple(best known as Secretariat's rider in his last race while regular
    rider Ron Turcotte was suspended) recently won his 4,000th race at
    Belmont.
481.3481992 Belmont StakesDECWET::JDADDAMIOMay the horse be with you!Mon Jun 08 1992 21:1025
    Well, the Belmont Stakes results should have next weeks's Blood Horse
    eating a few words! Not only did A.P. Indy win but he tied Easy Goer's 
    1989 Belmont Stakes time for the second fastest Belmont in history(2:26)! 
    Interestingly enough, A.P. Indy's jockey(Eddie Dellahouse) also rode 
    Risen Star whose 1988 Belmont Stakes victory is on the books as the third
    fastest Belmont at 2:26 2/5. 
    
    Not only did A.P. Indy get home in 2:26 but the English import(My
    Memoirs) was 3/4 of a length behind in second with Pine Bluff a close 
    third(about 1 length behind A.P. Indy). The rest of the field was 14 
    lengths farther back! Pine Bluff got the $1,000,000 bonus.
    
    BTW, one of the owners of My Memoirs is a West coast public handicapper 
    named Jeff Siegel. Mr Siegel is also one of the handicappers on the
    TV show "Post Time". Well, on last week's show, he was touting his
    horse because he really thought it could win. The other handicappers on
    the show(along with me and Jan at home) were going, "Sure,
    guy! My Memoirs will be well up the track!"...Guess he showed us!
    
    The way Casual Lies was running on the lead, I thought he was gonna
    steal the race but he faded due to an injury. He grabbed a quarter
    at/near the start of the race and gave up when it got too painful. If
    it heals quickly, we may see him in some big races later this summer.
    
    John
481.349Belmont Weekend ActionDECWET::JDADDAMIOMay the horse be with you!Mon Jun 08 1992 21:3532
    The weekend coupled lots of major stakes action at Belmont Park with
    the Belmont Stakes.
    
    Those who watched the Belmont Stakes on ABC probably saw Strike The Gold
    win the Nassau County Handicap, his second straight win in the ACRS
    seiries for older horses. Boy, was that exciting! Strike The Gold and
    Pleasant Tap(By Derby and Preakness winner Pleasant Colony) were last and 
    next to last(respectively) for most of the race. They charged through the 
    stretch to place 1st and 2nd. It was close enough as it was but 
    Pleasant Tap had some traffic problems which impeded his progress.
    Craig Perret, Strike The Gold's jockey in his last two races, said
    something like, "It looked like Pleasant Tap was gaining on my horse at
    the end. But if we had to go around the track again, he wouldn't have
    passed my horse. I had a lot of horse and he was determined to win."
    
    There were two other graded races on the card with the Belmont and
    Nassau County, the Colin and the Riva Ridge. On Sunday, there was the
    Manhattan Handicap and the Mother Goose(part of the 3 YO Fillies 
    "Triple Tiara"; Honest they started calling it that instead of "Triple
    Crown for Fillies" to separate it from the "Triple Crown" which is open
    to fillies. I guess they figure tiara's more "feminine" or something!)
    
    The Canadian horse, Sky Classic, won the Manhattan w/Pat Day up. This
    makes 3 major Turf stakes victories in a row for Sky Classic. With
    Tight Spot sidelined and Exbourne retired due to injuries, Sky Classic
    could well be Turf division champion this year. This horse just romped
    home!
    
    The Mother Goose favorites, Prospector's Delight and Pleasant Stage
    (she's also by Pleasant Colony) didn't run well and were off the board. 
    Turn Back The Alarm won by about a length and a half from Easy Now, who 
    is Champion Easy Goer's sister.
481.350News TidbitsDECWET::JDADDAMIOMay the horse be with you!Fri Jun 12 1992 21:1647
    Some interesting tidbits of racing news that I have come across in the
    past week or so.

    1. Arazi will race in an English 1 mile stakes race later this month.
       Looks like their gonna keep him at shorter distances for the near 
       future.

    2. The American Championship Racing Series(ACRS) of handicap races for
       older horses has changed complexion for 2 reasons.
	a. The next race in the series was schedulued for Rockingham in NH
	   Rockingham can't meet the financial commitments for the race 
	   because Rockingham is in deep trouble financially(Not surprising
	   w/New Hampshire's economy). Therefore, the Rockingham race has 
	   been replaced with the Suburban Handicap at Belmont. The Suburban
	   has usually been run around July 4th and was scheduled for 
	   July 5th this year. It has been resecheduled to July 18th to 
	   accomodate the ACRS commitment to ABC TV coverage.
	b. Best Pal is out with an injury and will miss the rest of the ACRS
	   races.
	c. These events set up well for Strike The Gold who was already being
	   aimed at the Suburban instead of the ACRS race at Rockingham.
	   With Best Pal sidelined, Strike The Gold is now the point leader 
	   among the active runners in the ACRS series.

    3. Injuries to major older stakes horses
	a. Best Pal has foot troubles which will keep him away from the
	   races for a couple months. Unfortunate, because this gelding
	   is one of the very best and the most consistent racehorses around.
	b. Tight Spot (winner of last year's Arlington Million) is out with 
	   a bruised foot. Expected back in training soon enough to defend
	   his Arlington Million victory.
	c. Exbourne(major turf horse but I can't think what he won right now)
	   has surgery to repair some serious ligament damage to his right 
	   front ankle. Expected to retire to stud. Exbourne came back to 
	   big stakes races after nearly dying of colic last summer

    4. Injuries to major 3 year old stakes horses
	a. Lil E Tee had bone chips in both his ankles. They were removed and 
	   he will recover but will be out for the rest of the season.

	b. Casual Lies did not GRAB a quarter in the Belmont after all. It
	   turns out he had a blind abscess in one of his front feet near the
	   quarter and it blew out during the race. Shelley Riley said that
	   her vet thought the infection was at least 2 months old which means
	   that Casual Lies has been racing SORE for the whole Triple Crown 
           without ever taking a lame step!
	   
481.351More Racing BriefsDECWET::JDADDAMIOMay the horse be with you!Thu Jun 25 1992 01:0646
    More racing newsbriefs:
    
    1. Best Pal who was originally believed to have more foot problems was
       later said to have popped a splint. This is an unusual condition to 
       develop in a 4 YO horse. More tests suggest that he has actually
       fractured his splint bone. He's expected to be out until late August.
    
    2. The leading rider at the current Belmont meeting is Julie Krone.
       She's really riding well especially on the turf! There have been
       several days in the past few weeks where she's won 3-4 races on the
       same card at Belmont. She's also getting some good stakes mounts.
       She rode Plenty of Grace to victory in the 10 Furlong New York
       Handicap(Gr II Turf) two weeks ago. This past weekend she deserted
       Belmont to ride Harbour Club to second place in the inaugural
       Pimlico Distaff($250,000 purse) and Saint Ballado to victory in the 
       $300,000 Arlington Class (Gr II 10 furlongs on Turf)
    
    3. The hottest stakes stable in North America is Samson Farms. Here's
       their roster:
    	a. Wilderness Song (4 YO filly by Wild Again) won the inaugural
           Pimlico Distaff. If she keeps on form, we'll see her in the 
    	   Breeder's Cup Distaff.
    	b. Sky Classic winning all kinds of major turf races(e.g. his last
    	   two races were wins in the Early Times  Dixie Handicap (Gr III 9
           furlongs) and the Early Times Manhattan(Gr II 10 furlongs).
           Probably being aimed at the Breeders Cup Turf(1.5 miles)
    	c. Rainbows For Life (9 wins for 15 career starts) won last
           weekend's $250,000 New Hampshire Sweepstakes(Gr III 9 furlongs
    	   on Turf) in stakes record time. Maybe, the Breeder's Cup Mile so
    	   he doesn't have to run against his stable mate Sky Classic.
    	d. The queen of racing(IMHO), Dance Smartly. Dance Smartly had been
    	   idle since her Breeder's Cup Distaff win last November. Her first
    	   start was delayed over some concern about filling in her ankles.
    	   She came out in the King Edward Gold Cup(Gr III T) a week ago
           Sunday against 10 males. She finished second by a nose and never 
    	   felt the whip. I got the feeling this was just a tune-up as 9
    	   furlongs isn't her best distance. Don't forget this filly won
           the Canadian Triple Crown last year at distances up to 1.5
           miles. I think we'll see a lot of her in 10 furlong races later
           this season. She will probably be aimed for the Breeder's Cup
           Classic.
    
    4. Arazi ran in the Saint James Palace Stakes in England last Tuesday.
       He finished 5th 2.5 lengths behind the leader. Steve Cauthen(his
       European jockey) says he thinks there is something wrong with the
       colt. The first 3 places were: 1) Brief Truce 2) Zaahi 3) Ezzoud
481.352First timers!DECWET::JDADDAMIOMay the horse be with you!Thu Jun 25 1992 17:4227
While I'm home recuperating from dental surgery, I thought I'd enter a couple 
notes that have been on my back burner for a while. Here's a couple "firsts" 
I've come across recently:

	1. 1988 3 YO Champion Risen Star(by Secretariat; won 1988 Preakness 
and Belmont) has his first crop of racing age at the track as 2 YO's. What I 
think is his first winner is his daughter, Lady Starlet. She won a 5 furlong 
race for maiden filly 2 YO's last week at Belmont.

	2. Champion Ferdinand(1986 KY Derby Winner, 1987 Breeder's Cup Classic 
winner, Horse of the Year, sired by Nijinsky, etc) also has his first crop of 
2 YOs at the track. His first winner was Foxie Ferdie which won a 4.5 furlong 
race for 2 YOs at Woodbine about 3 weeks ago.

	3. When Julie Krone retires from race riding, she may turn to calling 
races! She recently called her first race. SHe finished riding early one day
at Belmont and called the 7th race. It was a nice easy introduction as there 
were only 3 horses in the race. The others had scratched when it was moved 
from the turf to the main track due to weather. Although her inexperience 
showed a couple times, I think she'd make an interesting race caller. The call
was spiced up with puns and word play and her enthusiasm for racing came 
through....Compared to the bored sounding announcer that Rockingham has she's 
a champion!

	4. Champion mare, Bayakoa(Twice winner of Breeder's Cup Distaff,etc)
has produced her first foal. It's a bay filly by Strawberry Road(a champion 
Australian turf horse). Bayakoa has been bred to Seattle Slew for a 1993 foal.
481.353Great reading on racing heroesDECWET::JDADDAMIOMay the horse be with you!Thu Jun 25 1992 17:4316
Since I have time, I thought I'd recommend a couple good books on racing
heroes. 

"Secretariat: The Making of a Champion", William Nack, Da Capo Press, 
ISBN-0-306-80317-8, (original title "Big Red of Meadow Farm"), $11.95 
paperback.

"Ruffian: Burning From the Start", Jane Schwartz, Ballantine Books, 
ISBN-0-345-36017-6, $18, hardback

These are GREAT reading! The Secretariat book is so well written that you feel 
like YOU are riding Big Red in these races. The Ruffian book is also exciting 
and well written. Highly recommended....

well, it's nap time for this convalescent. See ya later
John
481.354General AssemblyAIMHI::DANIELSFri Jun 26 1992 17:4816
    Do you know anything about the racing history of General Assembly?  I
    saw him at Spendthrift this past May (he's out of Secretariat) and is
    not only gorgeous, but has a fantastic disposition.  I got to really
    pat him and go over his conformation, but I don't remember what the
    groom told me about his racing history.
    
    Also, I'm looking for a book called "Old Bones the Wonder Horse."  This
    book is about Excalibur who was either the 1918 or 1919 derby winner. 
    I read this book when I was young, and would love to have it.  I've
    searched many used book stores and have never found it.  I also don't
    know the author.
    
    Thanks,
    
    Tina
    
481.355General Assembly!DECWET::JDADDAMIOMay the horse be with you!Fri Jun 26 1992 19:1818
    Sure I remember General Assembly. He was foaled in 1976 in
    Secretariat's second crop. His dam was Exclusive Native(Native Dancer x
    Exclusive). General Assembly won graded stakes at distances from 7 
    furlongs to 1 1/4 miles(10 furlongs). Unfortunately, he met up with 
    Spectacular Bid in the 1979 KY Derby and finished a strong second. 
    
    Among other things General Assembly won The Hopeful Stakes(Gr I), Saratoga 
    Special Stakes(Gr II) at two. At 3 he won the Gotham Stakes(Gr II), 
    Travers Stakes(Gr I) and Vosburg Stakes(Gr I). 
    
    In the Vosburg (a 7 furlong sprint) he tied the stakes record of 1:21.
    The Travers is run at 10 furlongs( 1 1/4 miles) at Saratoga and has
    earned the nickname "The Mid-Summer Derby." On a sloppy track, General 
    Assembly set a track and Travers stakes record which still stands, 2:00
    He won by 15 lengths.
    
    Re: "Old Bones", I think that was Exterminator (1918 KY Derby winner)
    rather than Excalibur. Sorry but I don't recall the book mentioned
481.3561992 Queen's PlateDECWET::JDADDAMIOMay the horse be with you!Mon Jul 06 1992 21:1530
In what turned out to be nothing more than a public workout, King Haven Farms' 
Ayldeed won The Queen's Plate on Sunday. The Queen's Plate is the first leg 
of Canada's Triple Crown and is run at the same distance as The Kentucky 
Derby(1.25 miles).

Jockey Craig Perret kept Ayldeed off the pace and moved on the turn into the 
stretch. It was all over as soon as he asked the horse to run. In actual fact,
I don't think the colt had to run more than 1/8th. Perret wrapped up on him 
as soon as he made the lead. Even with the mild hand ride, the winning margin
was 10-12 lengths. Although the time was not impressive(3 seconds off the 
stakes record), I got the impression that he could have gone significantly 
faster if necessary. 

This is an entirely different colt than we saw in The Preaness Stakes in 
May. In The Preakness, Ayldeed was running hell bent for leather on the front.
Since then, Trainer Roger Attfield has concentrated on keeping the colt calm 
and teaching Ayldeed to rate and come from just off the pace. They went home 
to Woodbine after The Preakness and used the Marine Stakes and Plate Trial to 
practice those things under race conditions. The strategy worked. 

After the race, Perret said the hardest part of his job was to keep 
Ayldeed relaxed until he wanted him to run. He said that during the Marine 
Stakes he was racing alongside another horse and said to the jockey, "Watch 
what happens when I push the button on this horse." He later said that 
Ayldeed spurted away so fast that he didn't hear the response from the other 
jockey. They have a genuine racehorse on their hands. We'll hear a lot more 
from Ayldeed in the future barring illness/injury.

John
481.357Triple Crown winner?PIPPER::NICKERSONBob Nickerson DTN 282-1663 :^)Tue Jul 07 1992 16:1610
    The Queen's Plate was indeed just a workout for Alydeed.  I wondered
    what the commentators were talking about in the CBC pre-race show.  I
    really expected him to win but not by that margin.  Maybe I'm still
    thinking about all the hoopla on Arazi (sp) before the derby, but this
    colt certainly did look like a major contender in this race.  This
    being the first leg in the Canadian Triple Crown, he could easily win
    the Bank of Montreal's $1,000,000 bonus.
    
    Bob
    
481.358Racing News ShortsDECWET::JDADDAMIOMay the horse be with you!Tue Jul 14 1992 23:1140
    Some short racing newsbits
    
    Jockey Jose Santos(who I think is all time leading money winner among
    jockeys worldwide) was injured yesterday in a 3 horse spill at Belmont.
    The accident was caused by a traffic problem. All 3 horses got up and
    were on 4 legs. None of them appeared to be seriously injured. The
    other two jockeys were treated for minor injuries and released from the
    hospital. Mr Santos's injuries were more serious. One arm was shattered
    and he had neck and back pain which would require more tests to
    evaluate. 
    
    Handicap star Best Pal's splint problems were X-rayed and the X-rays 
    showed no fracture afterall. This means that his recovery will be 
    quicker and more complete.
    
    Preakness Stakes winner Pine Bluff was retired after he injured his
    sesamoidal ligaments in an ordinary gallop. He was just exercising not
    a serious workout...and people wonder why I say jogging is bad for
    humans!
    
    The surgery to repair Exbourne's ligament damage was successful.
    Unfortunately, he has foundered in the other foot and is in a life
    threatening condition.
    
    Those who watch NY racing on Sports Channel may have been wondering
    why Julie Krone(leading rider at the Belmont meeting) was absent from 
    Belmont from July 4th through July 9th...Well over 4th of July weekend,
    she went out to Fingerlakes (NY) to ride in a stakes race. (Her mount
    crossed the finish line second but the stewards disqualified the first
    horse so Ms Krone's mount got first money.) After that, she headed for
    Europe to ride for 3 days in stakes races. She arrived back in NY in
    time to ride Thursday at Belmont but...The airline lost her luggage
    which included her tack(You can relate to this!) She started riding
    back at Belmont on Friday or Saturday and has gone right back to
    winning... The current Belmont meeting ends on July 27th. Those of you 
    who know some German may remember that Juli is German for July and 
    Krone means "crown" in English. Could a name like "July Crown" be an
    a lucky omen for someone trying to win a riding title in July? We'll
    see.
    
481.359Foxboro thoroughbred meet closesDELNI::KEIRANTue Jul 21 1992 16:448
    Foxboro Raceway has cancelled live thoroughbred racing for the remainder
    of their 75 night meet, after running only 35 cards.  The track was
    losing money daily, the purses were costing them $45,000 per night
    alone, and the handle was very low.  The quarantine for suspected EVA
    didn't help either, though no horses at Foxboro were ill.  Foxboro
    will continue to run simulcasts from other tracks through the summer.
    
    The harness meet is scheduled to open at Foxboro on September 18th.
481.360Suffering DownsALFA1::COOKChips R UsTue Jul 21 1992 16:527
    I half heard something on the radio this morning about Suffolk
    (Suffering) Downs...they're closing for the rest of the season.
    
    Has anyone else heard that one?  Did I hear correctly?
    
    
    
481.361Not surprisingDECWET::JDADDAMIOMay the horse be with you!Tue Jul 21 1992 17:5324
    I am not at all surprised that Foxboro has closed and Suffolk Downs
    is considering closing. All the New England tracks are in financial 
    trouble. Rockingham has been in trouble all season and this sickness
    certainly hasn't helped them. 
    
    Minor tracks all around the country are in financial trouble. Even some
    major tracks have had trouble. For example, Gulfstream and Hialeah have
    been two mainstays of winter racing for eons and yet both have had
    trouble in recent years. 
    
    In plain English, TB racing can't go on like it has been. There are too
    many other opportunities for legalized gambling that compete with the 
    racetracks. Handicapping horses takes a while to learn and requires skill 
    as well as luck. Most other forms of legalized gambling are easy to
    learn and the players are less secretive than handicappers. After all,
    nobody wants to ruin the price on the horse they're going to bet.
    
    I think that in a few years, we'll see LOTS of the smaller tracks like
    Suffolk Downs and Foxboro either gone completely or turned into simulcast 
    only operations. Don't expect any help from the state governement
    either. Its only interest in TB racing is the revenue generated from
    the betting handle. I think there will always be racing at major
    centers like NYC, Southern CA, KY, FLA and maybe even Saratoga but even
    some of the mid-sized tracks will probably disappear within 5-10 years.
481.3621992 Suburban HandicapDECWET::JDADDAMIOMay the horse be with you!Tue Jul 21 1992 21:4643
On a more pleant topic, Pleasant Tap turned the tables on Strike The Gold
in last Saturday's Grade I Suburban Handicap. Nick Zito, Strike The Gold's 
trainer, sent out a rabbit to insure a fast pace for his closer. It worked and 
backfired all at the same time. The rabbit did his job admirably and in fact 
held on to finsih 4th or 5th which means he probably got enough of the purse 
to earn his oats on his own merit. But, the fast pace worked more to 
Pleasant Tap's advantage than Strike The Gold's. 

Pleasant Tap seems to be a little more versatile in his running style than 
Strike The Gold. Pleasant Tap can stay closer to the pace if he needs to and 
he did just that in the Suburban. Pleasant Tap's race in the Nassau County 
also showed that he is willing to run again after being checked for traffic 
problems. This gives Pleasant Tap's jockey more chances to take a 
shorter route during the race.

I have never seen Strike The Gold do anything but circle the field and come 
flying down the middle of the track. This suggests that he wouldn't come on 
after being checked by his jockey. Don't get me wrong, I think Strike The 
Gold's closing kick is the most exciting thing in racing. It's just that
his style leaves him a lot more to do than a more versatile horse and 
therefore, he doesn't win as often as his talent might merit. People make a 
big deal out of his 12 race "losing streak." Well, most of the time his 
style lost the race for him and he placed second. Nothing disgraceful about 
that especially considering the class of horses he runs against. I also 
feel that the horse was probably uptight during that 12 race streak because 
of the strife between his former owners. Zito and his staff were all uptight 
because of it so I'd be surprised if the horse DIDN'T pick up some of the 
tension.

Those who saw the race on ABC may have heard the announcer say that Julie 
Krone was riding Silver Ending and had already ridden 3 winners that day.
What they didn't tell you was that one of those races was the Tom Fool(Gr II)
which was run right before the Suburban. On Sunday, Ms Krone came back to win
4 more races including another graded stake.

Strike The Gold now leads the ACRS series with 27 points for 2 wins and a 
second. The injured Best Pal is in second with 23 points. The last 2 races are 
in August and will determine which horse will get the major share of the 
$1,000,000 bonus for the best performance in the 9 races series. Other 
contenders include Pleasant Tap, Sultry Song and Sea Cadet with 15-17 points 
each.

John
481.363Change the Triple Crown?DECWET::JDADDAMIOMay the horse be with you!Thu Jul 23 1992 21:4540
Hey, have you folks heard about D. Wayne Lukas' comments about the US Triple 
Crown races? Sometime in June, Mr Lukas gave a speech in which he said:
	1. The Chrysler car should go to the groom of the winning horse 
           rather than the jockey
	2. The races should be shortened to 1 1/8 miles for the KY Derby,
	   and 1 1/4 miles for the Belmont Stakes. The Preakness would 
	   remain at 1 3/16. His arguments are that we now breed horses for 
	   1 1/8 miles so our "classics" should reflect that change AND
	   the progression of increasing distances makes more sense than
	   the current distances.

Frankly, I don't care who gets the bloody car. It will just fall apart in 
2-3 years anyway. But, the CA racing community listened to that and gave
a mini-pickup to the groom of the winning horse in the Hollywood Gold Cup.
Ironically, that turned out to be Sultry Song who had shipped in from NY!
So, his groom had to take a week off to drive it home!

But, the idea that we should shorten classics to accomodate horses that 
can't run beyond 9 furlongs irritates me no end. First of all, it's not 
true that most American TB are milers/middle distance horses. Most are 
sprinters. Just look at the card at any track. Sprint races predominate but 
they have tiny purses. It's also not true that our top quality horses are
limited to middle distances(1 1/8 to 1 1/4 miles). The Irish Derby winner
this year(St Jovite) is American owned and bred. Last year's Prix de L'Arc 
de Triomphe was one by an American bred horse(Suave Dancer). The Europeans,
the Maktoum brothers(the Sheiks from Dubai), the Aga Khan and many others 
have been buying and exporting US horses for many years. Most of the 
European/Australian classics are run at distances of 1.5 miles and up!
    
    There are also LOTS of US races at distances of 1 1/4 to 1 3/4 miles
    for horses of all class levels including claimers. Most of those are in
    the Turf division though.
    
    
Personally, I think that shortening these classics would just cheapen the
whole series. What do you think?
    
    John

John
481.364Pinebourne FarmsSWAM2::MASSEY_VIFri Jul 24 1992 23:4518
    Sorry John I don't have much to say on shortening those races except...
    If it ain't broke, why fix it.
    
    I was reading through some of the first notes in here and about died. 
    I used to live in Long Island (many moons ago) and worked at Pinebourne
    farms.  We had broodmare and horses up to 3 yrs.  The were started
    there and then moved to the track.  I loved working there.  We also had
    one 5 yr old stallion that had twisted an ankle.  He was a pain.  Had a
    fit every time he saw the geldings.  Oh, we had two X pick-up horses
    that we would race every now and then.  I still watch the big races and
    go to the track sales here in CA.  I have a friend who worked for D.
    Wayne Lucas(I think) for 4 yrs. and is now going to vet school.  I only
    wish I had stayed in NY longer. 
    
    	thats my story.  Sorry if it doesn't belong here.
    
    
    virginia
481.3651992 Prince of WalesDECWET::JDADDAMIOMay the horse be with you!Mon Jul 27 1992 17:5541
    Well, I guess the Bank of Montreal is breathing a little easier today!
    They won't have to shell out the $1,000,000 bonus that they pay for
    being a Canadian Triple Crown winner!
    
    Alydeed was favored to win yesterday's Prince of Wales and annihilate
    the field as he did in the Queen's Plate. It was not to be. It had
    rained and the Fort Erie track was a quagmire. Perret kept Alydeed just
    off the pace in the early going and went to the lead sooner than in the
    Queen's Plate. I knew he was in trouble when he went to the stick in
    the top of the stretch. He didn't need to do that last time.
    
    The roan colt, Benblurb was gaining on outside Alydeed. For a few
    seconds, it looked like Alydeed would meet the challenge but he didn't
    respond and Benblurb won by half a length. The time was respectable as
    it was about 1 second off the course record even in spite of the slop.
    
    In an post-race interview, trainer Roger Whitfield said that the horse
    appeared to be all right and that the only excuse he could offer at
    this point was that the horse didn't like the track and/or tired in the 
    sloppy footing. He wasn't sure whether Alydeed would finish the Canadian
    Triple Crown or come south to Saratoga for the Travers. As a "career
    move", the Travers makes more sense. A win there would provide more 
    prestige and prize money than winning 2/3 of the Canadian Triple Crown.
    
    BTW, I used to consider, "My horse didn't like the track." as just
    another lame excuse when somebody couldn't explain a poor race. But,
    there was an article in last weeks Blood Horse than gave me some
    insight into why there might be some truth to it. Each track has an
    ENTIRELY different composition of the dirt in the track as well as
    different maintenance techniques/equipment. I had always assumed that
    track surfaces were more or less the same and that there were standard 
    maintenance techniques. Not true. In fact, there is a multi-year
    program on in CA to make the tracks more similar in composition and
    maintenance as a safety measure as well as a standardizing attempt.
    
    As sensitive as horses are about their footing, it's no suprise that
    they would have preferences for one racecourse over another. It also
    explains why you hear that excuse less from trainers of turf horses!
    The grass would mitigate the differences to some degree.
    
    John
481.366Belmont FinaleDECWET::JDADDAMIOMay the horse be with you!Thu Jul 30 1992 21:1432
    With all the buzz about the Olympics and other things, I never got
    back to this. But, Monday was the last day of the Belmont meeting.
    
    On the last day, there were a couple of firsts:
    
    1. Remember Personal Ensign who rallied to win the 1988 Breeder's Cup
    Distaff over KY Derby winner Winning Colors and become the first stakes 
    horse to retire undefeated since 1905? Her first foal made its first
    start on Monday. It's by Mr Prospector and finished second but I can't
    remember its name now!
    
    2. Julie Krone did win the riding title for the Belmont Summer meeting
    w/ 75 wins. She is the first woman to EVER win a riding title in TB
    racing. Not only did she have 75 wins at Belmont but she rode out of
    town for a couple weeks. She went out to Finger Lakes on 4 July and won
    and then went to England to ride for a couple days. There were some
    promotional events w/ other women jockeys but on one day she rode at an
    English track and won 3 races from only 5 mounts. One of the wins was as
    handicap with 17 starters.
    
    3. Unfortunately, this isn't a first. Jose Santos is reported to have
    needed an operation to repair his broken arm. It had been broken in
    several places. This is the second serious accident for Santos this
    year. He broke his shoulder in February.
    
    NY racing has moved to my all-time favorite venue, Saratoga. It's so
    intense there! I think there are only 2 days in the 35 day meeting that
    don't have a stakes race on the card. The youngsters start to show
    their merit and it's just about the most exciting meet going.
    
    Belmont's summer and fall meetings a respectable second and third though.
    And then Southern CA
481.367Re: last fewDECWET::DADDAMIODesign Twice, Code OnceThu Jul 30 1992 23:2716
    Haven't been in here for a while, but had a comment about shortening
    the Triple Crown races.  I vote "no".  I'd like to see *more* longer
    distance races.  Seems that a lot of races have been shortened in the
    past few years or so.  In the filly triple crown the Oaks used to be 
    1 1/2 miles like the Belmont and now it's something like 1 1/4 or 1 1/8
    miles.  My opinion is that Wayne Lukas wants to shortened the races
    because he doesn't have any that can win at longer distances.
    
    Re: .365
    
    It's Benburb that beat Alydeed, and Alydeed's trainer is Roger
    Attfield.
    
    Re: .366
    
    Personal Ensign's first foal is named Miner's Mark.
481.368exDECWET::JDADDAMIOMay the horse be with you!Thu Jul 30 1992 23:5231
    Jeez...Gimme a break,Jan. Just 'cause we're married doesn't mean you
    can point out my lack of typing skills in public! 
    
    Re the Triple Crown for Fillies, the Coaching Club Oaks was shortened
    to 1 1/4 miles. The races in that series are now 8, 9 and 10 furlongs
    in that order... That's too bad because frequently, true talent can
    show better in longer races where racing luck isn't as much of a
    factor.
    
    Does anybody realize that the Belmont Stakes is now the ONLY 1 1/2 mile
    race in the US on dirt? There are lots of 1 1/2 mile races on the
    grass.
    
    Re shortening other races...The Molson Export Million for 3YO's was 
    shortened from 10 furlongs(1 1/4 miles) to 9(1 1/8 miles) last year.
    Why? For one reason: the sponsor wants to improve the grade of the race. 
    Since the grade of a race depends on the quality of horses that run in it 
    and there are more good middle distance horses than I can count, they 
    shortened the race.
    
    Besides, I don't know where Lukas is really coming from saying we run
    stakes mostly 9 furlongs nowadays. The ACRS championship series for older
    horses has had at least as many 10 furlong races as 9 furlong events.
    And then there's the Pimlico Special which is 9.5 furlongs!
    
    On the final day of the Belmont meeting, there were 3 races longer than 9
    furlongs. Two of them were at 11 furlongs on the turf! These were
    claimers and allowance horses so maybe they don't count in 
    Lukas' eyes.
    
    John
481.369Update on General AssemblyDECWET::JDADDAMIOMay the horse be with you!Mon Aug 03 1992 18:3314
    Somebody asked about General Assembly a few back and said they had
    visited him at the farm where he stands stud. Last week's Blood Horse
    reports that a German breeder has made an offer to buy General
    Assembly(a 16 year old son of Secretariat x Exclusive Dancer). The
    syndicate is considering the offer.
    
    When I replied to the request for info about General Assembly, I forgot
    to mention that his dam, Exclusive Dancer, is a full sister to
    Exclusive Native who sired 1978 Triple Crown Winner Affirmed among tons
    of other stakes horses. Both Exclusive Native and Exclusive Dancer were
    sired by Raise a Native(Native Dancer x Raise You). They were out of
    Exclusive(Shut Out x Good Example)
    
    John
481.370A little more on GA and SpendthriftAIMHI::DANIELSTue Aug 04 1992 13:5015
    I got to visit General Assembly at Spendthrift, and even got to really
    pat him.  His groom said he's the only racing stallion he's ever seen
    with an absolutely terrific disposition - anyone, and he means *anyone*
    can handle him safely.  He's the only stud he would let me handle,
    because the rest are all biters or a combination of biting and
    striking - displaying domination behaviour.
    
    GA's stud fee is 7,000 for 92, and since Spendthrift has been in
    terrible financial trouble recently, I can believe that they might
    consider selling him.  One of Seattle Slew's son is also at Spendthrift
    and he seemed to have the most bookings at around 15,000.  
    
    Spendthrift's fees are among the lowest in the Lexington area, because
    they've had to buy stock in, some not always the absolute highest, as
    compared to Three Chimneys stud.
481.371News bits up to Aug 9 1992DECWET::JDADDAMIOIst das unbedingt notwendig?Thu Aug 13 1992 20:4349
Racing news update:

After her wins in filly classics like The Mother Goose, Turn Back the Alarm 
was expected to be the favorite in this Saturday's Alabama Stakes at Saratoga.
Unfortunately, she sustained a condular fracture on a hind cannon during a 
5 furlong workout last Sunday. In plain English, that means the knob at the 
end of her cannon bone(i.e. the condyle to an anatomy professor) cracked.
That's the bad news. The good news is that she's alive and expected to make 
a full recovery. Jockey Chris Antley who rode her in the workout said that
she took a single funny step in the middle of her workout but continued to 
finish her work in an easy 1:01 and change. Trainer Red Tirrel said the filly 
showed no lameness or swelling until more than an hour after the workout. She
was vanned back to the stables at Belmont. Sunday evening, the vets operated 
on her leg and she is recovering at Belmont. She's reported to be in good 
spirits. Three months of stall rest followed by a month of hand walking were 
prescribed. After that, her owners will make the decision whether to retire 
her to the broodmare band or return her to racing.

Belmont winner A.P. Indy is still sidelined with a quarter crack. He made news 
anyway because his owner Tomonori Tsurumaki has sold an interest in 
the colt to William Farish(Lane's End Farm) representing a sydicate consisting 
of William Farish, William Kilroy and Harold Goodman. Farish and Kilroy bred 
A.P. Indy in partnership and sold him as a yearling for $2.9 million. A.P. 
Indy is expected to return to racing in the fall and be pointed at the 
Breeder's Cup. The colt will continue to be trained by Neil Drysdale and race 
in Tsurumaki's silks.

Two stallions partially owned by the bankrupt Calumet Farm and related 
corporations were sold to Japanese interests. The 1990 Horse of the Year,
Criminal Type(Alydar x Klepto-No Robbery) will be sold to The Thoroughbred 
Breeders Club Co. of Japan for a total of $3.8 million. Criminal Type will 
stand at the club's farm on the island of Hokkaido. 

The Calumet half interest in 1984 Epsom Derby winner Secreto(Northern Dancer 
x Betty's Secret-Secretariat) was sold at a courtroom auction for $650,000. 
The lucky bidder was veterinarian Teizo Aida. Aida is reported to be 
purchasing the remaining half interest in Secreto for an additional $650,000. 
Secreto will stand at Aida's Suwa Stud.

Japanese bred horses may become significant in international competition in 
the future. In recent years, Japanese breeders have acquired a number of 
outstanding stallions/stallion prospects. For example, Criminal Type is the 
second Horse of the Year to go to Japan in recent years. The 1989 Horse of the 
Year, Sunday Silence was sold to Zenya Yoshida's Shadai Farm shortly after the 
horse was retired to stud. Major Grade I Turf division winner Golden Pheasant
was also sold to a Japanese breeder. Watch for them to be a factor in another 
5-10 years.

John
481.3721992 Iselin Handicap + ACRS seriesDECWET::JDADDAMIOIst das unbedingt notwendig?Fri Aug 14 1992 18:3139
    The penultimate race in the American Championship Racing Series(ACRS)
    was held this past Saturday. It was the Iselin Handicap at Monmouth
    Park in NJ. The track had been prepared in a different way than usual.
    The track superintendent had scraped and rolled it so it was hard and
    speed favoring, especially on the inside along the rail. 
    
    As a consequence, there were 3 track records set on Saturday. The
    Iselin unfolded about as expected. Loach(Strike The Gold's entrymate)
    to the lead and set an extremely fast past. Strike The Gold did his
    usual "Silky Sullivan" imitation and dropped back until he was 18
    lengths off the lead. The Zito plan was for Loach to burn out the other
    speed horses by setting a fast pace so Strike The Gold could close and
    win. It didn't work. Loach set thefast pace and Strike The Gold could
    closed well but he had no chance to catch the speed horses. 
    
    Jolie's Halo won the Iselin and tied the stakes record doing it. This
    is something of a "comeback" for Jolie's Halo as he had been injured
    and had only one prep race before the Iselin. Jolie's Halo won the
    very first ACRS race(the Donn Handicap) in Florida in Feb 1991.
    
    Jolie's Halo as well as the horses which placed second and third were
    running on the iside portion of the track and were the front flight
    after Loach packed it in after 3/4 of a mile. Other than Strike The Gold, 
    no horse made a forward move in the last half of the race. 
    
    Strike The Gold finished fourth and got 3 points which clinched the ACRS 
    title with 30 points for the series. Even his detractors said that this 
    was an excellent performance with the track favoring speed and the inside
    pathsd. He'll get $750,000 bonus after the final race. There's another 
    $750,000 up for grabs for the rest of the ACRS contenders. There are 
    about 4 horses which may have enough points to displace Best Pal for 
    second money with either a win or second place finish. Best Pal won't 
    contest the race as he's still recuperating from splint problems.
    
    BTW, news from Saratoga is that Nick Zito has purchased the last Alydar
    foal for Strike The Gold's owners. The yearling is out of My Juliet and
    was born about 30 minutes after Strike The Gold won the 1991 Kentucky
    Derby. Word has it that Zito believes that this is a good omen for the
    colt to follow in his older sibling's hoofprints.
481.373Yet another era endsDECWET::JDADDAMIOIst das unbedingt notwendig?Mon Aug 24 1992 23:5056
In another note, I mentioned that the Seattle area would only have a
Thoroughbred track for another 4 weeks. The local track is called Longacres
and it was in NO financial trouble. 

Then, why is is closing? Very simple.

The land that the track occupies was worth more to the owners as a development 
site than as a racetrack. The track's founder died some years ago. For many 
years, he and his wife had run the track. They even lived in a cottage in the
infield. Naturally, she ran the track after he died. In her old age, she 
continued to run it with the help of her sons-in-law until she died. When the 
current younger set inherited the track, they continued to run it at a profit. 
Actually, attendance and betting handle has steadily INCREASED over the past 
10-12 years. The 10 race card was always full with an average of 9 horses 
per race. Most of the horses at Longacres were state breds. Thoroughbred
breeding was a good business here.

But, in 1989, the family was made "an offer they couldn't refuse" by the 
Boeing Company. Neither the family nor Boeing has publicly said what the
sale price was but well informed sources say that it was a little over 
$90 million with a great deal of the sale price in Boeing stock. 

Boeing permitted racing to continue until 1992 to allow the Thoroughbred 
industry in the state an opportunity to organize and build a new track. 
Unfortunately, none of the groups that have tried to get a site, licensing 
and financing to build a new track has succeeded yet. Several of them have 
given up. They have failed for various reasons. 

Boeing needs to start contruction on their office park and pilot training 
simulator complex for their new model of airplane by December of 1992. 
Therefore, there will be no more racing at Longacres Park and that means 
that there will be no Thoroughbred racing in this area for at least 3 years 
IF EVER!

Longacres was only a second or third tier track. They only had a few big 
stakes races and only 1 of those was graded(Gr III Longacres Mile). But,
it employed thousands of people directly and indirectly in the TB breeding 
and related businesses in this state. This will leave a gaping multimillion 
dollar a year hole in the local economy as well as reducing the state's 
income from its portion of betting dollars. That may mean tax increases for 
the rest of us!

It's also disrupted lots of people's lives. For a lighthearted example, one 
young woman who is an exercise rider said she would probably go back to 
school for an advanced degree in biochemistry but that she would rather have 
stayed on at the track! Not all the track folk have such good options.

They ran the 57th and last Longacres Mile yesterday. It was won by Bolulight 
in 1:34.0 which is 2/5 or 3/5 off the stakes record. 

If financially sound tracks are being closed because the owners can make more 
money by selling the site for development, what's to become of those tracks
which aren't in such good shape? I've said before that Thoroughbred racing is 
in trouble. This is a good example of how messed up it is.

John
481.3741992 Turf ClassicDECWET::JDADDAMIOTwo steps back+3 ahead=progressSun Oct 04 1992 20:5654
    Belmont's Fall meeting features at least a dozen Grade I stakes 
    including several turf races at a distance.

    The most prestigous of the turf races is the Turf Classic for 3 YO's & up 
    (each w/126 pounds) at 1.5 miles on the Widener Turf course. Belmont has 
    two turf courses. The course and stakes records are:
        Cocoethes stakes record(1990)    2:25
        Secretariat course record(1973)  2:24.8 (2:24 and 4/5)
    
    The 1992 field included:
        Solar Splendor (Won 1991 & 1992 Gr I Man o' War at 1 3/8 AND 1991
                        Turf Classic at 1.5 miles)
        Fraise (Won 1992 Sword Dancer, Gr I Turf, 1.5 miles now run at 
                Saratoga; moved from Belmont)
        Sky Classic (Won 1991 Rothman's International, Gr I Turf, 1.5 miles
                     at Woodbine. Also won 5 graded stakes this year)
        Tel Quel(French runner; supposedly good at 1.5 miles)
        Adam Smith(English runner; not supposed to be very good)
        Libor about who's form I know nothing

    Solar Splendor broke on top but Adam Smith went to the lead and set 
    modest early fractions for the first half of the race(24 1/5, 48 1/5, 
    1:11 4/5) In the far turn, Adam Smith still had the lead but not for long. 
    
    Solar Splendor moved easily to the lead and Tel Quel went along with him. 
    The stretch-running Fraise made his move from the back of the pack. For
    a few seconds, it looked like Sky Classic was actually fading as the 
    others made their moves. But, Pat Day was still sitting chilly and not 
    asking Sky Classic for much. 

    As they turned for home, Solar Splendor looked strong but Fraise was 
    moving to him on the outside. As Adam Smith faded, a hole opened for
    Day and Sky Classic. They went through and CHARGED to the lead with
    Day still hand riding! In fact, he was hardly moving on Sky Classic;
    Just moving his hands with the horse; no leg; no whip. 

    Sky Classic drew off to win by about 2 lengths in a new course & stakes
    record time, 2:24.50 on the 100ths clock or 2:24 2/5 on the old style 
    timers. Fraise got up for second over Solar Splendor with Tel Quel
    fourth. 
    
    In his last prior race, Sky Classic lost by a head in the Arlington 
    Million (Gr I, 1.25 miles Turf)even though he looked like a sure winner 
    100 yards from the wire. Day was paying more attention to Golden Pheasant 
    who was challenging on Sky Classic's outside. Neither he nor Sky Classic 
    saw Dear Doctor get through traffic and come flying on the rail. Dear 
    Doctor went passed about 2-3 jumps from the wire. He got the lead by a 
    long head. Sky Classic came back at him and made it a short head at the 
    wire...If he had had a couple more jumps or Day had seen Dear Doctor 
    coming, the result might well have been different. Solar Splendor defeated 
    Dear Doctor 3 times in the past year; most recently in the Man o'War
    just 2 weeks ago. But that's why they actually run the races rather
    than giving out the money for morning works and past performances!
    
481.375Some of the racing newsDECWET::JDADDAMIOTwo steps back+3 ahead=progressSun Oct 04 1992 21:1629
    Between getting ready for our vacation and being away 2 weeks, I've 
    negelected racing news for quite a while.
    
    Here are some of the tidbits since August:
    
    1991 Champion 2 YO filly, Pleasant Stage died of shock after a vitamin
    injection.
    
    1991 Champion 3 YO filly, Dance Smartly has been retired after
    suffering a suspensory ligament injury in a workout. Dance Smartly has
    had foot & leg trouble all season and has, therefore, been unable to
    match the brilliance she showed last year when she beat colts as well
    as beating older fillies & mares in the 1991 Breeder's Cup Distaff.
    
    Rubiano, the gray son of Fappiano, has returned to his winning form.
    In the Spring, he had won 5 straight sprints under Jose Santos. Then, 
    he finished badly when he tried to stretch out to a mile in a Gr I
    event. Since Santos broke his arm, Julie Krone has ridden Rubiano and
    he has won two graded stakes including yesterday's Gr I Vosburgh. Under
    Santos, Rubiano was known as "The King of the Noses" since he won by a
    head or less. In his two recent races, he has won by 1 to 3 lengths.
    Whether he is just in better form or just runs a little better for 
    Krone(who is infatuated with the horse), I don't know. He is certainly
    NOT running against weaker competition! Yesterday's Vosburgh included
    the top US sprinters and last year's Breeder's Cup Sprint winner,
    Sheikh Albadou who is also one of the favorites for this year's Sprint.
    
    We'll see what happens in 3 weeks.
    John
481.376Big races on NBC TV this SaturdayDECWET::JDADDAMIOTwo steps back+3 ahead=progressThu Oct 08 1992 22:4323
    In the original version of this note, I forgot to mention the Breeder's
    Cup Steeplechase which will also be on the NBC racing broadcast. They
    are also supposed to broadcast the Kelso Handicap but that's not a
    Grade I race even though it is a stakes race.
    
    For those who may be interested and didn't know, NBC is broadcasting
    racing from Belmont this Saturday(Oct 10 1992). NYRA and Belmont are
    calling it "Super Saturday II" because it features FOUR(count 'em! 4!)
    Grade I races on the same race program. The four are: Jockey Club Gold
    Cup(1 1/4 mi for 3 yo & up), Champagne Stakes(2 yo colts), Beldame
    Stakes(fillies & mares 3 yo & up), and Frizette Stakes(2 yo fillies).
    
    Tune in and watch Strike The Gold and Pleasant Tap try to catch Sultry
    Song in the stretch of the Jockey Club; See Champion Easy Goer's family
    (3 YO filly Easy Now, a half sister by Danzig & 2 YO colt Strolling
    Along who is by Danzig out of Easy Goer's full sister, Cadillacing) try 
    to become the favorite for their  Breeder's Cup divisions. Both have won 
    Grade I stakes recently.
    
    If it's as exciting as last weekend's 2 Grade I program or the 3 race "Super
    Saturday I" program that Belmont and Sports Channel did while I was on
    vacation, it'll be a good time. (I had the VCR set and the electricity 
    STAYED ON! We loose power about 8-10 times a year out at our place.)
481.377Casual Lies is back to the racesDECWET::JDADDAMIOTwo steps back+3 ahead=progressMon Oct 12 1992 16:3917
    A sidenote of interest to all those who enjoyed Casual Lies'
    performance in the Triple Crown. As you may remember, he was injured
    during the Belmont Stakes. A weak spot in his hoof which had been
    created by a blind abcess erupted from the stress of the race. He's
    been recuperating over the summer.
    
    Well, he's back to the races and is racing in top company. Yesterday,
    he ran in the Goodwood Handicap at Santa Anita. The Goodwood is a Gr II
    9 furlong race for 3 YO and up. The field consisted of some of the top 
    older horses at the Santa Anita meet: Another Review, Marquetry, Reign
    Road, Claret as well as 3 YO Casual Lies. 
    
    Casual Lies contested the lead for the first 3/4 of the race but tired
    in the stretch and placed fourth. Since this is probably one of his
    first races since his injury, he's probably going to improve in his
    next race.
    Marquetry
481.378Breeder's Cup is this weekend!DECWET::JDADDAMIOMontar con orgulloTue Oct 27 1992 22:1837
    Can you believe it? Paulson and Sheikh Mohammed are running Arazi("The
    Wonder Dud") in the Breeder's Cup Classic! The horse has been running
    in 1 mile races all summer and losing. Then he runs ONE good race(still 
    at 1 mile) and wins a Grade II stake 3 weeks ago. So they decide to run
    him at 1 1/4 miles against top quality horses in the Breeder's Cup
    Classic???!!!!!?????? Arazi was pre-entered in both the Classic and the
    Mile(on the turf) so why not pick the distance he has proved capable of
    running rather than one that he's proved he can't?  His pedigree
    screams "MILER" not "classics".....
    
    Oh well, it's their money and time. Anyway, the Breeder's Cup Classic
    looks like a good field. Pleasant Tap, Strike The Gold, Sultry Song and
    a ton of other top horses. I'll be rooting for those 3 to do their best
    but,as long as all the horses get home safely, I don't care who wins.
    I honestly think Pleasant Tap and Strike The Gold will place first and
    second if there's a good pace and they have room to run. They're GREAT 
    stretch runners and can close even off a slow pace but traffic problems 
    may cost them the race.
    
    In the $2,000,000 Turf at 1.5 miles, I'm rooting for Sky Classic. He's
    the best turf horse in North America and I doubt that the European
    horses can beat him at 1.5 miles in North America. I think Sky Classic 
    will win. He runs just off the leaders and then explodes in the
    stretch. The late running Europeans tend to come from farther back and
    I don't think they'll catch him.
    
    In the Sprint, I'm cheering for Rubiano even though I think he'll have a
    tough time winning the race. His best distance is 7 furlongs and his
    second best distance is 1 mile. The Breeder's Cup Sprint is only 6
    furlongs so that works against him. Rubiano is also a stretch runner
    who comes from well back(Is there a pattern here?). In a short sprint 
    race with a full field of 14 horses, he's bound to hit some kind of 
    traffic problems. Even a minor slow down could deprive him of his
    chance. But like a writer in The Blood Horse said a couple weeks ago,
    "If you bet against him, do so at your own risk. Rubiano is good and
    he usually finds a way to win." Regardless of whether or not he wins
    this race, I think Rubiano will be the Ecplise Award's Sprint Champion.
481.379Picking on NBC again!DECWET::JDADDAMIOMontar con orgulloMon Nov 02 1992 18:2537
    I don't really want to discuss the results of the Breeder's Cup or the
    tragic injuries to Mr Brooks and Lester Piggot in the Sprint. I figure
    any of you who are interested saw the races and we all have expressed
    our opinions on the moral issues involved in racing and other equine
    sports in this and various other topics.
    
    But, there are a couple things that might be interesting background
    information. For example, after the Sprint, one of the NBC team
    interviewed English jockey, Walter Swinburn. In response to one of the
    interviewer's questions, Mr Swinburn said, "All Lester said at the gate
    was that he felt his horse moved terrible coming to the start - to post."
    The interviewer asked Swinburn if he was saying that Lester said his
    horse had warmed up poorly and Swinburn said yes. Within 20 minutes,
    the NBC commentators were retelling a modified version of that
    interview and saying things like "Swinburn said that Piggot told him
    the horse was sore." and implying that the fatal injuries to the horse
    and his own injuries were Lester Piggot's fault for not withdrawing the
    horse at the post. 
    
    Whether or not Piggot should have withdrawn the horse is debatable. He
    may simply have meant that he felt the horse wasn't going to win. He may
    have meant that the horse hadn't adapted to Florida's heat and humidity
    or he may have felt the horse was lame. I don't know. Lester Piggot is
    known for being a great jockey not for being articulate! Swinburn
    himself said that Piggot speaks very little.
    
    The commentators may have turned the story into "It's Piggot's own fault" 
    because of a similar situation at another track. A jockey who was crippled 
    in a race recently won a multi-million dollar lawsuit against a track 
    because the track's veterinarian had approved a horse to race despite the 
    jockey's wish to withdraw after the warmup. The horse broke down and the 
    jockey was crippled in the resulting spill. The track is now suing the
    trainer of the horse for partial responsibility as he's the one who
    sent a sore horse to the post.
    
    I sometimes feel like I'm in the middle of the book "1984" and history
    is constantly adjusted to meet Big Brother's current needs...
481.380Whip lashDECWET::JDADDAMIOMontar con orgulloMon Nov 02 1992 19:0350
    If you didn't turn off the races after the Sprint, you may have caught
    Trevor Dennman's interview with Eddie D after A.P. Indy won the Classic.
    He asked Eddie Dellahoussay how many times he hit A.P. Indy with the 
    stick during the race. Eddie D said "I don't think I cocked my stick." and 
    Trevor said something like "We could use a roomful of jockeys like you." 
    Eddie D replied "Sometimes you need it though."
    
    That exchange may have mystified a lot of viewers. It was an insiders
    continuing conversation. Although I'm not an insider, I am an 
    insighter. (pun or whatever intended) :-) Trevor Dennman(who is the track 
    announcer and TV personality for the Los Angeles area tracks) recently 
    wrote an opinion article for The Blood Horse about the use/abuse of the 
    whip. He feels that the American jockeys use the whip too much. He says 
    that this really turns off first time race goers as they feel this is 
    abusive. He praised jockeys like Eddie D, Chris McCarron, Pat Day and the 
    retired great Willie Shoemaker for their sparing use of the whip.
    
    Mr Dennman proposed that rules be instituted to soften the sting of the 
    whip and to limit its use. The rules he would like to see are:
    	1. Long soft tips on the whips rather than the current hard stiff ones
    	2. Shorter whips which will lessen the leveage factor and reduce
           the force with which the jockey can strike the horse.
    	3. Jockey can't raise the whip above his shoulder which would also
           reduce the force applied.
    	4. 10 stroke maximum in a race.
    
    Dennman goes on to say that European countries have restrictions on the
    use of the whip and we should follow suit. They do indeed limit the use
    of the whip in Europe. Furthermore, they are even stricter than the
    above suggestions. Steve Cauthen(US 1977 Triple Crown winner on Affirmed)
    was suspended for 5 days last summer for hitting a horse on its
    shoulder during a race. When he and other jockeys appealed and tried to
    make a case for rule changes, Cauthen's suspension was increased to 10 
    days! I think his fellow jockeys supported his appeal got off with warnings.
    
    Personally, I fully agree that we should restrict the use of the whip.
    I support such rules on two grounds: morality and effectiveness. I
    recall reading about a study on the effect of the whip in Cornell 
    Newsletter a few years ago. The study demonstrated that a horse running 
    at maximum speed increased the frequency of its strides when hit with a
    whip but it also took shorter strides. This gave the APPEARANCE on 
    increased speed but in fact the shorter strides offset the increased 
    frequency. The horses didn't/couldn't run any faster after being hit than 
    before! 
    
    The study did say that the whip may still be effective in races because
    it could be used as a signal to go to max speed or to encourage a
    tiring horse to sustain its max speed.
    
    John
481.381Budweiser drops American racingDECWET::JDADDAMIOMontar con orgulloThu Nov 05 1992 21:0322
    Last Saturday's The Blood Horse carried an article which says that
    Budweiser is dropping it's sponsorship of American races and racing
    programs. The contracts are up and will not be renewed. This includes
    their sponsorship of:
    	1. Breeder's Cup Turf
    	2. Breeder's Cup purse bonuses in selected stake races
    	3. D.C. International Turf race and Turf festival
    	4. ESPN's Thoroughbred Digest
    	5. ESPN's coverage of major stakes races
    	6. Some other weekly TV show I've never heard of on a network I don't 
    	   get
    
    Budweiser also sponsors the Irish Derby but that contract hasn't
    expired yet. No spokesperson for Budweiser would comment on the reason
    for cancelling the sponsorships but the article said an industry expert
    suggested that racing fans are older and have already established their
    brand preferences in beer. They feel that Budweiser is going to gear
    their marketing toward the younger "beach volleybal set."
    
    If that's they reason, they may decide to continue as sponsors of the
    Irish Derby and other European races to try to improve their market in
    Europe. WHo knows?
481.382First Tuesday in November?DECWET::JDADDAMIOMontar con orgulloFri Nov 06 1992 19:5843
    Quick! Why is the first Tuesday in November an important date?....
    
    Time's up. It's not an election in the US(That's the first Tuesday after
    the first Monday)
    
    
    It's the Melbourne Cup! The Cup is Australia's premier race and with a 
    purse of $2,000,00(Australian) it is the world's richest handicap race.
    (The Breeder's Cup races are run at fixed weights by age and sex.)
    
    But, The Cup is also a party,kinda like Kentucky Derby Week but
    compressed into a single day. All of Australia seems to
    participate...well at least all of Melbourne! This year there were over
    100,000 people at the track inspite of pouring rain! Another 350
    MILLION people were able to watch the race live via satellite! Pretty
    good attendance, eh? The Melbourne Cup and its festivities were also used 
    as the setting for the revenge portion of a Dick Francis novel("In The 
    Frame") involving theft and murder...
    
    The Melbourne Cup is a 2 mile turf race and, because it's a handicap, each
    horse carries an amount of weight assigned according to its ability.
    Better horses carry more weight which is supposed to make the race more
    even.
    
    The horses in this year's race ran quite true to their form. The 4
    horses selected as favorites by the bettors on track placed 1st,2nd,3rd and
    7th in a field of 21 starters!
    
    The favorite was Veandercross based on his past performance. He ran
    second. The second choice in the betting was Subzero and he won. I
    think Big Barron(7th) was third choice and Castletown(2nd) was fourth
    choice. 
    
    The turf course was VERY soft due to the heavy rains so the race was
    slow 3:34.70. The stakes record of 3:16.30 is more than 8 seconds faster
    so it's obious how soft the ground was.
    
    BTW, The Cup is the main reason you don't see many Australian horses
    ship over here for the Breeder's Cup races. (I think Strawberry Road is
    the only one and he was running a European campaign that year) Why ship
    half way round the world to run 1.5 miles for $2,000,000 when you can
    run 2 miles at home for the same size purse?
    
481.383Can't keep a good man down!DECWET::JDADDAMIOMontar con orgulloFri Nov 06 1992 20:016
    BTW, Lester Piggot was released from hospital on Wednesday. His
    injuries were broken collar bone, 2 broken ribs and a partially
    collapsed lung.
    
    His wife is quoted as saying that Lester will be back racing within a
    few months. 
481.384Yellow Ribbon on an Oak TreeDECWET::JDADDAMIOMontar con orgulloMon Nov 09 1992 17:4753
    The Eclipse award for 1 division of racing that isn't usually decided by 
    the Breeder's Cup races is the Female Turf Champion. There is no fillies
    and mares turf race in the Breeder's Cup program. In fact, there's not
    even a 9-10 furlong middle distance turf race. So unless a mare is
    good enough to beat the males at 1 mile or stays well enough to beat
    them at 1.5 miles, the fillies and mares turf champion is still
    selected the old fashioned way. By that, I mean on a season long
    campaign.
    
    One of the final major F & M turf events is the Yellow Ribbon Stakes at
    Santa Anita's Oak Tree meeting. This year's Yellow Ribbon was supposed
    to be a romp for odds-on 3-to-5 favorite Flawlessly who is a daughter
    of Triple Crown winner, Affirmed. It wasn't.
    
    In their previous meeting in the 9 furlong Las Palmas Handicap, Super 
    Staff(a daughter of Triple Crown winner, Secretariat) took the early lead 
    and set fairly slow fractions. Flawlessly charged up late but came up short
    by 3/4 of a length. People said that Super Staff won because she carried
    8 pounds tha Flawlessly and set her own uncontested pace. They were
    wrong.
    
    The 10 furlong Yellow Ribbon Stakes is weight for age so Super Staff
    and Flawlessly carried the same weight. Super Staff broke well and went
    to the front. She was pressed by some very fast horses and set good early 
    fractions of 24, 47 3/5, 1:11 2/5 and 1:35. Flawlessly came flying at
    the finish. Super Staff runs with her head low and with very long
    strides. She dug in and swished her tail vigorously several times
    usually when Desormeaux hit her. Flawlessly and Super Staff dueled down
    the stretch. Every time Flawlessly gained, Super Staff responded to the
    challenge and tried harder. Flawlessly came alongside and Super Staff
    fought back. They hit the wire together in the tightest photo finish
    short of a dead heat. Super Staff won by the width of her nostril! Her 
    time was a respectable 1:59 3/5 or about the same time as her
    Daddy's Kentucky Derby. I say about because Santa Anita times races in
    100ths of a second now and those timers were unknown in Secretariat's era.
    BTW, I think Super Staff looks like a feminine version of Secretariat.
    
    What does that mean for Female Turf Champion? It means that the top 3
    contenders are: Flawlessly, Super Staff and Kostroma. You could make a
    case for each of them.
    Flawlessly won the Gr I Ramona and beat Kostroma twice this year.
    
    Kostroma won the Gr I Beverly D and beat Super Staff in that race.
    
    Super Staff won the Gr I Yellow Ribbon and beat Flawlessly twice this
    year in that race and the Las Palmas. Super Staff's people claim that
    she had a bad trip in the Beverly D because of her outside post.
    Performance handicapper Gerry Brown whose numbers take into account
    esoteric factors like ground loss, wind velocity, etc in addition to
    the usual speed figures agrees. He picked Super Staff to beat
    Flawlessly in yesterday's Yellow Ribbon.
    
    Who'll win? Beats me! I like'em all!
481.385New sponsor for ESPN racing coverageDECWET::JDADDAMIOSnow is just a 4 letter word!Fri Nov 13 1992 17:5528
    ESPN has announced that The Daily Racing Form will sponsor
    Thorooughbred racing coverage on ESPN. This sponsorship includes both
    the weekly recap/interview show(Thoroughbred Digest) as well as ESPN's
    "racing Across America" series which provides coverage of major stakes
    races.
    
    Included in that series are 7 of the 9 races in next year's American
    Championship Racing Series. The ACRS has suffered some setbacks this
    year with several tracks(Santa Anita, Oaklawn Park and Rockingham Park)
    pulling out of the series for various reasons. SO, the original format
    of 9 races at 9 tracks has been modified so that several tracks host 2
    races in the series. The bonus money award for the series has been
    reduced because of the overal downturn in racing. But, there are still
    9 great races(8 of them Grade I and the other a Grade II) and all of
    them will be televised.
    
    ABC will cover the Pimlico Special and the Nassau County Stakes because
    they will be run on the same day as the Preakness Stakes and the
    Belmont Stakes respectively. This is reduction in ABC's coverage of the
    ACRS because ABC covered most of the series the first year and about
    half of it this year.
    
    In a way, I don't mind Budweiser pulling out from racing and other
    equine sports sponsorships. I kinda resented them plastering their name
    all over everything from Gem Twist to the Irish Derby! And, if they
    think I'm too old to change brands, they're wrong! Just watch me boycott
    their products!!!! (I know that's irrational since I just said I resented 
    their sponsorships but who said I was rational?)
481.386More racing newsDECWET::JDADDAMIOSnow is just a 4 letter word!Fri Nov 20 1992 17:1361
    A few short racing news items:
    
    Eddie Delahousaye won the first MVP award at the 1992 Breeders' Cup.
    The award from Piaget is supposed to go the the horse, jockey or
    trainer who had the biggest impact on the day's racing. Since there were 
    2 other jockeys(Chris McCarron and Patrick Valenzuela) that won 2 races 
    that day, one has to assume that Eddie D got it because he won the
    Classic. Of the 3 jockeys, I would have voted for Valenzuela because I
    think his ride on Fraise is what won that race. The way A.P. Indy was
    running, I think Eddie D's ride just increased the margin of victory.
    But, I really think the award should have gone to Lure for the Mile or
    his trainer, Shug McGahey(sp ?).
    
    As far as Horse of The Year goes, it looks like that will be A.P. Indy.
    The latest TRC poll of turf writers(who actually vote on the Eclipse 
    Awards) look like this:
    A.P. Indy (39 first place votes)	417 total points(1st = 10,  2nd=9, etc)
    Pleasant Tap			341
    Paseana(2)				336
    Sky Classic 			268
    
    Those standings also imply that A.P. Indy will be 3 YO champ, Pleasant
    Tap will be Older Horse champ, Paseana will be Older Mare champ and
    Sky Classic will be Male Turf champ despite his loss to Fraise in the
    Breeders' Cup Turf.
    
    Four BIG horses have been retired:
    1. Pleasant Tap - BIG surprise. Chris Speckert, his trainer, thought he'd 
    be able to race Pleasant Tap again next year and maybe win the Classic.
    However, Buckland Farms decided to retire the horse and stand him at
    their home farm. FYI, Pleasant Tap ran in a Breeders' Cup race in 4 
    consecutive years. Four different races and distances(Juvenile at 9.5
    furlongs, Sprint at 6 furlongs, Mile, and Classic at 10 furlongs).
    
    2. Rubiano - Sad to see such a good sprinter go out on a loss. I have
    never rooted for a sprinter before in my life. But, Rubiano's late
    running style and  his courage in winning against all odds in a
    string of photo finishes earlier this season deserved every cheer.
    At least, he'll go out as with the Eclipse Award Sprint Champion. 
    He'll stand at Lane's End Farm in Kentucky.
    
    3. Suave Dancer - American bred 1991 Prix de l'Arc de Triomphe winner
    has been retired. Despite efforts to get his services on the Continent
    and in the US, he will be standing in Britain at Newmarket's National
    Stud.
    
    4. Sky Classic - After watching him develop into a top horse last year
    and continue this year, I hate to see him retire on a loss, too. 
    Unfortunately, he lost 2 of his biggest races this year. One(Arlington 
    Million) due to pilot error and the other one his temperament lost for 
    him. He's sired by Nijinsky who had a nervous sort of temperament which 
    occassionally got him worked up before and during a race. The only races 
    Nijinsky ever lost were blamed on that temperament. Sky Classic inherited 
    that temperament and early on in his career, he was impossible to rate
    because he was so keyed up that he wanted to run on. That tendency came
    back in the Classic. Pat Day struggled to keep the horse from running
    up on the horses in front of him. That very possibly took enough out of 
    Sky Classic that he couldn't fight off Fraise's late challenge. But,
    any horse who can better Secretariat's Belmont turf course record by 
    running 1.5 miles in 2:24.50 and then come back 3 weeks later to run in 
    2:24.0 and lose by 4" or so is a top horse. He'll stand at Pin Oak in KY.
481.387Another RetirementNIKKOR::ANDERSONBIG RED FAN, Went to LITTLE BROWNMon Nov 23 1992 12:508
    Read in the paper...
    
    
    5.  ARAZI  - Retired 
    
    	Will stand in stud in England.  $35,000 stud fee.
    
         
481.388Throwing flamesDECWET::JDADDAMIOSnow is just a 4 letter word!Mon Nov 23 1992 16:3846
    Yeah, I knew about Arazi's retirement but didn't think it was worth
    the trouble to enter. Actually, I overlooked a couple more significant
    retirements in Meadow Star and Light Lite which finished 4th and 5th(I
    think) in the Distaff.
    
    FLAME ON!
    
    Can you believe that! Paulson and Sheikh Mohammed have an AWFUL lot of
    nerve standing the "Super Flop" for $35K when honest racehorses with
    multi-millions of racetrack earnings like Rubiano, Sky Classic and 
    Ferdinand are standing for $15K. Do they really think that TB breeders 
    are THAT STUPID? Nobody in racing was terribly surprised that Arazi 
    didn't win the KY Derby or even the Breeders' Cup Mile this year. Come
    to think of it, I don't think Paulson is charging $35K for services of
    his stakes winning Champions Strawberry Road and Theatrical both of
    which have sired staakes horses....Go figure! Perhaps, he hasn't
    actually realized that Arazi's performance was so poor. When his 2 YO
    filly, Eliza, won a prestigous stakes prior to the Breeders' Cup,
    Paulson is reported to have said that he had a female Arazi on his
    hands! Eliza went on to win the 1992 B.C. Juvenile Fillies. Her
    pedigree is also that of a sprinter or miler. Her sire is Mt Livermore
    who sired Champion sprinter Housebuster who could stretch out to a
    mile. I hope her 3 YO form is better than Arazi's!
    
    His pedigree and 2 YO form were that of a precocious miler. His race in
    the 1991 B.C. Juvenile was VISUALLY impressive but didn't stand up to
    analysis when compared to the fillies, older horses or even horses 
    running in lesser stakes in the supporting program...
    
    The Arazi "phenomena" was and is pure hype! The owner, popular media
    and, to some extent, the racing media all fell for what they thought
    would be the second coming of Secretariat. Apparently, none of the
    public paid any attention to Arazi's form in Europe. Even after his 
    poor performance in the KY Derby and a mediocre summer/fall campaign, 
    they wanted the fairy tale. So, they made him the favorite in the Mile 
    despite the fact that he hadn't defeated a top quality horse all season.
    
    If you want to use the Breeders' Cup Juvenile as a predictor of 3 YO
    form, look HARD at the horses that finish 2nd-4th. NO winner of the
    Juvenile has won ANY of the Triple Crown events. Two of them(Chief's
    Crown and Rhythm) had legitimate excuses like illness or injury that
    delayed their development as 3 YO's. Those 2 did come back to win the
    Travers Stakes at Saratoga later in the year but no other Juvenile
    winner has ever amounted to much as a 3 YO....
    
    Flame off before I put everybody to sleep!
481.389Going to the Japan CupDECWET::JDADDAMIOSnow is just a 4 letter word!Mon Nov 23 1992 19:2120
    Oh, I forgot...Sky Classic may NOT retire with his last race being a
    loss(as his sire Nijinsky did with a second place finish in the 1970
    Champion Stakes)... His owners, SamSon Farms have accepted an ivitation
    to send Sky Classic to Japan for the Japan Cup. Also making the trip
    from the US is the 1991 Arlington Million and Japan Cup winner, Golden 
    Pheasant.
    
    Dear Doctor and Dr Devious have also accepted their invitations and
    will travel from Europe. A couple top Australian runners will also be
    their along with 9 turf horses from Japan. I'm sure I've forgotten
    half the field but just the 4 I named would make a quality international 
    field!
    
    The Japan Cup will be run Nov 29 which is this Sunday. I don't think
    we'll get a broadcast of it from ESPN or Sports Channel but I might be
    able to get the the results from one of next week's racing recaps... If
    not, stayed tuned! The Blood Horse should have an article in about 2
    weeks.
    
    john
481.390Northern Dancer's last SW?DECWET::JDADDAMIOSnow is just a 4 letter word!Tue Nov 24 1992 19:4516
    The late GREAT sire, Northern Dancer, has recently reached a new record
    for the number of stakes winners he sired. His 4 year-old son, Northern
    Park recently won his first stakes race, the Grand Prix de Villeurbanne
    at Lyons, France. He's won 4 of his other 14 races but this was his first 
    stakes victory. 
    
    Northern Park was the next to last foal sired by Northern Dancer and
    the last of his foals to be sold through the Keeneland Summer Sale of 
    Select Yearlings. Northern Park was originally purchased by Zenya Yoshida 
    for $2,800,00. He is now owned by his trainer, Patrick Barbe.
    
    This brings Northern Dancer's total of stakes winning offspring to 146,
    breaking the tie at 145 each with his late son, Nijinsky. Since there
    are a few of Nijinsky offspring still running, there may be another
    late blooming stakes horse or two in that lot. Time will tell.
    
481.391Thanks!SWAM2::MASSEY_VIIt's all in the cueWed Nov 25 1992 14:304
    That's great news for me.  I have a Grand daughter of Northern Dancer
    who will be bred this season.
    
    thanks
481.392More, please!DECWET::JDADDAMIOSnow is just a 4 letter word!Wed Nov 25 1992 15:593
    >That's great news for me.  I have a Grand daughter of Northern Dancer
    >who will be bred this season.
    For racing or a sport horse? To which stallion? 
481.393Japan CupRDGE44::ALEUC3Fri Nov 27 1992 13:5525

The main European challenger for the Japan Cup must be the Oaks heroine
User Friendly (already 3/1 Fav with the UK bookmakers Ladbrokes). Unbeaten 
this year, except for a close second in the Arc (btn Nk by Subotica), this 
super three year old filly started her career by winning a minor stakes race at 
Sandown over 10 Furlongs at the rewarding odds of 25/1. There followed a facile
win in the Oaks trial at Lingfield Park. Her first Grade 1 victory came in 
the Epson Oaks on rain sodden ground, outstaying the previously unbeaten
All At Sea (who later ran second to Rodrio De Triano in the Grade 1 Juddmonte
stakes) to win by three and a half lengths. All her other victories were gained
in Grade 1 events ranging from 12 to 14 furlongs on ground ranging from 
good/firm to good/soft. 

Her best run must be her neck second to Subotica on soft ground over
12 furlongs in the Arc. Since this race she has been given a two month
break, wisely sidestepping the false lure of the Breeders Cup (how any European
horses could be fancied on that overheated, overgrown greyhound track that 
passes for the Gulfstream Racetrack is beyond me).

Although her best runs have been on ground with some give, she has performed 
well enough on fast ground (winning the St Ledger, and Yorkshire Oaks)
for her to be given a chance in this extremely competitive race.

Martin Kilgariff
481.3941992 Matriarch = Eclipse Award!DECWET::JDADDAMIOSnow is just a 4 letter word!Sun Nov 29 1992 22:4847
    The 1992 Matriarch (Gr I for Fillies & Mares; 9 furlongs on the turf)was 
    about as exciting as it could be but it did NOT unfold according to the 
    script everybody expected. This race was expected to decide the Eclipse
    Award Female Turf championship for the season. Super Staff, Kostroma
    and Flawlessly were all in the running. If you looked at their records,
    it might look like a classic circular definition in Gr I races. Super Staff
    beat Flawlessly, Flawlessly beat Kostroma and Kostroma beat Super Staff.
    
    The script had a good speed horse named Lady Shirl going to the front and 
    setting the early pace with Super Staff running second or third.  Kostroma 
    and Flawlessly were expected to be farther back until late in the race.
    
    Obviously, Kostroma and Kent Desormeaux didn't read the script! They
    went straight to the front and set good fractions themselves. Super
    Staff was running in third along the rail with Flawlessly in fifth.
    Super Staff was ridden by Eddie Delahoussaye in place of Desormeaux
    who had ridden her to victory in her last few races. Desormeaux is
    Kostroma's regular rider and chose to stay with her. Flawlessly had her
    regular rider, Chris McCarron, who had just flown back to CA from Tokyo
    where he rode Dr Devious in the Japan Cup. 
    
    The mares stayed in that order until the stretch. At one point or
    another in the stretch, it looked like each of them would win. Kostroma
    was still in front and looked strong. She's a mare who usually has a
    tremendous finish. She did accelerate but she didn't have enough today. 
    This was her first race coming back after a respiratory infection and, 
    before the race her trainer, Gary Jones, said he felt she was 95% fit. 
    I'll bet he wishes he'd had the other 5%!
    
    Super Staff got out of the pocket on the rail and overtook Kostroma
    easily. But, look again! Here comes Flawlessly flying down the middle
    of the track just outside Super Staff. Super Staff ran on well but
    Flawlessly overtook her and won by 3/4 of a length. Kostroma held on
    very well and finished a good third, about 1 and a half lengths behind
    Super Staff. Flawlessly finished the 9 furlongs in 1:46.14
    
    So, it's fairly certain that Flawlessly will be Female Turf champion
    for North America.
    
    Unfortunately, ESPN didn't have McCarron carry back a tape of the Japan
    Cup and they didn't even offer the results of the race, except to say
    that McCarron and Dr Devious had finished 10th. BTW, my apologies to
    User Friendly. She's definitely one of the top horses taht I forgot was
    in the Japan Cup field. Her race in the Arc was fantastic as was her entire
    season.
    
    John
481.395Tokai Teio wins Japan CupRDGE44::ALEUC3Mon Nov 30 1992 10:5528
Taken from the Sporting Life, Monday 30 November - without permission
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
Tokai Teio, winner of last year's Japanese Derby, and 2,000 Guineas, won 
the Japan Cup by a neck from Australian trained Naturalism with the fast
finishing Dear Doctor half a length farther away in third.

He won emphatically after a brief tussle with Naturalism at the furlong pole,
and the winning distance flattered the second. Mick Ditton, rider of the second,
said: "I thought we had it half a furlong out. Naturalism started to come back
at the winner, but he had us in the end. He would have beaten us a length in
another furlong."

Dear Doctor was given another clever ride by Cash Asmussen, who kept him covered
up near the rear of the field out of trouble. He came with a very late run on
the outside, having maneuvered through most of the field.

User Friendly could only finish sixth, beaten 6 lengths.

Full result:
1) Tokai Teio
2) Naturalism
3) Dear Doctor
Also Legacy World(4th), Hishi Masaru(5th), User Friendly(6th), Lets Elope(7th)
Let's Go Tarquin(8th), Ikuno Dictus(9th), Dr Devious, Hashiru Shogun,
Quest For Fame, vert Amande, Yamanin Global
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
Martin
481.396age has nothing to do with it.SWAM2::MASSEY_VIIt's all in the cueMon Nov 30 1992 14:4611
    
    	About My mare.  She is about 21 yrs. and is being bred to a Quarter
    Horse stallion to get a sport horse foal.  She is 61+hh and the stud is
    around 15.2.  He is build well, she is also.  I am hoping for a good
    sized horse for jumping or eventing.  Not on a perfessional level, just
    for my own enjoyment.  Stealthy has had a number of foals on the track
    and all have done well. She ran in stakes races untill she was 5 and
    then started producing foals for a stock farm here in So. California. 
    At 21 yrs. she is still a handfull and loves to run.
    
    
481.397exDECWET::JDADDAMIOSnow is just a 4 letter word!Mon Nov 30 1992 16:4310
    re .395... Thanks for the Japan Cup results. Since you gave the full
    order of finish, it looks like NONE of the horses campaigned in 
    North America actually ran in the Japan Cup even though they had
    accepted the invitations.
    
    re .396 -< age has nothing to do with it. >-
    I don't think 21 is very old for a broodmare. We have a mare whose dam
    delivered her last live foal at age 26 and lived until the ripe old age
    of 31-32. It all depends on their general health and their reproductive
    health. Good luck with your breeding and foaling.
481.398Where has all the money goneRDGE44::ALEUC3Tue Dec 01 1992 11:2714
Racing in Britain is primarily financed via a levy on all offcourse betting.
This betting is controlled by private bookmakers who in recent years have
made enough profit to diversify into other areas of the leisure industry,
sometimes overseas (I believe Ladbrokes own at least one American track).

The current levy will yield over the whole year approx 45 million pound to the
British racing authorities. 

The Japan Cup on its own generated a total of 31.5 billion yen (179 million 
pounds) of which 15%, nearly 27 million pound, is taken by the Japan Racing 
Association, which amounts to 60% of the annual British levy - on one race!!   
Didn't they do well.

Martin
481.399Racing NewsDECWET::JDADDAMIOSpeak softly;Carry a big CARROT!Fri Dec 04 1992 17:3438
    Where has all the money gone? Japan! The Japan Cup which was held last
    Sunday is now the richest race in the world. The purse money now
    exceeds $3,160,000 making it slightly richer than the Breeder's Cup
    Classic. 
    
    BTW, the for this year's 1.5 mile Japan Cup was 2:24 3/5 which
    is not too shabby! As I mentioned before, none of the North American
    horses ran. Golden Pheasant had a minor injurwhich kept him out of it.
    Fraise is being prepared for the Dec 13th Hollywood Turf Cup(Gr I Turf
    at 12 furlongs). I don't know why Sky Classic didn't run but I hope
    it's because he's going to run in the Hollywood Turf Cup. When giving the 
    results of the Japan Cup, one of the racing commentators characterised
    it as "a very rich but very unimportant race." Of course, he's a New
    Yorker and very prejudiced against anything from outside NY!
    
    In other news, A.P. Indy has been retired to stud. After he won the BC
    Classic, his owners had considered with the idea of racing him next season 
    even though they had earlier said he would go to stud. On Monday or
    Tuesday, they announced that they had decided to stick to the original
    plan and send him to Lane's End in Kentucky.
    
    Dixie Brass, winner of this year's Met Mile(Gr I), broke down in the
    Thanksgiving Day Sports Page Handicap(Gr III). The early reports were
    that he had either fractured a sesamoid or strained the ligaments in
    that area. It turned out to be a fracture but it was successfully
    repaired by surgery. He'll be retired to stud. Interestingly enough,
    his brother, Dixieland Brass, broke down in much the same way a few
    years ago. You may not remember this horse but he was considered to be
    a KY Derby contender about 3 years ago. He won one of the traditional
    Fla prep races for the KY Derby but pulled up lame after the race. He
    too was retired.
    
    Finally, do you remember Unbridled who won the KY Derby 2 years ago
    while his trainer called the race to his aged owner/breeder, Francis
    Genter? Mrs Genter died a few days ago at age 94. She had owned and
    bred racehorses since 1939. Unbridled also won the Breeder's Cup Classic
    the same year he won the KY Derby. He is now retired. He and his full
    brother, Cahill Road are at stud in KY.
481.400Injuries and Family MattersDECWET::JDADDAMIOSpeak softly;Carry a BIG carrot!Wed Dec 09 1992 22:3145
    I finally got my Nov 28th Blood Horse! It was a week late! In it, they
    told why Golden Pheasant and Sky Classic didn't run in the Japan Cup.
    Golden Pheasant had a pulled muscle. Sky Classic had sprained an ankle
    in the Breeder's Cup Turf and did not recover in time to go to Japan.
    
    Since the Japan Cup was scheduled to be Sky Classic's last race, he was
    sent to Pin Oak Stud in KY a few weeks early. 
    
    Sky Classic was a darned good horse! He's the second biggest money winner
    in Canadian history. Who's the first? His niece, Dance Smartly! Her dam
    is a half sister to Sky Classic(same dam; different sire) More about
    that in a couple weeks when racing is REALLY boring. I'm thinking of
    writing a note about Sky Classic's dam, A.P. Indy's dam and Solar
    Splendor's dam...All those mares have produced multiple Grade I winners
    and/or Classic winners.
    
    He was a champion in Canada 3 times over. He won't win a Canadian 
    championship this year because he didn't race there the minimum 3 times. 
    A hairline fracture sidelined him in the spring of his 3 YO year so he 
    didn't get to run in any US or Canadian classic races. 
    
    If his later form is any indication, his best shot at winning a Triple
    Crown race would have been the 12 furlong Belmont Stakes in the US
    series or the 12 furlong(Turf) Breeder's Stakes in the Canadian Triple
    Crown series. I say that because he set 2 course/stakes records in 
    12 furlong Grade I turf races in his last 54 weeks of racing. (The Belmont
    Stakes is on the dirt but it's the ONLY 12 furlong race in North
    America that's still on the dirt)
    
    On October 4 1992, Sky Classic broke Secretariat's course record and
    Cocoethes stakes record in Belmont's Turf Classic. On October 20 1991, he 
    set a course/stakes record in the Rothman's International. Those of you
    who saw Secretariat race may remember that the 1973 International at
    Woodbine was his last race. However, in Secretariat's days, the
    International was 13 furlongs rather than the current 12. It got
    shortened in the mid-1980's
    
    In his last race(1992 Breeder's Cup Turf), a combination of 1) his
    nerves, 2) a rough trip for him, 3) a good trip for Fraise and 4) a
    sprained ankle cost Sky Classic a loss by a head in a record setting 2:24 
    for the 12 furlong BC Turf. I'm not bad-mouthing Fraise. He's good. But,
    Sky Classic beat him several times this year so I think Sky Classic's
    better. When Fraise breaks one of Secretariat's or Sky Classic's records, 
    I'll reconsider that statement.
    
481.401Duty on Thoroughbreds in JapanGAUSS::BRANDENBERGTue Dec 15 1992 18:537
Re: racing in Japan

Isn't there something like a US$40,000 duty on bringing any kind of
race horse into Japan?  Another reason you might not see too many
American horses race there....

481.402exDECWET::JDADDAMIOSpeak softly;Carry a BIG carrot!Tue Dec 15 1992 19:1312
    Re: racing in Japan
    
    The Japanese have very prohibitive rules against importing horses for
    racing in Japan with the exception of the Japan Cup. Importing retired
    racehorses for stud is an entirely different matter. They want that
    very much(e.g Sunday Silence, Golden Pheasant, Tight Spot, etc all went
    to Japan)
    
    In other racing news in the US, the biggest news is the deaths of
    Frank Wright(trainer & TV personality) and C.V. Whitney(94 year-old
    owner/breeder whose horses won the Travers Stakes 50 years apart in
    1932 and 1982)
481.403give me more.SWAM2::MASSEY_VIIt's all in the cueWed Dec 16 1992 19:418
    
    
    	Could we get more background info on Wright and Whitney?
    
    
    I enjoy reading the entries in this particular topic.
    
    Virginia
481.404Frank WrightDECWET::JDADDAMIOSpeak softly;Carry a BIG carrot!Wed Dec 16 1992 20:4626
    Frank Wright was a racehorse trainer for many years. I can't remember 
    offhand what horses he trained or whether any of them were famous. I've
    never been good at remembering trainers unless they were real famous.
    
    Back in "ancient history" when CBS still put on part of the U.S. Triple
    Crown, he was part of their broadcast team as the "color" commentator.
    In those days, Charlsie Cantey(who used to be married to NY trainer Joe 
    Cantey who later moved to the UK) was also part of the CBS team. She did 
    the "on-track" commentary...you know the kind of thing: on track
    comments about the post parade and interviews w/jockeys while they were 
    aboard the winner being lead back to the winner's circle.
    
    After CBS quit broadcasting racing, Wright and Cantey went to work as
    part of the ABC broadcast team. After a year or two, Wright disappeared
    from ABC but Charlsie is still there. 
    
    About the same time, Wright and Cantey were the hosts of a weekly TV show 
    on racing in NY on one of the independent NYC stations(WPIX, Channel 9 I 
    think). That show packed up in the early-mid 80's when NYRA started 
    broadcasting their daily racing from Aqueduct, Belmont and Saratoga 6 days 
    a week with a weekly show of important races around the country on the 1 
    day a week that the NYRA tracks are closed.
    
    For the last 3-4 years, Wright worked for ESPN as part of their TB
    racing broadcast team. Charlsie Cantey also works for ESPN
    occasionally. 
481.4051992 Hollywood Turf Cup(revised)DECWET::JDADDAMIOSpeak softly;Carry a BIG carrot!Thu Dec 17 1992 12:5749
    The Hollywood Turf Cup(Gr I; 12 furlongs) was held this past Sunday. It 
    was Fraise's last chance to honestly win himself the Eclipse award as
    Older Turf Male.
    
    I say "honestly" because the Paulson's have been "begging" for Fraise
    to be turf champion. They've been buying 2 page ads in The Blood Horse
    and putting 'Fraise' commercials on any racing show that would take
    their money. The ads are kinda misleading. They say that Fraise is the
    only turf horse  to set 2 course records in Gr I turf competition this 
    year. They refer to the Sword Dancer Handicap and the Breeder's Cup Turf. 
    What they don't say is that the Sword Dancer was moved from Belmont to
    Saratoga this year and it was the FIRST time Saratoga held a 12 furlong
    Gr I on the turf! In other words, whoever won the race would probably 
    set a course record. The Sword Dancer was pretty slow; 2:26.88
    
    The ads also say that Fraise beat all these great turf horses(Sky
    Classic, Subotica, Dr Devious, Golden Pheasant, Dear Doctor, Solar
    Splendor, etc) in the same race. What they don't say is that it's the
    ONLY time he has beaten any of them all year! Sky Classic and Solar
    Splendor each placed ahead of Fraise at least twice this season...I
    could go on for hours but you get the idea...
    
    Anyway, back to the Hollywood Turf Cup. The course was firm as the
    Southern CA courses usually are. The field was small with only about 7
    horses. A nice 3 YO filly, Trishyd ran just behind the pacesetter,
    Tel Quel. Behind her came Bien Bien a 3 YO colt who has won
    a couple Gr II and III turf races this year. Fraise was in 5th down the 
    backstretch. 
    
    At the top of the stretch, Tel Quel faded and Trishyd went to the lead 
    with long flowing strides. I love the way she moves. She looked powerful 
    there on the lead but Bien Bien started to move up on the outside to 
    challenge. Wait! Fraise is moving fast between horses and is going right 
    with Bien Bien. Those two passed Trishyd pretty easily but they couldn't
    pull away from her. They battle to the wire in 2:31 1/5 which
    is well off the track/stakes records and a full 7 seconds slower than
    Fraise ran in Florida on another firm course. It was so close at the
    wire that you couldn't tell who got there first. Fraise actually
    crossed the line first but he was disqualified for interfering with
    Bien Bien. In the stretch drive, Fraise bore out and bumped Bien Bien
    twice. The stewards decided that it was enough interference to have
    put Bien Bien off his run for a stride or two which might have changed the 
    result. So, the stewards changed the result! Trishyd finished a good third
    about 3/4 of a length behind Bien Bien and Fraise.
    
    The DQ was just adding insult to injury. You don't get to be champion
    turf horse by defeating mediocre 3 YO stakes horses in slow races. 
    Losing(even by a DQ) to 3 YO's means Fraise doesn't have a snowball's
    chance in Haydes of being turf champion this year.
481.406C.V. WhitneyDECWET::JDADDAMIOSpeak softly;Carry a BIG carrot!Fri Dec 18 1992 19:0527
    Cornelius Vanderbilt Whitney(1899-1992) died in his sleep this past 
    weekend at his home in Saratoga NY. He was 93 and had been in racing
    for 60+ years. He was a millionaire many times over. He inherited lots
    of money from his father, Harry Payne Whitney. I think the family was
    in racing before C.V. Whitney was born. The Whitney Stakes takes its name
    from them but I'm not sure which one it's named for or who founded it.
    
    C.V.(Sonny) Whitney increased his fortune racing/breeding, aviation(he
    was a founder of Pan-AM Airlines), movies(co-producer of Gone With the
    Wind), etc
    
    Whitney was a longtime owner/breeder. He was the leading owner 5
    different years. Horses that he owned won 176 stakes races including 
    3 Travers Stakes. Unfortunately, I repeated something earlier that I 
    heard on TV(i.e. that his horses won the 1932 and 1982 Travers). 
    
    That can't be right because I KNOW that the 1982 Travers was won by a 
    Canadian horse called Runaway Groom. (No, I don't remember who won in
    '32! I wasn't around then!) I dug out a program that NYRA aired a few 
    years ago to commemorate the 125th anniversary of the Travers Stakes. 
    On that program, they said that Whitney was one of only 5 owners to have 
    won 3 or more Travers Stakes. They showed Chompion winning the 
    1968 Travers and said that the other 2 were Tompion(sire of Chompion) and 
    Fisherman but they didn't say what years. If I find out, I'll edit
    and re-post this note.
    
    His wife, MaryLou Whitney races too under the name of Blue Goose Stable
481.407Desormeaux injuredDECWET::JDADDAMIOSpeak softly;Carry a BIG carrot!Mon Dec 21 1992 16:4428
I meant to enter this last week but didn't get around to it.
Kent Desormeaux, the 22 year-old jockey who is leading the US riders 
in money won this year, was injured in a fall at Hollywood Park on 
Friday Dec 11.

His horse was leading down the stretch when it bolted to the outside and 
dumped Desormeaux in front of a whole HERD of oncoming horses. The good 
news is that all but one of the horses missed Desormeaux. The bad news is 
the one that didn't miss kicked him in the head.

Desormeaux suffered 4 hairline fractures in his skull and 6 more in facial 
bones. Doctors say he should be able to ride again in 4 to 6 weeks. He 
claims he'll be back sooner than that. In my foolish youth, I too thought 
I was indestructible...

Although Desormeaux will probably still be the nation's leading money 
winning rider(his mounts have won $14.2 MILLION this year), he won't be able 
to achieve his goal of breaking Jose Santos' single season record of $14.8 
million this year.

A similar incident happened to Julie Krone during Belmont's fall meeting.
Her horse was leading by about 10 lengths and bolted to the outside rail.
Krone too was unceremoniously dumped but she had time to roll out of the 
path of the field. She only suffered 1) a bruised ego, 2) a bruised body and 
3) loss of the jockey's traditional 10% of the purse. Minor compared to 
Desormeaux's or her own injuries in other spills.

John
481.408Metric racing distancesDECWET::JDADDAMIOSpeak softly;Carry a BIG carrot!Mon Dec 21 1992 20:0434
Have you ever been confused by the occasional TV broadcast of a race
from a country that uses the metric system? I used to be unable to relate
the metric distances to the US equivalent or figure out whether the race had 
been fast or slow until, one day, "Dawn broke on Marblehead," as the saying 
goes. I realized that, because we measure our races in these weird units 
called furlongs, the conversion is quite simple because 
1 Kilometer = 1000 meters = 5/8 of a statute mile = 5 furlongs!

Unless the "new math" has changed the rules of arithmetic, 1 furlong = 200 
meters and 1/16 of a mile = 100 meters. So, except for those odd distances 
like 1 mile and 70 yards or the St leger's 14 furlongs 127 yards, the 
    conversion is easy. To make it even easier, I've made up a table of 
    common distances:

Miles		Furlongs	Meters	Example(when I can think of a 
					        famous one)
5/8		5		1,000
6/8 or 3/4	6		1,200	B.C. Sprint, Erne Stakes
7/8		7		1,400	Vosburgh Stakes, Dewhurst Stakes
1		8		1,600	2000 Guineas, B.C. Mile
1 1/16		8.5		1,700
1 1/8		9		1,800	Santa Anita Derby
1 3/16		9.5		1,900	Preakness, Pimlico Special
1 1/4		10		2,000	KY Derby, B.C. Classic, Arlington 
					Million, Champion Stakes
1 3/8		11		2,220
1 1/2		12		2,400	Arc de Triomphe, (Epsom) Derby, Irish 
					Derby, B.C. Turf, Breeder's Stakes, 
					Belmont Stakes, Belmont Turf Classic,
					Rothman's International, King George 
					and Queen Elizabeth Stakes,  
					Hollywood Turf Cup, etc
1 5/8		13		2,600	San Juan Capistrano Handicap
2		16		3,200	Melbourne Cup
481.4091993 Graded Stakes ChangesDECWET::JDADDAMIOSpeak softly;Carry a BIG carrot!Wed Dec 23 1992 18:3637
    For what it's worth, the North American Graded stakes have been
    announced for 1993. Apparently, there isn't a prescribed number of
    graded stakes as 8 stakes have upgraded including those that are graded 
    for the first time. Thirteen stakes have been downgraded, 4 to a lower
    graded status and 9 to the ungraded category. A race has to be run at
    least twice before it will be considered for grading. The race must
    also have been run within the past 2 years to be considered. Rule 1
    explains why the $1,000,000 Pacific Classic wasn't graded in 1992. It
    was first run in 1991 and couldn't be considered until the 1993 season.
    Rule 2 explains what happens if a track closes down or discontinues a
    stakes race and is reborn at a later date. If it has been less than 2
    years since the race was last run and it was run at least twice before,
    it will be considered.
    
    Upgraded Stakes Race	Track 		Old Grade	New Grade
    Pacific Classic		DelMar		ungraded	I
    Nassau County		Belmont		II		I
    Beaumont Stakes		Keeneland	III		II
    Davona Dale			Gulf Stream Pk	ungraded	III
    Creme Fraiche		Gulf Stream Pk	ungraded	III
    San Marcos			Santa Anita	III Turf	II Turf
    First Lady Handicap		Gulf Stream Pk	ungraded	III
    Yerba Buena			Golden Gate	ungraded	III Turf
    
    
    Downgraded Stakes Race	Track 		Old Grade	New Grade
    Young American		Meadowlands	II Turf		III Turf
    Norfolk Stakes		Santa Anita	I		II
    Brooklyn Handicap		Moved from	I		II
    				Belmont summer meeting to winter Aqueduct
    				meeting
    Bay Shore			Aqueduct	II		III
    
    I only know about one of the 9 races that were graded in 1992 that are not
    graded in 1993. The Longacres Mile GrIII is no longer run due to the
    track closing down. I don't know what the 8 others were or why they were 
    demoted.
481.410They don't have to be famous!DECWET::JDADDAMIOWhen in doubt, cop out!Tue Dec 29 1992 17:4743
Have you ever heard of the racehorse called "Our Homeboy?" Although he's a
pretty good runner(He won 5 of his 7 starts this year in high priced 
claiming races and allowance races.), he won't get into the Racing Hall 
of Fame for winning famous stakes races or anything like that. But, he WILL 
be remembered for quite a while for two interesting feats.

A couple years ago at Saratoga, Our Homeboy was entered in a race which had 
a fairly small field(5 or 6 horses if I remember right). Angel Cordero was 
his jockey. They broke well from an inside post and went to the lead when 
things started to go wrong. Cordero's stirrup broke and the saddle slipped.
When the saddle slipped, the other stirrup went. So, Cordero was sitting
there in his best bareback donkey seat with legs dangling straight in front 
of him for balance.

Ordinarily, a jockey will pull up when there is a dangerous equipment problem
but Angel and Our Homeboy were trapped on the rail with horses outside them 
and behind them. They ran on IN THE LEAD! Cordero said later that he had 
intended to pull up as soon as he had room but the horse was going so well
that he decided to ride on in spite of the risk to himself. Our Homeboy lead 
well into the stretch when he tired and started to fade. Cordero stopped 
riding hard and let Our Homeboy coast to the finish line in fourth or fifth.

Yesterday, Our Homeboy won an allowance race at Aqueduct in his usual
front running style. An allowance race is a non-selling race in which the 
entrants must meet certain conditions to be eligible. The conditions are 
designed to keep the races fair and competitive. Typical conditions include 
1) the horses haven't won any/two/three races outside the maiden, claiming 
or starter race categories, 2) Haven't won X number of times outside the 
maiden, claiming or starter ranks since a certain date, or 3) haven't won 
more than a certain amount of money since a certain date. In other words, 
they are races for horses who are too good to risk selling in a claiming 
race and not quite good enough or perhaps not quite fit enough to win stakes 
races. 

So, why was yesterday's allowance race at Aqueduct special? It was named for 
Rose Hamburger. No, she didn't invent the ground beef sandwich that we 
Americans are so fond of. They named the race for her because she just 
happened to be celebrating her 102nd birthday. She was at Aqueduct yesterday 
to celebrate her birthday and present the trophy. She is a LONG time racing 
fan and is supposed to have seen ALL 11 winners of the US Triple Crown.

BTW, she wasn't just a kid when she saw Sir Barton win in 1919! Do the 
arithmetic, she was 29! May she see the 12th!
481.411News on 1975 classic winnersDECWET::JDADDAMIOWhen in doubt, cop out!Thu Dec 31 1992 19:127
    Two classic winners of the 1975 season were in racing news recently.
    
    Avatar, 1975 Belmont Stakes winner, died of a broken neck at an Ohio
    Stud farm.
    
    1975 KY Derby winner, Foolish Pleasure, was moved from Spendthrift Farm
    in KY to a farm in CA. 
481.412First reply of 1993EASI::GEENENI'd rather be at the racetrackThu Jan 14 1993 00:3439
    Happy new year, TB racing fans and greetings from soggy (it's about
    time) northern California, home of Golden Gate Fields and Bay
    "what's a sealed track, anyway" Meadows.
    
    For some time I've been reading this notes conference hoping that
    there would be some chatter about race handicapping, you know,
    books read, successful days at the track, etc.  But, looks like I'll
    have to start the discourse myself.
    
    First, however, I'd like to thank DECWET::JDADDAMIO for the entries
    on TB history and current events -- practically a one-person topic.
    Please continue.  My horseracing buddies are suitably impressed with
    the information I'm able to pass on to them from having read it here.
    I try not to take credit, but...
    
    Anyway, if I've learned nothing else from my career in the computer
    biz, I've learned that anything is possible.  You just have to be
    clever (or is it devious?) enough to figure out a way.  Not that I
    have any pretences to cleverness, mind you.  But I've been deter-
    mined to see if this attitude applies to horserace handicapping, and
    I believe I've made some progress at long last.  Right!  And I'm
    Bonaparte himself.
    
    Seriously, though, let me ask you this:  if you wanted to invest some
    money, where would you invest?  Stocks and bonds?  Mutual funds?  How
    about money market funds or T-bills?  And what would be a fair return
    on your investment?  5%?  10%?  20%?  Over how long a period to get
    that return?  1 year?  3 years?  I know some people who have invested
    money for an entire year only to get 7% return -- and brag about it!
    
    How about if you could invest money for one day and make a 10-20%
    return for it?  This is what I'm aiming for.  I think it's entirely
    possible.  Anybody else out there think the same thing?  Let's
    compare notes here in this topic.  I'd like to share some of my dis-
    coveries made over the last year.  Maybe we can put our heads together
    and come up with useful strategies.
    
    Has anyone read "Dr. Z's Beat the Racetrack" or any of the books by
    Andrew Beyer or Tom Brohamer?   More later.
481.413Possible, but a job is easier...INGOT::ROBERTSThu Jan 14 1993 11:3956
    Yes, you can make that sort of return -- with some smart figuring --
    but only if you limit your wagering to small amounts of money.  If you
    throw as much money into track betting as you might want to put into a
    mutual fund, you are going to lower your return.  This is the problem
    with pari-mutuel betting.  Say you are going to start with $1000 to
    "invest" at the races.  Winning systems are based on only betting when
    a particular race meets some criteria, and you will only find a couple
    of races that meet those critera in any day.  So, say your system says
    that you will only bet on your "very likely thing" when the odds are
    better than 3-1, and you find 2 such races.  So you go to the window
    and put $500 on the first race.  Guess what!  The odds aren't 3-1 any
    more; they've gone down, because of your bet.   
    
    One way of figuring out a system is to do a lot of statistical research
    on the past seasons' results at a particular track.  Start with some
    "selection" -- something like looking at all 3-yr old colts running in
    $15,000 claimers.  To get a base line, you first have to calculate the
    overall probability of winning for any 3-yr old colt in this claiming 
    class.  Since claiming classes group horses with similar abilities, they 
    all tend to win with a similar regularity unless other factors enter in.  
    Your job, then, is to figure out what these "other factors" are.  So
    you start poring over the variables -- you might look at horses who
    have just moved down in class, horses that came off a 2-week rest,
    horses that came off a 1-week rest, horses who have just changed to a
    "better" jockey, horses who have speed figures of 90 or better, or
    whatever you might think are meaningful variations.  You then figure out 
    if these differences lead to differences in the probability of winning.
    If so, how much better is this probability?  If it is, say 25% better
    than average (unlikely) then you could say that if you bet on 4 of
    these horses, 1 is likely to win.  So your odds on that horse will have
    to be better than 4-1.  (And, since parimutuel odds also take into
    account the percentage of the take that the track gets, this has to be
    figured in also.)
    
    A couple of years ago, I really got into this stuff, and my SO and I
    went to Saratoga for a week and made about 20% on our investment. 
    Saratoga is, admittedly, a harder track to make money at since there
    are so many young good horses coming out there.  And all of the horses
    have, of course, shipped in from other tracks, since the Saratoga
    season is only a month.  But we made this return only at the expense of
    sitting up each night with the following day's Racing Form, entering
    *enormous* amounts of data into our computer program, and then spend
    all day every day at the track.  And we were making only small bets
    (largest was probably $50).  Although, again, at a large track like
    Saratoga, largish bets are more easily "lost" since the overall pools
    are large anyway....
    
    It seems that, Yes, you can make money at the track.  If you are good,
    you can make a respectable "salary" -- i.e. $30,000 to $40,000.  But to
    do this you have to go to the track every day, and spend a very large
    amount of your other time figuring out handicaps, etc.  Which is fine
    if that's how you want to spend your time.....
    
    -ellie
    Course, this means you also have to live somewhere where you have
    access to racing year round, too.  
481.414KAHALA::HOLMESThu Jan 14 1993 15:0017
>> Since claiming classes group horses with similar abilities

   Or the owner thinks that is the "value" of his horse.  
   And the owners opinion is appropriately inflated, :-D, :-D, :-D  


   I always hear alot of talk on this subject but never seen any proof.

   Why don't you enter your picks and bets before you go to the
   track and then come back and list your results.  Start with a
   'play' bankroll of say $1,000.00 and maintain a note with a
   running total and let's see what happens.

   Call the note the Geenen Tip Sheet.

   Bill
   
481.415Where's the fun in that?DECWET::JDADDAMIOWhen in doubt, cop out!Thu Jan 14 1993 16:3533
    You're welcome. I'm just continuing the tradition that a few other
    noters started in this topic. Unfortunately, one of them is no longer
    with us(laid off) and the other no longer gets The Blood Horse...so
    I just picked up where they left off.
    
    I actually made a 33% return on my paper-route money at the track when 
    I was 11 years old! I went to the track with my uncle. He showed me how 
    to read the DRF before we left. I read the DRF in the car on the way to the
    track. I started out with $30 and came home with $40 and this was back 
    in 1957 when $10 would buy a week's worth of groceries. 
    
    Since then, I have found out 2 things:
    	1. Nearly EVERYBODY who has tried to make a living at handicapping
    	   has a story very similar to Ellie's. Long days at the track
    	   followed by long nights preparing for the next day which leads
    	   to a marginal enough return to live on. One can make large
    	   amounts of money at the track by playing exotics like Pick 6
    	   intelligently. Unfortunately, that means playing $600 on various
    	   combinations and permutations.
    
    	   If you want a wonderful account by somebody who did just that
    	   and went back to a regular job, read Bill Barrich's "Laughing 
    	   in The Hills"
    
    	2. Betting takes all the fun out racing for me. So, I no longer bet
    	   on horse races. I do sometimes follow a horse's career and root
    	   for him/her to do their best. The first thing I want out of every
    	   race is a safe trip for all horses and riders. The second thing
    	   is a good race. For me, gambling on the outcome, with money and
    	   ego involved, interfere with those 2 simple pleasures. So, I
    	   don't bet.
    
    
481.416Horses Find Their Own LevelsKALE::ROBERTSThu Jan 14 1993 19:2320
    re .-2
    
    Claiming categories really do result in de facto classing of horses by
    ability.  If, as you mentioned, and owner unjustifiably thinks his or 
    her horse is a $50,000 horse and only runs it in these races, the horse
    will not win any money, since it will be competing against faster
    horses.  Few owners persist in this sort of behavior for long. 
    Conversely, if an owner knows a certain horse is equal in speed to
    others running for $20,000 but faster than those who run for $10,000,
    this owner could decide to run the horse at $10,000.  But there would
    be a good risk that the horse would be claimed by another owner or
    trainer.  So trainers and owners tend to run their horses in the class
    of races where they have a possibility of picking up some money, and
    are less likely to get claimed.  (Unless there are other factors in the
    decision, of course.  If you have a consistently winning $20,000
    claimer who has just come up with bad x-rays, you might run him at
    $10,000 and hope that you pick up the purse and someone else picks up
    your horse.....)
    
    -ellie
481.417The betting public...EASI::GEENENI'd rather be at the racetrackFri Jan 15 1993 00:3756
    Not only do trainers and owners find appropriate levels for their
    horses, but the betting public and track experts are pretty good
    at predicting the chances of horses in a race.
    
    Let me explain by way of a story.  Several years ago, I decided to
    play the stock market.  I spent a lot of time reading Barron's, the
    Wall Street Journal, the Value Line Investment Survey, ordering
    corporate reports, calling Charles Schwab for quotes, etc.  You
    get the idea.  My return was mixed at best.  I wondered if there
    was an easier way to get a better return.  I wasn't dumb enough to
    think I could get rich quick, but I was looking for an approach
    that was less time consuming.  I thought that a stock broker might
    be what I was looking for, but I heard too many tales of greed and
    horror.  Finally, I settled on mutual funds.  Kind of the best of
    both worlds.  I don't have to pore over a bunch of boring data, I
    get professional money management, my return is better than mixed,
    and I don't have to pick up the phone.
    
    What does this have to do with horse racing?  Because the trainers
    and owners place their horses at what most of the time appears to
    be the correct levels, and because the public and track experts
    predict a horses probability of race performance reasonably well,
    I get the equivalent of professional money management, at least
    as close as you can get at the racetrack, and I don't have to stay
    up all night reading the form.
    
    Here's an illustration:  a local trainer, Jerry Hollendorfer, who is
    widely respected as such, moves a horse up in class from $18K claim
    to $22500 claim.  Not much of a jump, I admit.  When the horse's
    past performances were examined, I didn't see anything extraordinary.
    It appeared to me to be the sort of thing encountered at the race-
    track, that is, a horse moves up in class -- big deal, so what.  The
    morning line on the horse was 8-1, about what you'd expect based on
    past performances.  But, the tip sheets were listing the horse as
    a possibility.  The horse even made it to the lists of a couple of
    the track experts.  As betting progressed, the odds improved until
    the horse was the favorite.  The pre-race favorite was bet up to
    4-1.  Hollendorfer's horse won the race and it made me think, what
    could the experts and public possibly have seen in this horse that
    did not appear in the DRF?  I concluded that one of two things was
    at work here, that the experts and public (at least some of the
    public, because experts bet too) were privy to information that I
    can't know, or that everyone was deluded but got lucky this time.
    
    Since then, I've attempted to find out which, and I've been
    astounded at what I've found out.  More on this later.
    
    By the way, a friend of mine is also a lover of horse racing but
    believes that betting takes all the fun out of it.  As for me, each
    race is the most exciting couple of minutes of my life.  Placing a
    bet heightens the experience.  I just can't get enough of it.  But
    I'm glad that I can't go every day, just the occasional Saturday
    or Sunday.  I can see how some people get addicted.  I'd probably
    be in Gambler's Anonymous before long and my wife would divorce me.
    
    Carl
481.418The Distaff SideDECWET::JDADDAMIOWhen in doubt, cop out!Sun Jan 17 1993 15:27143
Everybody talks about the stallions in horse racing.  Typically, 
people will say or write "Strike The Gold is by Alydar out of 
Majestic Gold by Hatchet Man." But, sometimes, the mare isn't even given 
the dignity of a name! For example, folks say things like, "This horse is 
by Alydar out of a Secretariat mare." People talk about leading sires and 
broodmare sires until you're sick of hearing it. 

Breeders know that their mares are important. They call their top mares
that produce stakes winners and daughters who produce stakes winners, 
"Blue Hens". This note is going to talk about 3 broodmares who may become 
the revered Blue Hens of the future. They are Sultry Sun, Weekend Surprise
and No Class.

Sultry Sun(1980) was a stakes winner herself 10 years ago. As of last year,
she was the dam of 4 named foals. All raced. Three are winners and 2 are
graded stakes winners. Sultry SUn was Florida's Broodmare of the year in 1991.
Her pedigree is excellent. For example, her sire is a half-brother to the 
great filly Ruffian. 

           Tom Fool
        Buckpasser
           Busanda
    Buckfinder
           Native Dancer
        Shenanigans
           Bold Irish
Sultry Sun
           Sword Dancer
        Damascus
           Kerala
    Sunny Dame
           Princequillo
        Sunny Morn
           Good Morning

Her stakes winners are Solar Splendor and Sultry Song. Solar Splendor is a 
turf horse. In 1991, he won the Man o'War and Belmont Turf Classic. In 1992, 
the 5 YO Solar Splendor repeated his Man o'War victory. Both are Grade I 
turf races with the Man o'War at 1 3/8 miles and the Turf Classic at 1 1/2 
miles. Solar Splendor set a course record in winning the 1991 Saratoga 
Breeders' Cup Handicap(Gr IIIT) at 8.5 furlongs.

On the same day that Solar Splendor won the 1991 Turf Classic, his little
brother(Sultry Song) won the Gr II Jamaica Handicap at 8 furlongs. In 1992,
the 4 YO Sultry Song stretched out in distance and shipped to California
to win the $1,000,000 Hollywood Gold Cup at 10 furlongs.


Weekend Surprise(also 1980) was also a graded stakes winner in her own 
right. As of 1991 she had produced 4 live foals. All 3 that are old enough 
have run and won. Two of them are not only stakes winners but classic 
winners. Only SEVEN mares in history have produced 2 North American classic 
winners. Those mares are interesting enough to warrant a separate note. 
Weekend Surprise's classic winning sons are Summer Squall and A.P. Indy. 
In 1991, she threw a bay colt that is a full brother to Summer Squall. 
Weekend Surprise also has an impeccable pedigree which traces to a Blue Hen 
of another era and contains some common ancestors to Sultry Sun's:

              Nasrullah
          Bold Ruler
              Miss Disco
     Secretariat
              Princequillo
          SOMETHINGROYAL
              Imperatrice
Weekend Surprise
              Tom Fool
          Buckpasser
              Busanda
     Lassie Dear
                   Turn-to       
               Sir Gaylord
                   SOMETHINGROYAL
          Gay Missile
               Miss Baba

In 1990, Summer Squall won the Preakness Stakes at 1 3/16 miles. He raced 3 
years and won graded stakes every year he raced. Summer In fact, Squall won 
13 of his 20 starts including Preakness Stakes(gr I), Hopeful Stakes(gr I), 
Saratoga Special(gr II), Jim Beam Stakes(gr II), Pennsyvania Derby(gr II), 
Blue Grass Stakes(gr II) and the Fayette Handicap(gr II). Summer Squall won
over $1.8 Million on the track and retired to stud at Lane's End Farm after 
his 1991 race season.

A.P. Indy only raced 2 years(1991 and 1992) but they were very productive
years! As a yearling, A.P. Indy sold for $2.9 Million. In 1991, he won the
Hollywood Futurity(gr I) and became the FIRST top price yearling in nearly 
20 years that went on to win a major race. He continued his success in 1992
with wins in the San Rafael(gr II), Santa Anita Derby(gr I), Peter Pan 
Stakes(gr II), Belmont Stakes(gr I) and the Breeders' Cup Classic(gr I). His
Grade I victories came in 9, 10 and 12 furlong races so his classic pedigree
shows! In addition to the staying power in his dam's pedigree from 
Triple Crown winner Secretariat, Buckpasser and especially the double 
influence of Secretariat's dam, Somethingroyal, A.P. Indy is sired by 
Seattle Slew who is another Triple Crown winner. Incidently, the cross
to Seattle Slew TRIPLED the influence of Somethingroyal's sire, Princequillo.
Seattle Slew's dam(My Charmer) traces to Princequillo who was famous for
siring stayers and daughters who produced stayers. My Charmer also introduces
a double influence of a THIRD Triple Crown winner, War Admiral. War Admiral
was the best son of Man o'War who didn't win the Triple Crown because he
did not run in the KY Derby. A.P. Indy has won more than his puirchase price 
of $2.9 Million on the track and has recently been retired to stud at Lane's 
End Farm.

No Class(1974) was a winner at the races and was stakes placed. Through 1991,
she is the dam of 7 foals. Five of them have raced and won. Four have been
graded stakes winners. Her pedigree may not include as many names that are 
currently well known but it is not humble by any means. Interestingly 
enough, No Class also traces to Princequillo as do Sultry Sun and Weekend 
Surprise. 

               Star Kingdom
          Noholme II
               Oceana
     Nodouble
               Double Jay
          Abla-Jay
               Ablamucha
No Class
               Nasrullah
          Outing Class
               Track Medal
     Classy Quillo
               Princequillo
          Quillopoly
               Tonga

No Class's stakes winning offpsring include: Classy 'N Smart(by Smarten), 
Grey Classic(by Grey Dawn), Regal Classic(by Vice Regent), and 
Sky Classic(by Nijinsky II). Sky Classic is second in the all-time money 
won listing for Canadian horses. No Class won the Soverign Award 
as Canada's Broodmare of the Year in 1985. Her stakes winning daughter, 
Classy 'N Smart, is also producer of stakes winners and was 1991's Soverign 
Award winner as Broodmare of the Year. Why? Because her daughter, Dance 
Smartly(by Danzig) won the Canadian Triple Crown, Molson Million and the
Breeders' Cup Distaff to become Canada's 1991 Horse of the Year as well as
the North American Eclipse Award winner as the 3 YO Filly. She is also
the all time leading money winner among Canadian horses and all mares 
worldwide.

Not a bad trio of mares, eh?

John
481.419Top 10 of all time?DECWET::JDADDAMIOWhen in doubt, cop out!Tue Jan 19 1993 17:3116
    Every once-in-a-while, I come across the poll results of turf writers
    who were asked to rank the top TB racehorses of all time. (I'd LOVE to
    see how OLD these folks are to have seen Man o'War and Colin while they
    were racing! I mean I've been a racing fan for 35+ years now and I've
    only seen horses from Nashua forward!) But the latest poll says:
    
    1. Man o'War 
    2. Secretariat
    3. Citation
    4. Kelso
    5. Count Fleet
    6. Sysonby
    7. Native Dancer
    8. Nashua
    9. Seattle Slew
    10. Colin
481.420CARTUN::MISTOVICHTue Jan 19 1993 18:141
    Glad to see Man O' War is still #1.  :-)
481.421Books on handicappingEASI::GEENENSecretariat who?Wed Jan 20 1993 22:4459
    Has anybody out there read any of the classic handicapping tomes by
    Andrew Beyer?  Here are a couple that I read when I first became
    interested in horse racing:
    
         Picking Winners
         (Houghton-Mifflin, 1975, 1985)
    
         The Winning Horseplayer
         (Houghton-Mifflin, 1983)
    
    Picking Winners is termed "the classic book on speed handicapping."
    In it Beyer expounds on track biases, trainers, a horse's appearance,
    and all the tenets involved in his speed handicapping theory.  His
    insight and experience make this book required reading, in my opinion,
    for anyone that wants to understand thoroughbred horse racing,
    especially handicappers.  Even if one never uses Beyer's speed handi-
    capping techniques, the personal notes and asides are well worth the
    purchase price (currently $9.95 for the soft cover version).
    
    The Winning Horseplayer is termed "a revolutionary approach to
    thoroughbred handicapping and betting."  But instead of speed handi-
    capping, this book is about trip handicapping, that is, watching the
    horses' trip around the track and basing possible future trip perfor-
    mance on earlier trips.  For example, a horse with lots of run gets
    boxed in in the stretch and get get loose soon enough to win the race.
    So next race, it could be that if the horse doesn't get boxed in, it'll
    have a good chance of winning.  I recall Pleasant Tap getting boxed in
    a race early last year.  The replay showed him trying to get loose a
    couple of times to no avail.  When he did get loose, there was not
    enough time to make up the distance.  But in the next race he didn't
    get boxed and won the race comfortably.  Anyway, you probably get the
    idea of what trip handicapping is all about.  I think this book is also
    required reading for any serious horse bettor.  Again, Beyer's inside
    knowledge makes it well worth reading ($8.95 for the soft cover).
    
    But can anyone of us really apply any of Beyer's techniques?  Not
    unless you can go to the track every day and spend hours upon hours
    away from the track making par charts and calculating daily track
    variances, not just for your home track, but for all the tracks the
    horses you encounter normally run.  For example, I'd have to keep up
    with a whole lot of data from not only Golden Gate Fields and Bay
    Meadows, my home tracks, but also Santa Anita, Hollywood, and Del Mar,
    the southern California tracks, because the horses I encounter are
    liable to be shipping back and forth.
    
    I'm still trying to work out a handicapping method that has reasonable
    results without having to go to the track every day or spend all night
    compiling charts and data.  I've read some other books that I think
    have me heading in the right direction.  I'll tell you about them
    when I have a little more time and NOTED:: is in working condition.
    More later.
    
    Carl
    
    P.S. Yes, a really GREAT trio of female-type horses, indeed.  A friend
    of mine who breeds/owns/races thoroughbreds occasionally shows me
    pedigree charts on horses he breeds.  The more I learn about horse
    racing, the more amazed I am.
    
481.422Simple Betting SystemINGOT::ROBERTSThu Jan 21 1993 11:1421
    re -.1
    
    Yes, I too read Beyer's books, and they formed the basis of the systems
    I've used.  But you are right, this requires an enormous amount of time
    and effort.  I do have my own system -- although it's so primitive it
    hardly merits the name -- that is simple to use.  If I want to place a
    bet, and I have no idea of the horses' abilities, I bet the morning
    line favorite to place.  But before placing the bet, I look at the
    horse in the saddling paddock, to be sure he/she isn't having a bad
    day.  I also only bet if the odds are favorable.  I don't think I'd
    ever bet on an odds-on favorite.  Sometimes I also factor in the size
    of the place pool.  This system has never won me a lot of money, but
    over several trips to the track I come out better than even.
    Another thing to look at is races where there is a heavy sentimental
    favorite.  This frequently means that a lot of people are going to bet
    on a famous horse simply because they know his name.  In some cases
    this will skew the odds to such an extent that some very good horses
    might be going off at very favorable odds, and might win you some money
    even with a place bet.  
    
    -ellie
481.423Man O' War will always be #1SWAM2::MASSEY_VIIt's all in the cueThu Jan 21 1993 17:281
    
481.424Another handicapping bookEASI::GEENENSecretariat who?Thu Jan 21 1993 22:5882
    Here's another handicapping book I've read:
    
        Modern Pace Handicapping
        by Tom Brohamer
        (William Morrow, 1991, $22.95 hardcover)
    
    This book started me thinking about the types of horses that you might
    encounter in a race.  Brohamer devides horses into four broad groups:
    
        1.  Early speed horses - these go to the lead right away and try
            to stay there.  When they win, it's wire to wire.
    
        2.  Pace pressing horses - these lie just off the pace and pass
            the leaders either on the last turn or somewhere down the
            stretch.
    
        3.  Closing horses - these come from the back of the field to
            pass all the other horses (in dramatic fashion) in the far
            turn and/or down the stretch.
    
        4.  Sustained horses - these don't have early speed, pressing,
            or closing abilities, but maintain the same relative position
            all around the track.  A pure sustained horse is nothing to
            shout about, but sustained combined with early speed, for
            example, might be a winner.
    
    Brohamer suggests that it is the job of the handicapper to determine
    which horses have which qualities, and the way to do this is, you
    guessed it, hours upon hours of figuring par charts and daily variances
    and speed velocities.  Figuring speed velocities involves determining
    how long it takes a horse to cover the distance between calls and
    expressing it in terms of feet-per-second.
    
    But I think the book is worthwhile reading for the concepts it teaches
    you about the types of horses and when fast fractions are meaningful,
    and when they are not.  The book was the first place I had read
    anything about "turn-time", the time it takes a horse to cover the
    far turn, the place where contending horses traditionally make their
    moves.
    
    But probably the most influential book of my early study was:
    
         Investing at the Racetrack
         by William L. Scott (a pseudonym, as it turns out)
         (Simon and Schuster, 1981, $10.95 softcover)
    
    In it, Scott cites several studies that indicate the probability of
    a race's outcome.  Ellie hinted at it a couple of replies ago.   Here
    is what Scott has in his book:
    
         1.  The favorite wins about 33% of the time
         2.  The second favorite wins about 20% of the time
         3.  The third favorite wins about 14% of the time
         4.  The favorite wins or places about 50% of the time
         5.  The favorite finishes in the money about 70% of the time
         6.  One of the three favorites wins or places about 90%
             of the time
         7.  One of the three favorites finishes in the money about
             98% of the time.
    
    These percentages (within a couple of points) are borne out in
    another book I read by James Quirin, Winning at the Races, I
    think (I'll get back to you on that later).
    
    Another thing I learned from Scott's book is putting the whole money
    thing in perspective, that is, what is a reasonable return on my wager?
    Should I bet to win, place, or show?  Beyer says don't waste your time
    on anything other than a bet to win.  So does Brohamer.  But Scott says
    it's OK to bet to place, taking advantage of the above probabilities
    and not being so greedy.
    
    One other point Scott made that made sense to me is waiting until the
    last possible moment to place your bet, because late money might
    change which horses are the favorites.
    
    So I've tried to come up with a comprehensive system that incorporates
    everything I've learned.  I read two more books that filled in the
    gaps, especially money management.  I'll tell you more about them next
    time.  More later.
    
    Carl
    
481.425Use the mystical system. More fun!DECWET::JDADDAMIOWhen in doubt, cop out!Fri Jan 22 1993 18:287
    Aw, you guys work too hard at handicapping! What's the matter with
    "hunches." Well, even that's too fancy a name....What I mean is pick 
    "Kate's Pride" because your niece is Kate, "Atlanta Fan" because your
    sister is one, "Appealing Legs" when Diane Nelson is up, "Princess Ro
    Ro" because your highschool girl firend's mother treated her like a
    princess and her sister called her Ro Ro.... Only works the first time
    though... ;-) After that it's not a "hunch"
481.426Little red CorvetteEASI::GEENENSecretariat who?Fri Jan 22 1993 22:5310
    Speaking of hunches, some friends and my wife and I were at the
    Fairgrounds in New Orleans a couple of years ago.  My wife put a
    bet on a horse named "Little Red Corvette" because she liked the
    Prince song and she always wanted a red Corvette.  The horse was a 
    long shot and, of course, won pretty good money.  Next race, everyone
    asked her for advice.  She told them to bet on "Mocha's Surprise"
    because we have a cat named Mocha.  Well, this horse won too.  Here I
    am working dilligently on a scheme, my hands full of the DRF and other
    papers, her hunches pay off big and my "educated choices" finish for
    little or no money.  But in the long run... -- that's another story.
481.427We Don't Need No Stinkin' System...KALE::ROBERTSMon Jan 25 1993 11:183
    re -.1
    
    Ain't that always the way??  !!
481.428DELNI::KEIRANMon Jan 25 1993 11:375
    It must be beginners luck!  I was at Foxboro a couple of weeks
    ago, and a group of women were sitting right behind us, it seemed
    like they hadn't been to the track too much.   One of
    them bet on a horse named Lady Edith because she knew someone
    named Edith.  Of course she won and paid $75!  
481.429Can you believe it?DECWET::JDADDAMIOWhen in doubt, cop out!Sun Jan 31 1993 23:354
    Last week at Aqueduct, somebody played an Exacta of Darling Edith with
    My New Kitchen because their neighbor was named Edith and she had just
    got a new kitchen. Of course, they won BIG money because they were both
    longshots!
481.430One great family!DECWET::JDADDAMIOWhen in doubt, cop out!Sun Jan 31 1993 23:3661
Oh, there's another fantastic broodmare by the name of Northern Sunset.
Who's she? The dam of St Jovite who won the 1992 Irish Derby and the 1992
King George VI and Queen Elizabeth Diamond Stakes. The 3 YO St Jovite was 
also just rated the best horse in Europe for 1992 at distances between 11 
and 13 1/2 furlongs. He rated 135 pounds in the International 
Classifications where the top older horses(Pistolet Bleu and Subotica) were 
assessed 129 and 128 respectively. Dr Devious who defeated St Jovite twice 
was rated at a mere 125 pounds.

Northern Sunset(1977) wasn't much of a racehorse herself(2 wins from 18 
starts) But she has produced multiple stakes winners and she has a great 
pedigree:


               Nearco
          Northern Dancer
               Natalma
     Northfields
               Occupy
          Little Hut
               Savage Beauty
Northern Sunset
               Mossborough
          Ballymoss
               Indian Call
     Moss Greine
               Straight Deal
          Blaith na Greine
               Carpet Slipper

Northern Sunset has produced:
1982	Salem Drive by Darby Creek Road - Graded stakes winner of $1,045,575
1983	Lac Quimet by Pleasant Colony - Graded stakes winner of $817,863
1984	Ashford Evening by Kirtling - Unraced - died 1986
1985	Dry North by Temperance Hill - winner
1986 	Norberto by Roberto - winner and graded stakes placed
1988	Alysunset by Alydar - winner
1989	St Jovite by Pleasant Colony - Champion, multiple Grade I stakes 
		winner of more than $1,478,813
1990 	Charette by Chief's Crown - won her only start at 2
1991	unnamed bay colt by Carr de Naskra
1992	unnamed colt by Halo

For 1993, Northern Sunset is in foal to Pleasant Colony for the third time.
St Jovite, is a homebred and is spending the winter with two of his 
younger brothers at their breeder's Payson Park training center in Florida. 
Also at home are his 1 & 2 YO brothers (by Halo and Carr de Naskra 
respectively). It is undecided whether St Jovite will return to Europe or 
race in the US. Charette is in training in Ireland for a 3 YO campaign.

Salem Drive and Lac Quimet stand stud after SIX YEARS of racing(each !)
at Payson Stud in Kentucky. Also at Payson stud with Mom are her two 
daughters, Alysunset and Dry North. Alysunset is in foal to Sadler's Wells,
a Northern Dancer son. Dry North is in foal to Pleasant Colony.

Pretty good family, hey? All Northern Sunset's foals who have raced have won.
Of her 7 foals that have raced, 3 are graded stakes winners, one was graded
stakes placed and a fifth(Charette) may become a stakes horse in her 3 YO 
season. Add to that the fact that she is in foal the TENTH time in 11 years
when the average is about a 50% live foal rate per mare bred and you will
see that she's something special!
481.4311992 Eclipse AwardsDECWET::JDADDAMIOWhen in doubt, cop out!Tue Feb 02 1993 23:0328
ESPN announced the 1992 Eclipse awards on last night's Thoroughbred Digest 
show(Oh, did I tell you it moved to Monday nights?). Actually, they 
announced everything except the Horse of the Year award. That will be 
announced at a banquet on Thursday evening. Anyway, here's the awards:

2 YO COlt - Gilded Time
2 YO Filly - Eliza

3 YO Colt - A. P. Indy
3 YO Filly - Saratoga Dew (minor surprise as there were 3 good fillies nominated)

Older Male - Pleasant Tap
Older Female - Paseana

Turf Male - Sky Classic (Paulson's begging didn't do any good, did it?)
Turf Female - Flawlessly (No surprise after her win in the Matriarch)

Sprinter - Rubiano(I think this makes the 4th year in a row that the
                   Breeder's Cup Sprint didn't decide the Eclipse Award)

Steeplechaser - Lonsesome Glory (For being the first horse to win on both 
                                 sides of the pond)

Breeder - W. E. Farrish (Lane's End Farm) who bred  A.P. Indy etc
Owner - Juddmonte Farms(Super Staff, Marquetry, etc)
Trainer - Ron McAnally (2nd year in a row; 3rd lifetime)
Jockey - Kent Desormeaux (most money won at $14.1 million)
Apprentice Jockey - Jesus A. Bracho (Won over $2 million)
481.432Dual classic producing maresDECWET::JDADDAMIOWhen in doubt, cop out!Sun Feb 07 1993 16:0730
    In one of the notes on mare's, I mentioned that Weekend Surprise was
    one of very few mares to have produced 2 American classic winners.
    
    The first mare to do that was called Maggie B. B. All I know of her
    pedigree is that she was by Australian. She produced:
    	Harold(by Leamington) 1879 Preakness
    	Panique(by Alarm)     1884 Belmont
    In between those two American classic winners, she produced
    Iroquois(also by Leamington) which was the first North American bred
    winner of the Epsom Derby. He won that English classis in 1881.
    
    Next came, Cinderella in the 1890's. Her pedigree is even less certain
    as she is said to be by either Blue Ruin or Tomahawk! Anyway, her son
    Hastings(by Spendthrift) won the 1896 Belmont and Plaudit(by Himyar)
    won the 1898 Kentucky Derby.
    
    Lady Margaret(by The Ill Usedf) produced 1896 Preakness winner
    Margrave(by St. Blaise) and 1902 Belmont winner Masterman(by Hastings).
    
    Ignite(by Woodlands) produced 1900 Preakness winner Hindus(by Volante)
    and 1906 KY Derby winner Sir Huon(by Falsetto).
    
    Leisure(by Meddler) produced a pair of Preakness winners. Royal Tourist
    by Sandingham won in 1908 and Holiday(by Broomstick) won in 1914.
    
    Finally, Cinderella's great-granddaughter Prudery produced Whiskery and
    Victorian both by Whisk Broom. Whiskery won the 1927 Ky Derby.
    Victorian won the 1928 Preakness.
    	
    John
481.4331992 Horse of the Year Eclipse AwardDECWET::JDADDAMIOWhen in doubt, cop out!Tue Feb 09 1993 22:522
    It's official. A.P. Indy is Horse of the Year...I would have picked
    Paseana but I don't get to vote!
481.434News about horses and jockeysDECWET::JDADDAMIOWhen in doubt, cop out!Tue Feb 09 1993 22:5349
In the Jan 30 issue of The Blood Horse, I found the following items of 
interest:

General Assembly, a multiple Grade I winner and popular sire, has been sold 
and sent to France for stud duty at Haras de Victot. 
General Assembly(Secretariat x Exclusive Dancer) was Secretariat's first Grade 
I winner. General Assembly has sired 22 stakes winners since he entered stud 
in 1980.

Virginia Kraft Payson has announced that multiple European champion, St Jovite 
    will begin his 4 YO campaign in North America this season. (See 481.430
    for more on St Jovite.) He will be trained 
by Canadian Hall-of-Fame trainer Roger Attfield. Mr Attfield brought us the 
likes of With Approval, Izvestia and Alydeed. With Approval and Izvestia were 
champions, Canadian Triple Crown winners and US record setters. Alydeed 
looked to be of the same ilk early last season but disappointed later.

Dixie Brass is recuperating from life-saving surgery for injuries sustained
in November's Sports Page Handicap. He will not be well enough to breed during 
the first few weeks of the breeding season. He is expected to begin breeding 
in March at the Vinery.

Steve Cauthen is considering retiring. He has been riding in England since 
1979. In recent years, he has been the contract rider for Sheikh Mohammed al 
Maktoum's Darley Stud stable. His contract gave him an annual fee as well as a 
percentage of their purses. He was free to ride other horses when there was no 
conflict with his commitment to Darley Stud horses. The Maktoum family is 
cutting back it's English stables and offered to renew Cauthen's contract 
but with substantially lower remuneration. Irish champion jockey is said to 
be the likely replacement for Cauthen at Darley Stud.

Cauthen says he doesn't think he can find another job in Europe and cannot 
make the weights in the US. His minimum weight is 119 which is too high to
get regular work in the US. His weight hasn't been a problem because 
European horses carry more weight. Cauthen says he is considering public 
relations, training and broadcast commentary as well as writing a book.

Cash Asmussen will be staying in Europe as contract rider for the Stavros 
Niarchos' stable. Asmussen was leading apprentice rider in the US back in 
1979. He moved his tack to France in 1982 and has been champion jockey there 5 
times.

Lester Piggot is expected to return to riding races in Dubai very soon. Other 
reports say he may also go to Bombay to ride.

In a bit of irony, English jockey Walter Swinburn, who was interviewed shortly 
after Piggot's crash in the Breeder's Cup, sustained very similar injuries
while riding out in Hong Kong. Swinburn underwent surgery for a collapsed lung 
and 3 busted ribs after a crash at Sha Tin Racecourse.
481.435Primonetta rememberedDECWET::JDADDAMIOWhen in doubt, cop out!Wed Feb 10 1993 20:2145
In keeping with the recent notes on mares, this is also from Jan. 30 issue
of The Blood Horse:

"		Primonetta Dead at 35
	CHAMPION AND BROODMARE OF THE YEAR

A Valentine's Day foal whose name in Italian meant "first little one,"
Primonetta was first in the hearts of many during her days as a successful 
racemare, prominent producer and resident queen at the Daniel M Galbreath
family's Darby Dan Farm near Columbus, Ohio.

Bred and raced by Darby Dan founder John W Galbreath, Primonetta was the first 
filly sired by Swaps and two years later she became the stallion's first 
stakes winner. Primonetta was undefeated in four races at two and she extended 
her unbeaten streak to nine races at three. Primonetta at three won the 1961
Delaware Oaks and the Alabama, Miss Woodford and Prioress Stakes. The 
following year, she was named champion handicap mare chiefly from victories in 
the Spinster Stakes and the Molly Pitcher, Falls City and Regret Handicaps. 
(In 1963, her home-bred full brother Chateaugay was named champion 3-year-old 
male following wins in the Kentucky Derby and Belmont Stakes.)

Primonetta produced four stakes winners while at the Kentucky Division of 
Darby Dan: the Grade I winning full siblings Cum Laude Laurie and Prince Thou 
Art(by Hail To Reason) and full siblings Grenfall and Maud Muller(by Darby Dan 
home-bred Graustark). Named for a granddaughter of the Darby Dan founder, Cum 
Laude Laurie at three in 1977 won the Beldame(Gr I) and Spinster(Gr I) Stakes, 
Ruffian Handicap(Gr I), and Delaware Oaks(Gr I). Prince Thou Art had his 
biggest victory in the 1975 Florida Derby(Gr I), in which Foolish Pleasure 
suffered his first defeat while finishing third. Grenfall was a Group II 
winner in Ireland and Maud Muller was a Grade II winner in New York. 
Primonetta was honored as the 1978 Broodmare of the Year by the Thoroughbred 
Breeders of Kentucky.

A daughter of the Polynesian mare Banquet Bell, Primonetta produced her last 
of seven foals in 1980 and was pensioned soon afterward. She was sent from 
the Darby Dan division near Lexington to the one near Columbus.

Primonetta died on Jan. 16 after suffering an apparent heart attack. Her 
death came a month before a party would have been held on Valentine's Day to 
celebrate her real birthday. According to Darby Dan official John Phillips,
birthday celebrations had been held for a number of years and provided a time 
for the farm employees to honor Primonetta with a carrot cake and watch films
of the mare in action in the 1960s. Primonetta was buried near a road that
bears here name."

481.436DELNI::MANDILEToepick!Thu Feb 11 1993 15:091
    Wow..35!
481.4371993 ACRS races & datesDECWET::JDADDAMIOWhen in doubt, cop out!Fri Feb 19 1993 16:3531
    The 1993 American Championship Racing Series(ACRS) starts tomorrow
    at Florida's Gulfstream Park. The ACRS is a series of 9 Grade I stakes
    races open to horses 3 & Up. The ACRS offers a bonus to the horse which
    scores the most points in the series. Points are award according to a
    horse's placing in ACRS races. The idea was to bring more prominence to
    these races for older horses as well as to give owners an incentive to
    keep good horses in racing rather than retiring them after their 3 YO
    campaign. Between the ACRS, Breeder's Cup races, other million dollar
    purse races and the poor market for blood stock, many more good horses
    are racing at 4, 5 and 6 than a decade ago.
    
    All the races will be televised by ESPN or ABC. Here
    is a list of the races in the 1993 ACRS series:
    
    Date	Race		Track			TV Network
    Feb 20 Donn Handicap	Gulfstream Park		ESPN
    Mar 14 Gulfstream Pk Hcap	Gulfstream Park        	ESPN
    Apr 24 Californian Stakes	Hollywood Park		ESPN
    May 15 Pimlico Stakes	Pimlico			ABC (on Triple
    				Crown Coverage of the Preakness Stakes)
    Jun 5  Nassau County Hcap	Belmont			ABC (on Triple
                                    Crown Coverage of the Belmont Stakes)
    Jul 3  Hollywood Gold Cup	Hollywood Park          ESPN
    Jul 24 P. H. Iselin Hcap	Monmouth Park		ESPN
    Aug 21 Pacific Classic	Del Mar			ESPN
    Sep 18 Woodward Stakes	Belmont			ESPN
    
    The Donn Handicap will be broadcast live on ESPN at 5 PM Eastern time. 
    The race and the Gulfstream Park Handicap can also be seen on 
    SportsChannel Florida or SportsChannel America's daily broadcast called 
    "Thoroughbred Action From Gulfstream Park." 
481.438SportsChannel daily racing recapsDECWET::JDADDAMIOWhen in doubt, cop out!Fri Feb 19 1993 16:4226
    Re: SportsChannel Florida or SportsChannel America's daily recap
    show called "Thoroughbred Action From Gulfstream Park."  
    
    According to this week's Blood Horse, SportsChannel picked up the
    coverage of the Gulfstream meeting after Gulfstream filed suit against
    the cable network that broadcast the races last year. The article said
    that Gulfstream had had a 2 year contract with a Florida cable network
    which called for the network to pay Gulfstream $100 per day plus half
    the advertising profit. The network was to broadcast 6 days of racing
    and a weekly talk show. According to the article, the network did
    broadcast the shows in 1992 but made NO payments to Gulfstream. A few
    days before the current race meeting opened, the network informed 
    Gulfstream that they would not broadcast the shows in 1993.
    
    SportsChannel also produces a daily recap of the racing at NYRA tracks
    (Aqueduct,Belmont and Saratoga). The NYRA daily recap is on SportsChannel 
    New York, New England 52 weeks a year and appears on SportsChannel 
    America most of the year. Winter racing at Aqueduct is so boring that 
    SC America took SC Florida's Gulfstream show for the Jan-Mar season.
    
    So, the 2 ACRS races from Belmont should also appear on SportsChannel on 
    their "Thoroughbred Action From Belmont" racing recap show. Of course,
    Belmont isn't open right now so the daily show is from Aqueduct. They
    switch to Belmont in May and stay there until late July when they
    go to Saratoga. Racing moves back to Belmont for Sept and Oct. 
    
481.439Gulfstream jockey newsDECWET::JDADDAMIOWhen in doubt, cop out!Fri Feb 19 1993 17:2123
    BTW, as of yesterday, the 2 leading riders at Gulfstream Park are Julie
    Krone and Jerry Bailey. Here are the stats:
    
    Jockey	Mounts	Wins Place Show		Win %	In the Money %
    Krone	175      39     33   29		21.7	57.1!!!!!!!!!
    Bailey	133	 32     16   13		24.0	45.9
    
    In other Gulfstream jockey news, Mary Russ returned to riding races
    after a 5 year retirement during which she started a family. She
    married a trainer and they have 2 children. At Christmas, he told her
    he would support her in every way if she wanted to return to race
    riding. She hadn't been idle during her retirement. She rode exercise
    for her husband. When she returned to riding races, he put her on some
    of the horses she had been working. She's winning with them too! I
    think she won two races on his horses this week.
    
    Mary Russ was the first woman to capture a riding title at a "major"
    track when she won at Calder in the mid-80's. Well, Calder's not a
    "bush-league" track but I reserve the term "major" for NYRA(Belmont,
    Saratoga and Aquedcut) and LA area(Santa Anita, Del Mar and Hollywood
    Park) tracks. Julie Krone was the first woman to win a riding title at
    one of those tracks when she won Belmont's riding title at the May-Jul
    meeting.
481.440More handicapping stuffEASI::GEENENSecretariat who?Fri Feb 19 1993 23:1265
    Hello racing fans!
    
    After a couple of training classes (computers, not horses, darn it),
    and after nearly getting washed away from all the recent rain (I
    think the California drought is over), I'm finally able to pay more
    attention to the things that really matter, namely horse racing and
    handicapping.
    
    I said a few notes back that I would pass on the information on a
    handicapping book that I couldn't accurately remember the title or
    author of.  For those of you waiting patiently, here it is:
    
         Winning At the Races
         Computer Discoveries in Thoroughbred Handicapping
         by William L. Quirin, Ph.D.
         (foreword by Tom Ainslie)
         (William Morrow & Co., 1979, $22.95 hardcover)
    
    I think that Ainslie has foreworded more books than any other person,
    living or dead.  At the time of the book's first publishing, Quirin
    was Associate Professor of Math and Computer Science at Adelphi U.
    
    The book contains a lot of massaged data dragged out of a database of
    North American races.  Some of the info is enlightening, however, like
    how often favorites win or finish in the money, and how often early
    speed horses that live up to their promise in the first half of the
    race actually win or finish in the money.  Some of the data is pretty
    esoteric, though.  All in all, I'd say that the book is probably
    worth reading, but I think I'd try to find it at the library.
    
    But the most informative and enlightening book I've read to date is,
    don't laugh:
    
         Dr. Z's Beat the Racetrack
         by William T. Ziemba and Donald B. Hausch
         (William Morrow and Co., 1987, $24.95 hardcover)
    
    The foreword is by Edward O. Thorp.  Numbers freaks will remember him
    as the author of Beat the Dealer, a mid-sixties book about card
    counting techniques for blackjack.
    
    Ziemba is Professor of Management Science at British Columbia U and has
    some kind of economics doctorate.  Big deal, right?  Just tell me if it
    works, pal, and spare me the sheepskin.
    
    What I found fascinating was his discussion of stock market efficiency
    applied to betting on horseraces.  One chapter gives all the formulas
    that tracks use to determine odds and payoffs.  Another chapter
    explains what overlays are, how to recognize them, and when the payoff
    may be profitable.
    
    His "system", however, requires some fancy figuring in the last few
    seconds before the gates open, and placing a bet just before the window
    closes.  Of course, you need to buy a hand-help HP and his proprietary
    chip in order to perform these convoluted calculations quickly.  But
    the book for me was great stuff and well worth the read and the price.
    
    So now that I've read all these books, I think I'm finally ready to put
    my own system together and give it a whirl, right?  Well, maybe one
    more book, Laughing In the Hills, just to give me the "feel" of the
    track life.  It's an interesting insight, so far.  Many thanks to
    JDADDAMIO for its recommendation.
    
    More later.
    Carl
481.441Mailing list for horse racing and bettingGBLAUT::JANICKIV. Janicki DCE Engineering DTN 226-5980Mon Feb 22 1993 13:0161
    
    Carl,
    
    You might be interested in the following mailing list. Send mail
    to DECWRL::"derby-request@ekrl.com".
    
    ************************************************************************
Hi.  At your request, you have been added to the "derby" mailing list.  The
list is not moderated: it's just an alias that re-mails your posting
directly to everybody else.  Answers to frequently asked questions (FAQ)
are included at the end of this message.

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mode.  With batch mode, you will receive one daily email message in the
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Welcome, and enjoy!

See you at the races,
John Wilkes
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1)  What is derby all about?

	Horse racing.  All flavors, though we tend to focus on Thoroughbreds.
	We talk about handicapping and wagering strategies, as well as the
	horses, jockeys, and trainers.  If it has anything to do with horse
	racing, it's fair game for posting.

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	Derby is not moderated.

	To post to the list, mail to: derby@ekrl.com

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481.442Think about betting strategy too!DECWET::JDADDAMIOWhen in doubt, cop out!Mon Feb 22 1993 16:4821
    Carl,
    
    One more thing you want to remember: It is FAR more important to be a
    smart BETTOR than a smart handicapper! 
    
    Even guys like Jerry Brown(who makes up performance figures which he says 
    go beyond speed figures) and Andy Beyer(the speed figure guru) say that 
    it is much more important to chose smart bets rather than to be a great 
    handicapper. In fact, Jerry Brown's general approach to betting stakes
    races is to look for favorites he thinks are beatable and bet Exactas 
    using the 2 or 3 other horses in the race that he thinks have a shot at 
    winning. When he thinks the favorite will win, he passes on the race.
    
    They point out that average handicapping & wise betting will get you a 
    better return than handicapping well and betting unwisely. I'm sure
    there are all sorts of books on betting strategy or money management
    which would offer advise on how to play the exotic bets(daily double,
    triples/pick 3, pick 6 or pick 9) as well as the race to race
    management. 
    
    John
481.443Thang slotEASI::GEENENMe transmitte sursum, Caledoni.Mon Feb 22 1993 23:5953
    Many thanks to the authors of .441 and .442.  RE: .441, I'll sign up
    directly.  RE: .442, I have been working on a betting strategy.  In 
    Dr. Z's Beat the Racetrack, he examines at great length a strategy
    devised by some character named Kelly.  The strategy is basically
    upping your bet when the statistical probability of your hoped-for
    outcome is greater.  Dr. Z has applied Kelly's ideas to some "market"
    analysis-like data that has been realized from those thousands of
    North American races that I wrote about a couple of notes ago.
    
    Dr. Z, Quirin, Scott, and a host of others discovered that the money
    bet on your horse to win divided by the total amount in the win pool
    gives a fair approximation in terms of percentage of the horse's
    probability of winning the race.  Here's an example:
    
        Win pool = $20,000
      your horse = $ 5,000
    
    therefore, your horse has a 25% chance of winning the race.  Dr. Z, et
    al, contend that horses in this position will actually win 25% of the
    time.  Now, if you perform the same calculation for place and for show
    and add them all up, you get the horse's chance of finishing in the
    money.  For the last several months I have been tracking this to see
    if it's true, and so far the results are not too far off, thereby
    seeming to support the contention.
    
    A simple betting strategy that can be derived from this is establishing
    a "sure thing" maximum bet and betting a percentage of that maximum
    according to a horse's chances as discussed above.
    
    Example:
       My maximum bet is $100.  I would only bet this full amount if there
       were 2 horses in the race and one was a paraplegic.  The horse I'm
       thinking about has these money figures on the tote board:
    
                   Pool         My Horse         Probability
          Win    $10,000         $2,000              20%
        Place    $ 7,500         $1,250              17%
         Show    $ 3,000         $  675              23%
                                                     ---
                                                     60%
    
       The horse has a 60% chance of finishing in the money, and so I would
       bet only 60% of my maximum bet on the horse, $60.
    
    In reality, I have not yet summoned up enough, well, you know, to bet
    that amount of money.  The most I've ever bet is $20.
    
    So far I've managed to stay away from the exotic bets, which to me seem
    to be lot like gunslinging.  I'm trying to find a horse that will
    finish in the money and bet on it to show and sometimes to place if the
    chances are high enough.  More later.
    
    Carl
481.444Gulfstream?MR4SRV::MSHAMELMarsha ShamelFri Feb 26 1993 11:1612
I am a New Englander who is looking to get warm!

Having attended several races at Suffolk, the simulcasting makes
 Gulfstream look very appealing right now.  The only problem is,
I don't know what part of Florida it is in!

So, can someone let me know where Gulfstream is in Florida?  Has anyone gone there?
IF so, where are the best seats?

Thanks for any help...

Marsha
481.445CSLALL::LCOBURNPlan B FarmFri Feb 26 1993 12:107
    I believe Gulfstream is in Hallandale, FL....Ft Lauderdale area. I used
    to live down there (Ft L.) and drove by the park a few times but dont
    remember the specifics. I never went in. ANY part of Fl would seem
    nice right about now!
    
    -Linda, who has 2.5 ft of snow and is cold, too! :-)
    
481.446Paseana's early 1993 seasonDECWET::JDADDAMIOWhen in doubt, cop out!Tue Mar 02 1993 16:1646
    Paseana (who was 1992 Eclipse Champion Older Mare, Breeders' Cup Distaff
    winner and invincible against females in 1992) is off to a poor
    start for 1993! She had been rested for about 3 months(since the Distaff 
    on Oct. 31). 

    She came back to the races in the Santa Maria(Gr I, 8.5 furlongs) on 
    Feb 6th. Her stablemate, Race The Wild Wind, won in a wire-to-wire style.
    Paseana finished second, 2 lengths back while carrying 9 pounds more
    weight(126 to Race The Wild Wind's 117). Southern Truce, a former 
    claimer, was another 1 1/4 lengths behind Paseana carrying 116
    
    Sunday, Paseana ran in the Santa Margarita Invitational Handicap(Gr
    I) and went of the favorite despite her earlier loss. Everybody figured
    she just needed a race to complete her conditioning. The track
    handicapper put at least 10 pounds more weight on Paseana than any of
    the others. Race The Wild Wind wasn't there but Southern Truce was.

    Paseana and Southern Truce broke together but McCarron rated Paseana and 
    had her second down the backside about a length off Southern Truce.
    Approaching the final turn, McCarron sent Paseana to the front. She was
    running easily and had a full length over Southern Truce. She didn't 
    widen the gap but nobody was gaining either.
    
    At the top of the stretch, it looked like Paseana could be caught if
    the others tried. Then, she started to open up and I thought it was all
    over but the shouting! But, McCarron dropped the right rein! While he 
    was fumbling around for 2-3 strides to get it back, Paseana visibly 
    shortened her stride and giving Southern Truce a chance to come back and 
    battle down the stretch. Southern Truce did come back and raced Paseana to
    the wire. It looked like it was going to be a dead heat but Southern 
    Truce gained a slight advantage in the final 3 jumps to win by a head.
    
    Paseana gave away 10 pounds to Southern Truce and only lost by a head. 
    But, you have to wonder if she was really fit enough. All last year, she
    gave away weight and won easily despite carrying as much as 127. I think 
    she was undefeated against fillies & mares last year and she won 6 Grade I
    races including the 1992 editions of the 2 she lost this year.
    
    She's 6. Is she starting to lose her speed? Did she just lose some of her 
    edge from the long rest? Did the dropped rein cost her the race? Or is
    Southern Truce the female version of John Henry, another former claimer 
    who went on to fame and fortune? We'll see next time out. McAnally is 
    one of the best trainers in the country and I'm sure he'll have Paseana
    ready for the next one.
    
    John
481.4471993 Races on Network TVDECWET::JDADDAMIOWhen in doubt, cop out!Thu Mar 04 1993 18:5189
I came across a chart in The Blood Horse which showed all the stakes races
that are currently scheduled for broadcast by US television networks in 
1993. I say currently because NBC has broadcast the Arc de Triopmhe 
for several years and ABC has had the Grand National from England but they
don't appear on this list. Currently, the Irish Derby is the only non-US 
race listed. ABC has the Triple Crown races and most of the major prep races.
NBC has the Breeders' Cup and one of Belmont's Super Saturday features which 
is billed as a Breeders' Cup Preview. CBS didn't show up even though they
have been broadcasting a couple turf races the past 2-3 years.

ALL TIMES ARE EASTERN!!!!!!

Track Abbreviations:

AP =	Arlington Park(Illinois)
Aqu =	Aqueduct(NY)
Bel =	Belmont(NY)
CD =	Churchhill Downs(Kentucky)
Dmr = 	Del Mar(CA)
FG = 	Fair Grounds (Louisiana)
Hol =	Hollywood Park(Cal.)
GP = 	Gulfstream Park(Fla)
LaD =	Louisiana Downs
Med =	Meadowlands(NJ)
Mth =	Monmouth Park(NJ)
OP =	Oaklawn Park(Arkansas)
Pim =	Pimlico(Maryland)
RP =	Remington Park
SA = 	Santa Anita(Cal.)
TP =	TurfLawn Park

Date	Event				Track	Time		Network
 2/20	Donn Handicap			GP	5-6 PM		ESPN
 3/6	Santa Anita Handicap		SA	4:30-6 PM	ABC
 3/14	Gulfstream Park Handicap	GP	8:30-9 PM	ESPN
 3/20	Florida Derby			GP      4:30-6 PM       ABC
	Louisiana Derby			FG	8-9 PM       	ESPN
 3/27	Jim Beam Stakes			TP      5-6 PM          ESPN
 4/3	Remington Park Derby		RP	4-5 PM          ESPN
	Santa Anita Derby		SA      4:30-6 PM       ABC
 4/10	Blue Grass Stakes Special	Kee	4:30-6 PM       ABC
	Oaklawn Handicap		OP      5-6 PM          ESPN
	Blue Grass Stakes 		Kee     5-6 PM          ESPN
 4/17	Arkansas Derby			OP      5-6 PM          ESPN
	Ashland Stakes			Kee     5-6 PM          ESPN
	Wood Memorial Initational	Aqu	4:30-6 PM       ABC
 4/24	Kentucky Derby Preview			4:30-6 PM       ABC
	Californian Stakes		Hol	6-7 PM          ESPN
 5/1	Kentucky Derby Special			2:30-4:30 PM	ESPN
	Kentucky Derby 			CD	4:30-6 PM       ABC
 5/15	Preakness Special			3:30-4:30 PM    ESPN
	Preakness Stakes		Pim	4:30-6 PM       ABC
	Pimlico Special Handicap	Pim     4:30-6 PM       ABC
 6/5	Belmont Stakes Special			3:30-4:30 PM    ESPN
	Belmont Stakes 			Bel     4:30-6 PM       ABC
	Nassau County Handicap		Bel     4:30-6 PM       ABC
 6/19	Ohio Derby			Tdn	5-6 PM          ESPN
 6/27	Irish Derby			Curragh	3-4 PM		ESPN
 7/3	Hollywood Gold Cup Handicap	Hol	4:30-5:30 PM    ESPN
 7/17	Frank J De Francis Dash		Laurel	4:30-6 PM       ABC
 7/24	Phillip H Iselin Handicap	Mth	5-6 PM          ESPN
 8/21	Pacific Classic			Dmr	6-7 PM		ESPN
 8/29	Arlington Million		AP      6-7 PM          ESPN
 9/11	West Vriginia Breeder Classic	CT	6-6:30 PM	ESPN
 9/18	Woodward Stakes			Bel	4-5 PM          ESPN
	Man o'War Stakes		Bel     4-5 PM          ESPN
	Futurity			Bel     4-5 PM          ESPN
	Matron Stakes			Bel     4-5 PM          ESPN
10/2	Super Derby			LaD	3:30-4:30 PM	ESPN
10/9	Turf Classic			Bel	4-4:30 PM	ESPN
10/10	Vosburgh Stakes			Bel     3:30-4:30 PM    ESPN
	Jamaica Handicap		Bel     3:30-4:30 PM    ESPN
	Rare Perfume Stakes		Bel     3:30-4:30 PM    ESPN
10/15	Meadowlands Cup Handicap	Med	11-11:30 PM	ESPN
10/16	Breeders' Cup Preview Special	Bel	4:30-6 PM       NBC
	Champagne Stakes		Bel     4:30-6 PM       NBC
	Frizette Stakes                 Bel     4:30-6 PM       NBC
	Jockey CLub Gold Cup		Bel     4:30-6 PM       NBC
	Lawrence Realization Stakes	Bel     4:30-6 PM       NBC
	Kelso Handicap			Bel     4:30-6 PM       NBC
	Beldame Stakes			Bel     4:30-6 PM       NBC
	Breeders' Cup Steeplechase	Bel     4:30-6 PM       NBC
10/17	Spinster Stakes			Kee	4-5 PM		ESPN
	California Cup			SA	4-5 PM          ESPN
10/23	Budweiser International		Laurel	4-5 PM          ESPN
10/24	Remington Park Futurity		RP	4-5 PM          ESPN
11/6	Breeders' Cup 			SA	1:30-6 PM	NBC
11/20	Hollywood Derby			Hol	6-7 PM		ESPN
11/28	Matriarch Stakes		Hol     6-7 PM          ESPN
481.448Halo RecoveringDECWET::JDADDAMIOWhen in doubt, cop out!Sat Mar 06 1993 14:2669
    I've added more about Halo to the article from the 2/27 issue of 
    The Blood Horse:
    
    "Syndicated Halo, who twice led the nation's leading sire list,
    underwent surgery for colic at Hagyard-Davidson-McGee veterinary clinic
    near Lexington the morning of Feb 13. The stallion's discomfort was
    discovered at 1:00 AM at Arthur B Hancock's Stone Farm near Paris KY. A
    farm representative said that Halo is doing well, but that the
    24-year-old stallion will probably miss the first month of the breeding
    season. He is expected to cover som 40 mares.
    
    Halo(Hail to Reason-Cosmah, by Cosmic Bomb) was the leading sire by
    progeny earnings in 1983 and 1989 when his chief earner from each year,
    Sunny's Halo and Sunday Silence, respectively, won the Kentucky
    Derby(Gr I). Sunday Silence was named Horse of the Year and Champion
    3-year-old male that year. Halo has sired 52 stakes winners and the
    earners of more than $31 million."
    
    When he was racing Halo won the United Nations Handicap(Gr I Turf 1 3/16 
    miles), the Tidal Handicap(Gr II Turf 1 3/16 miles), Lawrence Realization
    Stakes (Gr II Turf 1.5 Miles) and the Voters Handicap(1 mile Turf). He 
    also finished second in a number of graded stakes. The UN Handicap is
    now known as the Caesar's International.
    
    Halo's pedigree includes lost of famous names:

                Nearcos
             Royal Charger
                Sun Princess
          Turn-to  
                Admiral Drake
             Source Sucree
                Lavendula
       Hail to Reason
                Blue Larkspur
             Blue Swords
                Flaming Swords
          Nothirdchance
                Sir Gallahad
             Galla Colors
                Rouge et Noir
    Halo
                Phalaris
             Pharamond II
                Selene
          Cosmic Bomb
                Blue Larkspur
             Banish Fear
                Herodiade
       Cosmah
                 Blenheim II
              Mahmoud
                 Mah Mahal
          Almahmoud
                 Peace Chance
              Arbitrator
                 Mother Goose

    The stakes winners sired by Halo that you may recognize include:
    Sunday Silence, Sunny's Halo(both mentioned above), Jolie's Halo(a 6 YO 
    stallion recently retired. Won ACRS races in 1991 and 1992), and 
    Devil's Bag (Champion 2 YO colt in 1983; retired before the 1984 KY Derby 
    due to injury).

    Speaking of Halo, there was an interesting article recently about his
    late half sister, Tosmah(Tim Tam-Cosmah, by Cosmic Bomb) that I'll enter 
    when I get a chance.
    
    John
481.449Tosmah RememberedDECWET::JDADDAMIOWhen in doubt, cop out!Sat Mar 06 1993 14:2752
As promised previously here's the story of Tosmah(Tim Tam x Cosmah). For 
those with short memories and those who weren't around, Tim Tam won the 1958
Kentucky Derby and Preakness Stakes. During the running of the Belmont 
Stakes(in which he finished a close second to the Irish horse, Cavan), 
Tim Tam fractured the sesamoids in his right front leg and was retired to 
stud. He was a good sire especially of stakes caliber horses. He died in the 
mid-80's at age 30 or 31. Northern Dancer is mentioned in the article on
Tosmah. He too was a member of the "Two Thirds Triple Crown Club" with wins
in the 1964 Kentucky Derby and Preakness Stakes and a second in the Belmont.
Northern Dancer then went home to Canada to work on the Canadian Triple Crown.
He won the first leg(Queen's Plate) and was retired to stud after suffering a 
training injury. From the Feb 6 1993 Blood Horse:

"		A DUAL CHAMPION AT THREE
Years before racings potentates came up with separate championship 
divisions for 3-year-olds and handicap performers, runners could take home top 
honors in both divisions. Among those who did was the late Anthony Imbessi's 
Hall of Fame filly Tosmah in 1964. The daughter of Tim Tam-Cosmah, by Cosmic 
Bomb, was named champion 3-year-old filly and shared top honors with the 
5-year-old Old Hat as champion handicap female. (The same year, 
Northern Dancer, a colt produced from Cosmah's half-sister Natalma, was 
champion 3-year-old male.)

Campaigned in Imbessi's Briardale Farm silks, Tosmah defeated Old Hat in 
consequetive added-money races that year. After beating Lt Stevens and other 
males in the Arlington Classic, Tosmah gave Old Hat a pound[in weight carried]
in Arlington's Matron Handicap a week later and came home a winner by half a 
length. Three weeks later in the Maskette Handicap at Aqueduct, Tosmah 
defeated Old Hat by six lengths as the only 3-year-old in the race while 
giving her rivals from four to 16 pounds. She closed out the year with wins in 
the Beldame Stakes and four other added-money races and a runner-up effort in 
the Vineland Handicap.

Tosmah, who was co champion juvenille filly with Castle Forbes in 1963, stayed 
in training through age five. She took the 1965 Maskette from Affectionately 
and Straight Deal and won three stakes the following year. Trained by 
Joseph W.(Monk) Mergler and ridden in all her races by Sam Boulmetis, Tosmah 
was retired with 23 wins from 39 races and earnings of $612,588, a sum which 
at the time was second to Cicada among all-time leading distaff earners.

Imbessi, who purchased Tosmah as a yearling privately from the filly's 
breeder, long-time friend Eugene Mori, bred Tosmah to Round Table in 1967, but 
the mare failed to get in foal. Tosmah produced her first two foals from the 
cover of Briardale home stallion Convex and her thrid foal(restricted stakes 
winner La Guidecca) by another home stallion, Royal I.J. Tosmah's next foal, 
by Ribot, was so arge that the mare was not able to carry a foal to term 
thereafter.

Tosmah's death last summer went largely unnoticed. The 31-year-old mare, who 
was elected to the Hall of Fame in 1984, was buried in her entirety at Mrs. 
Imbessi's Briardale Farm near Estell Manor, N.J."

481.450Neumeier, Ace handicapperKAHALA::HOLMESMon Mar 08 1993 12:32123
    This article should make new race handicappers salivate

        Neumie, Ace Handicapper by Paul Daley
        Lowell Sun 5-MAR-93    (Without permission)    
    
    "The best thing in the world
    is to win at the racetrack.  The
    second best thing in the world 
    is to lose at the racetrack."
            -Bob Neumeier

    You're right.  Bob neumeir wasn't the first to propos this
    theory of earthly nirvana.  But, it's a sure bet the popular
    Channel 4 (Boston MA) sportscaster believes every word.
    How can a person succumb to despair when there is another 
    pick six to be hit tomorrow ?

    The Weymouth native, who cut his professional teeth at the
    Newhouse School of Communications at Syracuse University,
    will have ample opportunity to test his burgeoning
    handicapping reputation this year.

    Following his excellent wotk for NBC television the last
    two years as the main paddock interviewer on the Breeders'
    Cup telecasts, ESPN has hired the Concord resident to join
    Chris Lincoln, Charlsie Cantey and Dave Johnson as a regular
    interviewer - handicapper for at least 12 segments of its
    "Race Across Anerica" series, which continues through
    October.

    Six of the remaining telecasts will be American Championship 
    Racing Series events.
    
    Additionally, the personable Neumeier appears each Monday night
    on a handicapping segment of "the Thoroughbred Digest" show on ESPN.
    Channel 4 news director Jeff Bartlett could block the moonlighting
    but probably won't.  "It will be part of our contract renewal.
    I don't see a problem," said Bartlett.

    Though an avid and tireless handicapper, Neumeir won't view himself
    as a tout on the productions.  "I am a broadcaster", he urges.
    "Others may be able to pick winners better, but I like to think 
    I can conduct interviews in the sport with anyone."

    Having been burned by the guy with the wavy hair and easy smile in a 
    few local contests, I can tell you that Mr. Neumeier is one
    heck of a handicapper.

    How else could a person win a $50,000 first prize in a 1990 Las
    Vegas handicapping tournament, hit five - count  'em, five - 
    'pick sixes' in New York over the last 16 months (ranging from
    less than $1,000 to $66,000) and finish second last fall in the Penn
    National World Series of Handicapping, pocketing a cool $40,000.

    Last Oct 10, Neumeier and broadcast partner Dan Kenny shared an $800 
    pick-six bet on Breeders' Cup Preview Day from Belmont and ended
    the telecast proudly telling the viewers about their $38,000 score.

    Neumeier returned the following day to lay it through the windows
    on Fowda ($17.40) to beat the Eclipse award-winning mare Paseana in 
    the Spinster Stakes at Keeneland.  As Grantland Rice might say
    "That ain't luck."

    Is Neumeier an overnight handicapping sensation ?  To hear him tell it,
    he is about as overnight a sensation as George Burns.

    "My father was a metuel clerk at Suffolk Downs on weekends.  But I 
    never went because I was always playing sports, especially baseball,"
    said Neumeier.

    "Then, when I was 15, we has a rainout one day and my father said, "Why 
    don't you come with me to the track ?"  he threw a Racing Form in my 
    face and gave me five dollars.  That was the start." he fondly remembered.

    Neumeier didn't do much with the sport for a few years because of school,
    sports and a lack of cash.  But he was fascinated by the handicapping
    process.  It was akin to learning a foreign language and attacking the
    stock market rolled into one.

    Still, he was a loser for the first 5 - 10 years.  But his competitive
    nature would not let him quit.  He had to bring the monster to its
    knees.  It became almost an obsession.

    What turned things around ?  "I think Andy Beyer's book, "Picking
    Winners," was what did it for me," smiled Neumeier.  "I came to 
    realize that accurate speed and pace figures are the most important
    factors.  They are the measuring stick.   Everything else is too
    subjective.  When you break a race down into fractional times you can
    actually visualize the race.

    At first, Neumeier utilized the figures provided by Bloodstock Research
    in Kentucky.  Then, he bought his own computer.  He supplements his home-
    made figures with the Ragozin sheets, sold daily at the track or through
    the mail.
    
    "I think Len Ragozin's Bounce Theory (where a horse's figure will regress
    off a lifetime best performance) is absolutely brilliant," gushed the
    handicapper, now really into the discussion.  "I never believed it, but 
    it is unreal.  It works best at the nmiddle-tier tracks like Arlington 
    Park, Calder and Louisiana Downs."

    Neumeier supplements his figures with trip handicapping and knowledge
    of grass breeding for turf racing.  But he definetly doesn't believe in
    tips.

    "I remember Williee Showmaker once said, "If I wasn't a jockey, I'd go 
    into the jockeys' room and book their bets,' laughed the guy his friends
    call Neumie.

    How do people in the television industry view Neumeier's hobby ?

    "To tell you the truth, I think even people in my industry view me
    differently,"  he said.  "But I never cared what people thought about me.
    It's ignorance to view handicappers as degenerates.  Tell them to
    go to a Vegas tournament and ask the people their professions.  They'd
    really be suprised."

    The only suprise here is that it took so long for Bob Neumeier to join
    the national elite in the coverage of the Sport of Kings.  I guess they
    thought he was just another overnight sensation.


481.451Neumeier? Humpfh!DECWET::JDADDAMIOWhen in doubt, cop out!Mon Mar 08 1993 16:2825
    Re "This article should make new race handicappers salivate"
    
    It sure should! Besides, Bob Neumeier is a GREAT example of a
    moderately good handicapper who is an excellent bettor. Betting $800 on
    a Pick 6 is an exercise in identifying the top contenders in 6 races
    and betting all combinations. It doesn't take great handicapping
    skills but it does take outstanding discipline, money management, wads
    of cash, etc. Steve Crist(a NY turf writer) is another who wins a lot of 
    Pick 6 bets, winning hundreds of thousands on that exotic alone. He freely 
    admits that he's got "average" handicapping skills and that he wins 
    because he plays the combinations rather than just his first choices
    in 6 races.
    
    Personable is the last word I would have used to describe Bob Neumeier
    after seeing him on ESPN's Thoroughbred Digest. Smug, conceited and
    opinionated come to mind more quickly! The opinionated part doesn't
    bother me much because without strong opinions there wouldn't be any
    need for competition of any kind. 
    
    What really bugs me about Neumeier's commentary on Thoroughbred Digest
    is that he does a LOT of "red boarding" on the show. The term "red 
    boarding" refers to the practice of looking at a race with 20-20 hindsight 
    and telling you how easy it was to pick the winner before the race. He 
    NEVER sticks his neck out by giving an opinion BEFORE a race but he's 
    sure happy to tell you how easy it was to pick the winner afterwards.
481.452racing newsDECWET::JDADDAMIOWhen in doubt, cop out!Mon Mar 08 1993 17:3273
    Some racing news:
    
    The 3 YO pitcure for the KY Derby is about as blurry as it can be.
    Gilded Time(1992 2 YO Champion) is out for 6 months with foot problems.
    He wasn't expected to want to run the 10 furlongs required for the
    Derby anyway but...River Special, who is the winter book favorite,
    missed the San Rafael(A Gr II used as a prep for the Santa Anita Derby)
    due to a fever. He's back in training and is aiming for the San
    Felipe(Gr II, 8.5 furlongs) next Sunday and, if all is well, the Santa
    Anita Derby(Gr I, 9 furlongs) on April 3.
    
    In Florida, the 3 YO's haven't sorted themselves out at all. The
    Fountain of Youth(Gr II, 8.5 furlongs), which is a common prep for the 
    Florida Derby, had so many entries that it had to be split into 2 
    divisions! Duc du'Sligovil won one division in 1:45 and Sea Tower won the 
    second in 1:44 4/5
    COMEBACKS:
    
    The 1992 KY Derby winner, Lil E Tee has come back to the races after a
    long rest. He had surgery on his ankles after the 1992 Preakness and
    had been recuperating. He resumed training at the Fair Grounds in
    Loiusiana a couple months ago and then shipped to Oaklawn Park in
    Arkansas. He won a good allowance race there with an impressive move on
    the rail. He won going away by 6 lengths under a hand ride.
    
    Alydeed, who came to American attention by winning the 1992 Derby Trial
    and finishing a strong second in the 1992 Preakness, is back racing
    too. You may remember he went home to Canada to contest their Triple
    Crown and won the first leg(Queen's Plate). He then started a puzzling
    series of loses. The last time I heard of him racing was in last
    August's Travers Stakes at Saratoga. He appeared in a FLorida 6.5
    furlong allowance sprint race last Saturday. He sure looked like the 
    "old" Alydeed! Perret kept him just off the pace and then pushed the
    button. Alydeed opened up to win going away under a hand ride.
    
    Best Pal, like Paseana, is having a difficult start to his 1993 season 
    after a long layoff. He was out 9 months after developing sore splint 
    bones last May. He came back to the races about a month ago and finished 
    a good second in his first race but was DQ'ed to 4th or 5th for 
    interfering with another horse. Best Pal had won the 1992 edition of the 
    Santa Anita Handicap(Gr I, 10 furlongs, $1,000,000) and he went off the 
    favorite in the 1993 edition last Saturday but didn't quite seem himself. 
    
    He ran fairly well but had traffic problems due to his inside post which 
    forced him to go about 8 wide turning into the stretch. He started to 
    close then bumped another horse and seemed to quit trying. He finished 
    5th. If he had continued to close, he might have gotten up for 3rd which 
    would have been a credible finish given the ground he lost with his wide 
    trip. Nine months is a LONG time to be away and it seems that he's still 
    not quite back in form after that long rest.
    
    Charlie Wittingham(The Bald Eagle who trained Ferdinand, Sunday Silence
    and a host of other great horses) sent out Sir Beaufort(a 6 YO son of
    Pleasant Colony) to win the "Big 'Cap" as it's called around Santa
    Anita. This makes the 9th time that Mr Wittingham(who will be 80 next 
    month!) has trained the winner of the Santa Anita Handicap.
    
    In the Santa Anita Oaks(Gr I, 3 YO fillies, 8.5 fulrongs) which was run
    on Sunday, it was supposed to be a match-up between Eliza(Allen
    Paulson's filly who was 2 YO filly champion who has rested since winning 
    the 1992 Breeders' Cup Juvenille Filly race) and Likeable Style, a big long 
    striding daughter of Nijinsky who won the Las Virgenes(Gr I) a few weeks 
    ago. Many consider Likeable Style to be the best 3 YO of either sex at 
    Santa Anita. The wise guys also think that Eliza won't go a distance 
    because she's by Mt Livermore who was a sprinter and is a sire of
    sprinters(e.g. the 1991 sprint champion, Housebuster). Well, Eliza used
    her sprinting speed to good tactical advantage. Turning for home, she
    opened up the way Housebuster used to do. She went from second to
    having a lead of 5-6 lengths in 100 yards or so. Her sprint caught the
    others by surprise and a VERY tired Eliza struggled home to win by
    about 2 lengths. Likeable Style did not run true to her form and
    finished well up the track in the middle of the pack. Hopefully, she
    just had a bad day and didn't suffer any physical problems.
481.453KAHALA::HOLMESTue Mar 09 1993 12:5421
    Well I guess we're all entitled to our opinions.


>    What really bugs me about Neumeier's commentary on Thoroughbred Digest
>    is that he does a LOT of "red boarding" on the show. The term "red 
>    boarding" refers to the practice of looking at a race with 20-20 hindsight 
>    and telling you how easy it was to pick the winner before the race. He 
>    NEVER sticks his neck out by giving an opinion BEFORE a race but he's 
>    sure happy to tell you how easy it was to pick the winner afterwards.

    My point in previous notes on betting.  My invitation to anyone to enter 
    your bets in this notes file before the race is still open.

    What bugged me about Neumeir's sports reporting on Ch 4 was one of the
    last racing accidents, when the horse broke it's leg and ran a few more
    steps, Neumeir showed that clip in slow motion about 5 times per
    broadcast.  Looked like the horse ran a 1/4 mile on the broken leg.

    Bill

481.454Eddie Delahoussaye get 5,000th winDECWET::JDADDAMIOWhen in doubt, cop out!Thu Mar 11 1993 16:4128
    Eddie Delahoussaye went to work yesterday at Santa Anita needing one win 
    to become the 14th jockey in history to win 5,000 or more races. He got 
    THREE!
    
    His 5,000th win came in the fifth race, a 6 1/2 furlong allowance on
    the turf. His mount was the favorite, Ackler who is sired by the great
    racehorse AckAck which had been trained by Charlie Wittingham.
    
    In a post race interview, Eddie D. said that this had been a "great
    personal goal" and that he had been happy 10 years ago when he reached
    3,000. He also said, "I thought I'd give it up when I turned 30 but 
    things just got better." They sure have! Since then, Eddie D has won 5
    Breeders' Cup races including the 1992 Classic, 2 Kentucky Derbys, the
    Preakness Stakes, the Belmont Stakes, and a ton of other major stakes.
    
    He also won the 7th race( 6 1/2 furlongs, dirt, $16,000 claiming)
    aboard Stans Natti and the 9th(1 1/16 miles, dirt, $12,500 claiming)
    on Frequent Flyer.
    
    Who else has won 5,000 races? Names like Johnny Longden, Willie
    Shoemaker, Angel Cordero and Lafiit Pincay come to mind. Pretty good
    company, eh? Eddie D's one of the very best and IMHO should have been
    champion jockey for 1992. His rides on A.P. Indy in the Belmont,
    Jockey Club Gold Cup and Breeders' Cup Classic were absolutely
    impeccable! Yes, I know they lost the Gold Cup but it was a great effort
    by both horse and rider after being bothered badly at the start.
    
    John
481.455A TV HandicapperDECWET::JDADDAMIOWhen in doubt, cop out!Tue Mar 16 1993 20:1462
    Re the few about handicapping, betting and handicappers(specifically Bob
    Neumeir)...
    
    The only handicapper I've seen on TV that seems to be outstanding in
    terms of picking winners vs playing all the combinations is Jerry
    Brown. Every week, he sticks his neck out with predictions about the
    week's stakes races on SportsChannel's "Post Time" show. He's also the 
    guy who peddles the "ThoroughGraph" performance charts. He claims
    they're better than speed figures because the numbers take into account 
    ground loss length of the race, and other factors. His charts also
    place the figures in a way that makees picking up form cycles easily as
    well as displaying multiple years of figures side by side for
    comparison. If anybody in NH area is interested, I think he's giving a free
    seminar on Fri Mar 19 at Rockingham.
    
    His record with the predictions he makes on TV is pretty good. For
    example, last week, he said:
    
    Bonnie Miss Stakes(Gulfstream Park): Sky Beauty should win but Dispute 
    has an excellent chance. Bet Sky Beauty to win, an Exacta with Sky Beauty 
    over Dispute and reverse(Dispute over Sky Beauty) for half as much.
    
    Gulfstream Handicap(Gulfstream Park): Devil His Due is about to run the 
    race of his life. Bet him to win.
    
    New Orleans Handicap(FairGrounds): Delafield will beat the favorite...
    (whose name I have forgotten)
    
    Bayshore(Aqueduct): Farmonthefreeway to win
    
    San Felipe Stakes(Santa Anita): He thought River Special wasn't fit
    enough to like at a short price. He liked Corby & Personal Hope in an
    Exacta.
    
    I made the following mythical bets based on those recommendations:
    
    Bonnie Miss Stakes(Gulfstream Park): 
     $2 Sky Beauty to win 
     $2 Exacta Sky Beauty over Dispute 
     $2 Exacta Dispute over Sky Beauty
    
    	Dispute won over Sky Beauty - $2 Exacta paid 20.60 at Gulfstream
    
    Gulfstream Handicap(Gulfstream Park): $2 Devil His Due  to win
    	Devil His Due won and a $2 win ticket paid $25.80 at Gulfstream
    
    New Orleans Handicap(FairGrounds): $2 Delafield  to win
    	Delafield did beat the favorite but unortunately Delafield was second 
    	to a 20-1 shot!
    
    Bayshore(Aqueduct): $2 Farmonthefreeway to win
    	Racing at Aqueduct was cancelled due to the blizzard.
    
    San Felipe Stakes(Santa Anita): 
     $2 Exacta Dispute Corby over Personal Hope 
    	Corby won with Personal Hope second. The $2 Exacta paid $39.20 at
    	Santa Anita
    
    That's a total of $14 wagered(including the cancelled Aqueduct race) with 
    a return of $85.60. That ain't bad advice for TV! 
    
    John
481.456Handicapping scheme resultsEASI::GEENENMe transmitte sursum, Caledoni.Tue Mar 23 1993 18:5768
    For the last three Saturdays I've been handicapping the races at
    Golden Gate Fields and making wagers accordingly.  My current scheme
    seems to work as expected, so far.  The tenets of my scheme are these:
    
    1.  Handicap to find the horse most likely to finish in the money,
        restricting my bet to the top three favorites in the betting.
    
    2.  Bet on this horse to show only (sometimes to place if there is
        no show betting).
    
    3.  Vary the amount of the wager in proportion to the horse's
        probability of finishing in the money (see my previous notes).
    
    I have determined that in order to make a profit, I must be correct
    75%-80% of the time.  It takes roughly 2.7 won wagers to offset one
    lost wager.  At any rate, here are the results for the last three
    Saturdays:
    
    March 6   10 races on the card, I was correct in 8 of the 10 races
              for a 7% profit on money wagered.
    
    March 13  10 races on the card, only 9 races were bettable (one race
              had first time starters as the three favorites), I was
              correct in 8 of 9 races for a profit of 21% on money
              wagered.
    
    March 20  11 races, 10 on Golden Gate's card and the Florida Derby on
              simulcast, I was correct in 8 of the 11 races (including
              the derby) for a profit of 3%.
    
    Average profit for the three Saturdays is 10.34%.  I'm aiming for my
    scheme to average 10%-20% for the rest of the meet.  Maybe it's not
    as good as the return posted in the last note, but I'd be willing to
    bet that that performance won't stand up over the long run.  Indeed,
    I'm uncertain about the long term prospects of my scheme, but it will
    be fun and interesting to find out.
    
    About the Florida Derby, Silver To Silver was the Golden Gate Favorite,
    Storm Tower was next, followed by Living Vicariously.  I had already
    ruled out Living Vicariously because of too many fading finishes.  My
    preliminary handicapping had shown Silver To Silver as edging out
    Storm Tower as being more likely to finish in the money, but it looked
    like both would be in the money at the end.  I finally settled on
    Storm Tower because the show bet would pay better on him, being
    second favorite.  Anyone who saw the race knows it was a nail biter as
    far as Storm Tower was concerned.  I was really pleased when ST not
    finished in the money, but two relative longshots filled in the
    winning trio.  My show bet paid $4.80 at GGF (I think it was $2.60
    at GP) for a profit of 140%.  But 3 of 11 races last Saturday were
    duds.  In two of the races, my horse was blocked in on the rail and
    the jockey tried 2 or 3 times to get around in the stretch, but quit
    when it became to late to try.  In the other race I missed, my horse
    (brimming with early speed in past performances) failed to live up to
    his billing and languished in the back of the pack for a less than
    stellar performance.  None of the three favorites finished in the money
    in that race, a rare occurrence, happening in only 1.2% of all races.
    
    I'd like to be able to post my picks in the notes conference before
    the races go off, but I don't know which horse I'm going to bet on
    until I see the tote board at the track to know who the top three
    favorites are.  I don't know how much my wager is going to be until
    the horses are about to be loaded in the gate.  I place my bet at
    the very last minute.  I've been going to the jockey club where there
    are no lines, so I can be assured of not being shut out.
    
    So far, so good.  More later.
    
    Carl
481.4573 YO's on the Derby TrailDECWET::JDADDAMIOWhen in doubt, cop out!Tue Mar 23 1993 22:3740
    Talking about Saturday's Fla Derby reminds me. Oh, in case anybody
    missed. Bull In The Heather won the 9 furlong Gr I Florida Derby. He's a 
    son of 1987 KY Derby winner, Breeder's Cup Classic winner and Horse of the
    Year, Ferdinand. This is Ferdinand's first crop of racing age so this
    is impressive. Ferdinand has a long way to go though before he
    surpasses his own sire as a stallion. Ferdinand is by Nijinsky who
    sired at least 145 stakes winners. I'm unsure of the count because
    there are many Nijinsky foals still racing but when he died last year,
    Nijinsky was tied with HIS sire(Northern Dancer) with a record 145
    stakes winners among their foals.
    
    But, back to this year's 3 YOs....I heard conflicting reports on ESPN's
    TB Digest and yesterday's "Santa Anita Tonight". The Santa Anita show
    said that Allen Paulson's Corby is entered in the Santa Anita Derby on
    April 3rd. ESPN says that Paulson says that Corby is going to Kentucky
    for the Blue Grass Stakes, Diazo is going to Golden Gate for the
    California Derby, and *Eliza* is going in the Santa Anita Derby.
    
    Furthermore, ESPN showed the results of the most recent TRC Triple
    Crown Poll which ranks the filly Eliza as 3rd or 4th in the ranking!
    Now, this is just plain NUTS, folks. Anybody who say Eliza's last race
    in the 8.5 furlong Santa Anita Oaks (Gr I for 3 YO fillies) couldn't 
    help but be impressed by her turn of foot. But, anybody with EYES that 
    still work saw her practically *STAGGER* under a hard ride while the 
    rest of the field closed the gap on her. That is NOT a horse that wants
    to go the 9 furlongs of the Santa Anita Derby or the 10 furlongs of the
    Kentucky Derby........ Remeber what Paulson called her last year? "A
    female Arazi" I think he's right. Arazi was a miler and so is Eliza.
    Neither of them is a stayer.
    
    I still think the best West Coast colt is River Special. I also think
    that Likeable Style(Oh yeah! She's by Nijinsky so I know he's got at
    least 146...) is the best 3 YO filly at route distances. However, I do
    think that Corby and Personal Hope are probably fitter right now and
    they may place ahead of River Special in the Santa Anita Derby.
    
    Watch for Gerry Romero's colt(Dixieland Heat by Dixieland Band) out of 
    the Louisiana Derby too. He's undefeated so far but he hasn't gone 9
    furlongs yet. He was impressive the couple times I've seen him run even
    though he was a little green. He's only been raced 5 times.
481.458Yeah, but...EASI::GEENENMe transmitte sursum, Caledoni.Wed Mar 24 1993 01:0124
    I get it now.  Ferdinand (the bull) begets Bull In The Heather.  Ain't
    they funny.  Good race though.  I had passed right by BITH and 3rd
    place Wallenda as being also rans.  I guess that's why it's called
    horse racing.
    
    Every year when KY Derby time rolls around, the TB world is quick to
    herald any filly who looks like she might be able to run the classic
    distances.  This year it's Eliza, who might be a miler, but is the
    onlt filly to choose from at the moment.  I think her current status
    is based on her performance at the Breeder's Cup last year.
    
    About Arazi though.  He really was great as a two year old.  A
    friend of mine who owns/breeds/races TBs filled me in on why such a
    great horse turned out to be such a dud - the knees.  Arazi had
    both knees operated on to remove bone chips.  According to my friend,
    who has encountered this in a couple of his horses over the years,
    a lot of horses faced with the same operation don't recover to their
    pre-operation ability.  Also, the younger the horse, the greater the
    likelihood they won't recover.  He said you don't hear about this
    phenomenon unless the horse recovers and goes on to adequate or better
    performance, or unless a previously adequate or better horse fails to
    recover, like Arazi.  I knew Arazi had had the operation, but was unaware
    of the likely outcome.  My friend had the sense, unlike me, to not bet
    Arazi in last year's derby or in the BC mile.
481.459Subject to change w/o noticeDECWET::JDADDAMIOWhen in doubt, cop out!Wed Mar 24 1993 16:0711
    You're right about Arazi's knees. They were probably his undoing. The
    problem was that his owner and the press weren't smart enough to
    realize that he would need time to recuperate and might not regain his
    form....
    
    BTW, I wouldn't put TOO much faith in Mr Paulson's press announcements
    about which races his horses are running in...On MOnday before the 1992
    Breeders' Cup, he said that Arazi would run in the 10 furlong Classic.
    By Wedsnesday, he had changed his mind and decided the colt would run
    in the Mile... Kinda like catalog prices....subject to change without
    notice..........
481.460St Jovite retired to Payson StudDECWET::JDADDAMIOWhen in doubt, cop out!Wed Mar 24 1993 16:1917
    The other Saturday, I tuned in the Gulfstream Park Handicap expecting
    to see European Champion St Jovite begin his 1993 US campaign. I was 
    disappointed to see that he had scratched but figured that Roger Attfield
    (his trainer) had decided St Jovite wasn't ready.
    
    That was a false assumption. St Jovite had actually injured himself in a 
    workout. It turned out that this was a recurrence of a soft tissue 
    injury that he had suffered as a 2 YO. His owner, Virginia Kraft Payson, 
    has announced that he will be retired to stud rather than attempt a 
    comeback. 
    
    While I'm disappointed that we won't have the privelege of seeing this
    great horse compete in the US, I'm glad they put his safety ahead of the
    prize money and prestige of winning more races. Like Charlie Wittingham
    said when Sunday Silence was retired due to fairly minor injury, "He
    could come back but what if he broke down? We'd look pretty foolish
    hauling him off the track."
481.461Not to mention...EASI::GEENENFac me cochleario vomere.Thu Mar 25 1993 00:112
    Not to mention that they can make a bundle off of stud fees.  And a
    broken horse doesn't generate too many of those.
481.462Not necessarilyDECWET::JDADDAMIOWhen in doubt, cop out!Thu Mar 25 1993 16:156
    re: "a broken horse doesn't generate too many of those." 
    
    Not true!(unless he dies from his injuries) TB breeders make lots of 
    noise about breeding sound horses but they are AWFUL quick to overlook 
    a history of unsoundness or breakdowns in a sire if his offspring are 
    winning, even if lots of the offspring breakdown!
481.463Dark Ages of RacingDECWET::JDADDAMIOWhen in doubt, cop out!Thu Mar 25 1993 16:5132
    The "Dark Ages of Racing" may be upon us......
    
    Last year saw the demise of Longacres(in WA), Canterbury Downs(MI),
    troubles at Foxboro and Suffolk Downs in MA, crisis situations in NH at
    Rockingham, down in Florida, etc
    
    But, the bad news doesn't stop there. In this week's Blood Horse, there
    are articles saying that Garden State Park(NJ) and the Philly
    track(can't recall the name right now) which is just across the river
    will probably be closed soon. Garden State Park is out of debt and
    making money but Robert Brennan says it's not making enough money to
    pay a decent return on the investors money. The commercial value of the
    property is astronomical compared to the return from racing. Garden
    State is expected to close at the end of its current meeting which is
    sometime in May. The Philly track is heavily in debt, losing money and
    may go sooner than that.
    
    EVEN WORSE, the NY Racing Association has announced that they are
    behind their income of last year and have to cut costs. Purses are
    going to be cut something like 2% in general. The $500,000 Gr I NYRA Mile
    has been cancelled. The Gr I Nassau County and Gr I Suburban Handicap 
    stakes have had their purses reduced by $100,000 & $200,000
    respectively. Santa Anita isn't doing that great either but they
    haven't announced any major cutbacks....yet.
    
    When I was growing up in PA, there were tracks all through PA, Maryland
    and Delaware, many of which are gone now(e.g. Havre de Grace, Timonium, 
    etc) but with the loss of Garden State and the Philly track, the Philly
    area will be without a racetrack for the first time since WWII. The
    nearest track will be the shaky Atlantic City track(I think) other than
    that Philly area race fans face the long trip out to Penn National,
    down to Laurel, or up to the North Jersey & NY tracks......
481.464Philadelphia ParkEASI::GEENENFac me cochleario vomere.Thu Mar 25 1993 21:5833
    The Philly area track you're thinking of is named Philadelphia Park,
    which isn't in Philadelphia at all, but at Bensalem, PA, a town about
    20 miles NE of Philly on I-95.  You can see the track from the PA
    Turnpike.  Just take the Street Road exit from either I-95 or the
    turnpike.
    
    It's a mile track.  When I was there last December, attendance was
    very low I thought for a sunny Saturday and Sunday.  I'd never heard
    of any of the horses, jockeys, or trainers.  Aqueduct was running at
    the time, so the only shippers were from Maryland and Delaware.  I
    thought the facility was very nice, but the quality of the races was
    nothing to write home about.  LOTS of bottom claimers.  The only
    people in attendance seemed to be the hard core handicappers and a
    few sports writers.
    
    Here in the SF bay area, I'm pleased to report that GGF and Bay
    Meadows are still hanging in there, although I've heard that some
    property speculators have made an offer for Bay Meadows, and the
    owners are taking a hard look because profits aren't what they used
    to be.
    
    My friend the TB horse person, says times are tough because of the
    recession, but also because the gambling industry is providing a lot
    of competition, what with Reno, Vegas, Tahoe, Laughlin (all in NV),
    but also the Indian reservations and the cruise ships, not to mention
    video poker on practically every street corner, and of course the
    various lotteries.
    
    Actually, I think I'm probably to blame for the demise of horse racing.
    It seems that every time I get interested in something, it gets dis-
    continued.
    
    Carl
481.465Mommouth ParkCSC32::KOELLHOFFERFri Mar 26 1993 04:162
    Does anybody know how Mommouth Park in Nj is doing ?
    Carl
481.466Santa Anita CuriousitiesDECWET::JDADDAMIOWhen in doubt, cop out!Fri Mar 26 1993 16:4819
    Santa Anita racing shows are usually fun, even the talk shows that they 
    have on the 2 days a week they don't race. The talk shows usually look 
    at recent Santa Anita stakes and tell ya what the "excuses" were for well 
    respected horses that got beat or some off-beat discussion of curious
    things. For example, they looked at Sir Beaufort's win in the Santa Anita 
    Handicap. More specifically, they showed the official win photo of Sir 
    Beaufort winning by a nose. Then, they pointed out that the horses' ears 
    as well as the jockeys' bodies were in a dead heat. Sir Beaufort won 
    because his head was longer than the second horse's head. In other 
    words, Sir Beaufort didn't win by A nose, he won by HIS nose. And that
    made a difference of $350,000 in purse money between 1st & 2nd...Hmmmm 
    maybe a lot of horses will get nose jobs now to help win those photo 
    finishes...
    
    Another curious thing that Trevor Denman pointed out on last night's
    racing show. There was a dead heat in yesterday's first race at Santa
    Anita. What's so curious about that? There's lots of dead heats...but
    both horses in the dead heat were 5 YO mares sired by the same stallion!
    Now, that just doesn't happen everyday!
481.467Santa Anita's big weekend.DECWET::JDADDAMIOWhen in doubt, cop out!Mon Apr 05 1993 19:2640
    Santa Anita had a big weekend. Santa Anita Derby and two other graded
    stakes on Saturday followed by the Gr I Santa Barbara Handicap(10
    furlongs on turf for F & M) on Sunday.
    
    The Santa Anita Derby field was small with the defections of Corby,
    Diazo and River Special. Bob Hess, River Special's trainer, announced
    that he needed another week to get the colt ready so he was taking him
    to Golden Gate's California Derby instead because he didn't want eny
    excuses in his next race. Unfortunately, Hess later discovered that 
    River Special was injured. He is now sidelined for several months to
    recuperate.
    
    As everybody in their right mind expected, Eliza could not get the 9
    furlongs. She did a bit better than I thought she would and hung on for
    3rd. I figured that Devoted Brass would get up over her along with
    Personal Hope and Union City. Personal Hope was pretty impressive
    taking the lead and fighting off Eliza's best move as well as Union City's
    late charge. The time might look slow but I think the quick early
    fractions account for that. I'm not sure that Personal Hope can go so
    quickly early and still have enough left to be in front after 10
    furlongs. That's pretty tough to do. So, their race strategy will be
    important for him to win the KY Derby.
    
    Yesterday's Santa Barbara was even more exciting even though the field
    was even smaller than the SA Derby field! Trishyde(I think it's spelled
    like that.) went off as the even money favorite. ALl last year she had
    raced in the shadows of Flawlessly, Kostroma and Super Staff. With
    Flawlessly and Kostroma retired and Super Staff facing retirement if
    her injury doesn't heal up soon, Trishyde looked ready to come into her
    own. 
    
    The race really turned into a match race between Trishyde and the
    talented Exchange. They hooked up on the final turn and battled through
    every foot of the stretch run. Every time Trishyde put her head in
    front Exchange came back. Approaching the wire it looked like Trishyde
    got her head in front again. Unfortunately, she hit the wire in the
    wrong phase of her stride(i.e. with her head and neck drawn up) and
    Exchange won on the nod. It was the best race so far this season.
    
    John
481.468Santa Anita DerbyEASI::GEENENFac me cochleario vomere.Tue Apr 06 1993 00:2332
    My pre-race prediction was, of course, the speed duel between Personal
    Hope and Eliza, with Devoted Brass and Union City as late closers,
    Devoted Brass being a later closer than Union City.  I had figured that
    the winner would be Personal Hope, having won the speed duel over
    Eliza, or one of the closers, probably Devoted Brass.  But I bet on
    Eliza to show.  I had determined that she had enough staying power at
    9 furlongs to be in the money at the end.  I also thought that
    Personal Hope would fade somewhat, not enough to be overtaken by Eliza,
    but to be caught by Devoted Brass or Union City.
    
    Much to my surprise, Personal Hope hung on, just barely, to edge out
    Union City with Eliza closer than I would have thought.  One length
    behind is not bad at all and shows that Eliza can run with the big
    boys.  After all, she did beat Devoted Brass and the other horses in
    the race, all males.  Eliza paid $3.20 for the show finish at GGF. I
    was looking for $2.60 or $2.80, so I'll take the lagniappe any day.
    
    But I doubt that the early speed routine will hold up at 10 furlongs.
    It seems to me that Devoted Brass's and Union City's come-from-behind
    style would be favored over the wire-the-field style of Personal Hope,
    Eliza, or any other early speed horse.  Had the Santa Anita Derby
    been another furlong, it looked like Union City would have overtaken
    Personal Hope, and Devoted Brass might have caught Eliza for third.
    Exciting race.  I hope the remaining derby preps are as exciting.
    
    Did anyone see the Remington Park Derby?  That was a pretty good
    finish, too.  Too bad about El Atroz, though.  I always give the
    California horses a pretty good look, and I was hoping he would do
    better, but, after examining the PP's in the form, I couldn't see
    enough to base a bet on.
    
    Carl
481.469Eliza, Front runners & routesDECWET::JDADDAMIOWhen in doubt, cop out!Tue Apr 06 1993 18:1437
    Carl,
    
    Obviously, we disagree on Eliza's ability. I think she's a top class
    sprinter/miler but I  can't see her winning at middle distances or true
    routes. BTW, Allen Paulson announced that Eliza will run only against 
    fillies in the future. 
    
    I think she'll even have a tough time beating fillies at 9 furlongs or 
    longer distances especially if the likes of November Snow and 
    Turn Back The Alarm come back to form after their injuries which kept 
    them out the Bredder's Cup last fall. In fact, I think there are several 
    East Coast fillies that will give her a TOUGH time. The West coast also 
    has one or two fillies that I think will better Eliza over a distance of 
    ground(e.g. Likeable Style).
    
    The problem with picking a KY Derby winner is that it always looks more
    like a bloody cavalry charge more than a horse race! In many years, 
    traffic problems, strategy and racing luck seem to have as much to do 
    with winning as ability. Take Shoe's win on Ferdinand for example. Shoe
    moved Ferdinand through a hole on the rail and pulled off to win the
    race. That's luck as much as the jockey's skill and the horse's
    ability. I remember what Angel Cordero said about Shoe's win, "Shoe
    look pretty smart sitting off the leaders and moving through on the rail. 
    But, what if those horses in front of him don't tire? Then he don't 
    look so smart and it's a different race."
    
    As for speed not holding up at 10 furlongs, tell that to Spend A Buck
    and Winning Colors who wired their fields in the KY Derby! It always
    amazes me how frequently stretch runners(like Rubiano) win sprints and
    front runners win routes. Even Secretariat's Belmont was won from the
    front! If I remember right, he went to the lead in the first or second
    furlong of that 12 furlong race.  In fact, I think no horse that's won
    the Belmont in the past 20 years has been worse than 3rd with 3
    furlongs left in the race. So, don't count front runners out in the
    Derby!
    
    John
481.470GBLAUT::JANICKIV. Janicki DCE Engineering DTN 226-5980Wed Apr 07 1993 17:2814
I remember that Bold Forbes won the Derby('76) from the front.

And I remember a supposed miler Conquistor Cielo winning the
1 1/2 mile Belmont stakes wire to wire.

I agree with John. The fields in the Ky.Derby are usually
so huge that luck plays an incredible factor in the race.
A front runner can win if he/she can relax while on the lead.
If they can't relax and/or are pressed by the usual speedball_
who_doesn't_belong_in_the_race_but_is_entered_anyway, they
usually don't have it. From what I've read, Eliza's inability
to relax before and during the race may be her worst handicap.

Vicky
481.471I'm not counting them outEASI::GEENENFac me cochleario vomere.Wed Apr 07 1993 17:3524
    I'm not counting out the front runners in this year's classics, I'm
    saying that the current crop of front runners doesn't seem to have any
    Secretariats or Spend A Bucks in it.  And so I think that opens the
    door for the late closers.  Personal Hope held off Union City's late
    charge at 9 furlongs, but using that same early speed style, I doubt
    he can do it at 10 furlongs.  Then there's Devoted Brass who was
    gaining on the leading SA derby trio in the stretch.  Given another
    furlong, I think he would have been right there in the money at the
    end.  If the SA derby contestants run the same race in the KY derby,
    the edge goes to the come-from-behind style, rather than wire-to-wire.
    It'll be interesting to see what happens in the remaining preps.
    
    Maybe there is no route future for Eliza, but I saw a game filly at
    the SA derby run HER race.  She was beaten, no doubt, but turned in
    a competitive performance, being beaten by only one length.  I don't
    think she would hold up over a longer distance.  Indeed, her style
    seems more suited to 6 or 8 furlongs.  But I was impressed with her
    being able to run with the boys and beat all but two of them.
    KY derby material?  I doubt it.  Impressive performance at 9 furlongs?
    You bet!  Route future?  Stick to 6 or 8 furlongs for best chances.
    Future success against other top fillies/mares?  I'm a believer, but
    time will tell.
    
    Carl
481.472Where's my car parked?DECWET::JDADDAMIOWhen in doubt, cop out!Wed Apr 07 1993 21:1426
    OK, so we really AGREE about Eliza's style and best distance. I'm not
    taking anything away from her. I just thought her OWNER was crazy for
    even *trying* her under those conditions. He wants the KY Derby win so
    badly that I think he is sometimes blind to what is best for his
    horses in terms of distance and competition. 
    
    I'm not overwhelmed with any particular horse for the Derby this year.
    I mean, the first time I saw SUnday Silence run, I knew he was gonna
    beat Easy Goer in the Derby. And when I saw Strike The Gold's closing
    kick for second in the Blue Grass, I knew he'd win...but this year
    nothing grabs my attention.
    
    That could mean that it's either a mediocre crop of 3 YOs OR an
    incredibly deep crop with good talent everywhere you look. Ya can't
    tell this early in the year.
    
    Vicky,
    
    I'm impressed! I didn't know anybody else remembered that much trivia
    about races. You're right of course that both Bold Forbes and
    Conquistador Cielo wired their fields in the classics but I figured
    that was too long ago for anybody but us die-hard fans to remember. ;-)
    
    How come I can't remember where I parked my car but can remember every
    KY Derby winner since 1875(that's the first year.) and sometimes who
    ran second?
481.473Ah memories...GBLAUT::JANICKIV. Janicki DCE Engineering DTN 226-5980Thu Apr 08 1993 14:1011
Yes, I can remember pedigrees and who won what races, but
I can't remember to make it to meetings on time. Go figure. :-)

Conquistador Cielo was easy to remember. I was working at
Belmont Park that day and had some money on him. 

I think the 3 years olds won't settle out until the end of
the summer. Seems to me we have alot of decent horses this
year.

Vicky
481.474Why so much prestige?DECWET::JDADDAMIOWhen in doubt, cop out!Thu Apr 08 1993 17:3822
    Re "I think the 3 years olds won't settle out until the end of the
    summer."
    
    I agree. I don't think they EVER show their true ability until 
    summer. I've never understood why the KY Derby is considered the
    most prestigous 3 YO race. For my money, the Belmont Stakes is more
    indicative of a horse's true ability because of the distance and the
    fact that racing luck plays a much smaller part in the victory.
    
    I've thought about it a LOT and I can't understand why the KY Derby has
    more prestige than The Travers Stakes. They're the same distance. The
    Travers offers more money. The Travers is older. The horses are at a
    better stage of development in August. The Travers is run at Saratoga 
    which is a first class track and Churchhill Downs is a second rate track 
    except for Derby Week. For example, the ONLY Grade I races at Churchhill
    Downs are the KY Derby and the KY Oaks(3 YO fillies) which is run the day 
    before. In fact, there are only 5 Grade I races in the Commonwealth of
    Kentucky! Saratoga has 35 stakes(30 graded) in its 30 day meeting! 
    
    The only reason I can come up with for the amount of prestige given to 
    the KY Derby is that it is the FIRST test of 3 YOs at a distance beyond
    9 furlongs. End of soapbox rantings and ravings!
481.475What happened to Corby?EASI::GEENENQuo signo natus est?Mon Apr 12 1993 16:0836
    My pre-race prediction in the Bluegrass Stakes was that Paw-paw Hank
    and Corby would duke it out for the early lead and Corby would emerge
    from that battle as the one to catch.  I also thought that Dixieland
    Heat and Prairie Bayou would be the ones doing the catching.  Well,
    as it turns out I was partially correct.  The heavy favorite Corby
    languished about in the middle of the pack all the way around the
    track.  As expected, Dixieland Heat and Prairie Bayou broke from the
    pack down the stretch with PB winning the race, DH showing, and I
    think it was Wallenda placing.
    
    Interestingly, an examination of the horses's styles and Beyer speeds
    was a fair predictor of the outcome:
    
         Horse            Style          Beyer speed average
         -----            -----          -------------------
         Corby            early speed        90.2
         Prairie Bayou    late closer        92.0
         Dixieland Heat   pace presser       90.1
    
    Late closers tend to earn their speed ratings on the far turn but
    mostly down the stretch; they usually come from the back half of the
    pack to pass everyone.  Pace pressers stay close in contention
    until the stretch where they traditionally take advantage of tiring
    leaders.  Prairie Bayou and Dixieland Heat lived up to their pre-race
    billing, in my estimation, but what happened to Corby?  Could be he
    had a bad day or maybe there is some problem like what happened to
    River Special earlier this year or Casual Lies last year.
    
    BTW, I decided on Prairie Bayou, based on style and speed rating.  He
    paid $8.40 $4.20 and $3.60 at GGF.  I bet on him to show because I
    thought he would have a hard time catching Corby, being hard pressed
    by Dixieland Heat.  It certainly was exciting the way PB burst from
    the pack coming down the stretch.  Each race is the most exciting
    couple of minutes of my life.
    
    Carl
481.476Prairie BayouDECWET::JDADDAMIOWhen in doubt, cop out!Mon Apr 12 1993 17:4425
    I don't know what happened to Corby but he never ran a lick, did he? I
    think he finished next to last! Even if he turns out to prefer shorter
    distances, he's better than that. Hopefully, it was just a bad day and
    he wasn't injured.
    
    Prairie Bayou is an interesting story. He's like Rodney Dangerfield.
    Nobody gives him any respect! His owner and trainer thought he was a
    2nd or 3rd rate horse. They sent him to the "hinterlands" aka winter 
    racing at Aqueduct(Gawd, it's boring!). Winter racing at Aqueduct is
    all on their "inner" track which is "winterized"(i.e. packed with
    chemicals to help prevent freezing), short and mostly sand surfaced. I
    don't think they have anything above a Gr III on the inner track.
    
    So, in this obliviion, what did Prairie Bayou do? He trained well and
    won 3 straight Gr II races. His people said, "Hmmm, maybe we oughta
    take a second look at him." The moved him to Oaklawn where they train
    their first string stakes horses. He won again. 
    
    To top it off, none of the public handicappers, DRF columnists,etc
    thought much of his performances. In fact, just last week, the DRF's
    track man at Santa ANita said that he didn't think Prairie Bayou could
    beat Corby and that he thought Prairie Bayou was a second tier colt.
    
    So they entered him in the Bluegrass and he won that too.... Next stop 
    Louisville. But, he can't win that. He's just a second stringer! ;-)
481.477Wood memorial predictionsEASI::GEENENQuo signo natus est?Fri Apr 16 1993 23:1467
    Pen in hand (and probably foot in mouth), here is my handicapping for
    tomorrow's Wood Memorial:
    
    Horse              Style      Beyer Avg. /  Form
    -----              -----      ------------------
    Marked Tree         Pcs       95.3     Improving
    Duc d'Sligovil      Ef        86.6      Wavering
    As Indicated        ES        95.6     Improving
    Rohwer              Efs       80.6     Declining
    Country Store       ES        77.0     Improving
    Tri for the Gold    Efps      83.6     Improving
    Marco Bay           E         85.3     Improving
    Storm Tower         ES        92.6    Consistent
    Classi Envoy        Esfp      82.0      Wavering
    Tossofthecoin       Ef        86.0    Consistent
    Takin' Names        Sep       83.3    Consistent
    Ozan                Se        90.8     Improving
    
    Legend:  E = early speed
             P = pace presser
             C = late closer
             S = able to maintain sustained pace
             F = fade tendency
    Upper case letter means the horse exhibits the quality half or more
    of the time.  Lower case letter means horse exhibits quality less
    than half but more than a quarter of the time.  These are derived from
    examining each horse's run lines in the DRF.  The letters are in order
    from most displayed tendency to least displayed tendency.
    
    Beyer speed averages are derived from a horse's most recent races (up
    to 5), excluding out of the ordinary good or bad days and races on
    other surfaces.
    
    Form is also derived by examining each horse's running lines and speed
    averages.  Improving means the horse has been turning faster speeds,
    declining means that the speeds are getting slower, wavering means
    that there is a fair amount of variance between speeds from one race
    to the next, consistent means that the horse's speeds are pretty much
    the same from one race to the next.
    
    Based on all of this, it seems reasonable to think that As Indicated
    and Storm Tower will be survivors of the early leaders, with probably
    As Indicated leading the way.  This may work in Storm Tower's favor
    because As Indicated looks like a 6 or 8 furlong horse, never having
    raced more than a mile.  None of the other early speed horses look like
    they can keep up with this pair, but Duc d'Sligovil may not be too far
    behind.  So are there any come from behind horses?  Yes, Marked Tree.
    He has the speed to catch them and his form has been steadily improving.
    One other horse to worry about is Ozan, who has fair speed but no real
    outstanding qualities and indeed may be in over his head with this
    bunch.
    
    If each horse is able to run its race and doesn't get up on the wrong
    side of the stall, I predict the order of finish to be (gulp):
    
          1st - Marked Tree
          2nd - Storm Tower
          3rd - As Indicated
    
    If its an off track, replace As Indicated with Ozan.
    
    The DRF seems to think highly of Country Store, but I don't see much
    to rave about with only 2 races and the lowest speed average in the
    field.  This horse would have to improve A LOT to have a good showing.
    
    We'll see,
    Carl
481.4781993 Oaklawn HandicapDECWET::JDADDAMIOWhen in doubt, cop out!Sat Apr 17 1993 00:0745
    That reminds me, I've been meaning to enter the Oaklawn Handicap
    results all week. The 3 YOs have been getting all the press lately.
    
    The big favorite going into the race was Lil E Tee(1992 KY Derby
    winner). He had been at Oaklawn and had two wins over the track. The
    first was an allowance race in his comeback after his injury last May.
    We won easily under a hand-ride and going away. Then, he ran in the 
    Razorback(Gr II) and won that with only a little more effort.
    
    Second choice among the bettors was Best Pal who shipped in from CA.
    Best Pal was also coming to the Oaklawn on two races after a long
    layoff since last May due to injury. He had made his comeback in two Gr
    I stakes placing second and fifth(or was it fourth?). The lower placing
    was in the Santa Anita Handicap which he had won in 1992. His race in
    the Big 'Cap was disappointing but he had lost a shoe early in the race
    and Desormeaux said the 5 YO gelding hadn't handled the condition of
    the track well at all.
    
    Best Pal is kind of a quirky horse who is known to run his best on the
    outside. In fact, some say he can't/won't run inside other horses. He
    drew an inside post. By the time Desormeaux dropped him back and worked
    his way to the outside, they had lost so much ground that he could have
    been Silky SUllivan back there. Only an outstanding final quarter even
    put him in the race. He got up for third. I was as impressed by his
    third as I was by A.P. Indy's 3rd in the 1992 Jockey Club Gold CUp when
    he stumbled at the gate, lost lots of ground and then swept around the
    field in a tremendous finish.
    
    Lil E Tee did his usual thing and stalked the leaders with Pat Day
    sitting chilly and keeping him "covered up" behind other horses. He
    went to the lead easily in the final quarter and looked like winning it
    as he was pulling away. Suddenly, here comes Jovial, flying down the 4
    path in the middle of the track! He practically blew Lil E Tee's ears
    off as he went by! Jovial was a Gr I winner last year but I can't
    remember when he last won a race. It was said after the race that Lil E
    Tee is also a bit quirky and perhaps too competitive because he
    doesn't run when he's alone on the lead. He needs competition to keep
    him interested. That may have lost him the race. But, I dunno...Jovial
    was absolutely FLYING...I think he might well have passed Lil E Tee,
    interested or not!
    
    Final order of finish:
    Jovial
    Lil E Tee
    Best Pal
481.479Not too bad, but...EASI::GEENENQuo signo natus est?Mon Apr 19 1993 15:5525
    Ok, so my crystal ball wasn't right on the button, but I wasn't too
    far afield with my pre-race presumptions.  Storm Tower was indeed the
    early leader for the others to catch.  The speed duel with As
    Indicated didn't develop (finished a lackluster 7th), which left ST
    without a reasonable challenger.  Other horses tried to maintain the
    pace but were not able to keep up.  Marked Tree closed late as I
    thought, but I felt he was too far back in the pack in the first half
    of the race to be able to catch up.  ST showed no signs of fading in
    the stretch.
    
    I'm thinking that ST ran his race, MT was a little off, and
    Tossofthecoin ran the best race of his 3 yr-old life.  I'm sure the
    Beyer speed for ST must be in the high 90's or low 100's, which would
    not be out of line with expectations.  BTW, my show bet on Storm
    Tower would have paid off ($3.20 I think at Aqueduct), but too bad
    there was no simulcast wagering at GGF.
    
    Did you see the failure of Dalhart and Diazo in the Arkansas Derby?
    And what about Rockamundo paying $218.00 for the win!!  The longest
    shot on the board, not to mention the worst credentials Beyer speed
    wise and his flat running style.  Here was a horse who ran the race of
    his life.  His stock just went up, but I still say continue to not
    bet on him.
    
    Carl
481.480Have you seen these horses?SWAM2::MASSEY_VIIt's all in the cueMon Apr 19 1993 16:2835
    Hi.
    
    I am looking for some informations on a few Thoroughbred race horses
    and I thought this might be a good place to look.  These horses have
    raced and or offsprings of my mare, Stealthy.
    
    1979	Step Quietly, ch colt by Nasrullah Spy
    
    1982	Mohawk Lady, dk b/ Filly by Red Trooper
    
    1983	Hass the Glass, b Colt by Pass the Glass
    
    1986	Haz Ru Mar, ch clot by Stancharry
    
    1987 	Doux Cuff, dk b/ colt By Doux Lord (FR)
    
    1989	Stea Stan, ch filly by Stancharry
    
    If anyone knows of these horses or the sires please leave any
    information.
    
    Thanks in advance,
    
    Virginia
    
    ps. Stealthy's pedigree is:
        
    	       		Bold Ruler
    	Envoy
        	        Monarchy
Stealthy
    		
    			Saratoga
    	Mohawk Maid
    			Deep Sea Tale
481.4811993 San Juan Capistrano(updated)DECWET::JDADDAMIOWhen in doubt, cop out!Thu Apr 22 1993 17:0169
Santa Anita closed its Winter/Spring meeting on Sunday and what a way to 
go with an exciting finish! The feature race was the 14 furlong(turf) 
Grade I San Juan Capistrano which is the longest race in North America on 
the flat. Lots of steeplechases are longer than 1.75 miles.

Last year, the race was won by Fly Till Dawn who took the lead at the break, 
loped along setting a moderate pace and drew off in the final furlong. This 
year shaped up a LOT differently.

First of all there were only 5 horses in the field but what a choice lot they 
were! They included: 
	Fraise: won 2 Gr I turf races last year at 12 furlongs. In his 
		only 1993 start prior to the San Juan Capistrano, he won the
		12 furlong Gr II Pan American Turf Handicap at Gulfstream 
	Kotashaan: a European import who won Santa Anita's major 12 furlong
		turf races this meeting including the Gr I San Luis Rey and 
		Gr II San Luis Obispo. 
	Bien Bien: a 4 YO who at 3 won the 9 furlong Gr II Cinema Handicap
		on turf, the 10 furlong Gr II Swaps Stakes on dirt and late in 
		the year ran against older with a win in the Gr I 12 furlong
		Hollywood Turf Cup and a good second in the 9 furlong Gr I 
		Hollywood Derby. He's by turf champion Manila and out of 
		Starkwinter, a Graustark daughter. In other words, he's bred
		for turf and distance.
	Campagnarde and Carnival Baby who are consistent graded turf stakes 
		performers.

Carnival Baby broke on top and set the pace with Campagnarde pressing the
pace a bit. Chris McCarron had Bien Bien in 3rd, Fraise settled in fourth 
with the late running Kotashaan trailing. The only change in the original 
order in the first 11 or 12 furlongs was that Bien Bien and Campagnarde 
exchanged positions. 

Trevor Denman called the pace slow but I thought it was a good clip for a 14 
furlong race. They went steady "twelves" meaning that each furlong took about
12 seconds. Running in "twelves" will win most stakes races beyond 9 furlongs.
For example, Secreatariat(1:59 3/5) and Northern Dancer(2:00) are the only 
two horses to have run the KY Derby in twelves or better. Older horses, 
especially in CA, tend to go slightly faster. The split times were:
	 6 furlongs	1:11.62
	 8 furlongs	1:35.78	(which would win lots of mile races)
	10 furlongs	1:59.67 (which would win lots of mile & 1/4 races)
	12 furlongs	2:22.98	(which would win lots of mile & 1/2 races and 
				is about 1 second faster than 12s)

And then the running started! McCarron and Bien Bien moved first and fast. 
They went to the lead and ran very strongly pulling away from Carnival Baby 
and the mare, Campagnarde. Fraise ran strongly and passed the early leaders 
too. He was gaining on Bien Bien but slowly. But here comes Desormeaux and
Kotashaan flying down the middle of the track. Trevor Denman says, "He's 
moving like an express train!" Kotashaan passes Fraise who can't go with him.
Kotashaan's gaining on quickly Bien Bien but does he have enough ground to 
catch up and win? Kotashaan and Bien Bien hit the wire in a tight photo 
finish. 

They show the photo and Kotashaan wins by a nostril! Trevor Denman says, 
"After a mile and three quarters all that separates them is an inch and three 
quarters!" The final time was 2:45.00 which is 3 full seconds faster than 12s 
for the 14 furlongs! It's also a new course & stakes record. The previous 
record had stood for over 30 years! 

Final order of finish:
1. Kotashaan
2. Bien Bien		nostril
3. Fraise		1 length
4. Carnival Baby 	6 lengths
5. Campagnarde		up the track

John
481.482Racing News and KY Derby infoDECWET::JDADDAMIOWhen in doubt, cop out!Fri Apr 23 1993 18:2784
    Recent racing news older horses, 3 YOs, etc
    
    STALLIONS
    Sham(1973 Santa Anita Derby winner, second to Secretariat in KY Derby
    and Preakness) died recently of a heart attack. He was 23. He was close
    enough to Secretariat in the Preakness that he(Sham) would also have
    set a stakes record that day.
    
    First Secretary, Secretariat's first foal and an Appaloosa, died
    recently of colic. He was 19. Since he was a November foal, First
    Secretary never raced or showed but he wrote himself a page in history
    as a Appaloosa sire.
    
    CURRENT OLDER HORSES
    
    Paseana won Oaklawn's Gr I Apple Blossom (8.5 furlongs) last weekend. She
    drew off by 5 lengths and looks like she is back in form. Southern
    Truce(who had beaten Paseana twice in CA) had no apparent excuse and
    finished 4th.
    
    Strike The Gold make his debut performance as a 5 year old this Weds in
    a mile allowance race at Aqueduct. Strike The Gold has been off since
    the 1992 Breeders' Cup. Shortly after the BC, it was discovered that he
    was extremely anaemic. He was sent south for the winter and has only
    recently resumed training. At Aqueduct, he has been training well and
    is being pointed for the Pimlico Special(which will be run the same day
    as the Preakness this year to accomodate ABC Sports). The pace had been 
    fast so, as usual, Strike The Gold was 12-15 lengths off the lead when 
    they went into the final turn. He put in his best run and caught the
    leaders near the top of the stretch. Then, he went on by and drew off
    to win by 5 lengths in a time something like 1:35.40. This was little
    more than a public workout. 
    
    This Saturday at 6PM ET, ESPN will broadcast the 9 furlong Californian 
    Stakes from Hollywood Park. This Gr I stakes for 4YOs & up is part of the
    ACRS series this year. The current favorite is Sir Beaufort who has been
    rated top older horse for the past few weeks based on his Santa Anita
    Handicap win.
    
    
    3 YOs
    The KY Derby is only a week away and not a favorite in sight! That
    means that every able-bodied 3 YO who can get the distance and a bunch
    whose owners have "Derby Fever" will be entered. Fortunately, the
    Churchill Downs management limits the field to the 20 horses with the
    most money won in graded stakes. 
    
    His owner has announced that Dalhart is out. The owners of the follwing 
    horses have recently said that they'll run:
    	1. Rockamundo 	longshot winner of Arkansas Derby
    	2. Storm Tower	winner of Wood Memorial
    	3. Bull In The Heather	Fla Derby winner
    	4. Diazo
    	5. El Bakan
    
    Diazo is currently 20th on the list of Gr Stakes money winnings so he
    may not make the cut. Who's El Bakan? A fair question. He's from
    Panama(or is it Venezuela? somehwere in Central or South America) and
    was undefeated before he ran second in the Lexington Stakes. He has won
    Gr I events even against older horses so he might be tough. The
    Lexington was his first start in North America. This is the same kind
    of history that brought Canonero II to the KY Derby winner's circle.
    
    The current TRC Triple Crown Poll looks like this:
    	1. Prarie Bayou .... the horse with an oxymoron for a name gets
    				some respect!
    	2. Personal Hope
    	3. Storm Tower
    	4. Union City
    	5. Bull In The Heather
    	6. Dixieland Heat
    	7. Grand Jewel
    	8. Wallenda
    	9. Corby
    	10. Eliza
    
    If I were director of the ABC Sports crew at the Derby, here's the four
    horses I would choose for isolated camera coverage during the race:
    	1. Prarie Bayou 
    	2. Personal Hope
    	3. Bull In The Heather (especially if there's a sloppy track)
    	4. El Bakan
    
    John
481.483Handicap divisionDECWET::JDADDAMIOWhen in doubt, cop out!Mon Apr 26 1993 18:0062
    More older horses
    
    ALYDEED
    Last week, Alydeed came back to stakes racing. You may remember he made
    his 1993 debut in a Gulfstream allowance sprint(6 furlongs) after 
    being off since August. He won handily in record time. I think he's
    being reinvented as a sprinter/miler. Last week, he went in Keeneland's 
    Commonwealth Breeders Cup Sprint Handicap(Gr III 7 furlongs) and beat a 
    fairly good field in 1:21 2/5. Binalong was second.
    
    CALIFORNIAN STAKES
    The Californian Stakes was held on Saturday. Sir Beaufort did go off as
    favorite but had a rough day. He got caught in traffic and had to check
    hard twice in order to avoid "clipping heels" with the horses in front
    of him. He got going again but used a lot of energy catching up to the
    leaders. He got cut off again in the stretch when a horse angled out in
    front of him...but that didn't matter he was too tired by then to
    finish. He did well enough under the conditions to finish 4th. 
    
    Latin American made a LONG sustained drive from the back of the race. He 
    started in the middle of the backstretch. On the final turn, it was 
    obvious that he was closing very fast on the leading group but ESPN's
    race caller, Dave Johnson, was sleeping at the switch and never mentioned 
    the move until the final sixteenth. I got to hear track announcer Trevor 
    Denman's call later. He didn't miss the move! He says, "Here comes Latin
    American and he's just inHALing the leaders." 
    
    Latin American went by to win going away. Missionary Ridge and Memo
    took second and third respectively.
    
    
    DEVIL HIS DUE
    
    Devil His Due may just turn out to be a top horse in the handicap
    division. He won the Gr I 10 furlong Gulfstream Park Handicap back on
    March 13th. He won the Gr II 10 furlong Excelsior at Aqueduct this past
    Saturday. Why am I so impressed by that? Because of the wasy he won it!
    
    In the Gulfstream Park Handicap with a 10 horse field, DHD ran the
    early parts of the race at the back of the pack in 7th. To win, he made
    a wide sweeping move late in the race.
    
    Last Saturday, he met another 10 horse field in the Excelsior. But,
    this field had no early speed! So, Alan Jerkins changed his tactics and
    had Mike Smith keep DHD close to the pace. They broke well with DHD
    under a bit of restraint to keep him from chargin to the lead. That
    caused him to be 4 wide going into the first turn. Then DHD settled
    into 4th just behind the first flight of horses. The leaders set VERY
    soft fractions: 24 2/5 and 48 4/5 for the qurater and half mile
    respectively. At about the 3/4 pole(1:12 2/5), DHD went to the lead
    with half a mile to run. He made his move under a hand ride, fought off
    a mild challenge in the stretch and CANTERED leisurely home to win by 3
    easy lengths. In the winner's circle, he looked like he could go around
    again and still win! 
    
    Such versatility should make him a frequent winner in the handicap
    division if he stays helathy and keeps similar form. My guess is he's
    headed for the Pimilco Special in 3 weeks or the next ACRS series race
    after that one. I think that's the Nassau County which is the same day as
    the Belmont. Heck, he could go in both of them!
    
    John
481.4841993 Hall of Fame electionsDECWET::JDADDAMIOWhen in doubt, cop out!Tue Apr 27 1993 17:5314
    The the 1993 inductees to the Racing Hall of Fame have been announced:
    
    Alysheba - 1987 KY Derby and Preakness winner, 1988 Breeder's Cup Classic 
    		winner, 1988 Horse of the Year and all-time leading money
    		winner
    
    Personal Ensign - 	1988 Breeder's Cup Distaff winner, undefeated in 13
    			career starts, first major stakes horse in 80 years
    			to retire undefeated.
    Cavalcade	-	1934 KY Derby winner
    
    Eddie Delahoussaye	- Jockey; 5,000+ wins including those w/ A.P. Indy
    T. J. Kelly	-	  Trainer of numerous champions/stakes horses and
    			  sire of trainers ;-)
481.485My Derby PickDECWET::JDADDAMIOWhen in doubt, cop out!Thu Apr 29 1993 18:3028
    Well, Eliza's reputation and her recent good showing against the colts
    haven't scared off anybody with good fillies from entering them in
    tomorrow's KY Oaks. There is a field of 11 for the Oaks including: 
    Sum Runner, Boots N' Jacky, Aztec Hill, Avies Shadow and Lunar Spook.
    I would expect good performances from Aztec Hill, Sum Runner, and 
    Lunar Spook over the 9 furlong distance. Frankly, I expect them to have
    more punch in the final furlong than Eliza. The question really is: Will 
    Eliza's middle move open up enough distance that she can hang on to win 
    in the final furlong? I think not. I would not be at all surprised to
    see 1 or 2 filies in front of Eliza at the finish.
    
    Tomorrow also sees the running of the 9 furlong Early Times Turf Classic at
    Churchill. That looks to be a great field: 1992 Breeder's Cup Mile
    winner Lure and runner-up Paradise Creek will challenge the west coast
    middle distance turf star, Star of Cozzene. I'd give the nod to Star of
    Cozzene who is best at 9-10 furlongs. Lure and Paradise Creek like 8-9
    furlongs. So, I think that Star of Cozzene will have more punch left
    and that will get him home first. Lure might be able to get out front 
    and run away with it though. It should be a great race.
    
    Prairie Bayou and Personal Hope are the favorites for the KY Derby. I
    think that Bull In The Heather is the class of the field and will win
    if he gets a good trip. I'm rooting for Randy Romero to win on
    Dixieland Heat though. Romero is just coming back from some serious
    injuries and I'd like to see him win to complete his comeback. BTW, his
    brother(Geryy) trains Dixieland Heat. Did you know that there family
    was the model for the movie "Casey's Shadow?" Randy is the youngest so
    he was the little kid in the story.
481.486home bred horse makes good!ELMAGO::HBUTTERMANFri Apr 30 1993 18:1415
    
    	Casey's Shadow... guess I missed that one!   Dixieland Heat was
    	a name I heard on the radio on the way into work this morning..
    	(I think - I might be losing my mind too).  Anyway, there is
    	a home-town-bred horse running tomorrow from New Mexico and
    	the local radio station was interviewing one of the owners and
    	talking about all the hype that goes w/being in the Derby.
    
    	I'll have to watch and see.
    
    	Hava great weekend!
    
    	smiles - h
    
    
481.487exDECWET::JDADDAMIOWhen in doubt, cop out!Fri Apr 30 1993 19:0450
    Casey's Shadow...Walter Matthau plays a man who is a QH race trainer
    and has 5 sons(no wife but I can't remember whether she had died or run
    off with the milkman or what). He comes home with a rundown looking
    mare who is bred to some great sire. The rest of the story hinges
    around the resulting foal and the family issues in their life. A fun
    movie about life and family with happy ending without being maudlin or
    melodramatic. (I don't like "socially significant" or sensitive new age
    guy with relationships type movies. If you do, this movie may be too
    "light" for you.)
    
    I heard the post position draw for the KY Derby this morning. Doesn't
    look good for some of the "near" favorites: Storm Tower drew the rail
    which is bad for a speed horse in a big field. He'll have to hustle to
    get up to the lead without getting trapped on the rail. Corby and Diazo
    drew the far outside (17 & 18) positions along with El Bakan(19) which 
    just about ruins any hope they had.
    
    Horses who got good positions inlcude:
    	Prairie Bayou	5th
    	Personal Hope	7th
    	Rockamundo	8th - supposedly the most frequent post postiion of
    				KY Derby winners. BTW, speed figure guru, 
    				Andy Beyer says Rockamundo has the best
    				speed figure over 9 furlongs coming into 
    				this race and IF he can repeat the
    				performance will win the race. However,
    				Beyer is reluctant to say that Rockamundo
    				will be consistent enough.
    	Union City 	I can't recall the exact post but it was in the
    			middle somewhere
    	Bull In The Heather 10th - should give him a good position with
    				minimal traffic problems considering the
    				size of the field
    
    
    If you believe in omens, good luck signs or just plain tradition, 
    Bull In The Heather is stabled in the stall his sire(Ferdinand) had 
    when he won the Derby. It was also the stall in which Affirmed was 
    stabled when he won the Derby and went on to win the Triple Crown.
    
    Pat Day says he and Wallenda may win because of the pattern of
    back-to-back KY Derby wins: 1972 & 73 Ron Turcotte with Riva Ridge and
    Secretariat; 1982 & 83 Eddie D & (Uh Oh! My memory chip failed! Let's
    see...maybe if I start at 1875 and Aristides and work forward I'll
    remember...); 1992 & 93 Pat Day with Lil E Tee and Wallenda....
    
    I'm a little worried about my pick of BITH to win...Lots of the "wise
    guys" and track people are saying he'll win...Usually a sure sign that
    a horse WON'T win. ;-) We'll see tomorrow.
    
481.488Kentucky Derby PicksEASI::GEENENQuo signo natus est?Sat May 01 1993 00:5478
    Once more out on the limb to make public my picks for tomorrow's big
    day.  The field shapes up like this (in the order they appear in the
    DRF):
    
    Horse                 Style    Speed Avg. / Current Form     Dosage
    -----                 -----    -------------------------     ------
    Storm Tower            Es         93.7    / consistent        7.00
    Kissin Kris            CP         90.6    / improving         1.56
    Truth of It All        Cs         85.3    / wavering          0.88
    Union City             Ep         94.8    / improving         2.64
    Prairie Bayou          Cp         95.2    / consistent        4.33
    Sea Hero               Spe        91.0    / consistent        1.12
    Personal Hope          E          96.8    / consistent        2.73
    Rockamundo             S          81.2    / improving         1.20
    Silver of Silver       Sp         88.0    / declining         1.95
    Bull in the Heather    Cp         93.0    / improving         1.40
    Tossofthecoin          P          90.0    / improving         4.82
    Mi Cielo               Spc        93.3    / improving         3.73
    Wild Gale              PS         86.0    / improving         2.20
    Ragtime Rebel          C          88.3    / improving         1.44
    Dixieland Heat         P          91.0    / consistent        3.40
    Wallenda               PS         90.0    / improving         4.20
    Corby                  EP         91.4    / wavering          1.74
    Diazo                  Ep         99.7    / improving         2.56
    El Bakan               E          90.0    / consistent ?      3.33
    
    You'll have to look at one of my earlier notes to see what the style
    code means and how I determined speed averages and current form.  For
    those of you unfamiliar with dosage, it's not the amount of sugar
    added to champagne or sparkling wine, in this case it's a rather
    complicated way of determining a horse's inclination towards speed or
    endurance in the so-called "classic" distance races, 1 1/4 - 1 1/2
    miles.  If you want to know more about it, "Dr. Z's Beat the Race-
    Track" (discussed in another of my previous notes) devotes an entire
    chapter to it.  But, to be brief, the dosage system favors horses with
    an index number lower than 4.00.  So, if you believe in Beyer and
    dosage, picking the winner is merely a matter of selecting the horse
    with the highest speed average who has a dosage less than 4.00.  Never
    mind that Strike the Gold had a dosage of 9.00.
    
    The big speedsters are Storm Tower, Personal Hope, and the foreign
    invader El Bakan.  If Diazo has his way, he shouldn't be far behind.
    
    Union City and Corby will need to be in the front half of the field if
    they want to be in contention.  But they'll be in a traffic jam with
    the likes of Dixieland Heat, Wallenda, Tossofthecoin, and the other
    pace-pressing horses.
    
    The late closers figure to be Kissin Kris, Truth of It All, Prairie
    Bayou, Bull In The Heather, and Ragtime Rebel, although Prairie Bayou
    and Bull In The Heather look like the class of this lot.
    
    If everything goes like the paperwork says it should, Personal Hope
    should be trying to hang on with Union City right behind and Prairie
    Bayou trying the rein them both in.
    
    Therefore (whew!), my picks are:
    
       1st - Prairie Bayou
       2nd - Union City
       3rd - Personal Hope
    
    The only fly I can see in this ointment is Diazo, who has been really
    improving.  His 4th place finish in the Arkansas Derby was still good
    enough for a 100 Beyer speed rating.  He finished only 1 3/4 behind
    Rockamundo, the longshot winner.  He had a bad start and had to work
    too hard to stay in contention, and so tired in the last furlong.
    
    Looking for a longshot?  Ragtime Rebel and Tossofthecoin seem worth
    consideration.
    
    We'll see tomorrow,
    Carl
    
    P.S. Eddie D. had back-to-back KY Derby winners in '82 and '83 with
         Gato del Sol and Sunny's Halo.  I'd like to impress you by saying
         I knew this off the top of my head, but the DRF lists all of the
         winners in the KY Derby special issue.
481.489I still won my bet, thoughEASI::GEENENQuo signo natus est?Mon May 03 1993 14:4951
    OK, my prediction didn't turn out the way I thought.  The first 3/4 of
    the KY Derby went according to the script with Personal Hope and Storm
    Tower battling for the lead.  I thought they would fade, but not as
    much as they did.  Personal Hope, however, finished ahead of Storm
    Tower and came in 4th, I think.  So, not too bad on that account.
    
    Prairie Bayou closed late, as expected, but Union City was nowhere to
    be seen.  I think he got caught in traffic.  But, who would have
    thought that Sea Hero was a real contender, much less capable of
    winning.
    
    Looking back at my pre-race study, Sea Hero's speed average was
    very adequate, considering the speed averages of the favorites.  A
    difference of 5 points does not make much difference, if any.  A
    difference of 10 or more points, that's another story.  Sea Hero's
    dosage is well within acceptable limits (under 4.00), but another
    dosage factor is the center of distribution (CD).  I forget what CD
    means, but supposedly a CD of less that 2.5, I think (or is it 1.25?),
    is also desirable.
    
    A third indegredient in the dosage mix is the weight profile.  I'm not
    completely sure about this.  I'll read up on it and report back later.
    According to the theory, in order to be a dosage contender, a horse
    must first have a DI under 4.00.  Higher than that excludes the horse
    from further consideration.  Having passed the DI test, a horse is
    considered a contender, no matter what the CD or weight profile turns
    out to be.  But a CD under the limit favors a horse even more.  If the
    weight profile is within acceptable limits, a horse is labeled a dual-
    qualifier, and supposedly has the best chances to win races at the
    classic distances of 1 1/4 to 1 1/2 miles.
    
    There were 3 horses which were dual-qualifiers for this year's KY
    Derby:  Silver of Silver, Truth of It All, and, you guessed it, Sea
    Hero.  All these horses were relative longshots.  Silver of Silver
    had to be discounted because of his recent sicknesses and declining
    form, but a bet on both of the other two would have paid off, on
    Sea Hero anyway ($26.00 for the win).
    
    After the whole dosage scheme was worked out in 1981 (?), the theory
    was retro-fitted back to previous triple crown race winners.  It seems
    that very few horses that didn't fit into the scheme won any of the
    races, most recently Strike the Gold, whose DI was 9.00.
    
    My derby bet was on Prairie Bayou to show, which, if everything had
    gone according to plan, would have been a minimum payoff.  But, because
    Sea Hero won and Wild Gale came in third, my payoff went up to $4.20
    at GGF, a 110% gain on money wagered.  PB paid $4.80 at Churchill
    Downs.
    
    More on dosage later,
    Carl
481.490Derby commentsDECWET::JDADDAMIOWhen in doubt, cop out!Mon May 03 1993 17:5138
    Re the KY Derby: 
    
    I don't think that ANYBODY's analysis of the race would have come up
    with Sea Hero so don't feel bad about it. Sea Hero hadn't won a race
    since the Champagne Stakes last October. He ran poorly in Fla this
    winter although several people said they thought the colt hated Fla
    weather and tracks and that he would be better once they left Fla.
    Well, that was true. He did run better in his last race prior to the
    Derby, the Bluegrass Stakes at Keeneland but he had a difficult trip
    and finished out of the money.
    
    Several analysts said that whoever got the best trip would win the
    Derby. They were right! Sea Hero got the best possible trip. He broke
    well and settled into a "hole" between 2 groups of horses. He saved
    grounbd along the rail until he wanted to make his move. Then, Jerry
    Bailey took the colt out behind Bull Inthe Heather about 3 wide looking
    for an outside stretch run. The outside never opened but the inside did
    and he went through and took the lead. At the eighth pole, the race was
    over! Sea Hero was strong and running well. The only horse closing in
    the final furlong was the favorite Prairie Bayou who just had to go too
    wide to catch Sea Hero with his perfect trip. 
    
    Perhaps, the only way to have picked Sea Hero was to have gone to
    "secondary" factors which make a difference when you can't separate the 
    field on the primary issues. Like jockies, Jerry Bailey sometimes gets
    on "hot" winning streaks in big races. So, when he won the Oaks and a 
    race on the Derby undercard, that might have been a clue. Of course,
    you could make the same argument for Pat Day, Gary Stevens or Chris
    McCarron. Or even Rockamundo's trainer and since he won a Grade III
    race on the Derby undercard for Rockamundo's owners....but that's more
    like throwing darts than picking horses... ;-)
    
    That's why they actually run the races rather than just getting some
    "experts" to decide who should win. That's why I always get a chuckle
    out of these "fantasy races" where they take all the Triple Crown
    Winners and Man o'War along with a couple other great horses and "run"
    the race on a computer. Heck, lots of things look good on paper but 
    don't work out!
481.491Loach is a class horse!DECWET::JDADDAMIOWhen in doubt, cop out!Mon May 03 1993 18:3985
    Believe it or not, my racing focus this weekend was NOT on the KY
    Derby! While the Derby was a good race, there were more exciting races
    this weekend!
    
    On Friday, Churchill Downs hosted the KY Oaks and the Early Times Turf
    Classic. The KY Oaks is 9 furlongs for 3 YO fillies. The favorite was
    Eliza. I've been saying all Spring that I didn't think Eliza had the
    stamina to be a Gr I winner at that distance and that there were
    several fillies in the East who could beat her. It looks like I was
    right. 
    
    She ran into one of them in the Oaks. Dispute took the lead early in
    the race with Eliza running in second. With about 3 furlongs to go,
    Eliza charges up to take a short lead but she couldn't pull away!
    Dispute stayed right with her and fought back on the rail. Eliza faded
    in the final sixteenth and Dispute pulled away to win by 1 1/2 widening
    lengths. Eliza was second by a diminishing neck over Quinpool. In other
    words, Eliza was fading fast! 
    
    Would you believe, I fogot Dispute was in the race when I talked about
    the Oaks last week? Shug McGaughey is one of the best trainers in the
    business and I usually remember his horses. Dispute's a good filly and
    just one of several that I would expect to do well at the 9-10 furlong
    distance. Unfortunately, most of the other good 9-10 furlong fillies
    ares still recuperating from injuries.
    
    The 9 furlong Early Times Turf Classic went very much like I expected. 
    Lure and Paradise Creek broke well and Lure went to the lead setting 
    BLAZING fractions. Lure ran the first mile as fast as he did the
    Breeder's Cup Mile last October(1:34 2/5)! I thought for sure 
    Star of Cozzene would close well behind that pace. He did but Lure 
    had plenty left!
    
    Lure was running very strongly the final furlong. Star of Cozzene was
    running even faster but he ran out of ground and lost by about 3/4 of a
    length. Lure set a course record of 1:46.15 for 9 furlongs. Lure must
    be regarded as the best middle distance turf horse in North America. If
    he can win at 10 furlongs, he will be Eclipse Turf Champion this year. If
    he can't go 10 furlongs, Kotashaan and other distance horses have a
    chance at being Turf Champion.
    
    Lure's race and Devil His Due's wins in major Gulfstream and Aqueduct
    stakes underscore the significance of the 1992 Gotham Mile for 3 YO's.
    Those 2 horses finished in a dead heat to win the Gotham! DHD went on
    to win the 1992 Wood Memorial for 3 YOs but disappointed the rest of the 
    year. Lure switched to the turf and won the 1992 BC Mile. Now, they are
    both at the top of their respective handicap divisions. 
    
    Sunday saw the running of Aqueduct's 7 furlong Carter Handicap for
    older horses. The favorite was Alydeed based on his record setting
    performance in an allowance race at Gulfstream and his near record
    performance in Keeneland's Gr III Commonwealth Breeder's Cup.
    Unarguably, the fastest horse in the race, some handicappers felt he
    had run poorly after big efforts in the past and recommended betting
    against him. There was a fairly large field including stakes winners
    Senor Speedy and Loach(aka Strike The Gold's rabbit).
    
    Now, strictly for emotional reasons, I was rooting for Alydeed and
    Loach. I wanted to see Alydeed redeem himself for last year's failures
    and make the handicappers eat their words. I wanted to see Loach run
    well because I think it's demeaning for a horse of his quality and
    talent to be known as Strike The Gold's rabbit. The race was a dream
    come true!
    
    Alydeed broke on top but other horses hustled up and Loach took the
    lead about 8 jumps out of the gate. He set fairly fast fractions for
    the first 4 furlongs(22 3/5 and 46.0). Craig Perret asked Alydeed to
    run on the final turn. They were still flying:6 furlongs in 1:09 3/5.
    Alydeed took a short lead on the outside but, on the rail, Loach was not 
    folding! They duel down the stretch with Loach coming back at Alydeed. 
    Perret pulls one of the oldest race riding tricks in the book and floats 
    Alydeed closer and closer to the rail trying to make the hole too small 
    for Loach to come through but without actually cutting him off. (The
    stewards would have disqualified Perret & Alydeed for cutting off
    Loach.) It works. The jostling and bumping in tight quarters makes Loach
    hesitate for a jump or two before charging up again. Alydeed wins by a
    head. Robbie Davis, Loach's rider, claims foul against Perret for
    squeezing him on the rail. In a close decision, the stewards disallow
    the claim of foul. 
    
    Both horses showed talent but it takes a great deal of heart to come
    back and go into a tight hole against the rail after losing the lead.
    Loach is a class horse!
    
    John
481.492Where did this one come from?SWAM2::MASSEY_VIIt's all in the cueMon May 03 1993 21:477
    Hi all.  I loved the Derby!  Of course I love all major horse races.
    
    Does anyone have the background of Sea Hero?  Basically his pedigree.
    
    Thanks!
    
    Virginia
481.493CSLALL::LCOBURNPlan B FarmTue May 04 1993 14:404
    I'm not much of racing fan at all, but I do love to see the underdogs
    win! Any chance Sea Hero (who prior to the race had won my vote as
    'cutest lookin') will do well in the other two Triple Crown races??
    
481.494Sea Hero: pedigree & commentsDECWET::JDADDAMIOWhen in doubt, cop out!Tue May 04 1993 17:1267
    Yes, I think Sea Hero will do well in the remaining Triple Crown races.
    I think so because he's doing well now and has run well at Belmont in
    the past. He's also bred to go the distance. However, I doubt that
    we're looking at a Triple Crown winner. I saw an interview with
    Mack Miller(his trainer) on ESPN last night. Mr Miller said that he
    pulled the colt out of Fla after he figured out that he hated it there.
    He moved the colt to South Carolina(presumably the Aiken training
    center) where he blossomed in the cooler weather and liked the "rural"
    atmosphere compared to the Fla track atmosphere. 
    
    There are only about 10 horses entered in the Preakness so there should
    be much less danger of getting blocked when he wants to run. I think
    he'll finish in the money in both the Preakness and Belmont. I would
    like to see him win the Belmont as it's the toughest of the three.
    
Prior to his Kentucky Derby win, Sea Hero's only stakes win was the October 10 
1992 running of the 8 furlong Gr I Champagne Stakes at Belmont Park. 
Sea Hero is by Polish Navy out of Glowing Tribute. Polish Navy raced 2 years 
winning about $1.12 Million while winning 7 of 12 starts. His Graded stakes 
wins included Gr I Woodward, Gr I Champagne Stakes, GrII Cowdin Stakes among 
others. Polish Navy was bred and raced by the Phipps family. He entered stud 
in 1988 at Claiborne. He stood there until Aug 1992 when he was sold and 
exported to Japan. Glowing Tribute was bred and raced by Paul Mellon. She 
raced 3 years winning 9 of 24 starts. She was a graded stakes winner on the 
turf having won the GrII (Turf) Sheepshead Bay Handicap twice and the GrII 
(Turf) Diana Handicap. She is the dam of 9 foals, 7 have raced, 7 have won 
and 5 are stakes winners. Besides Sea Hero, her stakes winning foals include:
	1. Hero's Honor(by Northern Dancer) winner of multiple Gr I turf races
	2. Wild Applause(by Northern Dancer) winner of multiple Graded turf 
		stakes including the one her Mom won(GrII Diana Handicap)
	3. Glowing Honor(by Seattle Slew) - she won GrII Diana Handicap twice
	4. Seattle Glow(by Seattle Slew) who won the ungraded Spend A Buck 
		stakes
Here's his complete 5 generation pedigree:

             Neartic
          Northern Dancer
             Natalma
       Danzig
             Admiral's Voyage
          Pas de Nom
             Petitioner
    Polish Navy
             The Yuvaraj
          Tatan
             Valkyrie
       Navsup
             War Admiral
          Busanda
             Busnesslike
Sea Hero
             Tenerani
          Ribot
             Romanella
       Graustark
             Alibhai
          Flower Bowl
             Flower Bed
    Glowing Tribute
             Turn-to
          Hail To Reason
             Nothirdchance
       Admiring
             War Admiral
          Searching
             Big Hurry
481.495Thanks.SWAM2::MASSEY_VIIt's all in the cueTue May 04 1993 23:369
    Thanks so much for the pedigree and info.  I think Sea Hero has some
    good blood behind him.  I once worked with a Northern Dancer daughter. 
    She was brought to us to foal her.  She was a maiden mare and a bit
    fussy about things.  She was huge!  A full 17hh and 1600 lbs when at
    full term.  She looked like an overgrown Quarter horse instead of a TB. 
    But all went well and she had a beautiful foal.  She left us a week
    later to be bred again.  I don't know what happened to her or the foal.
    
    Virginia
481.496Northern DancersDECWET::JDADDAMIOWhen in doubt, cop out!Wed May 05 1993 16:407
    Isn't it strange about the Northern Dancers? Some of them like the mare
    you foaled and others like Nijinsky were 17H horses while Northern
    Dancer himself was a little pony-sized horse as was most of his get!
    I saw a video about Northern Dancer and his influence on racing. He
    basically defined a "new" type of small compact racehorse especially in 
    Europe where his relatively small turf-loving get won everything worth
    winning. Go figure!
481.497Preakness this Sat.!DECWET::JDADDAMIOWhen in doubt, cop out!Wed May 12 1993 20:5457
    There is a wide diversity of opinion about Sea Hero's KY Derby 
    win and the likelihood of him being in the money in the remaining
    Triple Crown races. 

    Most of the handicappers, especially the speed figure players, claim 
    that this is a mediocre crop of 3 YOs and that they will take turns 
    beating each other. Their theory is that they're all about equal in 
    ability. Therefore, whoever is fittest and has the best racing luck
    (track conditions that they like, suitable pace for the colt's style, 
    traffic problems, etc.) will win.

    They forget that it's too early in the year to evaluate them fairly and 
    that several that were top colts as 2 YOs are sidelined with injuries.

    The other camp is basically the trainers. One example is Phil Johnson, 
    a NY trainer who occassionally serves as an expert commentator for
    the "Inside Racing" show on SportsChannel. Mr Johnson said that he thinks 
    we're looking at another Triple Crown winner! 

    Mr Johnson feels that Sea Hero has just begun to show his full potential. 
    He credits the recent improvement is Sea Hero to 2 things: 1) getting 
    the colt out of Fla were the colt hated the climate 2) jockey Jerry 
    Bailey who suggested that the colt should run without blinkers and gave 
    the colt a good ride in the race. 

    Bailey rides regularly for trainer Mack Miller and Mellon's Rokeby 
    stable. He knew the colt from last year's races as a 2 YO and 
    thought the colt would relax and rate better w/o blinkers. Mr Johnson 
    claims that Sea Hero was much less on the muscle in the Derby which
    meant that Bailey could make tactical moves more or less at will with 
    him. He called Bailey an intelligent thinking jockey who is 
    under-appreciated.

    Last night on Inside Racing, they had a 10 minute interview w/ Mr Bailey.
    During the interview, they played the start of the Bluegrass Stakes in 
    which Sea Hero broke from the inside  post while still wearing the 
    blinkers. He was CLEARLY fighting Bailey and not at all relaxed. He made
    a good move in the stretch but got trapped on the rail and could get 
    through so he finished 4th. 

    I'm somewhere in between the 2 camps. It's too early in the season to 
    evaluate the 3 YO colts fairly. The handicappers are too eager to 
    condemn when they can't pick a winner. I agree with Johnson's comments 
    about Bailey. I also agree with him that Sea Hero has the class, the 
    tactical speed, acceleration and the ability to make positioning moves 
    before making his big run. These things give him an advantage over a 
    horse like Prarie Bayou who makes one long sustained run on the 
    outside. Poor Prarie Bayou always runs farther because he's way outside 
    and he frequently runs into traffic problems. 

    Therefore, I think Sea Hero is the horse to beat in this Saturday's
    Preakness. He had the fastest speed figures of all the last year's 2 
    YO's(including those like Gilded Time and River Special that are out 
    with injuries). He's proved he can get the distance. He's got a good 
    style for classic distances. If he gets a reasonable trip, I don't see 
    how any of the others can beat him unless they suddenly 
    blossom into superstars. 
481.498Pimlico Special on Sat. too!DECWET::JDADDAMIOWhen in doubt, cop out!Wed May 12 1993 21:015
    Oh yeah. Don't forget to tune in early to see the Gr I Pimlico Special
    Handicap for older horses. Devil His Due and Strike The Gold are both
    entered. If they are both in the same form as their recent races, this
    race will be a humdinger! I'm looking forward to that more than the
    Preakness! It's on ABC at 4:30 ET(I think)
481.499air tvELMAGO::HBUTTERMANWed May 12 1993 21:5512
    
    
    	Boy John... I hope they have tv on the plane I have to take from
    	Albuquerque to Portland, Maine!  Actually I am suppose to get
    	in around 4:30 so maybe........  just maybe.
    
    	Well, if I miss it I'm sure my sister (and the only person *I*
    	know who SURE the Sea horse would win!) will fill me in (maybe
    	even videotape it for me!)
    
    	have a good one - h
    
481.500Genuine Risk's first foal!DECWET::JDADDAMIOWhen in doubt, cop out!Tue May 18 1993 20:2523
    Genuine Risk, the 1980 KY Derby winner, had her first live foal last
    Saturday(May 15) about 5 PM. It's a chestnut colt by Rahy.
    Markings:star, stripe and 3 white feet...LOTS of chrome!
    
    She was bred to Secretariat in 1981 for a 1982 foal but that foal was
    stillborn. If I remember correctly, one of its ribs broke during the
    birth procses and punctured its heart...gruesome....
    
    Since then, Genuine Risk has had a series of problems: miscarriages, not 
    getting in foal, etc, She's now 16 and they were getting worried that
    they might not be able to preserve her lines.
    
    They had to induce labor because the monitors showed that the foal was
    in distress. Once she had been induced, all went well. She's reported
    to be in good health and a good mom.
    
    The foal is healthy and doing well. Unfortunately, he retained his
    meconium and simple enemas couldn't get him to pass it. So, the
    performed a minor surgical procedure. Now, he's drinking and manuring
    normally. 
    
    The Three Chimneys Farm manager said he expects the colt(& Mom of
    course) to go out to pasture in a couple more days.
481.501Lure again!DECWET::JDADDAMIOWhen in doubt, cop out!Tue May 18 1993 20:5534
481.502Now how old am I?SWAM2::MASSEY_VIIt's all in the cueWed May 19 1993 15:416
    Genuine Risk is 16????  Gawd I must be getting old.  I remember that
    race like it was yesterday.  
    
    Congrats to her!
    
    Virginia
481.503Dosage Handicapping 101EASI::GEENENSum, ergo edo.Wed May 19 1993 16:3077
    As promised, here is a little information on dosage handicapping
    (pronounced doe-SAHJ, just like sugar added to champagne).
    
    History:  some french guy back in the 1920's decided that a horse's
    pedigree was the best factor to study when trying to determine the
    horse's capabilities, and therefore its chances of performing well and
    predictably in a race.  This frenchman examined the pedigrees of a lot
    of horses and decided that one need only consider the sires going back
    four generations in a horse's ancestry to make the determinations.
    
    Why only sires?  His rationale was that a sire may cover 50-60 mares a
    year, and therefore have many oportunities to pass along his traits,
    but a mare has an average of only 15 foals in its life, too few to
    consider in examining inherited traits.
    
    Why four generations?  His rationale here was that any further back
    and the gene pool is too diluted to detect acurately.
    
    Each sire in the four generation pedigree was called by the french
    guy a "chef-de-race".  Each chef was looked at for his capability,
    that is, sprinting, routing, etc.
    
    Not much more happened with dosage theory until 1970 or so when an
    american horse breeder decided to expand on the french guy's earlier
    ideas.  This american invented 5 categories in which to rate the
    chefs-de-race.  Category 1 is heavy on speed and category 5 is heavy
    on stamina.  Category 3, therefore, combines speed and endurance.
    
    Each chef is pigeonholed in one or two of these categories and points
    are awarded to the chef thereupon.  The points are added up in each
    category to derive a dosage profile for the horse whose pedigree is
    being looked at.  Formulas are applied to the dosage profile and two
    factors are achieved:  dosage index (DI) and center of distribution
    (CD).
    
    The higher the DI and CD, the speedier the horse is.  Dosagers argue
    that the cutoff point for DI is 4.00 and for CD is 2.50 for classic
    distance races, 10-12 furlongs.
    
    Applying dosage theory to past Kentucky Derby and Belmont Stakes, those
    cutoffs seem to be right on the button.  This year, Sea Hero would have
    been the obvious KD choice, and looms large for the Belmont.  We'll
    have to see who the other Belmont entrants are to see if dosage can
    indicate any other horses.
    
    Once the distance drops to less than 10 furlongs, dosage restraints
    lessen dramatically so as to be almost insignificant.  However, in
    this year's Preakness, dosage theorists argued that Prairie Bayou
    was such a standout that dosage clearly indicated him.
    
    In a given classic distance race, once you have narrowed down the list
    of horses who qualify on DI and CD, you must filter these horses to
    find the most likely candidate for your bet.  In 1984, yet another
    dosage developer came up with a "quality filter" which I have yet
    to find out what it means.  This filter states that a true contender
    should be "within 10 pounds of the current 2-year-old champion on the
    experimental free handicap."  John, do you know what this means?
    Anyone?  So this filter narrows the list down for this year's KD
    where there were only 3 horses being dosage contenders:  Sea Hero,
    Truth Of It All, and Silver of Silver, of which Sea Hero had the best
    track record.
    
    But, if you consider that most north american races are less than 10
    furlongs, dosage isn't going to do you much good most of the time.
    At GGF, you go go for 3 or 4 weeks without having a race to which
    dosage can be applied.  And in the races where it can be applied,
    the horses are such unknowns that it is difficult if not impossible
    to find a horse's pedigree with enough time to calculate DI and CD.
    Whereas for nationally known races like the KD or BS, the pedigrees
    of each entrant are prominently displayed beforehand.
    
    BTW, my bet in the Preakness was Prairie to show.  since relative long
    shots filled out the other money spots, my simulcast bet at GGF paid
    $4.20, 110% return on money wagered.
    
    Dosage 102 soon,
    Carl
481.504Reports on Union City? STRATA::STOOKERWed May 19 1993 16:394
    Any reports on how Union City is doing after breaking down in the
    Preakness?     Just wondering.
    
    Sarah
481.505BOUVS::OAKEYAssume is *my* favorite acronymWed May 19 1993 17:5310
481.506exDECWET::JDADDAMIOWhen in doubt, cop out!Wed May 19 1993 18:0028
    Re Dosage 101
    
    Thanks, I knew about the Frenchman's dosage formula but could never
    figure out how they converted it in simple numbers like 1-5.
    
    BTW, "chef-de-race" is a title bestowed only on certain horses so I'm
    not sure that ALL the sires 4 generations back would be considered
    chefs de race. In fact, I remember one Derby winner that people were
    saying proved the dosage index theory was wrong because his index was
    over the 4 threshhold...and then "the powers that be" made one of his
    ancestors a chef de race AFTER the race and, magically, the winner was
    "acceptable" by the dosage theory...wouldn't do you much good
    handicapping but it kept their string going!
    
    Re "within 10 pounds of the current 2-year-old champion on the
    experimental free handicap."
    
    The Experimantal Free Handicap is just a rating system in which a group
    of handicappers assigns weights to the 2 year olds on the basis of
    their performance as if they were going to race all of them together.
    It's not much more valid than the TRC Triple Crown opinion poll in
    determining which ONE is really the best but it does give one a good idea
    of which colts are the best of the crop....
    
    The Experimantal Free Handicap is published in The Blood Horse every
    year. I don't pay much attention to it so I'm not sure who collects and
    analyzes the data. But, I think it is something that The Blood Horse
    magazine started.
481.507C'est mortDECWET::JDADDAMIOWhen in doubt, cop out!Wed May 19 1993 18:001
    Union City's injuries were to extensive to save him.
481.508More on dosageDECWET::DADDAMIODesign Twice, Code OnceThu May 20 1993 19:5415
    Re: .506
    
    I think John is referring to Strike the Gold here as the horse whose
    dosage didn't fit the Kentucky Derby numbers.  I think his dosage was 9
    at the time.  However, whoever keeps track of these numbers later
    changed the numbers for his sire, Alydar.  After that Strike the Gold's
    dosage came to be within the normal range of Kentucky Derby winners.
    
    Sounds a little bit like changing the numbers to make the theory valid
    to me.
    
    BTW, there is also a European Experimental Free Handicap done too. 
    Maybe it started over there and was picked up here.
    
    						Jan
481.509Yet some more on dosageDECWET::JDADDAMIOWhen in doubt, cop out!Thu May 20 1993 20:3323
    Yes, I was referring to Strike the Gold but I wasn't gonna name
    names...
    
    Anyway, since I posted .506, I found an article on the last page of
    this week's Blood Horse on dosage by the PhD(Piled Higher & Deeper) guy 
    who 'updated' dosage theory and created the index. The Blood Horse uses 
    the last page as a "guest" editorial spot. Every week there's something 
    at least halfway interesting there.
    
    This guy was kinda defending his work. He makes several points:
    	1. He never said that no horse w/ a higher dosage than 4 COULDN'T
    	   win the KY Derby only that none had since 1940 which is the
    	   first year's data he analyzed. It's the media that turned
           everything around.
    	2. Dosage is just a formalized way of analyzing pedigrees which
    	   most horsemen and some handicappers already do
    	3. Dosage is intended to evaluate KNOWN sources of speed & staying
    	   power. It is perfectly legitimate to add horses as the
    	   abilities and preferences of their get become known. In fact,
           this has to be done since they only look at 4 generations.
    
    This guy also confirmed what I thought about only selected horses being
    considered "chefs de race" rather than all the sires in the pedigree.
481.510Dosage 102EASI::GEENENSum, ergo edo.Tue May 25 1993 15:29225
The best source I've been able to find on dosage is the book

    Dr. Z's Beat the Racetrack
    William T. Ziemba & Donald B. Hausch
    1987, William Morrow & Co. (hardcover $24.95)

Appendix C is entitled, "How to Pick the Winner of the Kentucky Derby"
and is about dosage theory.  The first few paragraphs pretty much sum it
all up, and I reprint them here (without permission, but I plugged his
book).

     A horse's chance for success surely depend to a large extent on his or
     her pedigree. But how much? How can one evaluate the combined effects
     of all the sires and dams in a horse's heritage? When is such an analysis
     useful? Does it point to horses to consider or to eliminate?

     A most interesting and useful theory is that of dosage. It has provided
     us with the winner of the Kentucky Derby the last four years, and its
     performance in this race over the years has been nothing short of
     remarkable.

     The theory of dosage began with Lt. Col. J. J. Vullier in his Les
     Croisements Rationnels dans la Race Pure, written in the 1920's.  Vullier
     found that within a particular time frame of approximately twenty years,
     very few stallions appear with great frequency in pedigree bloodlines.
     These stallions can be said to be fixing the breed since the percentage
     of blood attributable to them was roughly constant in this time period.
     He called them chefs de race.  Vullier argued that matings should be
     made to keep these percentages in balance.  His ideas were used in the
     very successful breeding program of the H. H. Aga Khan.

     Dr. Franco Varola in his Typology of the Race Horse in 1974 added to the
     dosage theory.  He considered classifications of speed and endurance that
     were passed on by the chef-de-race sires.  The character of the offspring
     horse then resulted from the total number of appearances in each
     classification regardless of the generation of the sire.  We could say
     that this offspring had a probability distribution that would describe
     its probable running behavior.

     In the last few years Dr. Steven A. Roman, following additional work by
     Mr. Abram S. Hewitt, has modified and extended the Vullier-Varola theory
     to its current useful state.  The ideas are simple.  First, only the sires
     are counted, because mares produce too few numbers to permit reliable
     generalizations.  The past four generations are evaluated, with each
     succeeding generation becoming twice as important.  Nonchefs do not
     count since they have not been known to generate consistent racing
     qualities in their offspring -- we can call their effect "noise."  The
     categories brilliant, intermediate, classic, solid, and professional refer
     to admixtures of speed and stamina.  Brilliant is prepotent speed,
     professional is prepotent stamina, and the others are more relative
     mixtures of these qualities.  According to Dr. Roman, the categories are
     defined as follows:

          1. Brilliant:  characterized by great speed and early maturity,
             little propensity for distance.
          2. Intermediate:  characterized by speed and early maturity, but
             capable of being a runner of classic potential.
          3. Classic:  characterized by a balance of speed and stamina, well
             suited to classic distances and often capable of expressing each
             quality separately.
          4. Solid:  characterized by less speed and later maturity than the
             first three categories; also capable of classic potential
          5. Professional:  characterized by lack of speed, enormous endurance
             and late maturity; runners tend to be plodders.

     The designation of a chef is a quantitative but judgemental exercise of
     determining that the sire does indeed breed a consistent characteristic,
     that is, he is prepotent.  By studying a large population of a sire's
     offspring one can empirically determine whether a sire is prepotent and
     also assign him into one or more aptitude classes to make his population
     consistent with the entire population.

     Using only the sires in a horse's pedigree to determine its running style
     may sound sexist, but there is a reason for it.  A horse can be put into
     one or two of the five categories only after analyzing the running styles
     of many offspring.  A sire may service fifty or more mares a year, and
     thus, after several years, there are many offspring racing.  For a mare,
     however, the five to fifteen lifetime offspring is not enough to classify
     her with any degree of statistical significance.

     To use these ideas one can construct statistical distributions that reflect
     the basic characteristics.  To compute these so-called "dosage profiles,"
     a chef-de-race sire appearing in the first generation is assigned 16
     points, which is split 8-8 if the sire has influence in two classes.
     Second-generation sires receive 8 points, third-generation sires receive
     4 points, and fourth-generation sires get 2 points.  Notice that each
     generation is allocated 16 points.  Each sire becomes less influential the
     further back he appears in the pedigree but the number of sires increases
     to compensate.  Summing the points in each of the five classes then gives
     the dosage profile.  While these profiles shed much light on a horse's
     possible performance, two indices have been developed that are easier to
     work with and understand, as they summarize the profile as a single
     number.  The first is the dosage index (DI), which is computed by dividing
     the speed component (brilliant and intermediate points plus half the
     classic points) by the stamina component (half the classic points plus
     the solid and professional points).  Thus the DI can vary from 0 (all
     stamina) to [infinity] (all speed).  Brilliant and professional points
     receive the same attention as intermediate and solid points.  Future
     refinements of this measure might use different weightings, although it
     may be argued that equal importance is the most appropriate weighting.
     More attention is paid to the polar attributes in the second index, the
     center of distribution (CD), which multiplies the brilliant points by two,
     adds in the intermediate points, subtracts the solid points, and subtracts
     twice the number of professional points.  Dividing by the total number of
     points gives the CD.

That's the basic idea of dosage theory.  Dr. Z gives an exmaple for four horses
in the 1985 Kentuck Derby.  My fingers are getting tired so I'll give you only
one of them, Chief's Crown:

Sires                Brilliant  Intermediate  Classic  Solid  Professional
-----                -----------------------------------------------------
1st Genr. (16 pts.)
   Danzig              (not a chef, so no points)
2nd Genr. ( 8 pts.)
   Northern Dancer       4                       4
   Secretariat         (not a chef, so no points)
3rd Genr. ( 4 pts.)
   Nearctic            (not a chef, so no points)
   Admiral's Voyage    (not a chef, so no points)
   Bold Ruler            2           2
   Swoon's Son         (not a chef, so no points)
4th Genr. ( 2 pts.)
   Nearco                1                       1
   Native Dancer                     1           1
   Crafty Admiral      (not a chef, so no points)
   Petition                          2
   Nashrullah            2
   Princequillo                      1                   1
   The Doge            (not a chef, so no points)
   T.V. Lark                         2
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
Dosage Profile           9           8           6       1

DI = (9 + 8 + (6 / 2)) / ((6 / 2) + 1 + 0)
DI = 5.00

CD = ((9 * 2) + 8 - 1 - (2 * 0)) / 24
CD = 1.04

So Dr. Roman worked out the dosage for the winners of the KY Derby and Belmont
since 1940 and found that no Derby winner had a DI over 4.00 or a CD over 1.25,
and that only 3 Belmont winners had a dosage over 4.00 -Creme Fraiche, Damascus,
and Conquistador Cielo - or a CD over 1.25 - Creme Fraiche and Conquistador
Cielo - and their wins were in the mud, so are maybe suspect as far as dosage
is concerned.

Roman also worked out the average dosage of winning horses in the KY Derby and
Belmont - 2.58 DI and 1.78, respectively.  So, the longer distance actually
requires a lower dosage.

After you determine DI and CD for a given horse, the 10 pound filter needs to be
applied - your horse needs to be within 10 pounds of the current 2-year old
champion on the experimental free handicap.  This filter has been expanded to
include champions from other countries.  For example, in this year's KY Derby,
Sea Hero had the required DI and CD plus met the 10 pound filter requirement
while Truth of it All had the necessary DI and CD but was the Canadian champ.

Dr. Z then gives a list of the horses from the 1984-87 KY Derbies who met
the DI, CD, and 10 pound filter requirements and how they finished:

1984
----
Life's Magic - 8th
Fali Time    - 5th
Swale        - 1st

1985
----
Stephan's Odyssey - 2nd
Spend A Buck      - 1st

1986
----
Ferdinand - 1st
Groovy    - 16th

1987
----
Alysheba           - 1st
Bet Twice          - 2nd
Capote             - eased
Conquistarose      - 9th
Demon's Begone     - bled
Masterful Advocate - 12

In the 1986 Derby, Bold Arrangement finished 2nd.  His original DI was listed
as infinity and his CD was 1.75, and he didn't pass the 10 pound filter rule.
But in October of the same year, Relko, the damsire of Bold Arrangement, was
granted chef-de-race status.  So, BA's DI and CD were reworked to 2.00 and
0.83, respectively.  BA then was reclassified as meeting the DI and CD test
but still not qualifying on the 10 pound weight rule.  This same thing has
apparently happened with Strike the Gold, although I'm not sure of the details.

On the surface, this may seem like a bit of number juggling to lend credence
to the whole dosage idea.  But, I submit that this is not the case for two
reasons.  First, lets say that BA or STG or any of the 3 Belmont horses that
failed the DI/CD/10 pound tests did indeed win their races without passing
the dosage requirements.  That leaves a whole lot of horses that won the
remainder of the Derbies and Belmonts that DID meet the dosage theory rules.
Second (I wonder if anyone has caught this), DI and CD are constantly
evolving numbers.  As sires produce more and more get over the years, their
classification in any of the 5 categories can change, and therefore the DI
and CD of their get can change accordingly.

There's a summation of this year's KY Derby dosage contenders in the May 1
issue of the DRF on page 7 (at least that's the page in the west coast
edition).  According to the DRF, Sea Hero, Silver of Silver, and Truth of
it All were the horses that met all 3 dosage requirements.  Silver of
Silver's form at the time of the Derby was suspect, Truth of it All was the
2-year old champ from Canada and had never faced horses of this caliber in
a race of this level and was also therefore suspect, leaving Sea Hero as
being the logical choice, if you believe in dosage.

How do sires become chefs?  Steven A. Roman (mentioned earlier in this note)
and Abram S. Hewitt and Leon Rasmussen of the DRF have developed a list of
chefs.  Dr. Z publishes the list in the book talked about in this note.  I
guess a more current list would be published in the DRF or maybe The Blood
Horse or Bloodlines.  John, do you know?  Anyway, it seems that the list is
subjective according to the persons making up the list.  A software list
exists and I think is called PC Dosage or something like that.  I'll see if
I can find out more about it and pass on the info.

I think this is enough dosage for the moment,
Carl
481.511Genuine Risk and her foal at playDECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle Rain Festival: 1/1-12/31Tue May 25 1993 21:307
    ESPN's Thoroughbred Digest had a few seconds of footage of Genuine Risk
    and her foal on last night's show. The foal is stunning! He has a
    tremendous amount of bone from what I could see in a fleeting glimpse.
    She looks great too. A typical first time mama, she wasn't about to let
    the foal out of her sight. Every time he played up and galloped away,
    she chased after him and put her neck over him. Poor old girl never got
    to munch grass! (Don't worry, she's not losing any weight!)
481.5121993 Metropolitan MileDECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle Rain Festival: 1/1-12/31Tue Jun 01 1993 23:2423
    Memorial Day is the tradtional date for the Gr I Metropolitan Mile
    Handicap at Belmont. It was a good field of 9 horses and an even better 
    race.
    
    Loach broke on top but let Bertrando take the lead. Bertrando set 
    blistering fractions getting the mile in 44 and change. Loach pressed
    Bertrando by staying about 3/4 length back on his outside. Alydeed
    stayed close to the pace racing 3rd and 4th for most of the trip.
    England Expects and Ibero were well back.
    
    For a few seconds, it looked like Alydeed wasn't going to run but a
    hole finally opened up for him and Perret asked him to go to the lead.
    Alydeed went to the lead as Loach folded at the eighth pole and passed
    Bertrando easily. Bertrando came back at Alydeed just as Ibero charged
    up on the outside. For a stride or two, it looked like those 3 would
    duel to the wire but the fast pace began to tell on Bertrando who had
    set it and Alydeed who had tried to stay close to it.
    
    Ibero took over and started to pull off. Bertrando came back gamely and
    tried to stay with Ibero but only managed second. Alydeed got third in
    a good performance. Many of the "wise guys" expected him to be off the
    board after running 2 hard races in his last 2 attempts because he was 
    coming up against top quality horses who were also fresh in this race. 
481.513Belmont action this weekendDECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle Rain Festival: 1/1-12/31Wed Jun 02 1993 20:0043
    The Belmont is this Saturday. It looks like there will be 12-14 horses
    in the race. Of course, Prairie Bayou and Sea Hero will be there.
    They're the only ones who have a shot at the $1,000,000 bonus money!
    Since the bonus is awarded on points(first 10, second 5, third 3, fourth 1)
    and Prairie Bayou won the Preakness and was second in the Derby, the bonus
    is almost in the bag for him. He has 15 points and Sea Hero has 10 for
    his Derby win. The only way for Sea Hero to get the bonus is for him to
    win the Belmont and Prairie Bayou is third or worse. There are also a couple
    ways they could tie at 15 or 20 points each and split the bonus. There
    are only 2 other horses that even ran in both the Preakness and the
    Derby who will enter the Belmont.
    
    The field will include El Bakaan and Cherokee Run who finished 2nd &
    3rd in the Preakness. The Peter Pan stakes which A.P. Indy used as a
    Belmont prep last year after he missed the earlier races due to injury
    will provide a couple new faces with quality, Virginia Rapids and
    Colonial Affair. Those horses ran 1-2 respectively in the Peter Pan
    which is 9 furlongs. Seven horses have won the Peter Pan and then gone
    on to win the Belmont so it's possible. Virginia Rapids is by Riverman
    and out of a Sir Ivor mare. So, he's bred to go a distance. Colonial
    Affair is by Pleasant Colony, a classic winner and sire of classic
    winners.
    
    I'll go out on a limb here. Prairie Bayou will not win. He's too slow,
    is a one run horse with no tactical speed and I doubt that he can get 
    the 12 furlong distance. I'm inclined to think that Virginia Rapids
    will be there or thereabouts since nearly every horse I liked this
    season was by Riverman or his son, Irish River. I also think that Sea
    Hero is a factor because he's bred for the distance and NY is his home
    track. On the other hand, NY has been known to be hot and humid which
    we know this colt doesn't like. If it's cool, he's got a shot,
    especially if it rains within 24 hours before the race. He likes a
    track with some moisture in it.
    
    Other action at Belmont this weekend includes the next event in the
    ACRS series(Gr I Nassau County) on Saturday. Devil His Due and other
    top handicap horses will be there. There are also 2 other graded stakes
    on Saturday. On Sunday, Dispute, Aztec Hill and Sky Beauty(among
    others) will contest the Gr I Mother Goose for 3 YO fillies and Lure
    and Star of Cozzene will vie for the 10 furlong Gr II(turf)Early Times 
    Manhattan. If Lure can stretch out to 1.25 miles, he'll 1) get
    $1,000,00 bonus for winning all 3 races in the turf series and 2) will be 
    aimed at the 10 furlong Gr I Arlington Million in September.
481.514Genuine Risk was bred to who???!!!DECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle Rain Festival: 1/1-12/31Fri Jun 04 1993 18:1046
    I'll bet some of you are wondering, "Who the heck is Rahy that Genuine
    RIsk was bred to him?" I must confess even I didn't remember his name!
    So, I looked him up in The Blood Horse's Stallion Register(which is
    about as thick as a hardback "college edition" dictionary!). The short
    version is that he is VERY well bred and was a mediocre stakes horse.
    BTW, that puts him in the top 2% of his foal crop! Only 2% of
    Thoroughbreds EVER win a stake race so a "mediocre" stakes horse is a
    pretty good race horse even if he ain't Man O'War, Secretariat, Sea
    Biscuit, Kelso, Forego, Best Pal or Cougar II!
    
    Rahy was foaled in 1985 and raced in England at 2 & 3. He ran in the US
    3 times as a 4 YO. He won 6 of 13 starts. He was a basically a miler as
    most of his wins were at 8 or 8.5 furlongs. He won 2 stakes, a 6
    furlong sprint as a 2YO in England and a GrII Mile event by 10 lengths
    in the US at 4. His other wins were in overnight handicap and allowance 
    events. He was second in 4 races(3 of which were stakes) and third in 1 
    race which was also a stakes race. Rahy entered stud in 1990 and his
    first foals are 2 YOs in 1993 so we don't know whether he'll be a good
    sire or not.
    
    His sire, Blushing Groom raced in France and England and was a champion
    at 2 and 3. He was also a miler. Rahy's dam is Glorious Song who was a
    multiple Gr I stakes winner and won multiple champion titles in Canada 
    and North America. Blushing Groom sired many champions and has become a
    sire of sires. One of his best known sons at stud is Mt Livermore who
    sired Champions Housebuster and Eliza. (Now do you see why I didn't
    think Eliza could get beyond 8.5 furlongs? She comes from a long line
    of sprinter/miler stock.)
    
    A more extended pedigree follows:
    
                Nasrullah (sire of Bold Ruler who sired Secretariat,etc)
            Red God
                Spring Run
        Blushing Groom
                Wild Rush
            Runaway Bride
                Aimee
    Rahy
                Hail to Reason
            Halo
                Cosmah
        Glorious Song 
                Herbager   
            Ballade
                Miss Swapsco
481.515Belmont/Nassau Post positionsDECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle Rain Festival: 1/1-12/31Fri Jun 04 1993 18:2030
    The post positions for the Nassau County Handicap and Belmont Stakes
    were drawn yesterday. Here theu are
    	
    		Nassau County Handicap (Gr I 9 furlongs)
    PP 	Name		Morning line odds(partial; others between 15-1&30-1)
    1	Sand Lizards
    2 	Devil His Due		 8-5 
    3	Strike The Gold		 3-1
    4	Valley Crossing
    5	Offbeat
    6	Missionary Ridge	 7-2
    7	Honest Ensign
    8	West by West			
    
    		Belmont Stakes
    PP  Name            Morning line odds
    1	Cherokee Run		 8-1
    2	Virginia Rapids		 5-1
    3	Kissin Kris		20-1
    4	Colonial Affair		15-1
    5	Prairie Bayou		 8-5
    6	Bull Inthe Heather	20-1
    7	Raglan Road		30-1
    8	El Bakaan		20-1
    9	Arinthod (who???)	12-1
    10	Only Alpha		50-1
    11	Sea Hero		 4-1
    12	Silver of Silver	20-1
    13	Antrim Rd		20-1
    14	Wild Gale		20-1
481.516Good year, bad yearEASI::GEENENSum, ergo edo.Mon Jun 07 1993 16:4933
    Now that the Triple Crown races are in the books, I look back to see
    what the most memorable moments have been for me.  I've never followed
    the races in previous years like I have this year.  In some ways, I feel
    like I have come to know the horses personally.  For better or worse, here
    are my most remarkable moments:
    
    1.  Prairie Bayou breaks down in the Belmont.
    2.  Colonial Affair and Kissin' Kris win and place in the Belmont
        (I had a show bet on each of them at GGF, based on dosage).
    3.  Prairie Bayou wins the Preakness (not unexpected, just an exciting
        finish).
    4.  Union City breaks down in the Preakness
    5.  Sea Hero emerges momentarily from his doldrum to win the Kentucky
        Derby, after which he disappears back to mediocrity, taking many
        lost Preakness and Belmont bets with him.
    6.  Dosage appears to be a viable handicapping tool in the Triple
        Crown races.
    
    It was a tragic year due to Prairie Bayou and Union City and other
    horses injured along the way, like River Special.  Maybe the injuries
    are normal, but I can't remember the last time two horses had to be
    put down (or one horse for that matter).
    
    BTW, my dosage scheme narrowed down the field to just 3 horses, Sea
    Hero, Colonial Affair, and Kissin Kris.  I eliminated Sea Hero as being
    in declining form or just a mediocre horse who pulled off the KY Derby
    upset.  I couldn't eliminate Kissin Kris, so I placed him just behind
    Colonial Affair.  Both were worth a show bet.  CA paid $7.20 and KK
    paid $11.20 to show at GGF.  Perhaps I was just lucky, but I think
    there really IS something to dosage handicapping.  Let's see how it
    works at the Breeder's Cup.  So far, I'm a believer.
    
    Carl
481.517Belmont Stakes musingsDECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle Rain Festival: 1/1-12/31Mon Jun 07 1993 18:0550
    The last time something like this happened in Teiple Crown races was 
    about 8 years ago. In fact, the circumstances are frighteningly similar. 
    Haji's Treasure broke down in the Preakness while Tank's Prospect won and 
    matched Secretariat's DRF time for the race. Tank's Prospect then broke 
    down in the Belmont. Fortunately, *both* of them were saved and are still 
    alive today.
    
    In the Breeder's Cup Sprint a couple years ago, Mr Nickerson and Shaker
    Knit died due to injuries. Mr Nickerson burst a blood vessel and 
    hemorraghed. When he went down, Shaker Knit fell over him and broke his 
    back.
    
    For Carl and others interested in handicapping, there were other things 
    to be considered in Saturday's Belmont besides pedigree[dosage or
    otherwise]. NY racing regulars could have told you that traction 
    devices(mud caulks or turn downs) are important on the NY surfaces.
    There were 5 horses in the 13 horse field that had traction. One of
    them won. 
    
    I thought the rain and cool weather would be in Sea Hero's favor. 
    Sea Hero also had traction but I can't recall right now whether 
    Kissin Kris was shod that way or not.
    
    Another thing to consider is behavior. Those that saw ABC's broadcast 
    heard Mack Miller say that Sea Hero was "tearing the barn down" which
    implies he was anxious or overwrought. He was also acting up on the way
    to the saddling enclosure. Jan looked at me and said, "Hope he doesn't
    lose the race before he gets to the gate."
    
    Unfortunately, we couldn't apply Jan's "hot jockey" theory(The jockey who 
    wins the associated filly race will win the Triple Crown race) because the
    Mother Goose wasn't run until Sunday. However, Jerry Bailey did win the
    *stakes* race the day before the Belmont. But, when I heard that he had 
    already had 3 winners on Saturday, I knew it was very unlikely that Sea 
    Hero win. Why? Because a jockey winning 3 races on the same card at 
    Belmont is fairly common. It happens about once a week. Winning 4 or more 
    is a LOT more unusual... like once or twice a meeting.
    
    Because of Sea Hero's behavior and Bailey's win streak, I had kinda cast 
    Sea Hero out in favor of Colonial Affair because the Pleasant Colony babies
    love a distance, mature late and he had caulks. He was also fresher
    than Virginia Rapids who had run twice in the past month. Never thought
    twice about Kissin Kris!
    
    However, when I saw Sea Hero's move on the turn, I thought I might have 
    been wrong. I said to Jan, "Bailey's either got a heck of a lot of horse 
    or he's been run away with." You  heard him say after the race, it was 
    basically the latter. Bailey's got class. No excuses. He simply said the 
    horse was rank and wouldn't settle so, early in the race, he knew he had 
    no chance.
481.518Other Belmont actionDECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle Rain Festival: 1/1-12/31Mon Jun 07 1993 18:2827
    In other action at Belmont this weekend:
    
    Miner's Mark(Personal Ensign's first foal) won the Gr III 9 furlong Colin
    Stakes for 3 YO. There's a bit of irony here as his dam(Personal Ensign) 
    was the first major stakes horse since Colin to retire undefeated. 
    Miner's Mark looks like he'll make a good middle distance horse. He is by 
    Mr Prospector so it's unlikely that he'll go much farther than 9 furlongs. 
    Most of the Mr Prospector's don't. 
    
    The 10 furlong Early Times Manhattan was run on Sunday. Lure took over
    on the final turn and forged to a 1 length lead. He was running
    strongly and looked good but Star of Cozzene was closing hard. Star of
    Cozzene caught Lure in the final 1/16 and went on to win by 3/4 of a
    length. Lure ran very well and this race was not a disgrace by any
    means. It was Lure's first start at 10 furlongs and the grass
    course was soft from the weekend rains(Lure likes firm turf).
    His lose does mean that he didn't get the $1,000,000 bonus that the 
    Early Times folks put up. Lure and  Star of Cozzene split a bonus of 
    $247,000 but Mike Smith(jockey on Lure and Prairie Bayou) wasn't having 
    a good weekend.....
    
    Until he got the the Mother Goose (Gr I 9 furlongs 3 YO fillies) late
    on the Sunday card. Sky Beauty drew away from Dispute like she was
    standing still! Sky Beauty won by 6 lengths under a hand ride and was
    actually eased in the last few yards. Dispute with Jerry Bailey up was
    under a hard drive but could make no headway in catching Sky Beauty.
    Eliza, whom Dispute defeated in the KY Oaks, wisely stayed in CA.
481.519BOUVS::OAKEYAssume is *my* favorite acronymMon Jun 07 1993 19:2610
481.520exDECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle Rain Festival: 1/1-12/31Mon Jun 07 1993 20:254
    >As I recall... not a good day - wasn't this the same day that Go For
    >Wand also broke down in the Distaff race?
    
    Unfortunate, but true. 
481.521Genuine Risk's careerDECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle Rain Festival: 1/1-12/31Tue Jun 08 1993 00:0144
    For those interested in Genuine Risk's story who either weren't
    following racing in 1980 or have forgotten...I'll tell you what I
    remember...That was before we had a VCR so I don't have any tape of
    her. It was also before we subscribed to Blood Horse so this is
    strictly a recall deal.
    
    Genuine Risk was bought by the Bert & Diana Firestone for $35,000 at a 
    yearling sale. Their son, Matthew, had picked her out and asked his 
    parents to bid on her. They evaluated her and thought she was worth 
    $30,000 to $40,000 and bought her for that price.
    
    Genuine Risk was sired by Exclusive Native. Exclusive Native also sired
    Triple Crown winner, Affirmed who successfully fought off Alydar 3
    times in 1978. Exclusive Native was sired by Raise a Native(Native
    Dancer x Raise You) and out of Exclusive(Shut Out x Good Example).
    Sorry but I can't recall Genuine Risk's dam.
    
    Genuine Risk won the KY Derby in 1980. She ran second in the Preakness
    but(IMHO) should have won on a DQ. Codex, who did win the race, bumped
    her and forced her wide on the turn. Genuine Risk also ran in the
    Belmont and was leading in the stretch but tired and finished second by
    about a length.
    
    This is an outstanding performance in the Triple Crown and is by far
    the best performance by a filly. If there had been a Triple Crown bonus
    that year, she would have won it because the others were inconsistent
    and/or didn't run in all 3 races. She would have had 20 points for a
    win and 2 seconds while the best total for the others was 10.
    
    She was a courageous and honest racehorse. She always ran her best.
    There are very few racehorses that affect me the way she did. I was
    awed by Secretariat but Genuine Risk was different emotionally. I don't
    know how to explain it. Rubiano and Sky Classic were the same way so
    I'm pretty sure that it wasn't just that Genuine Risk was filly.
    
    She was retired in 1981 when she took a "funny" step in training. I
    think this was at Saratoga. She prained an ankle or something like that 
    and was retired. She went to Firestone's Catocin stud and was bred to
    Secretariat in 1982. That foal was stillborn and this is the first foal
    she's carried to term since.
    
    John
    
    
481.522THE BOOK ON DOSAGEDECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle Rain Festival: 1/1-12/31Tue Jun 08 1993 17:5572
481.523Strike The Gold retired.DECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle Rain Festival: 1/1-12/31Tue Jun 08 1993 18:019
    On ESPN's "Thoroughbred Digest", they said that Strike The Gold's
    owners had announced that he is being retired. No reason was given for
    the retirement but my guess is that they felt he wasn't coming back
    from his bout with anemia in a way to make him a contender in the top
    handicap races. He gave a very poor account of himself in the Pimlico
    Special on May 15 when he finished last. He ran better in the Nassau
    County but still only managed 3rd. 
    
    No decision has been made about where he'll stand stud.
481.524So I guess the book is still open?EASI::GEENENSum, ergo edo.Tue Jun 08 1993 18:4325
    It looks like the book is still open on dosage, even though neither Truth
    of it All or Sea Hero finished in the money in the Belmont.  I had set
    an upper limit of 3.20 DI for the race using the formula:  2.58 average
    DI (for 10 furlongs) is to 4.00 (upper limit DI for 10 furlongs) as 1.78
    average DI (for 12 furlongs) is to X (solve for X, the upper limit DI
    for 12 furlongs).
    
    This ruled out many horses including Virginia Rapids with a DI of 3.93
    I think.  Anyway, my list was narrowed to six horses, the three best of
    which were Colonial Affair, Kissin Kris, and Sea Hero.  I dismissed
    Sea Hero thinking he was in declining form or just happened to uncork
    a good KY Derby run (check his Beyer speed averages for his pre-Derby
    races and also his Preakness Beyer speed rating and you'll see that his
    Derby speed sticks out as unusual).  That left CA and KK as the logical
    dosage contenders, both of which were showing steadily improving form
    from their pre-Belmont Beyer speed ratings.  CA's speed average for the
    previous two races was 102 while KK's was 99, not enough difference to
    pick between them.  But CA has a history of finishing well and KK's
    history was a bit more spotted.
    
    This was my selection criteria for the Belmont.  I didn't pay any
    attention to the 10 pound filter rule.  Except for that, it looks like
    the book is still open on dosage theory, at least from my perspective.
    
    Carl
481.525Soft shifting ground(modified)DECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle Rain Festival: 1/1-12/31Wed Jun 09 1993 21:2452
    The point that the statistician was trying to make is that Dosage is
    pseudo-science because it's is quantifying subjective opinions of
    selected parts of the pedigree. In that sense, I agree. 
    
    But, most handicapping tools and techniques involve 1) selected bits of
    information, 2) subjective opinions and, occassionally, making
    "numbers" out of 1 & 2. For example, speed figures and performance
    figures both involve taking hard numbers like the time and distance of
    a race and "adjusting" it for track conditions, local variants etc.
    They too are pseudo-science because the adjustments are based on
    the performances of horses *subjectively* deemed equal by
    the fact that they are running for the same claiming tag. That doesn't 
    mean these techniques are not useful in the art of handicapping.
    
    However, statistics can be deceiving, especially if the model is biased. 
    In the past, for example, scores on intelligence tests were used to 
    indicate superiority of one racial/ethnic group over another until it was 
    demonstrated that the tests were(and probably still are) culturally 
    biased. In other words, if the tests were made up by W.A.S.P. males, the 
    tests are bound to be biased in favor of W.A.S.P. males.
    
    One can take practically any sort of data and make SOME sort of statistic 
    out of it. They real question is whether or not the claim implied by the 
    statistic is valid. 
    
    My basic problem with dosage is that the selection of chefs-de-race
    includes some sires who were useful at best while excluding outstanding
    ones. The other thing that gives me some heartburn about it is that the
    number shifts from week to week or year to year. For example, the
    pedigree for Chief's Crown that Carl entered. It showed that Chief's
    Crown had an unacceptable dosage index to win at the KY Derby distance
    of 10 furlongs. But, in fact he DID win at 10 furlongs! He won the
    Gr I Travers Stakes at Saratoga 3 months after losing the Derby.
    In my opinion, the reason he didn't win the Derby is not his dosage
    index but the simple fact that he had been sick while training in Fla
    that winter and had not returned to form by early May. Besides, his
    number should have changed(perhaps to an acceptable level) after Danzig 
    became a chef! 
    
    I don't like soft changing ground as a basis for a choice of what to
    do. If dosage ever becomes less arbitrary, I think it would gain wider
    acceptance. For example, it could:
    	1) include ALL sires who have produced 20 or more foals who raced 
           at age 3+ (20 is a reasonable number for a statistical sample
           and allows young sires to be added evaluated quickly. Age 3 and
           up is necessary to determine what the stallion is producing.
           They don't race much beyond a mile at 2.)
    
    	2) categorize the sires by percentages of 5-7 furlong sprinters, 
           8-9.5 furlong middle distance horses and 10+ furlong stayers 
           or some other method which is less arbitrary than the current
           scheme.
481.526Twenty years ago todayDECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle Rain Festival: 1/1-12/31Wed Jun 09 1993 21:2633
    Twenty years ago today, Sgt Pepper taught the band....No! NO! that's
    something else!

    Twenty years ago today(June 9, 1973), Secretariat won the US 
    Triple Crown with an incredible victory in the 105th running of the 
    Belmont Stakes. No horse had done the triple in 25 years.

    My Gallant broke on top and battled Twice a Prince for the lead at the 
    first call. Sham was moving well on the outside but Secretariat rushed 
    up on the rail to take the lead. Secretariat and Sham raced stride for 
    stride going into the first turn. Rounding the clubhouse turn, Sham 
    took a slight lead. From that point on, it was all Secretariat.

    Down the backstretch, Secretariat started drawing off. He continued to 
    widen on the final turn. I remember announcer Chick Anderson saying 
    "He's moving like a tremendous machine!" I was jumping up and down, 
    yelling and screaming like a maniac, "Look at him go! Look at him go!"

    Secretariat set a new stakes and track record of 2:24 for 12 furlongs 
    in a hand ride. He won by a record margin of 31 lengths about 1/16th 
    of a mile or 110 yards. Both records still stand.

    Secretariat's KY Derby time of 1:59 2/5 for 10 furlongs still stands as 
    the stakes and track record, too. His unofficial time for the 
    Preakness(1:53 2/5 see 481.322 for details) would have been a stakes and 
    track record but it has since been matched by 3 YO's in the Preakness and 
    blown off by an older horse(Blushing John by Blushing Groom) in the 
    Pimlico Special(which is run at the same distance as the Preakness).

    I've also prepared a note describing Secretariat's race record and will 
    enter that right behind this one.

    John
481.527Secretariat's race recordDECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle Rain Festival: 1/1-12/31Wed Jun 09 1993 21:3075
Here's Secretariat's race record. I've marked record setting performances 
with * in the "Finish" column.

Date 	 Race & Distance	   Track 	Finish
__________________________________________________________________________
 7/4/72  Maiden Special Wgt 5.5f   Aqueduct	4th 1 1/4 lengths behind 
						winner; Mugged at the start; 
						impeded then rallied late.
 7/15/72 Maiden Special Wgt 6f     Aqueduct     Won handily by 6
 7/31/72 Allowance 6f              Saratoga	Won by 1 1/2 ridden out
 8/16/72 Sanford Stakes 6f         Saratoga     Won by 3 ridden out
 8/26/72 Hopeful 6.5f		   Saratoga     Won handily by 5
 9/16/72 Belmont Futurity 6.5f     Belmont	Won handily by 1 3/4
10/14/72 Champagne Stakes 8f       Belmont      Crossed finish first by 2 
						lengths; DQ'ed to second for
						bearing in passing Stopthemusic
10/28/72 Laurel Futurity 8.5f	   Laurel	Won easily by 4
11/18/72 Garden State 8.5f	   GSP		Won handily by 3 1/2

Champion 2 YO and Horse of the Year for 1972


 3/17/73 Bay Shore 7f              Aqueduct	Won by 4 1/2 in mild drive
 4/ 7/73 Gotham 8f	           Aqueduct	*Won by 3 ridden out; Stakes
						record; course equaling 
						record; broken by Easy Goer 
						in 1989
 4/21/73 Wood Memorial 9f          Aqueduct     3rd 4 lengths behind winner;
						raced wide and hung; said to
						have had an abcess in his 
						mouth which kept him from 
						taking hold of the bit
 5/ 5/73 KY Derby 10f              Churchhill	*Won handily by 2 1/2 - stakes 
						& course record still stands
 5/19/73 Preakness 9.5f	           Pimlico	*Won handily by 2 1/2 - 
						unofficially stakes & course 
						record; stakes record tied by
						Tank's Propect(1985). course 
                                                record beaten by 1/5 second by 
						Blushing John in the Pimlico 
						Special
 6/ 9/73 Belmont Stakes 12f	   Belmont	*Won ridden out by 31 lengths!
						stakes & course record still 
						stands
 6/30/73 Arlington Invitaional 9f  Arlington	Won easily by 6
 8/ 4/73 Whitney Stakes 9f         Saratoga     2nd by a length; weakened in 
						stretch; said to have had a 
						mild fever
 9/15/73 Marlboro Inv Handicap 9f  Belmont      *Won beating stablemate
						Riva Ridge(1972 KY Derby and 
						Belmont winner) by 3 1/2; 
						stakes, course and world
						record. 
 9/29/73 Woodward 12f              Belmont      2nd; 4 1/2 lengths behind 
						winner; said to have been a
						last minute substitution for
						Riva Ridge who did not like
						an off track; Was being 
						trained on turf for Man o'War
						Stakes 9 days later
10/ 8/73 Man o'War Stakes 12f turf Belmont	*Won by 5 ridden out; stakes & 
						course record; Broken 1992 by
						Sky Classic
10/28/73 Can. International 13f turf Woodbine	*Won by 5 1/2 ridden out; 
						Race is now run at 12f

Champion 3 YO and Horse of the Year for 1973

Looking back at it, Secretariat was defeated 5 times in 21 lifetime starts: 
once when he got mugged, once when he was disqualified by the stewards, twice 
when he wasn't healthy and once when he was being prepared for a different 
race. The latter 3 losses shouldn't have occurred in my opinion. The other 2
were simply bad racing luck. Not bad for a horse won on the toss of a coin!

John
481.528Did you know that Secretariat...EASI::GEENENSum, ergo edo.Thu Jun 10 1993 17:5834
    And after that remarkable racing career, Secretariat did not produce
    enough significant get to be considered a chef-de-race?  In my dosage
    study, I have seen a couple of different lists (one from Dr. Z's
    book compiled by a couple of DRF guys, and another list compiled by
    a couple of Blood Horse editors), both of which list Secretariat as
    having no chef-de-race points!  You'd think that the progeny of such a
    great horse would be tearing up the world's race tracks.
    
    Which brings me to a few points to make about dosage:
    
      1.  Assignation of horses as chefs-de-race is subjectively
          performed by so-called experts.
    
      2.  The experimental free handicap 10 pound filter rule is made
          up subjectively by more so-called experts.
    
      3.  The current 2-year-old champion is decided by even more
          experts rendering their subjective opions, although every so
          often such a great horse comes along that it's obvious.
    
      4.  Champions of other countries being considered in the same
          light as 10 pound filter rule qualifiers is not always
          reliable.
    
      5.  As chefs produce more get, their dosage numbers can change.
          Dosage experts have refigured the numbers on horses to make
          previous non-dosage qualifiers into dosage qualifiers, but I
          have yet to see previous dosage qualifiers refigured to become
          non-dosage qualifiers.
    
    So John, I agree with your assessment of dosage being non-scientific and
    subjective, but dosage does seem to work amazingly well.
    
    Carl
481.529Secretariat an OutcrossKALE::ROBERTSFri Jun 11 1993 12:3310
    Yes, that's an interesting thing about Secretariat not being a "chef du
    race".  But in a way, it makes sense.  He was the product of what some
    breeders think of as an outcross, since his sire and dam pedigrees
    didn't have a lot (yeah, what's a "lot") of ancestors in common.  The
    theory is that if you cross two different and inbred lines, you have a
    good chance of getting an outstanding individual (which certainly was
    the case!) but that this individual is unlikely to "breed true".  That
    seems also to have been the case....
    
    -ellie
481.530musingsGBLAUT::JANICKIV. Janicki DCE Engineering DTN 226-5980Fri Jun 11 1993 16:0716
    re: Secretariat
    
    But, Secretariat is becoming well-known as a broodmare sire
    and perhaps that is where his legacy will be. If you look at his
    produce record, he tended to produce more like his grandfather
    Princequillo than as a Bold Ruler son. I think Secretariat would
    have done better in Europe than in the US with its emphasis on
    speed.
    
    Also it is tradition that the "superstar" racehorses don't tend
    to be exceptional sires. For example, Citation, Whirlaway, Affirmed.
    You do have the exception in Seattle Slew though. :-)
    
    BTW, How is Spectacular Bid doing at stud?
    
    Vicky
481.531stallion ramblingsDECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle Rain Festival: 1/1-12/31Fri Jun 11 1993 18:1349
    It always amused me that people thought Secretariat would go to stud
    and produce nothing but wonder horses. When an outstanding racehorse
    with a medoicre pedigree retires, they expect that horse to
    breed "true" to his pedigree(i.e. produce mediocre stock). Even better,
    a gelding like John Henry whose sire's stud fee was pocket change...The
    attitude was, "No great loss that he's a gelding. He would have bred to
    his pedigree anyway."
    
    Why, when a horse with good pedigree is superior on the track to others
    with similar pedigrees(even those with Bolder Ruler x a Princequillo mare),
    do they expect his performance in the breeding shed to exceed his
    pedigree? Genetics just doesn't work that way!
    
    If you evaluate Secretariat's performance as a sire compared to those
    with similar pedigrees, it looks pretty good. He produced horses that
    won Gr I stakes horses(at 10 furlongs and up) from 1976(General Assembly) 
    through 1992(Super Staff), including champions and classic winners like
    Risen Star and Lady's Secret. His last crop are 3 YOs this year and
    there doesn't seem to be any world beaters in it. Some of Secretariat's
    get develop late, one or 2 of them may turn out to be good as older
    horses.
    
    In fact, as Vicky suggested, Secretariat's breeding record is very 
    similar to Princequillo's in "style". Both produced a number of top race
    horses(but nothing like Northern Dancer and Nijinsky in terms of
    quantity) and both are better known as broodmare sires. 
    
    Actually, I wouldn't say that Seattle Slew was an exceptional sire. He
    produced a few good horses in his early crops but *nothing* in recent
    years. Northern Dancer and Nijinsky are the only "superstar" racehorses
    I can think of who became (what I would call) exceptional sires.
    
    Most of the exceptional sires in recent years were mediocre or worse as
    racehorses. For example, Mr Prospector(who only ever won 2 stakes races) 
    and Danzig(leading sire by earnings 1991 and 1992 who never ran in a 
    stakes race and only won 2 races in an abreviated career). Both those 
    horses also had soundness problems which breeders immediately overlooked 
    when they started producing stakes horses. To no one's surprise, they 
    produce a lot of unsoundness as well as stakes horses.
    
    Re: How is Spectacular Bid doing at stud?
    
    Apparently, not very well. He was moved from KY to NY this season. For
    most stallions, being moved from THE center of the breeding industry to 
    another state can be taken as a sign that he's not to good a sire.
    Especially when that state is no better than 4th behind KY, FL and CA
    in terms of producing quality horses. I'll look in the stallion
    register over the weekend and see what they have in the way of
    statistics etc.
481.532Spectacular Bid as a sire.DECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle Rain Festival: 1/1-12/31Mon Jun 14 1993 19:2252
    Re: How is Spectacular Bid doing at stud?
    
    Spectacular Bid is another example of an outstanding racehorse who
    is not an outstanding sire. A brief recap of his racing career shows
    30 starts with 26 wins(23 stakes wins) as well as 3 stakes placings 
    (2 seconds and one third). His 23 stakes wins included 13 Gr I stakes 
    like Champagne Stakes,  Laurel Futurity, KY Derby, Preakness, Santa Anita 
    Handicap, Californian Stakes, Haskell Invitational and the Woodward. His
    other stakes wins were Gr II and Gr III. His stakes placings were in 1 1/2
    mile Gr I races like The Belmont Stakes and the Jockey Club Gold Cup(now 
    run at 10 furlongs rather than 12). "The Bid" raced 3 years and was 
    champion each year he raced (2YO colt, 3YO colt and older horse 
    respectively). Shoemaker said Spectacular Bid was the best he ever rode.

    The most successful horse Spectacular Bid sired to date has won 1 Gr II 
    and 1 Gr III stakes race. The following statistics are from The Blood 
    Horse's Stallion Register(I kept it this year, Vicky ;-) and should allow 
    you to draw your own conclusions(or confuse you totally! ;-)

				In 92		1992 2 YOS(crop of 1990)
    Foals	423
    Runners	308(73%)    	104		12
    Winners	220(52%)	 48		 6
    2 YO Winners 52(12%)	  6		 6
    Stakes winners 37(9%)	  2		 0

    On Average, Spectacular Bid's foals win 2.16 times as much money as the
    average for all horses that run the same year. They also win 3.42 times as 
    much money as foals out of the same dams by other stallions.

               Number of Wins By Racing Year
    1984  12
    1985  32
    1986  70
    1987  76
    1988  78
    1989  97
    1990  99
    1991 100
    1992  79
        
               			By Foal Crop
    Year	Named	Runners	Winners		2YO Winners	Stakes Winners
    1982	25	20	17		 7		7
    1983	51	38	29		 4		5
    1984	50	42	33		11		8
    1985	53	42	27		 6		8
    1986	51	40	30		 5		3
    1987	46	39	32		 4		3
    1988	56	40	29		 6		2
    1989	45	35	17		 3		1
    1990	46	12	 6		 6		0
481.533It's a family affairDECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle Rain Festival: 1/1-12/31Thu Jun 17 1993 21:4114
    Sultry Song (1992 Gr I Hollywood Gold Cup winner, 3rd in Horse of the
    Year voting in 92, etc) has been retired to stud at age 5. That's the bad 
    news. 
    
    The good news is that his older brother,Solar Splendor, is still racing. 
    He recently went against Lure and Star of Cozzene in the 10 furlong Early 
    Times Manhattan. He set the pace for a while but got beat by horses who 
    are better at 10 furlongs and like a soft course(Star of Cozzene). Solar 
    Splendor's best races have been at 12f.
    
    Even better though, is that Sultry Sun(their dam) has produced a 2 YO
    by Canadian champion and world record setter, With Approval. This 2 YO 
    will probably be a) good and b) a turf horse, so watch for him in major
    stakes.
481.534Chill out! California!DECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle Rain Festival: 1/1-12/31Thu Jun 17 1993 21:5620
    Speaking of Sultry Song's Hollywood Gold Cup win reminds me...
    Everytime you turn around, the press and Californians are saying
    something like, "California has the best horses. Eastern horses can't beat
    'em"...etc
    
    Baloney! Not only did Sultry Song go west and beat California's best
    last summer in the Hollywood Gold Cup, but the Californians that have
    gone east in the past year haven't done well at all. The Triple Crown
    races and associated filly races were all won by Eastern horses.
    Personal Hope, Corby, Diazo, Union City, Eliza, etc all met defeat.
    
    Similarly, in the major races for older horses, the West Coast shippers
    haven't done too well. Even Champion Paseana and Best Pal got beat when
    they went East...Most ACRS races(this year and last) were won by Eastern 
    horses. Strike The Gold won the bonus last year and Devil His Due has
    won 2 races so far this year. Lure beat Star of Cozzene 2 out of 3
    times. Strike The Gold, Devil His Due and Lure are al NY based
    horses. 
    
    So, "Chill out! California!"
481.535ramblings on recent racesDECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle Rain Festival: 1/1-12/31Wed Jun 23 1993 18:2724
    Stakes racing has been pretty quiet since Belmont Weekend but there are
    a couple interesting things that happened in CA recently:
    
    Best Pal is still not back to his peak form. He tried the grass for the
    first time in a major stake and ran a game second with his usual late
    charge.
    
    Bien Bien(now 4) has finally got over his case over second-itis. He's
    been running well on the turf but always managed to get beat somehow
    Even in his victory over Fraise last December, he won by DQ after
    finishing second by a nostril. Fraise had knocked him off stride in the
    stretch run. Well, he won BIG last time out and set a track/stakes
    record. Kotashaan, Lure and Star of Cozzene will have to battle this
    late developing colt. He's got the talent and class to run with them.
    
    Paseana is back to her winning ways. She's won her second straight Gr I
    race and now seems to be near the top of her game. There's talk that
    she and Turn Back the Alarm may meet in one of the stakes at Saratoga.
    If not, they'll certainly meet in the Breeder's Cup Distaff.
    
    Eliza is back to losing. She finished a dismal 4th in a 5 horse field
    after leading for 7+ furlongs. On the final turn, you could tell she
    was spent. She was shortening stride and you knew she would be caught.
    Hopefully, she was just a bit unfit and not injured. She's better than that
481.536I can hardly wait!EASI::GEENENSum, ergo edo.Sat Jun 26 1993 01:0433
    I finally got my Breeder's Cup tickets yesterday and I just can't
    possibly relate how excited I am!  My wife and I have a couple of
    box seats between the 1/8 and 1/16 poles -- front row!  Now if I can
    only contain myself until November 6th.
    
    It was not too difficult to find tickets, but it was a little on the
    expensive side.  I had called Santa Anita, but the lady just laughed
    when I asked her if they had any tickets.  It seems they were sold out
    months ago.  But she suggested that I call sports ticket agencies,
    who buy most of the tickets anyway.  I called my company's travel agent
    and she was able to find two or three places selling tickets.  There
    was still plenty of choices of seating left -- for a price.  The
    cheapest seats in the nose-bleeds are $75 (Santa Anita would have sold
    them for $20 if they had any left) and the most expensive seats were
    in the Turf Club for $1500!!  We settled for box seats for $200.
    Other box seats were available for $150, $250, $300, and $350 for the
    loge section almost at the finish line.  According to the travel agent,
    all the sports tickets places were charging the same prices.
    
    The hotels, airlines, and car rental agencies are having 3-day/night
    deals for the Breeder's Cup.  In other words, you can't get a hotel
    room for one or two nights, it has to be three nights, arriving on the
    4th and checking out on the 7th.  Rental cars offer the best deal if
    you get the car on the 4th and return it on the 7th.  The airlines
    give you a 2 ticket for price of one deal only if you arrive on the 4th
    and leave on the 7th.  Looks like they're accomplices.
    
    It's bound to be great fun seeing the world's best horses, trainers,
    and jockeys.  And add to that my passion for horseracing and handi-
    capping -- I can hardly wait!
    
    Is it November yet?
    Carl
481.537A favoriteDECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle Rain Festival: 1/1-12/31Thu Jul 01 1993 18:0736
    Ever hear of Fourstars Dave? Probably not, but he's one of my favorite
    racehorses that's running today. He's an 8 YO gelding and runs in minor
    turf stakes in NY(Gr II-III and ungraded). 
    
    His younger brother(Fourstars Allstar) is better known and has been
    seen in Gr I turf races on network TV. He just won the NH Sweepstakes at 
    Rockingham the other week. Both are NY breds and based in NY with 
    Irish-born trainer Leo O'Brien(former jump jockey and jump trainer in 
    Ireland)
    
    So, why do I follow "Dave?" He's a good racehorse AND a character! For
    example, he started racing at 2 and has won a stakes race at Saratoga
    EVERY season! That's 6 seasons, folks! Usually, it's a graded stake but 
    last year he could only manage a victory in lesser stakes. I thought it 
    was the "twilight" of his career and that he was losing his speed. Wrong!
    
    He came back this season and has been running well. Last Saturday, he
    won the GrIII(turf) Poker Stakes at Belmont and broke *HIS OWN* course
    record for the mile! He won well in 1:33.00, a good time anywhere!
    
    He's also the all-time leading NY bred money winner. His last race
    prior to the Poker, was in allowance company at Philadelphia Park. Why?
    He was approaching the NY bred earnings record and his trainer wanted
    him to set the new record with a win rather than just being in the
    money. So, he sent him over to PA. His purse money from the Poker just
    pushed his record a little farther out of reach for the next horse.
    
    When "Dave" goes to Saratoga, he really sharpens up. O'Brien says that
    he thinks "Dave" knows the place and that "Dave" loves the atmosphere 
    there. There's more activity to entertain him and he spends hours
    looking out the window watching the world go by. 
    
    So, don't be surprised if "Dave" wins one of Saratoga's best races this
    year. He's in good form and he's done it before! I hope he does and
    then they retire him. After all, how many horses have won Saratoga
    stakes 7 years in a row?
481.538GBLAUT::JANICKIV. Janicki DCE Engineering DTN 226-5980Thu Jul 01 1993 22:435
John,

I don't know "Dave", but I am interested in his pedigree.

Vicky
481.539Fourstar pedigreeDECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle Rain Festival: 1/1-12/31Tue Jul 06 1993 20:0558
Fourstar Dave and Fourstars Allstar are out of the unraced mare, 
Broadway Joan and sired by Compliance, a Northern Dancer son. Compliance raced 
for 2 years in Ireland and had a career of 5 starts and zero wins. His best 
finish was 3rd in the Ballycorus Stakes. His record as a sire is 55% winners 
and 2% stakes winners.

Broadway Joan has had 5 named foals to date(4 by Compliance and 1 by Secreto). 
All 5 have raced and won. Dave and Allstar are her only stakes winners to 
date. Last year, Broadway Joan was sent to Ireland and was bred to 
Sadler's Wells, another(but FAR more successful) Northern Dancer son. There 
was a breeding arrangement between the mare and stallion owners where 
Broadway Joan would be bred to Sadler's Wells twice. The stallion owner gets 
the first foal and the mare owner gets the second. The first foal is on the 
ground and she has been rebred.

Dave has made 80 starts(so far!) in his career and has 20 wins. Most of those 
races have been at 7-9 furlongs. His biggest win was the Gr II St Paul Derby.
He has won about $1.5 million in purse money while winning 13 stakes and 
finishing "in the money" in 17 more stakes!

Fourstars Allstar is now 5. His biggest win was the Group I Irish 2,000 
Guineas as a 3 YO. He's also won several Gr II and III events here in the US 
as well as a number of ungraded stakes. He's best at 8-9 furlongs but can 
stretch out to 10 furlongs.

Full pedigree follows for those interseted enough to continue:

             Nearco
          Neartic
             Lady Angela
       Northern Dancer
             Native Dancer
          Natalma
             Almahoud
    Compliance
             Tom Fool
          Buck Passer
             Busandra
       Sex Appeal
             Traffic Judge
          Best In Show
             Stolen Hours
Fourstars Dave 
             Double Jay
          Noble Jay
             Noble Nurse
       Bold Arian
             River War
          River Val
             Shop Val
    Broadway Joan
             Nashua
          Wakefield Tower
             Slave
       Courtneys Doll
             Wigral
          Rapport
             Wise Ally
481.540Recent racesDECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle Rain Festival: 1/1-12/31Tue Jul 06 1993 21:4243
    Whew, what a weekend! Every timew I turned around there was a good race
    on TV!
    
    Best Pal finally got back to his true form. In an interview, Gary Jones
    said that he had probably rushed Best Pal to get ready for the Santa
    Anita Handicap last February and he wasn't ready. Then when they ran
    him at Oaklawn to defend that title, he bruised a foot and was off
    again. He needed his last race(a good second on the Hollywood Park turf 
    course) and Jones said he was out of excuses. Fortunately, Best Pal
    didn't need one! He won easily in defeating Marquetry, Missionary
    Ridge, Bertrando(all 3 trained by Bobby Frankel!), Latin American, and a 
    couple other top West Coast handicap horses in Saturday's Hollywood Gold 
    Cup.
    
    On Sunday, the East Coast's top handicap horses contested the Gr I
    Suburban. Devil His Due was back on form with a 4 week rest after losing
    the Gr I Nassau County on Belmont Stakes day. DHD went to the lead on
    the final turn and was truly pressured in the lane. He was very game in 
    holding off all challenges and won by well over a length. Pure Rumour 
    was a fast closing second while Nassau County winner Gone West faded to 
    third.
    
    Champion turf mare Flawlessly started her season with a win. She won the 
    Beverly Hills Handicap by a wide margin! Unfortunately, it wasn't as
    decisive a victory as it looked. Jockey Kent Desormeaux managed to get
    Jolypha boxed in when there were only 3 other horses in the field!
    While Flawlessly, who had only about a length advantage, strode away 
    from the others, Desormeaux had to pull Jolypha up and take her outside 
    the 2 "also rans" that had her boxed. By the time Jolypha got running 
    again, Flawlessly was home with a 10 length win with Jolypha flying to 
    get second. You may remember seeing Jolypha run an excellent third to
    A.P. Indy and Pleasant Tap in the 1992 Breeder's Cup Classic. Many people 
    thought she actually ran the best race that day and only lost because 
    she was forced wide on the turn. She's darned good and her jockey's 
    bone-headed move cost her all chance of catching Flawlessly. Next time!
    
    I could go on for another 100 lines but I'll finish with some feed back
    on Eliza. Her trainer said she was not injured and he thinks her mind
    is blown. She's been anxious and overwrought; impossible to rate even
    in workouts. He's planning on giving her a vacation to see if she'll
    come back. On the other hand, it's possible that she's exactly what
    Allen Paulson called her, a female Arazi...precocious and brilliant at 2 
    but a disappointment thereafter. 
481.541'Thoroughbred World' on PRIMEDECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle Rain Festival: 1/1-12/31Wed Jul 07 1993 17:2814
    The PRIME sports network and its affiliates(NESN, PTN, PNW, SUN, MSG,
    etc) are putting on a new show about throughbred racing. It's a 30
    minute show and  is supposed to be on 3 times a month.
    
    After viewing the first show, I think the main focus of the show will
    be attracting new fans and public relations. The first show included
    stories about Secretariat, Genuine Risk and her new foal, and a short
    segment on handicapping. 
    
    The next show will have a segment on advances in veterinary medicine
    which can save many horses who are injured. I think they will feature
    a story about Dixie Brass who broke down in the 1992 Sports Page
    Handicap with an injury similar to that which took Ruffian's life in
    1975. Dixie Brass is now at stud. 
481.542Brain adled in SeattleDECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle Rain Festival: 1/1-12/31Thu Jul 08 1993 21:1738
481.543Sky Beauty wins "The Triple Tiara"DECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle Rain Festival: 1/1-12/31Tue Jul 13 1993 23:2824
    Well, Sky Beauty and jockey Mike Smith won the Triple Crown for Fillies
    last Sunday as expected. The Filly Triple is a series of races in NY
    consisting of the Acorn Stakes, Mother Goose Stakes and Coaching Club 
    American Oaks. Actually, last year(I think) they started calling it 
    "The Triple Tiara" to a) make it sound more feminine and b) avoid
    confusion with all the other "Triple Crowns" in the world.
    
    Sky Beauty is only the eighth filly in history to accomplish this feat.
    The last time it was accomplished was 1989 when Open Mind did the "hat
    trick." Some of the others to win the Filly Triple are: Chris Everett,
    Mom's Command and Ruffian. Sorry, I can't think of the other 3 offhand.
    
    Sky Beauty is the top filly in the US, bar none. She would have been
    2 YO Filly champ last year but an injury sidelined her and Eliza won
    the B.C. Juvenile Fillies.
    
    However, this doesn't put Sky Beauty in the same category as Mom's
    Command and Ruffian(yet). The races have been shortened in recent years.
    They are now 8, 9 and 10 furlongs for the Acorn, Mother Goose and Oaks,
    respectively. The Oaks was shortened from 12 to 10 furlongs a few years
    ago. I think that the Mother Goose used to be 10 furlongs so that the
    races were 8, 10 and 12 furlongs respectively. It takes a different
    kind of horse to go 10 and 12 furlongs than 8 & 9. Not necessarily
    better, but definitely different.
481.5441993 Queen's Plate & jockeys as handicappersDECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle Rain Festival: 1/1-12/31Tue Jul 13 1993 23:4826
    Speaking of "other Triple Crowns in the world"...The Canadian Triple
    Crown series started on Sunday. 
    
    Peteski won the 10 furlong Queen's Plate in a wire to wire romp. 
    Although the series is restricted to Canadian *horses*, there are no
    restrictions on ownership or riders. Peteski was ridden by Craig
    Perret. Peteski is owned by a New Yorker who used to be head of the 
    NY Racing Association. He bought the horse after Peteski broke his maiden 
    earlier in the current Woodbine meeting. Peteski is trained by Canadian 
    Roger Attfield who trained 2 Canadian Triple Crown winners(With
    Approval and Izvestia). Attfield has now won the race 6 times and 3
    times in the last 4 years!
    
    Intersetingly enough, Attfield trained the second place finisher, 
    Cheery Night, who was the favorite in the race. Just to demonstrate
    what poor handicappers jockeys are, Canadian jockey Don Seymour was 
    given his choice of the two mounts. He regularly works both in the 
    mornings and chose Cheery Night. 
    
    I've never understood why people ask jockeys for inside tips! Many of 
    them have the knack of choosing to ride the wrong horse. FOr example, 
    Kent Desormeaux chose not to ride Best Pal in May. Now, he's lost the 
    mount to Corey Black and Best Pal is back on top of the handicap
    division. There are few better jockeys than Eddie Maple but he 
    seems to choose *away* from horses that turn  out to be outstanding 
    stakes horses.
481.5451993 Vanity HandicapDECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle Rain Festival: 1/1-12/31Fri Jul 23 1993 23:3733
    I been meaning all week to tell you about the Gr I Vanity Handicap(9 
    furlongs for fillies & mares 3 YO & up).
    
    It was another short field with just 5 going to the post. Champion
    older mare Paseana(now a 6 YO!) was the favorite and gave away *TONS*
    of weight to every other mare in the field. 
    
    Paseana had drawn an inside post and broke well but she was in danger
    of being trapped on the rail like Jolypha was against Flawlessly in the
    Beverly Hills Handicap. Kent Desormeaux is still taking abuse for that
    mistake! To be fair though, the other jocks intentionally kept
    Desormeaux & Jolypha boxed by waiting to make their own runs. It was
    good strategy in an attempt to get second for themselves. But, Jolypha
    was too good for that trick to work.
    
    Anyway back to the Vanity. Chris McCarron(who rides Flawlessly and 
    Paseana) was paying attention that day. So, when 3 horses were outside
    him, he moved Paseana early to get through a hole on the rail. Paseana
    came to Sourthern Truce easily and went on by. She relaxed and turning
    for home she looked invincible.
    
    ReToss finally got some running room and came flying when she finally
    got clear. SHe closed on Paseana and for a minute it looked like a
    battle to the wire. But, the weight Paseana was carrying started to
    take its toll. ReToss won by a mere length while she carried 12 pounds
    less than Paseana.
    
    As good a racehorse as ReToss is, she didn't beat Paseana. The track
    handicapper did by the weight assignments. Every time Paseana has lost
    this year, she's been beaten by less than 2 lengths by a mare carrying 
    12-17 pounds less weight. Paseana *should* carry more weight, no
    question. But, it's unfair to load her up so much more than the others.
    It's obvious that she can't give away that much weight 
481.546Opening week at SaratogaDECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle Rain Festival: 1/1-12/31Wed Aug 04 1993 23:0149
    Last week marked the opening of the Saratoga race meeting which is
    arguably the best single race meeting in North America. It's certainly
    got the highest ratio of stakes to days of racing. I think they have 30
    stakes races in 35 calendar days. There's a stake almost every racing
    day(they only race 6 days a week)!
    
    Last Friday, they ran the Gr III(turf) Daryl's Joy which old FourstarDave
    had won twice. This year's race was great! Dave ran along in 3rd-4th
    place until the top of the stretch when he started to kick for home. He
    sure looked like a winner until I saw Lure(a champion turf horse and
    multiple Gr I winner) coming like an express train.
    
    Dave went with Lure for a few strides but Lure edged away to win by 3
    lengths. I was sorry to see Dave lose but he ran well(You should see
    his stride! It's incredible!) and it took a champion like Lure to beat 
    him. The good news is that Lure didn't break the course record which Dave
    had set in one of his earlier wins of this race. (I think he's run in
    the Daryl's Joy race about 5 times and never been out of the money!)
    
    For Lure, this was something of a new style. He had been held well
    off the pace in an attempt to teach him to rate. He has always been a
    front runner. His trainer, Shug McGaughey was interviewed on last
    night's "Inside Racing" and said that this new style was intended to
    preserve Lure's energy so he could get 1 1/4 miles. He's intending to
    run Lure in the Arlington Million next month which is a Grade I race at
    1 1/4 miles.
    
    NYRA also held the traditional set of races for opening week: The
    Schuylerville, Saratoga Special, Test, Jim Dandy etc.
    
    Definitely worth mentioning is the Jim Dandy(Gr II 9 furlongs 3 YO
    colts) which is a traditional prep race for the Gr I Travers Stakes(the
    oldest stakes race in the US.) Miner's Mark(Cmapion older mare, 
    Personal Ensign's first foal) defeated an all-star cast which included 
    Sea Hero(Gr I KY Derby winner who will now probably compete in grass 
    races), Colonial Affair(Gr I Belmont Stakes winner), Sea Tower(Gr I Wood 
    Memorial winner), Virginia Rapids, etc. Miner's Mark is also trained by
    McGaughey and is headed for the Travers.
    
    Eddie Maple a veteran jockey of 25 years won the Saratoga Special with 
    Dehere. He says this is the best juvenile he's ever ridden. I believe it 
    too. You should have seen the race. Eddie had him on the rail and was 
    trying to get through along the rail. Couldn't get through so he tried 
    to move between horses to get a shot at the lead. Another horse got to 
    the hole before him. So, at the top of the stretch, he checked Dehere 
    a bit and took him back to go around the fron runners. By the time he 
    maneuvered him to the outside, they were 6 lengths out of it and racing 
    4 wide! No problem! Dehere went by the others like they were standing
    still and drew off to win by 3-4 lengths!
481.547Lil E Tee retired.DECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle Rain Festival: 1/1-12/31Wed Aug 04 1993 23:075
    1992 KY Derby winner, Lil E Tee, has been retired. He sustained a
    hairline fracture to his right front cannon bone in a workout. The
    injury is in NO way life threatening but he has been retired.
    He is for sale as a stallion prospect. Anybody wanna buy into the
    syndicate?
481.548Zafonic is a bleederRDGE44::ALEUC3Thu Aug 05 1993 16:1414
The winner of the English 2,000 Gns (Grade 1 race for 3 yo colts over 1 mile)
ZAFONIC trained by A Fabre in France, who is regarded by many as the best 
miler in Europe, had what is certainly his last European race, and possibly 
the last race of his career last week. The race was the Sussex Stakes at 
Goodwood (UK) which is a traditional all-aged mid-season grade 1 affair over 
a mile. Zafonic ran a disappointing race to finish a well beaten 7th on 
unsuitable good-soft ground. It later transpired that the colt had bled 
internally. Since medication is not allow in Europe the colts future lies
either at stud or on the American circuit. 

Is lasix allowed on the Santa Anita course ?

MartinK
481.549Bleeder policies in N.A. and OzDECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle Rain Festival: 1/1-12/31Thu Aug 05 1993 17:2636
    >Is lasix allowed on the Santa Anita course ?
    
    Yes. Unlike Europe, we in the US have no *national* regulation of which
    medications are allowed on race day. Each state sets up its own
    regulations. The strictest are New York's which allow no medication
    within 24 hours of a race. California allows lasix on race day.
    
    I'm sure Zafonic would be a welcome addition to the barn of any of the
    top southern CA trainers,especially those with reputations of handling
    turf horses well like Bobby Frankel, Ron McAnally or Charlie Whittingham.
    
    Actually, the strictest national policy I have heard on the subject of
    bleeders is Australia's. Not only do the Aussie's not allow medication
    but, if a horse bleeds twice in races, it is *BANNED FROM FURTHER
    RACING FOR LIFE*! 
    
    One of their top turf mares has recently relocated to CA because she
    had bled once in a race. Rather than risk bannishment, her owners moved
    her to the US so she could continue racing and will get lasix.
    
    Most states in the US permit horses to race on lasix but the regulations 
    vary from state to state as to how much is allowed and what conditions have
    to be met before the horse can race on lasix. Some leave it strctly to
    the trainer or veterinarian. Others require 2 confirmed episodes of
    bleeding before allowing lasix on race day.
    
    Canada does have national regulations and, until about 2 years ago, the
    Canadian regulations were like Europe's. No medication on race day. 
    About 2 years ago(Sept 1991, if I remember correctly), they began to  
    allow lasix. 
    
    Many people will claim that lasix does not improve a horse's performance.
    Therefore, it was with great interest that I noted the comments of
    Woodbine's offical handicapper during the broadcast of the Canada's
    Queen's Plate. He said "After watching thousands of races since we
    allowed lasix, I can tell you that lasix turns 'also-rans' into winners."
481.550True formEASI::GEENENCogito, ergo doleo!Thu Aug 05 1993 17:4613
    My personal opinion is that lasix allows a horse to run according to
    it's true capabilities, rather than actually improve a horse's performance.
    
    A fictional example:
    
        A horse has the ability to run with capability X.
        The horse bleeds and can only muster capability X-Y.
        After lasix the horse can run again with capability X.
    
    This is what I have gathered so far from my reading and also from
    a few owners and trainers via the Internet Derby and otherwise.
    
    Carl
481.551Shall we agree to disagree?DECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle Rain Festival: 1/1-12/31Thu Aug 05 1993 18:5732
    Carl,
    
    I disagree and so do many veterinary studies. In one such study, Lasix
    was administered to a control group of non-bleeders. They all ran
    faster than they had without the Lasix. The theory is that because it
    is a diuretic, Lasix causes horses to urinate substantially more than
    they ordinarily would. Therefore, the horse is lighter(the theory 
    continues) and the same amount of muscle power/energy will produce 
    faster times.
    
    Many people in American racing feel that Lasix enhances performance
    rather than merely allowing true ability to show. In addition, 
    many prominent people in American racing(e.g Seth Hancock, president of 
    Claiborne Farms and John Veitch, trainer of Alydar) feel, as I do, that 
    Lasix should be banned entirely or, at least, banned in Gr I races like
    the Breeder's Cup, Kentucky Derby, etc. because the winners of those 
    races have such great impact on the future generations of horses. 
    
    If we continue to allow Lasix and other drugs(e.g. Bute) on race day,
    we will soon have a breed of horses which cannot race without them.
    That's not good for the horses, the sport, the betting public or the
    TB industry.
    
    Many people who favor allowing Lasix and Bute in competing horses use
    the "it's only humane" argument to justify their position. Frankly, I
    think it is inhumane to give a horse a painkiller(like Bute) and race
    it when it's sore! Same with Lasix. I think it's inhumane.
    
    Finally, in the arguments against, Lasix is not very effective. Many 
    horses bleed despite having been treated with Lasix. 
    
    John
481.552How about neither?EASI::GEENENCogito, ergo doleo!Sat Aug 07 1993 01:5620
    I'm not so sure that it's a matter of agreeing or disagreeing.  My
    personal opinion is based on what I know *so far* from having read
    books, talked to a few trainers and owners, and what I have learned
    from following the mail in the Internet Derby.  All of this, of course,
    is for the sole purpose of finding a horse to bet on.  The sum total
    of what I know up to now was stated by me in my last note, but is always
    subject to change from new information.  It seems that you, John, have
    read or been exposed to more and different sources than I have, so it's
    not surprising that our current thinking on the subject is different.
    
    I'm always looking for new information about anything pertaining to
    horse racing and thoroughbred handicapping, but I've not read anything yet
    about veterinary studies and I would find it very interesting to do so.
    Are there articles or books you could cite?  The Internet Derby doesn't
    get into vet studies or the like, only handicapping related stuff, and
    the trainers and owners I know are probably not aware (and could care
    less) about the effects of lasix you have mentioned.  Anyway, any info
    you could point me to would be most appreciated.
    
    Carl
481.553KAHALA::HOLMESMon Aug 09 1993 13:5917
>>re: 481.552 
>>                                                                    and
>>    the trainers and owners I know are probably not aware (and could care
>>    less) about the effects of lasix you have mentioned.  

    "not aware".  Now that's the dummest think I ever heard !

    You might want to check out note 471.6

    I think we should be careful in quoting 'scientific' studdies.
    I'm certainly not a biological scientist either but alot of smaller
    clinical studies are not reproducable.

    The last smaller scientific breakthru, with alot of media attention
    that was not reproducable was, I believe nuclear fussion in a coffee
    cup, I'm sure most of us remember that.

481.554Straight from the owner's mouthEASI::GEENENCogito, ergo doleo!Mon Aug 09 1993 15:3749
    I was at a meeting of my cat club last Saturday night.  The president
    of the club is an owner and breeder of TB horses.  He's not the high
    profile owner you see on TV at the major races, but he's been fairly
    successful here in No. Cal. at Golden Gater Fields.  He's been helpful
    to me in my quest to learn as much as I can about horse racing.  I'm
    fascinated by every aspect of racing and I take advantage of his
    helpfulness and experience whenever I see him and he is willing to
    answer my constant barrage of questions.
    
    This time I asked him to tell me everything he knew about lasix, how
    he uses it, what kind of horses, etc.  Here are the major points of
    what he had to say:
    
    1.  I generally try to avoid using it as a pure performance enhancement.
        It's kind of like body builders using steroids.  You sacrifice
        long term in favor of short term gains.  And the gains are not
        automatic.  Some horses respond and some don't.  You can never
        tell which will and which won't ahead of time.
    2.  I usually only give lasix to the bleeders.  Most of the people I
        know do the same thing.  But I depend on the veterinarian to make
        the call.  I rely on his advice.  That's what I pay him for.
        Some bleeders don't respond very well at all to lasix, so then you
        can't race them at all.  That's the chances you take when you
        decide to get into horse racing.
    3.  I don't pay much attention to studies.  For every study that says
        one thing, there's another study that says something else.  I'll
        let the vets read them and sort it all out.  Sometimes another
        owner or trainer will ask me if I read some article about the
        effects of lasix or something else.  I'll talk to my vet about
        whether I should be concerned or not.  A lot of times he dismisses the
        studies as not having enough backup data or for being too isolated,
        but occasionally there is real reason for concern and he makes
        recommendations.
    
    So it seems that at least one owner is aware of the usual lasix
    considerations, but is not aware of every study or report.  He seems to
    genuinely care about the quality of life of his horses, that is, he
    wouldn't give lasix to a horse just to get it acroos the finish line first,
    only to drop dead later.  He trusts his vet to make the correct calls and
    keep up with the latest info.  But still, he wants to protect his
    investment, so will not hesitate to use lasix when deemed necessary.
    
    But I still intend to read some of the studies.  I'm not sure I'll find
    anything that will increase my profitability at the track, but it's
    sure to be interesting.  When I learn more, I'll report it.
    
    Carl
    
    P.S.  Radical thought:  let's be civil, not insulting.
481.555YMMVDECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle Rain Festival: 1/1-12/31Mon Aug 09 1993 17:5839
    Carl,
    
    re your club president's comments:
    
    >1.  I generally try to avoid using it as a pure performance
    >    enhancement.
    
    The wording of that statement implies that he believes that Lasix *can*
    be used as a performance enhancing drug and that some people *are* 
    using it that way.
    
    > 2.  I usually only give lasix to the bleeders. Most of the people I
    >     know do the same thing. 
    
    Implies that most people use the drug in a therapeutic way *most* of
    the time. But it also implies that he/they sometimes give or has a vet 
    give the drug to a horse which is not a bleeder which would be a 
    non-therapeutic use. What purpose could there be other than therapy if
    the drug does not enhance performance, he asks with tongue-in-cheek?
    
    The basic problem lies in human nature. People are always looking for
    an "edge" over the competition. If they can get it through drugs, 
    many will use it.
    
    Aside from what I've read(and I'll look up as many articles as I can on
    lasix and other drugs), you only have to look at simple facts:
    	1. Horses who have no history of bleeding get Lasix. 
    	2. Many bleeders, who are given Lasix, bleed anyway(i.e. it's not real
    effective in its therapeutic use). 
    	3. Horsemen in NY do without Lasix and claim that there are other
    ways to manage horses who have bleeding problems.
    	4. Horses that run on Lasix in other states ship to NY and race
    without Lasix. 
    
    If Lasix were strictly necessary for a bleeder to race and only had
    a therapeutic effect, would those things be true? My own conclusion is
    no. Your mileage may vary.
    
    John
481.556Weekend turf stakesDECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle Rain Festival: 1/1-12/31Mon Aug 09 1993 18:3547
    Now, back to our regularly scheduled topic....
    
    This was a good weekend for turf racing in the US. Saratoga had the Gr
    I 12 furlong Sword Dancer Handicap for 3 YO & up and Del Mar(the CA 
    analogy to Saratoga) had 2 Gr I 9f turf races, the Ramona Handicap for 
    Fillies & Mares as well as the Eddie Read for 3 YO & up) ...not to
    mention Arlington International's 10 f Gr II Arlington Handicap!
    
    With Lure being unsuited for 12f and Star of Cozzene resting, the
    Saratoga field was not exactly star-studded. But, there were a number
    of good solid stakes horses there. The win went to Spectaluar Tide 
    through a well-timed move by Julie Krone.
    
    At DelMar, the fields were a bit more impressive. The Ramona saw Re
    Toss, Heart of Joy, Jolypha and others up against champion Flawlessly. 
    Re Toss and Heart of Joy broke on top and set the pace into the first
    turn. McCarron had Flawlessly in perfect position, running third just
    off the leaders. Jolypha was tucked in just behind Flawlessly. Heart of
    Joy set a blistering pace. For a minute it looked like she would never
    quit. When she did tire, Jolypha moved first and she moved outside 
    Flawlessly. As the leaders tired and Flawlessly needed running room,
    she was then taken outside Jolypha on the final turn. While coming out
    of the turn Jolypha drifted out a bit and bumped Flawlessly. The bump
    was enough to knock Jolypha sideways for a couple strides at which
    point she stopped running and finished last or second last. Flawlessly
    did not seem to be bothered by the incident and drew off to win
    impressively.
    
    In the Eddie Read, Kotashaan was the class of the field and trailed
    throughout most of the race. When it was time for him to make his move,
    the field was tightly bunched but spread out widely across the track.
    In the final turn, Kotashaan raced so wide he was about 3/4 of the way
    to the *outer* rail on DelMar's turf course! He must have been 8 to 10
    horses out from the inner rail! He went on to win by about 5 lengths 
    under a hand ride. 
    
    Kotashaan was being prepared for the 10f Arlington Million in 3 weeks 
    time. It may have been unintentional, but my guess is that he lost so
    much ground racing wide in the final turn that he ran 10f yesterday! He
    out to be *very* sharp for Arlington.
    
    Unless the respiratory disease currently plaguing Chicago scares off
    some people, the  Arlington Million should have an outstanding field 
    this year. Lure will be trying to show his class at 10f. His arch-rival,
    Star of Cozzene, will be there. Kotashaan will be there as will the 
    other CA turf star, Bien Bien. And that's just what I can think of 
    off-hand! The Canadians and Europeans usually send a few good horses too.
481.557Peteski wins; Perret suspendedDECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle Rain Festival: 1/1-12/31Mon Aug 09 1993 23:0338
I meant to put this in last week but forgot.

Up in Canada, the Triple Crown for 3 YOs is still in progress. Sunday Aug 1,
they held the second leg(The Prince of Wales, 9.5f dirt) at Fort Eirie 
racetrack. Peteski won but with a new jockey and new tactics. First of all,
the race was incredible! Peteski was rated rather than on the lead and made 
his move late. He pulled off to win by about 6 and made it look easy. When 
the dust settled, he had *obliterated* the course and stakes record! The 
record had been 1:56. Peteski turned in a time of 1:54 2/5 which is 
1.6 seconds faster than this race had ever been run! 

Why did Peteski have a new jockey when Craig Perret had ridden him so well in 
all his previous races? Because the Ontario Jockey Club had suspended Perret
for comments he made after winning the Queen's Plate!

In a post-race interview after winning the Queen's Plate, Perret made some 
comments about the Peteski's previous race in the Queen's Plate Trial and his 
ride in that race. I interpretted his comments as "In the Trial, we were 
preparing for the Queen's Plate. I experimented with tactics to see how much 
control I had over him in a race. Maybe, if I hadn't, he'd have won that day 
too."

Unfortunately, the Ontario Jockey Club, the press and some of the public 
thought Perret was saying "I wasn't trying to win in the Queen's Plate Trial."
The Ontario Jockey Club filed 2 charges against Perret: "Failing to ride to 
win" and "Conduct detrimental to the best interests of racing." After a 10 
hour hearing on the matter including films and testimony, they decided that 
he had been trying to win but should not have made comments which sounded 
like he wasn't. In other words, innocent on "Failing to ride to win" and 
guilty on "Conduct detrimental to racing." His sentence was 15 days 
suspension, $4,000 fine and a public apology to fans and bettors for his 
comments. 

Since the various jurisdictions honor each others penalties, Perret's 
suspension by the Ontario Jockey Club means he can't ride in the US either.
Unfortunately, this is a very bad time to be serving a suspension with 
Saratoga having 24 graded stakes in 30 racing days! He's losing a lot of good 
mounts(including Peteski!) to other jockies.
481.558KAHALA::HOLMESTue Aug 10 1993 14:3637
re: .554  very good.

    The intuition that "it may help" often will prompt a trainer to
    give a horse that is not performing to expectations Lasix.  It may
    help and can't hurt. 

    (You can't in MA, the horse must be scoped by a vet to confirm
     bleeding and the track vet must administer Lasix n hourse before
     the race, I think 4 hours)

    If you assume that Lasix helps some bleeders, noone know's why.

    I have read that steroids, given to reduce inflamation, may have a 
    bad long term effect, causing arthrtis, but have not heard of any
    problems with Lasix.

    Trainers of all horses will try different things to experiment.
    For all we know, making the horse pee (can we use that word),
    before the race might be all it is doing.


>>    genuinely care about the quality of life of his horses, that is, he
>>    wouldn't give lasix to a horse just to get it acroos the finish line first,
>>    only to drop dead later.  He trusts his vet to make the correct calls and
>>    keep up with the latest info.  But still, he wants to protect his
>>    investment, so will not hesitate to use lasix when deemed necessary.

    Unlike bettors, owners get a check for 1st to 5th place in Harness racing
    and I think 1st to 6th for Flats.  If the horse is competative in his
    class, then over the course of the year hel'l do okay.

    Can't speak for the big buck stakes, I'd expect the owners of a million
    dollar colt to place the same demands on their trainer as the owners
    of a $50,000 or $100,000 dollar Jumper would put on theirs.

    Bill
481.559More weekend turf stakesDECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle Rain Festival: 1/1-12/31Tue Aug 10 1993 17:5926
    Geez, I meant to include the Arlington Handicap in the recap of last
    weekend's turf races and by the time I got done with the Gr I races, I
    forgot about it!
    
    Anyway, the Arlington Handicap is Gr II at 10 f on the weeds. The race
    was run very similarly to the Eddie Read at Del Mar. A large field with
    a fast pace made the final turn and stretch run look as much like a
    cavalry charge as anything else. The race was won by Evanescent in a 
    move much like Kotashaan's in the Eddie Read, too. Evanescent trailed
    early and made a late last-to-first move. He was forced about 8 horses
    wide in the turn and *flew* down the stretch to win drawing off. The
    differences were that he had more ground to make up and he moved later
    so he only won by about 1 widening length. The time was excellent at
    2:00 2/5 seconds.
    
    NH's Rockingham Park also had a graded turf stake last Sunday. The Gr
    III Spicy Living for Fillies & Mare 3 YO & up at 9f. Via Borghese lay
    off the pace and made a *strong* late move to win drawing away and set
    a new course record. She's expected to ship to Arlington for the Gr I
    Beverly D Stakes where she'll run into champion Flawlessly whose win in
    the Ramona showed she's in peak form.
    
    The Beverly D & Arlington Million should be good races this
    year...unless the respiratory virus outbreak puts the track into
    quarantine or scares people off.
    
481.560mid-week turf stakeDECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle Rain Festival: 1/1-12/31Thu Aug 12 1993 20:5832
It must be turf appreciation week or something at North American tracks 
because even mid-week we're getting Graded turf stakes! What a treat!

Yesterday, Saratoga had the Gr II 9f Bernard Baruch Handicap. The field 
included several winners of recent graded turf events such as Star of Cozzene,
Royal Mountain Inn and Furiously as well as a multiple Gr I winner, Solar 
Splendor. Solar Splendor was fourth in his only previous race this season but 
had won Gr I turf events at 12 furlongs the past 2 seasons. The speed horse, 
Cleone rounded out the small field.

Naturally, Star of Cozzene was favored because he had defeated champion Lure
twice this season. Cleone broke on top and set the early pace with Furiously
and Royal Mountain Inn in hot pursuit. Star of Cozzene trailed the field.

Going into the final turn Star of Cozzene moved up along the rail for a 
ground saving trip. Solar Splendor now trailed and dropped farther back. 
Clearly, he was not ready for this type of competition. As Cleone stopped,
Furiously suddenly found himself on the lead without having to work. Julie 
Krone sensed that she could not win the race with Royal Mountain Inn and 
was content to try to save second money for her mount through strategy. 

That strategy included saving what horse she had left by *boxing* Star of 
Cozzene on the rail so he couldn't get clear to make his usual late run. 
Furiously took advantage of Krone's strategy to coast home an unchallenged 
winner by about 2 lengths. 

Star of Cozzene did finally get clear and made enough of a run to nip Royal 
Mountain Inn for second money. But, it didn't look like his all-out drives 
when he was chasing Lure earlier this season. He was not closing quickly on 
Furiously. Perhaps, the jockey had conceded defeat and was just doing enough 
to get second. Perhaps, Star of Cozzene wasn't quite up to his usual form 
for some reason. Perhaps, Furiously was too good to be caught.
481.561STRATA::CORLISSFri Aug 13 1993 18:5411
    I was at Saratoga on Wednesday and watched the Star of Cozzene race.
    There were two very good reasons for Furiously winning: first he was
    getting seven pounds from Star of Cozzene and second he tied the track
    record. Furiously seems to have really found a home on the weeds. He is
    now three for three with two track records....not bad for a horse who
    couldn't make seven furlongs on the dirt. 
    
    PS this is a great note. It is my first time in it after a long and
    arduous search for something of this sort. I am an avid horse fan and
    am glad to know DEC contains many of the same ilk.
    
481.562More Lasix commentaryDECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle Rain Festival: 1/1-12/31Mon Aug 16 1993 22:4739
    Carl,
    
    I haven't forgotten about my promise to look up studies on Lasix. Just
    haven't done it yet. And since I'm off on vaction from tomorrow till the
    middle of next week, I may not get back to you for a couple weeks.
    
    BTW, Bill's(at least I think it was Bill) reminder about "scientific"
    studies whic aren't reproduceable cuts both ways. There are
    *NO* studies that claim that Lasix prevents bleeding. It's an
    unsubstantiated opinion of some vets that it should help "bleeders"
    because Lasix lowers blood pressure. Now, practical medicine is
    sometimes ahead of laboratory/theoretical medicine but, to date, there
    are no studies that demonstrate that Lasix prevents bleeding in
    racehorses.
    
    After we discussed this last week, I decided to count the number of
    horses running on Lasix the next time I watched the So Cal daily racing
    recap show. Last Saturday's Del Mar card had nine races in which 71
    horses were entered. Fifty-four(yes, 54!) of those horses ran on Lasix.
    That's over 76%! Unless CA has become the home for all racehorses with
    bleeding problems, I find it hard to believe that more than 3 out of 4
    horses need Lasix for therapy. 
    
    Lest someone suggest that these were all "bottom-of-the-barrel"
    claimers, they were not. There were 2 stakes races at Del Mar last 
    Saturday: a listed turf handicap at 11 furlongs for older horses and 
    a graded sprint stake for 2 YO fillies. 
    
    Of the 10 turf handicap horses, 9(!!) of them were on Lasix. Half of 
    the 2 YO stakes fillies ran on Lasix. There was also a 2 YO maiden race 
    in which half the field was on Lasix. 
    
    Actually, those 2 YO races pulled the percentage *down*. When one excludes 
    the 2 YOs, over 80% of the horses on last Saturday's card at Del Mar 
    were on Lasix. Makes me wonder about those claims that Lasix doesn't
    enhance performance.
    
    More later.
    John
481.563And even moreEASI::GEENENCogito, ergo doleo!Tue Aug 17 1993 15:1649
    I had the opportunity to talk briefly with my cat club president about
    his and others' use of lasix.  As you may recall, he owns, breeds, and
    races TBs here in the SF bay area.
    
    After reading note 471 and the assorted replies, the consensus seems to
    be that there is a lack of positive proof the use of lasix has value in
    controlling or stopping bleeding, and also lack of positive proof that
    lasix is a performance enhancer.  But yet the racing world administers
    the stuff to a large percentage of horses, as pointed out by John in
    note .562.  So I wanted to ask my friend what his perception of lasix's
    effectiveness was.
    
    He, and others in his sphere, believe that lasix does indeed control or
    stop bleeding in most cases.  His empirical proof is if the horse
    bleeds and you give him lasix and the bleeding stops, then lasix was
    effective.  He observes this, he says in the vast majority of his
    horses that receive lasix.
    
    As far as lasix being a performance enhancer, the several times he has
    had lasix given to his horses, he saw little improvement in their
    performance above what he would have expected without it.  So he has
    continued the use of lasix only as necessary to control bleeding.
    
    He complained of a few other trainers and owners that he says
    ruthlessly exploit horses for profit's sake by giving them lasix when
    they show no evidence of bleeding (and a few other practices of which
    he would only mention one - freezing a sore hoof!?  I'd never heard of
    this before).
    
    So maybe my friend is an exception to the way the rest of the racing
    world thinks.  Maybe the majority of the racing world is interested
    only in the money and prestige and treat the horses as a disposable
    commodity, and only my friend and a few others in his circle care
    about the horses and the integrity of racing.
    
    Anyway, in California race day lasix must be administered by the track
    vet.  This can occur anywhere from 2 to 4 hours before the scheduled
    race.  The horse's vet makes the request to have the horse receive
    lasix (I'm not sure if the request has to be in writing or not), and
    the track vet administers it if he doesn't see any reason not to by
    way of his exam, which I'm told is very brief.  So just a vet's say-so
    is enough for any horse to get lasix.  The above is according to my
    friend.  I've not read or heard any official rendition.
    
    So, here I am trying to figure which horse to bet and wondering if I
    should or should not include lasix in my determinations.  Little did
    I know...
    
    Carl
481.564That's anecdotal evidence, not empiricalDECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle Rain Festival: 1/1-12/31Thu Aug 26 1993 18:0322
    Giving a horse Lasix and having the bleeding stop is anecdotal in
    scientific terms rather than empirical. That doesn't mean it's an
    invalid hypothesis, just that the empirical scientific work hasn't been
    done. 
    
    The Grayson-Jockey Club Research Foundation is currently funding 2
    major controlled scientific experiments which intend to find out whether
    or not Lasix is effective therapy for "bleeders" and what the effects
    of Lasix and/or Bute are on performance.
    
    Since one anecdote is as good as another... In one of the earlier notes
    on Lasix, I mentioned an Australian champion turf mare(Let's Elope) who
    had been moved to CA to avoid being banned from racing if she bled
    again in Australia. She ran in Flawlessly's Ramona Handicap recently.
    Let's Elope ran on Lasix that day. She bled in spite of the Lasix. Her
    trainer rated the episode a 2 on a scale of 3. In other words, the
    blleding was moderately severe. Let's Elope finished sceond. Did the
    Lasix prevent or control her bleeding? No. Did the Lasix enhance her
    performance or allow her to run to her true potential? We'll never
    know.
    
    John
481.565Saratoga NewsDECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle Rain Festival: 1/1-12/31Fri Aug 27 1993 13:2470
Time to catch up on 2 weeks of Saratoga's racing news

Just before I went on vacation, I mentioned Dehere and that Eddie Maple
said he was the best 2 YO he had ever ridden. Well, Maple lost the mount.
For some reason, the owners/trainer decided to put Chris McCarron up in 
Dehere's next race. Dehere ran the same for McCarron as he did for Maple.
Dehere laid off the pace, got into traffic trouble was taken up and went 
around the field with an *amazing* turn of foot to win by a narrow margin.

McCarron also picked up the ride on Miner's Mark in the Jim Dandy because
Jerry Bailey decided to stay with Sea Hero. Trainer Shug McGaughey was 
disappointed that Bailey took off his horse but applauded Bailey's loyalty
to Sea Hero, trainer Mack Miller and owner Paul Mellon. McGaughey said that
he had always thought that he would call on McCarron if he ever needed a top 
rider so he decided that now was the time. Miner's Mark won the Gr II Jim Dandy 
under McCarron from Sea Hero, Colonial Affair, etc.

The same day as the Jim Dandy, Kissin Kris won the Gr I Haskell Invitational
against nondescript competition. Now, it befuddles me why the Haskell is Gr I
and the Jim Dandy is Gr II when the top horses in the east are running at 
Saratoga rather than going to the Haskell...

Anyway, on Travers Stakes day, the 4 "genuine" horses in the Travers turned 
out to be Miner's Mark, Sea Hero, Colonial Affair, and Kissin Kris. They were 
the only horses who had won a Gr I stake. Coming off their recent victories,
Miner's Mark and Kissin Kris looked good with many believing that 
Miner's Mark would win because he had beaten better horses than Kissin Kris. 
Colonial Affair hadn't raced since his Belmont victory and Sea Hero hadn't
run well since the KY Derby.

With a trip and stretch run *very* similar to his KY Derby race, Sea Hero 
collared Miner's Mark in the final furlong and drew off. Kissin Kris closed 
*extremely* well to catch second. Miner's Mark also ran very well for his 
first race beyond 9 furlongs. 

Jeryy Bailey's loyalty to Sea Hero was rewarded not only with a victory aboard
Sea Hero but also in Sunday's John A Morris handicap for fillies. He rode
You'd Be Surprised to a good win in that Gr I race.

On Friday(Aug 20th), Julie Krone made history again. She rode *five* winners!
That had previously been done only twice at Saratoga in its 125 year history.
The only other riders to have won 5 races on a single day are Angel Cordero,
the perennial leading rider at Saratoga for the 15 years before his 
retirement, and Ron Turcotte who is best known for being Secretariat's 
regular rider. Sadly, both these great jockeys had their careers ended by 
injuries from a racing accident. I hope that same fate doesn't await Krone(or 
anybody else for that matter). BTW, 7 of Friday's 10 races were won by women 
jockeys as Georgina Frost won 2 races as well. 

The race for leading jockey tightened up considerably. Mike Smith, the 1992 
leading rider, had had an edge over Krone before last Friday. Her 5 wins 
and his couple wins left them tied after Friday's races. After Saturday, 
Krone was 1 up. By Monday, they were tied again. After Wednesday's races, 
Smith is one up(35 wins to Krone's 34). Their nearest challenger is 
Jerry Bailey who had 25 wins after Wednesday's races. With only 5 more days 
in the Saratoga meeting, this could get very interesting.

FourstarDave won a Saratoga race for the *seventh* year in a row! He won a
tiny stake called the Calcutta Cup(8.5 furlongs turf) from several other 
stakes horses and some good allowance horses. To sweeten the pot, each 
owner added $1,000 to the purse money on a winner-take-all basis. 
FourstarDave passed up his usual style of running just off the pace and 
led the field wire-to-wire.I was impressed with his versatility and the 
fact that this 8 YO horse ran the mile in 1:34 1/5 and finished out in 
1:40 2/5 even though he had set moderately fast fractions...I thought 
horses were supposed to lose their speed after age 5 or 6? Guess nobody 
told Dave! BTW, he's scheduled to race in the West Point Stake for 
NY-breds today(Thurs). I'll let you know what happens.

John
481.566Fourstar Dave's best performanceDECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle Rain Festival: 1/1-12/31Fri Aug 27 1993 14:2544
The 1993 West Point(9 furlongs turf restricted to NY state-breds) may well 
have been the best performance of Fourstar Dave's long and successful career. 
It was eventful and exciting too.

But, Rodney Dangerfield(the comedian who says he gets no respect) has nothing 
on Fourstar Dave! The betting public didn't even make him the favorite in 
this field of NY state-breds even though he has won Graded stakes in open 
competition and set course records this year! The favorite went off at even 
money with Fourstar Dave second choice at 3-1.

When they opened the gates, Fourstar Dave stumbled and went to his knees.
I thought the race was over for him then and there. But jockey Richard 
Migliore(a very credible journeyman but not Hall of Fame material) picked 
Dave up and steadied him. Dave ran on and moved quickly into his usual 
fourth position going into the first turn. The favorite was running in 
third.

On the backside, Dave took over third spot from the favorite. Migliore wasn't 
asking a lot of Dave. Dave seemed to be running his own race but I was 
beginning to wonder if they might be doing too much early on while trying 
to recover from that disastrous start. Wrong!

Dave moved easily into second on the final turn with the field closely 
bunched. Coming into the straight, he poked his head in front and started to 
draw off from the crowd. Halfway to the finish, Dave seemed to stall out and
another horse was moving well and coming through on the hedge. It looked like 
Dave was beaten. NOT! When he was challenged, the old campaigner responded 
like the pro he is and added another burst of energy. He stopped the timer 
in 1:46.66 which would win most open stakes even in CA(a.k.a. "Speed City"). 

Unfortunately, Fourstar Dave had bumped the favorite at the top of the 
stretch. The stewards disqualified him and placed him fourth behind the 
favorite(who had finished fourth and was moved up to third)...

Needless to say, the stewards were not very popular yesterday even though 
they made a correct impartial decision. In the hearts of every fan, 
Fourstar Dave won the race. The press mobbed Migliore after the race trying 
to get his comments. The offical winner and his people were ignored. Even the 
"Thoroughbred Action" show, which showed the bumping incident several times
and supported the stewards decision, ignored the winner. They  raved about 
Fourstar Dave's performance showing him stumble, recover and get home first 
several times. I guess they're fans too!

John
481.567Millions and millionsDECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle Rain Festival: 1/1-12/31Mon Aug 30 1993 21:46100
August 28-29 was a good weekend of racing across the US

Arlington(Chicago) had 3 Gr I turf races(Beverly D 9 furlongs, 
    fillies & mares, 3 & up; Secretariat Stakes 10 furlongs, 3 YO; and
    Arlington Million 10 furlongs, 3 & up), 
Saratoga(NY) had 2 Gr I dirt races(Whitney Handicap, 10 furlongs, 3 & up and
    The Hopeful(7 furlongs, 2 YO)
and Del Mar had the Gr II Chula Vista(8.5 furlongs fillies & mares, 3 & up)

The Chula Vista went to the big favorite, Magical Maiden over ReToss and 
several other top stakes mares(no, Paseana wasn't entered). For a minute, it
looked like Laffit Pincay would get his longshot home and get his 8,000th
career victory but he was disappointed in both the Chula Vista and the 
nightcap. Perhaps in today's races he'll get it. BTW, when he does get it, 
he'll be only the second jockey in history to break 8,000 wins. Shoemaker
has something like 8,800 so Pincay will have to keep riding to break that 
mark.

In the Whitney, Devil His Due was the favorite and highweight. Brunswick(who?)
won with West by West second. Devil His Due ran OK but not his best. He's
being pointed to the Woodward at Belmont for the ACRS finale. I'll bet he's
also headed for the Breeders' Cup Classic.

The Hopeful went to Dehere with Chris McCarron up. A different strategy this 
time. McCarron took Dehere to the front early and avoided all the traffic 
jams that the colt had encountered in his earlier races. It looked like he 
was tiring and the others started coming to him. But, he had something left
and turned on another good acceleration to win going away. BTW, Dehere is 
being pointed toward the Breeders' Cup Juvenile at Santa Anita. They changed 
jockeys from Maple to McCarron to establish the colt with a top Southern CA 
rider well in advance of the Breeders' Cup.

The jockey race at Saratoga is essentially over. On Thurs and Fri, Smith got 
one more win each day than Krone. On Saturday, Krone went out to Chicago to 
ride Aquilegia in the Beverly D and Smith won 3 races at Saratoga. On Sunday, 
they reversed roles with Smith going to Chicago to ride Strolling Along in 
the Secretariat and Lure in the Million. 

Unfortunately, Krone couldn't match Smith's Saturday wins. She rode 5 or 6 
favorites and got them home second. No mistakes, she just got beat by 
better horses. She got one long shot home but she's too far behind Smith to 
catch him unless she bags another 5 winner day. BTW, she said that her 5 wins
last week are the second biggest day of her life. Winning the Belmont tops it.

Arlington's Beverly D is the richest turf race for fillies & mares in the US.
It *always* draws the top distaff turf stars in North America. This year's 
field included CA based mares like 1992 American champion Flawlessly and
Australian champion Let's Elope. The east coast sent multiple stakes winners 
like Aquilegia and Via Borghese. Those 4 sat off the pace and turning into 
the stretch, Flawlessly started her run. Expecting to see Flawlessly draw 
off as she usually does, it was a bit of a surprise to see the race turn 
into a cavalry charge. Let's Elope and Via Borghese came up outside 
Flawlessly and challenged for the lead. Aquilegia was right there in the 
thick of it too.

As they got to the wire, it looked like a 4 horse photo with the white 
blinkers of Let's Elope seeming to be in front by a short nose over 
Flawlessly and Via Borghese a head farther back. Unfortunately, Let's Elope 
had run out trying to escape the left handed whip of jockey Pat Valenzuela. 
She came out badly and knocked Via Borghese sideways. Valenzuela switched 
the whip to the other hand and Let's Elope lugged in and smacked Flawlessly 
around. They showed the head-on replay and Let's Elope looked like an 
old-fashioned pinball bouncing around in the field! Needless to say, 
Let's Elope was siqualified and placed 3rd. Official results: 1. Flawlessly, 
2. Via Borghese 3. Let's Elope. 

The Secretariat Stakes was uneventful and slow because overnight rain had 
turned the course from Saturday's good condition to soft. Awad won with the
Canadian horse, Explosive Red a good second.

The soft course sondition caused Lure to scratch from the Million. Trainer 
Shug McGaughey said that for Lure to stretch out to 10 furlongs and have a 
chance of running well, he needed a firmer course than they had Sunday.

That left Star of Cozzene as the big favorite over the 1992 Million winner 
Dear Doctor and the 1993 Arlington Handicap winner Evanescent. Turning for 
home, there was a wall of horses across the track. Dear Doctor and Star of 
Cozzene were both behind the wall. Dear Doctor took the inside route and 
ran into all sorts of traffic problems. By the time he got clear, he could 
only manage fourth. Evanescent came from somewhere in the pack of horses that 
formed the wall and drew off from the others. Star of Cozzene went around the
pack and easily ran down Evanescent to win by 3 lengths. If he hadn't had 
to go so wide, I'd guess Star of Cozzene would have won by 8-10 lengths.
The time was slow(2:07 3/5 I think) because of the soft going.

Star of Cozzene is not nominated for the Breeders' Cup even though his 
sire(Cozzene) is Breeders' Cup nominated. The fees weren't paid when Star of 
Cozzene was a foal so he's not nominated. He can be supplemented to the 
Breeders' Cup for 12% of the purse money in whichever race he's entered.
His owners(Team Valor) haven't decided whether or not to supplement him.
Neither the BC Mile(8 furlongs) nor the BC Turf(12 furlongs) are his best 
distance(9-10 furlongs). They have to take a long hard look to determine 
whether it's worth coughing up $120,000 or $240,000 respectively to enter
him in a Breeders' Cup race. BTW, Cozzene(his sire) won the BC Mile a few 
years back so that might be the preferred race if they go at all. Or they
could run him at 12 furlongs in Sept to see how he handles it and then go for 
the BC Turf. Or they could keep him home and enter races that suit him. We'll
see.

John
481.568Conquistador Cielo?DECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle Rain Festival: 1/1-12/31Mon Aug 30 1993 22:0512
    Was Conquistador Cielo a mudder?
    
    The reason I ask is that,after a horse sired by Conquistador Cielo won
    on a muddy track, some commentator said "All the Conquistador Cielos
    like an off track."
    
    I don't remember Conquistador Cielo as being a mudder but that was a
    while ago. So if anybody remembers... Vicky, didn't you say that you 
    were at Belmont when Conquistador Cielo won the Belmont Stakes? Surely,
    you'd remember getting rained on at the track! ;-) 
    
    Was Conquistador Cielo a mudder?
481.569YesGBLAUT::JANICKIV. Janicki DCE Engineering DTN 226-5980Tue Aug 31 1993 14:477
    Conquistador Cielo won the Belmont in the slop that day. He also
    had mud calks too. 
    
    So yes, I'd consider him a mudder. I don't think he actually improved
    in the mud, but rather the mud did not seem to affect his performance.
    
    Vicky
481.570Insult added to injuryDECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle Rain Festival: 1/1-12/31Tue Aug 31 1993 21:3515
    Julie Krone did not manage to catch Mike Smith for the Saratoga riding
    title. She didn't even get a chance. She took a spill in the third race
    when another horse interferred with her horse causing it to stumble.
    Krone, who seemed to be looking back for oncoming traffic at the time,
    was catapaulted over the horse's shoulder and slammed onto the track.
    
    In regaining its feet, her horse went sideways and knocked Jean-Luc
    Samyn off his horse. Samyn was uninjured. Krone was hospitalized. The
    extent of her injuries was unclear at the time of the broadcast from
    Saratoga but she was conscious and not believed to be in danger of
    death or paralysis.
    
    The horses involved in this accident seemed uninjured.
    
    Smith won the riding title by only 3 wins.
481.571Pincay's 8,000th winnerDECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle Rain Festival: 1/1-12/31Wed Sep 01 1993 22:4910
    Clerical errors!
    
    I misstated the distance of the Beverly D. It's 9.5 furlongs.
    
    Clerical errors also affected Laffit Pincay's 8,000th winner. On
    Monday's DelMar replay, Trevor Denman announced that a review of
    Pincay's career showed that a 1991 win at a Mexico City track had not
    been counted in the reckoning. Therefore, Pincay's 8,000th winner
    actually occurred in Sunday's 7th race at DelMar. They had a little
    ceremony which they showed at the end of the races.
481.572Update on Krone's InjuriesDECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle Rain Festival: 1/1-12/31Thu Sep 02 1993 17:5623
    According to a report on yesterday's Belmont recap show, Julie Krone
    suffered multiple fractures in Monday's spill at Saratoga. On Monday's
    show they had said that she may have fractured bones in/near her ankle
    and wrist. Yesterday's report was not specific about where the injuries
    were.
    
    However, they did say that Krone underwent surgery yesterday to repair
    one fracture site and the the operation was successful. They also said
    that she will have a second surgical procedure next week to repair the
    other site. They said that it is expected that she will be able to walk
    without assistance in about 3 months and that it is hoped she can
    return to riding in about 6 months.
    
    This injury will set her riding career back for at least the next year
    even if everything goes according to expectation. Being out until March 
    1994, she will miss the high profile Belmont fall meeting which is 
    second only to Saratoga in the ratio of graded stakes to racing days, 
    the Breeder's Cup *and* the winter meeting at Gulfstream Park where 
    she has been leading rider for the last couple years. Being out so long
    means that she will lose many of the good stakes horses she has been 
    riding. Missing the Gulfstream meeting means that she will be unlikely 
    to get any good 3 YO's next spring for the Triple Crown as they will all 
    have jockeys by the time she gets back to riding.
481.573Another Canadian Triple Crown & musingsDECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle Rain Festival: 1/1-12/31Tue Sep 07 1993 21:3372
    I forgot to mention this until last week's Blood Horse reminded me...
    
    Peteski won the third leg of the Canadian Triple Crown, The Breeders'
    Stakes, in a walk-over. The Breeders' is run at 12 furlongs like the
    US's corresponding leg(Belmont Stakes) but, unlike the Belmont, it is
    run on the grass. 
    
    Peteski had never run on the grass before so that and the distance
    raised questions in some people's minds. They expected Explosive Red
    and Desert Wave(I think), who are known to be top grass horses, to give
    Peteski a real run for the money. Never happened. Explosive Red was
    sent to the Secretariat Stakes at Arlington where he ran a good second.
    The other horse was scratched due to a minor injury(a strain if I
    remember correctly).
    
    In the end, only 4 horses went to the post and only Peteski ran.
    Perret, who is back after serving his suspension, took him to the lead
    right out of the gate and coasted all the way around. The only serious
    danger they faced was from the tack! Perret had such a hard hold on
    Peteski in an attempt to rate him on the lead that the saddle slipped
    up onto Peteski's withers. If he had had to do any serious riding(e.g.
    a stretch duel), I doubt that Perret could have been terribly effective.
    
    Now, don't mistake the following as a put-down of Peteski. Any horse
    that can *obliterate* a 30 year old course record like he did at Fort
    Erie is a good racehorse. 
    
    The question is that Peteski is the 4th horse to have won the Canadian
    Triple Crown in 5 years. With Approval, Izvestia and Dance Smartly won
    it in 1989, 1990 and 1991 respectively. 
    
    With Approval was the first horse in 25 years to win the Canadian
    Triple Crown. Have Canadian horses suddenly become better? No, they've 
    always had top quality horses.
    
    Why then this burst of TC winners? Simple. They rearranged their Triple
    Crown in 1988. Actually, the Canadian Triple Crown as a series is only
    about 40 years old even though the races are significantly older than
    that. For example, the Queen's Plate is the oldest stakes race in North
    America! The oldest US stakes race still being run is the Travers
    Stakes. The KY Derby is an upstart since it's about 10 years "newer"
    than the Travers! Anyhow, the  Canadian Triple as a *series* was put 
    together in the late '50s or early 60's.
    
    Until 1988, the second race(Prince of Wales) was run at 1.5 miles on
    the turf. The turf course at Fort Erie was frequently heavy in August.
    That coupled with the distances of the 3 races(10f dirt, 12f turf and
    12f turf) made it hard to win. It was turf biased and "stayer" biased
    which made the series unattractive to many modern trainers/owners.
    
    So, they shortened the Prince of Wales to 9.5 furlongs(1 3/16 miles)
    and switched it to the dirt. They found a sponsor to offer a $1,000,000
    bonus. (The sponsor withdrew after 4 years with 3 winners!) Interest in 
    the series renewed among trainers/owners and here we are with 4 winners 
    in the last 5 years.
    
    It has gotten to the point that people(even Canadians!) don't get excited 
    about a Canadian Triple Crown winner until it also wins the Molson
    Million 4 weeks later! 
    
    Note that's 4 major races in 10 weeks! The interesting thing is that
    people want to change the US Triple Crown to be even easier to win!
    In the past 2 seasons, there have been proposals to:
    a) Shorten the KY Derby *AND* Belmont to 9 and 10 furlongs respectively 
    and b) give the horses 4 weeks rest between Triple Crown races.
    
    What advantage would there be in making a Triple Crown easier to win? It
    would devalue the achievement just as it has in Canada. Then, we'd say,
    "OK. Lemon-Lime won the Triple Crown but he didn't win the Travers so
    he's not very good." If the series structure is changed, I can even 
    forsee a scene in which a US Triple Crown winner wouldn't be voted 3 YO 
    champion at the end of the year!
481.574Say it ain't soEASI::GEENENCogito, ergo doleo!Wed Sep 08 1993 14:0615
    A famous baseball anouncer (I think it was Red Barber) said, when
    asked what his idea of perfection was, that he thought perfection was
    90 feet between the bases.  A little longer and no one would be able
    to steal second.  A little shorter and everyone would be stealing it.
    90 feet was the optimum distance where only the best could steal, and
    give the fans good entertainment value and something to talk about.
    
    This sort of thing I think is true for the American triple crown
    races.  Make the format easier and probably there'll be an increase in
    triple crown winners.  If it were any harder, no triple crown winners and
    maybe there'd be a loss of interest.  I think the races are perfect
    just as they are, a true test that is difficult to pull off, yet
    achievable for only the best.
    
    Carl
481.575Probably was Red BarberDECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle Rain Festival: 1/1-12/31Wed Sep 08 1993 17:4035
    Yeah, there has been such talk as unfortunate as it is. The good news
    is that it's just talk...at least for now. 'Course we could always
    start a letter-writing campaign against it if talk threatens to become 
    action...
    
    I think all the talk right *now* is prompted by the fatal injuries to 
    Prarie Bayou and Union City in this year's Triple Crown. I don't see 
    how shortening the distances or lengthening the time between races would 
    prevent broken legs. People make a lot of fuss over the Triple Crown
    because it's 3 races in 5 weeks carrying more weight and going farther
    than they have raced before.
    
    This ain't new and it's not just the 3 YO Triple Crown horses. For
    example, look at Dehere's races at Saratoga. He's 2 and he ran 3 stakes
    races in the 5 week meeting. Each race was farther than he's run
    before. Each time he carried more weight than before. Is there an
    outcry in the press that this is too much too soon? No, just raves
    about what a great 2 YO this colt is. Frankly, I don't see the
    difference except that there's less media hype about Saratoga than the
    Triple Crown.
    
    Actually, there was a report in this month's Cornell Animal Health
    Newsletter of a study of fatal injuries at CA tracks. The report said 
    that a very high percentage of fatal injuries(most of which were broken 
    cannon bones) showed a pre-exisiting stress fracture that was 
    undetectable by X-ray. To me, that says that many breakdowns in
    both training and racing could be prevented by a better way to
    diagnosis problems with the leg bones.
    
    Maybe ultrasound would be a better tool than X-ray. Ultrasound is
    supposed to be able to measure minute differences in bone density. If
    the track vets had such things, they could certify each runner on the
    day of the race as having satisfactory(whatever that means) bone
    structure in their legs. Might save a lot of lives both equine and
    human.
481.576Krone's crashDECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle Rain Festival: 1/1-12/31Wed Sep 08 1993 17:5415
    Speaking of injuries, last night's Thoroughbred Digest had a report on 
    Krone's spill last week at Saratoga. They confirmed what I thought
    happened in that accident. Another jockey tried to take their horse to
    the outside and cut too close in front of Krone's horse. Krone looked
    back to see if it was safe to take her horse wider but it was too late.
    Krone's horse clipped heels(stepped on the other horse's feet) and
    stumbled to its knees throwing Krone to the ground.
    
    Thoroughbred Digest said that Krone suffered multiple fractures to her 
    ankle and that the second operation on the ankle is scheduled for this 
    Thursday. They showed a different camera angle than the race recap 
    show(which just showed the race) and it was quite clear that Krone was 
    trampled by oncoming horses. Fortunately, her helmet and flak jacket 
    prevented head and internal injuries.
    
481.577So long to "Post Time"DECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle Rain Festival: 1/1-12/31Mon Sep 13 1993 20:1520
    I have mentioned SportsChannel's weekly "Post Time" racing show several
    times in this topic. I thought their race recap segment was better than
    ESPN's Thoroughbred Digest and the show was a handicapper's delight
    with weekly segment's on techniques, methods, etc. What I liked most
    about the show was Jerry Brown's Thoro-Graph segment which usually
    included his selections for the weekend's upcoming stakes races. FWIW, as
    an experiment, I compared his selections to actual race results and
    payoffs for about 6 months. If one had followed his recommended betting 
    strategy, more than 100% profit would have been realized...as in double 
    your money in 6 months of playing stakes races!...Don't know if he's that 
    good on a daily basis with claimers, etc but...
    
    Anyway, SportsChannel America is converting to a news format next
    month. (Oh Boy! I can't wait. NOT! :-{ ) SportsChannel cancelled the 
    show even though many regional affiliates carried it. The show has not 
    been picked up by any other sports network or independent station that I
    know of.
    
    Ah well, at least we still have "Inside Racing" produced by NYRA and
    broadcast on regional SportsChannels.
481.578BC Preview & Molson MillionDECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle Rain Festival: 1/1-12/31Wed Sep 15 1993 21:1483
    Not to be outdone by showjumping's TV coverage, racing's got a big
    weekend too.
    
    This Saturday, Belmont has the first of its Breeder Cup Preview cards. 
    This card include 5 graded stakes races, four of which are Gr I stakes.
    The 5th race(Fall Highweight) is a Gr II 6 furlong sprint. The Gr I
    races are Man O'War(12f turf), Woodward(10f), Futurity(2 YOs) and the
    Matron(fillie & mares). Coverage will be by ESPN beginning at 4 PM
    Eastern time(1 PM Pacific). Sunday, Belmont will have the Ruffian and
    Woodbine holds the Molson Million. SportsChannel's regular coverage of
    NYRA racing will get both of them because Belmont is simulcasting the
    Molson Million. CBC will broadcast the race live from Woodbine, if you 
    can get Canadian TV. (Actually, Canadian stations come in as good at 
    my house as Seattle stations even though Vancouver is 3 times farther away!)
    
    The second BC Preview card will be Oct 9th and will be covered by NBC.
    
    The Man O'War *may* see Star of Cozzene try to stretch out to 12
    furlongs. It depends on who buys him! That's right, he's being sold.
    There are 2 groups interested in buying him. One group intends to try
    him at 12 & aim for the Breeder's Cup Turf, the other doesn't. The
    rest of the field reads like a Who's Who of distance horses.
    The Woodward is the ACRS finale and its swan song too.(No ACRS next
    year). We will see the top 4 point leaders in this race. Devil His Due
    is the most likely horse to get the $750,000 series bonus. He has 32
    points and his closest competitors have 25 and 24 points. Bertrando is 
    in fourth with 22 points(I think). 
    
    With the points for placing scheme of 10(for first), 7, 5, 3, and 1 for 
    5th, Devil His Due would have to run pretty badly (i.e. 5th or worse) 
    for anybody else to get the bonus outright. If gets gets 3 points, the 
    worst he could do would be split the bonus if the hosre with 25 points
    wins the race. Of course, the first through 4th in the point standings
    get some bonus but it's not as big!
    the 
    
    The Matron will probably see champion Paseana & Turn Back The Alarm
    meet up for the first time. Possibly the last too since *neither* of
    them is Breeder's Cup nominated. Red Terrel said on last night's
    "Inside Racing" show that supplementing Turn Back The Alarm to the
    Breeders' Cup Distaff would be almost an even money bet that they
    would win the race! Here's his logic: It costs $120,000 to supplement
    her. The Breeders' Cup gets another $25,000 if she starts. It would
    cost about $15,000 in other expenses (transportation for horse &
    humans, meals, lodging, etc.) to get her to the race.
    
    The winners share is the Distaff purse is $450,000. The jockey and
    trainer get ten percent each of that leaving $360,000 for the owners.
    With expenses totalling $160,000, they make $200,000 for *winning* the
    race. That's like betting at 5 to 4!  Would you make a win bet at 5:4?
    Not a real good payoff.
    
    The main reason they are considering going is that they can't win the
    Eclipse award without a) beating Paseana this week and/or b) winning
    the BC Distaff. Why? Two reasons: It's the last major race of the
    season for mares on the dirt and the CA turf writers never vote for an
    eastern horse unless they have to. No flame intended that's just a fact
    of history. The CA writers vote for CA horses even after they *lose* in
    the east. SO, to get their votes, you have to win a BC race or win in
    CA or beat the CA horses multiple times if they go east.
    
    Sid & Jenny Craig own Paseana and they may well supplement her. After
    all, they can afford it... BTW, don't you think it's a little odd that
    2 kinda chubby people are always telling us that we should lose weight
    and that they can help us do it? It obviously didn't work for them! ;-)
    
    Anyway tune in Saturday if you get ESPN. If you don't, find a friend 
    that does! :-)
    
    The Molson Million(3 YO 9f) on Sunday shapes up as good race. Maybe the
    definitive one of the season. Every 3 YO stakes colt that is able-bodied
    is entered! Canadian Triple Crown winner Peteski, KY Derby and Travers
    winner Sea Hero(did you know that Sea Hero is the first horse in 51
    years to win the Derby *AND* the Travers?), Belmont winner Colonial
    Affair, Haskell WInner Kissin Kris, etc.... 
    
    This is the first year that the MM has a field of US colts of this
    quality. The only winner of *any* US Triple Crown race to run in the MM
    before was A.P. Indy and he was coming off a 3 month lay-off and was
    *not* in top form. He desparately needed a race.
    The MM was shortened to 9 furlongs 2 years ago in an attempt to attract
    more US horses so they could get a Gr I status. This year, they might
    get it!
481.579Oops, memory error!DECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle Rain Festival: 1/1-12/31Thu Sep 16 1993 18:2720
    Ugh! More errors due to memory failure. My Dad says that memory is the
    second thing to go but I can't recall what he claims goes first. ;-)
    
    First of all, the Man O'War isn't 12 furlongs, it's 11. And Star of
    Cozzene is *IN*! Guess he was sold to the folks who are thinking
    Breeders' Cup or wasn't sold after all....
    
    I *always* get the Matron and the Ruffian mixed up! Doesn't the name
    "Matron" sound like it's for older fillies? Well, it's for 2 YO
    fillies. So, don't expect to see Paseana & the grey whirlwind, Turn
    Back The Alarm in that one! They're going in the Ruffian on SUnday.
    
    Saturday's Matron will see undefeated Strategic Maneuver take on the
    east's best 2 YO fillies at 7f. If they both get to the BC Juvenille
    Fillies, the 2 to watch will be Strategic Maneuver and CA's Sardula who
    is the most impressive 2 YO filly from CA in *many* years. (Yes, I do
    think she's better than Eliza!)
    
    The Futurity will see undefeated Dehere who won 3 graded stakes at 
    Saratoga try 7f and the east's best 2 YO colts at 7f.
481.580Holy Bull!DECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle Rain Festival: 1/1-12/31Tue Sep 21 1993 17:5895
    ...beat Dhere in Saturday's Gr I Futurity at Belmont. Since they were both
    undefeated, at least one of them had to have that streak broken.
    Belmont was *very* sloppy and Dehere had never run on an off
    track before. It took him some time to get used to it and start his 
    late kick. He didn't run badly and closed very well to be what Tom
    Dirken called a "diminishing half length" back of Holy Bull.
    
    The condition of the track was a *BIG* factor in all Belmont's races
    this weekend. It rained so hard on Friday that racing was cancelled so
    the workcrews could try to save the weekend racing. The heavy rain 
    continued on Saturday(NYRA's recap showed the Secretariat statue with 
    rain running off it in streams!).
    
    In the Gr II Fall Highweight sprint, Fly So Free won easily while
    carryin 135 pounds. Jan said, "Now, we know why it's called the
    Highweight!"
    
    Strategic Maneuver made all the right moves and blew the field away!
    She won the Gr I Matron by more than 12 lengths. She won her first 
    race in the slop so there was no learning curve for her to overcome.
    She's *good*...keep an eye on her for next year.
    
    In his most impressive race to date, Star of Cozzene won the Gr I (Turf) 
    Man O'War going away. He loves a soft course anyway so the rain didn't
    bother him. BTW, that was the only turf race on Saturday and turf
    racing has been cancelled at Belmont until at least Wednesday to give
    the course a chance to dry out. Anyway, Star of Cozzene clearly
    demonstrated his talent and versatility. This was his first race beyond
    10 furlongs and he handled it very well. I wouldn't be surprised to see
    him in Belmont's 12 furlong Turf Classic in 3 weeks time. If he shows
    that he can go 12 furlong in that race, he may go to the Breeders' Cup
    Turf rather than face Lure in the Mile which is Lure's best distance. 
    In the Man O'War, Star of Cozzene faced and defeated many of the horses
    he might face in the BC Turf. Bien Bien, Dr Kiernan, the French horse 
    Dear Doctor, etc... SO it might be worth the trip....BTW, Star of
    Cozzene ran in the same colors as his earlier races. Apparently, he
    hasn't been sold.
    
    The Woodward went *exactly* as the NY betting public expected. The
    public choices ran 1, 2, 3 in the order selected by the bettors! You
    don't see that very often. Bertrando took the lead out of the gate,
    kept it throughout and opened up in the stretch. I had more or less
    discounted his chances because of the off track. This was the best I've
    ever seen him run. I didn't know horses could swim that fast! ;-) The
    track was soooo sloppy by the Woodward that it really did look rather
    like swimming. Bertrando did the same thing to Devil His Due that he did
    to Best Pal. Bertrando went out early, ran fast and *dared* the field
    to catch him. Devil His Due made a good move to go after Bertrando at
    just the right time but there was no catching Bertrando. As the lone
    speed horse(again), Bertrando had everything his own way. The closers
    had no chance and finished well back. DHD is versatile and stayed
    within 3-4 lengths of Bertrando in the early going, rested on the
    backside and moved going into the far turn. Good strategy but to no
    avail.....BTW, DHD did get the biggest bonus for the ACRS series.
    Bertrando got the second place bonus for the series. Bertrando has now
    beaten the 2 best handicap horses in the country when he's not
    challenged early by another speed horse in the early stages of a race.
    Can he do so at 10 furlongs in the Breeders' Cup Classic with other
    speed in the race? We might see in about 6 weeks.
    
    By Sunday, the rain had stop and the track had dried out a little...but
    not much. The track was sloppy early and upgraded to good by the time
    of the Ruffian. It still looked sloppy to me just not as sloppy.
    
    Anyway, the field was: Paseana, Dispute, Turn Back the Alarm, You'd Be
    Surprised and Shared Interest. All graded stakes winners and at least 4
    Gr I winners! (I can't remember whether Shared Interest had won a Gr I
    or not).
    
    Odds-on favorite Paseana *hated* the slop and never lifted a hoof. She
    finished last. She's expected to stay in the East and train for the
    9F Gr I Spinster which is in 3 weeks before heading to the Breeders'
    Cup Distaff. 
    
    You'd Be Surprised did surprise me. The Rokeby horses usually run well
    in slop and on soft turf. She didn't. She finished 4th.
    
    Shared Interest took the lead out of the gate and never looked back!
    Jockey Robbie Davis did look back but he never saw any of the "big"
    mares(Paseana and Turn Back the Alarm) come to challenge. What he did
    see was Dispute finding a hole to run through when she had a lot of
    steam left in her boiler! 
    
    So, Davis chirrped to Shared Interest and she opened up on the field to
    win going away! Dispute was a very good second and Turn Back the Alarm
    ran a credible third. 
    
    These mares are all so good that if they ran this race 4 times under 4
    different sets of track conditions, I doubt that the same one would win
    twice. Shared Interest loves the slop. Paseana loves those hard
    airstrips they call race tracks in LA. Turn Back The Alarm likes it dry
    but not rock hard. Dispute and You'd Be Surprised seem to do their best
    running on moist but not off tracks.
    
    And that's the weekend's big races in the US 
481.581Molson Million(Canadian funds)DECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle Rain Festival: 1/1-12/31Tue Sep 21 1993 18:2434
    So now we move north of the border to Canada and Woodbine's Molson
    Million.
    
    The US horses should have stayed home. It's that simple. The conditions
    are "rigged" (if you'll pardon the expression) in that horses that have
    not won "open" stakes races get a weight advantage. Since the Canadian
    Triple Crown is restricted to Canadian horses, Peteski and Cheery
    Knight got the advantage. All the US horses(Sea Hero, Colonial Affair,
    Kissin Kris) carried 126 pounds. Peteski, who had won the Triple Crown and 
    set track records doing it, carried 121. Cheery Knight got away with 117! 
    Fillies running in the KY Derby carry more than that regardless of what
    they've won! 
    
    When I heard the weight assignments and heard the commentator say that
    the track was showing a bias favoring the rail and speed horses, I knew
    the race was over.
    
    Cheery Knight broke on top and set the early pace. Peteski ran right
    off his flank about a length back and then took over to win by 5.
    Sea Hero ran pretty well and closed to get third. He wasn't far
    behind(maybe a long neck or short half length) Cheery Knight(who was 
    carrying 9 pounds less!). Shift the weights to an even 126 and I'll bet 
    you'd have a much different race. Peteski's too good to get a 5 pound
    weight advantage over the US horses.
    
    Perret better stay out of Canada. They'll hang him soon! This time,
    before the race, he referred to Peteski as having won against his 
    "state-breds" and now he needed to prove his class against open company. 
    After the race, he again referred to Canadian horses as state-breds...If 
    there's one thing I've found Canadians to be militant about it is that 
    they are not the 51st state of the US and don't want to be treated as
    such... If Perret doesn't wise up and realize he's in another country, 
    he may find that the OJC bars him for life rather than 15 days for
    "comments which were not in the best interest of racing"
481.582Diazo's back to the racesDECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle Rain Festival: 1/1-12/31Mon Sep 27 1993 16:1915
    The most interesting race this weekend was the Meadowlands(New Jersey)
    Gr I Pegasus Handicap for 3YO's at 9 furlongs.
    
    As you can imagine with the "name" 3 YO colts having just run in the
    Molson Million last week, there wasn't a star studded field. In fact,
    the favorite and actual winner in a romp was Diazo.
    
    Trainer & Hall of Fame jockey Bill Shoemaker said that Diazo bucked his
    shins in the KY Derby and was off recuperating until late summer.After
    a win at 1 mile on the turf, he felt he was ready to go back to the
    dirt for a Gr I race.
    
    Laffitt Pincay(the only *other* jockey to have won more than 8,000
    races) rode Diazo in the Pegasus. Shoe said that Diazo will probably go
    to the Breeders' Cup in a turf race!
481.583Racing NewsDECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle Rain Festival: 1/1-12/31Wed Sep 29 1993 20:5430
    So much for what Shoe said on Fri night. Mr. Paulson said Diazo will be
    aimed for the Breeders' Cup Classic rather than one of the turf races.
    
    Sea Hero is out for the rest of the season. He has a calcium deposit
    near one of his knees. He's being treated and rested until next year.
    He wasn't being aimed for the Breeders' Cup Classic(Mr. Mellon refuses
    to ship his horses to CA) so there wasn't much left for him to run in
    this season...just the Gr I Jockey Gold Cup in 2 weeks.
    
    Star of Cozzene has now been sold for a reported $3,000,000. The
    Thoroughbred Digest only referred to the purchasers as "the Japanese"
    which I think is an insult to both us as viewers and to the purchasers.
    Even if the horse were sold to the Japanese National Stud (assuming
    there is such an entity), Thoroughbred Digest could have said so. If
    the horse were sold to a private farm, corporation or individual, why
    not say so? Anyway, they said that the new owners intend to send Star
    of Cozzene to the Japan Cup in late November. They did not specify
    whether or not he would run in the Breeders' Cup before that.
    
    1974 KY Derby winner Cannonade died recently. Infirmities of old age.
    He was 22. That was (now retired) jockey Angel Cordero's first win in 
    the Derby.
    
    Julie Krone had the second surgery on her ankle and it was successful.
    However, the doctors now say it may take up to a full year before she
    can return to riding. The doctors also say that she will be likely to
    suffer from traumatic arthritis in that joint as a result of the
    injury. The apprentice rider whose horse interferred with
    Krone's mount was judged by the stewards to have caused the accident
    through careless riding. He was fined and banned from riding for 5 days.
481.5841993 Louisiana Super DerbyDECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle Rain Festival: 1/1-12/31Mon Oct 04 1993 18:0252
    Super Derby 14 turned out to be the most exciting 3 YO dirt race of the 
    season! For those unfamiliar, it is Gr I, 10 furlongs on the dirt, run in
    Louisiana and has a big purse...formerly $1,000,000 but now reduced to
    $750,000. All the colts carry 126 pounds.
    
    The field included Canadian Triple Crown and Gr II Molson Million winner 
    Peteski as well as Gr I Haskell winner Kissin Kris. Both of them were 
    running on only 13 days rest since the Molson Million at Woodbine. 
    Kissin Kris was part of a 3 horse entry (1 rabbit and 2 contenders). The 
    field also included Wallenda(Gr II PA derby winner) and Devoted Brass 
    but none of the US classic winners.
    
    The first part of the race went according to Peteski's script. He lay
    in 3rd just off the pace with Perret rating him nicely. Peteski's move
    came on the final turn and he took the lead easily. But, at the top of 
    the stretch, I knew he was beat. Saintly Prospector(part of the entry
    with Kissin Kris) challenged Peteski on the inside. But, Wallenda, who 
    had been in last place, had also started a move of the final turn. 
    Saintly Prospector and Kissin Kris are similar colors and wore the same 
    color silks(same owner). The only way to tell them apart was the color of 
    the jockey's cap.  I couldn't remember which was which so I wasn't sure 
    which of them it was but said to Jan, "The horse on the inside has Peteski 
    beat but it looks like Wallenda's race." Well, I was right but the photo 
    was a lot closer than I *ever* expected.
    
    First of all, Wallenda closed a little more slowly than it looked like
    he would. It looked like he was momentarily bothered by Devoted Brass
    who was trying to get to the outside to make his late run. Wallenda
    checked slightly and Devoted Brass cut back to the inside.
    
    Peteski was game. He held on after Saintly Prospector took the lead.
    In the closing strides, he actually came back a little. He ran very
    well. 

    Kissin Kris was flying on the rail and closing even faster than
    Wallenda but he started his charge too late to win. It looked like he
    got up for third but when, they showed the replay of the stretch
    drive, it was the game Peteski's nose that got third.

    So, it was Wallenda by a nostril over Saintly Prospector; Saintly 
    Prospector by a nose over Peteski; Peteski by a nose over Kissin Kris.
    Devoted Brass never got a chance to do his best and finished 5th about
    1 length behind Wallenda. That's right...the difference between first and 
    5th was a mere length.
    
    Before the race, many of the commentators were talking about Peteski
    and said they expected him to win and set a stakes record. Actually,
    Peteski ran well and performed about as well as I expected him to *at
    level weights*. The time was farily ordinary 2:02 4/5(or was it 3/5?) and 
    a good 2 seconds off the stakes record.

    John
481.585What makes a Canadian-bred?DECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle Rain Festival: 1/1-12/31Mon Oct 04 1993 18:0326
    BTW, what makes a Canadian-bred?

    Peteski's pedigree reads like a Who's Who of KY stallions for 5 
    generations. So, what constitutes a Canadian-bred when it comes to 
    eligibility for the Canadian Triple Crown, etc? Is just being foaled in 
    Canada of a Canadian-owned mare the sole requirement?

    I may have this a bit jumbled because I'm doing it from memory but,
    if one of the pedigree mavens would like the full details, I'll check:

             Native Dancer
          Exclusive Native
       Affirmed
          dam by Mr Prospector
    Peteski
                Nearco
             Northern Dancer
                Natlama by Native Dancer
          Nuryev
             dam by Forli(aka sire of the great Forego)
       Vive
                Ribot  
             His Majesty(full brother to Graustark)
                Flower Bowl
          second dam
             third dam by Turn-to
481.586Bits & piecesDECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle Rain Festival: 1/1-12/31Wed Oct 06 1993 20:5017
    A couple tidbits from this week's Thoroughbred Digest and/or Inside
    Racing shows:
    
    	Genuine Risk's foal has been named: Genuine Reward
    		Very appropriate considering how long it took to produce
    		her first foal! Now, if he has his Mom's courage, he'll be
    		good. BTW, Genuine Risk is open this year but they plan to
    		breed her in the Spring
    
    	Star of Cozzene will run in this Saturday's 12f Gr I Turf Classic
    	at Belmont. It will be his last race in the US before he is shipped
    	to Japan for the Japan Cup. I don't know whether he'll be retired
    	to stud after the Japan Cup or will race next year.
    
    	Kingmambo(Miesque's first foal) is expected to run in the Breeders'
    	Cup Mile. His Mom won that race twice! Hope she told him how to win
    	the big ones!
481.587European BC challengeRDGE44::ALEUC3Mon Oct 11 1993 12:2846
Talking about the breeders cup, a few weeks ago we had a mile race at
ASCOT in England contested by several European horses being aimed at 
the breeders cup mile race. The following are the note I made for the 
internet "derby list". The result of the race was:
1 - Bigstone
2 - Barathea 
3 - Kingmambo 
The race being run of soft ground.

  Bigstone  3-9-0 Trained in France by E Lellouche
    The only 3-y-o to beat older horses at grade 1 level in Europe this year.
    Finished a close second in two grade 1 events over 9 and 10 furlongs 
    for 3-y-o in France before reverting to a mile and winning the grade 1 
    Sussex Stakes on Good/Soft going at the end of July, beating Sayyedati 
    by one and a half lengths giving her 3lbs. Has since been beaten under 
    a length by Kingmambo in the grade 1 Prix Du Moulin on good ground.

  Sayyedati 3-8-11  Trained by C Brittain in the UK 
    Won the 1,000 gns (3-y-o fillies classic over 1 mile) at Newmarket
    in the spring on good ground. Off the racecourse for 90 days, returned 
    to finish 2nd to Bigstone in the Sussex Stakes. She then won the Grade 1
    Prix Du Haras De Fresnay-Le-Buf at Deauville in France on good ground 
    beating Kingmambo and Elizabeth Bay in the process. Appears to be best
    on good fast ground. Improving filly who is being aimed at the Breeders
    Cup Mile. Has not run for 6 weeks.
    
  Kingmambo 3-9-0 Trained in France by F Boutin
    Beat Zafonic on his re-appearence in a 3 horse race in heavy going
    in April. Has thrived since winning three grade 1 events and finishing
    a close third to Sayyedati in the other after losing both his front shoes
    during the race. Appeared to win his last race with a little in
    hand, having been asked to quicken in the last 100 yards of the race.
    Acts on soft and good ground, is another being aimed at the Breeders
    Cup Mile.

  Barathea 3-9-0 Trained by L Cumani in UK
    Ran second to the hugely impressive Zafonic (who broke the track record
    of 45 year standing) in the 1 Mile Grade 1 2,000 Gns (3-y-o classic for 
    colts and fillies) in the spring. Went on to win the Grade 1 Irish 
    2,000 gns. Failed to stay the 12 Furlongs of the Grade 1 Epson Derby. Has 
    been placed in last two run behind Opera House in the grade 1 Eclipse Stakes
    over 10 Furlongs, and Kingmambo in a Grade 1 race in France over a mile. 
    Far from disgraced in either race. Has won on soft ground but is more 
    effective on a fast surface. 

MartinK
481.588exDECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle Rain Festival: 1/1-12/31Mon Oct 11 1993 16:3043
    Thanks Martin! We don't get much news of European horses here.  Even in
    The Blood Horse, they get at most 1 page per week. 
    
    Are any of the European horses known to like firm/hard going? Santa
    Anita in November will be hot by European standards and dry. So, I'm
    sure the ground will fairly hard. But, not so hot as Florida...
    
    In US racing over the weekend, *all* four major races in NY went to
    jockey Mike Smith! In the Turf Classic at Belmont, he rode the French
    horse Apple Tree to an upset victory in the $500,000 Gr I 12 furlong
    event. The odds-on favorite was Star of Cozzene with last year's BC
    Turf winner, Fraise, as the second choice. My personal & sentimental 
    choice was Solar Splendor who won the Belmont Turf Classic 2 years ago.
    
    Solar Splendor and jockey Herb McCaulley tried to "steal" the race. The
    went out in fractions of 26+, 51+, 1:16+, 1:41+ through the first mile.
    Pat Valenzuela and Fraise pinned Star of Cozzene on the rail and never
    gave him running room. The tactic did keep Star of Cozzene from winning
    but did Fraise no good as he finished last. Star of Cozzene was fourth.
    
    Turning for home, it looked like Solar Splendor would win it as he was
    still quite strong but Apple Tree came with a late rush and got up by a
    length. 
    
    Half an hour later, Smith returned to the winner's circle after
    piloting, BirdOnTheWire to a 4-5 length victory in the Gr I
    Vosburg(7f). He defeated the best eastern sprinters(Alydeed, Loach,
    LionCavern, etc) as well as the CA horse, Ibero.
    
    On Sunday, Sky Beauty won a length victory in the Gr II 8 furlong Rare
    Perfume. Sky Beauty never does more than she has to and Smith left his
    move until the last minute. Sky Beauty did win easily despite the
    seemingly narrow margin. She was loafing, looking around, listening to
    the crowd etc...She was never really challenged. She's expected to go
    to the Breeders' Cup...most likely in the Distaff as her form suggests
    that she can't beat males at 10 furlongs in the Classic.
    
    In the Gr II mile Jamaica Handicap for colts. Smith again got the
    winner home but my mind draws a blank at the moment....
    
    Soory about that and that I don't have the results of the big CA races
    from Santa Anita's Oak Tree meeting(there were 2 Gr I races yesterday)
    but I've not been able to find their daily  show as yet.
481.589apple treeRDGE44::ALEUC3Wed Oct 13 1993 08:1820
  Had a quick look through my database

  Apple Tree

  Consistent animal has been placed in most of his grade 1 and 2 races.
  Beaten 7l when unplaced in the French Derby last year. Has tended
  to be unruly at the start and was demoted from 2nd to 3rd in the
  grade 1 Coronations Cup at Epson in June this year after leaning
  on the third placed horse. The winner of that race, Opera House,
  who's bound for the BC, went on to win two grade 1 races over
  1 1/4 and 1 1/2 miles.
  Apple Tree later ran second to User Friendly in another grade 1 race.
  Has run most of his races on good or soft ground. A good consistent
  animal, but not the best available in Europe.

  The slow early pace in Saturdays almost certainly played into Apple Trees
  hands, as French race tends to dawdle for the first half of a race, and
  sprint only over the last few furlongs. 

  MartinK
481.590Poor LotRDGE44::ALEUC3Wed Oct 13 1993 08:2413
  I've just been reading an article bemoaning the poor bunch of 3yo we
  have here in Europe this year. Of the 70 occasions that 3yo have taken
  on their elders in Grade 1 races, only twice have they prevailed.
  This is the worst record for 20 years. 
  Mind you, it apparently worse on your side of the pond. According to
  the International Racing Bureau all the 35 Grade 1 races open to 3yo,
  have been won by older horses (they don't say how many were contested
  by younger horses), the worst season since 1974.

  What do people think are behind these statistics, and what are the 
  implications for the Breeders Cup in those races open to 3yo?

  MartinK
481.591Poor 3 year old cropsGBLAUT::JANICKIV. Janicki DCE Engineering DTN 226-5980Wed Oct 13 1993 13:0715
It seems to me that there is a cycle to these crops. The three year olds
are taking turns beating each other. As for why the three year old aren't
beating the older horse- I think the best three year old colts are not
racing against them. There is plenty of money in their age group and
there are alot of good older horses who have stuck around this year.

The Boston Globe had an article in August of this year, I believe. About
how the Kentucky breeders are selling off their future to the Arabs and
the Japanese. What will be really interesting is to see if this trend of
so-so horses continues in the US. 

Personally, I think we are overdue for an outstanding racehorse to appear.
Racing needs some real excitement, not media hype ala Arazi.

Vicky
481.592American based candidates for BC TurfDECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle Rain Festival: 1/1-12/31Wed Oct 13 1993 16:2126
    re Apple Tree
    
    Your comments are quite consistent with what we knew about Apple Tree
    and what the TV folks said about him before the race: A good useful
    horse but not even the best in his stable much less Europe.
    
    It looks like Star of Cozzene is unlikely to go in the Breeders' Cup
    Turf as he is being shipped to Japan for the Japan Cup and his owners
    are reluctant to supplement him to the BC Turf. Frankly, I think
    they're wise. I think we have better horses at the distance even here
    in the states. The UK and French horses are probably better too.
    
    In particular, I would expect Bien Bien, Kotashaan and Luazur(another
    French import, I believe) to best Star of Cozzene on a regular basis
    over 12f. Star of Cozzene can get 12f in good company but IMHO he
    doesn't dominate the competition at that distance. He *does* dominate
    at 10f.
    
    For example, in Sunday's 12f Oak Tree Invitational at Santa Anita,
    Luazur went out too fast and essentially stopped at the top of the
    lane. Kotashaan came on to win in 2:25 which is decent time even on
    Santa Anita's firm course. Since the BC Turf is at the same course and
    the same distance in a mere 3 weeks time, I would think Kotashaan would
    be the best American based horse to compete in the BC Turf.
    
    John
481.5933 YOs & up?DECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle Rain Festival: 1/1-12/31Wed Oct 13 1993 16:5934
    The net died while I was typing this last time so here we go again...
    
    At this point in the season, I think it's safe to say that our 3 YO
    crop is mediocre. There aren't many of them that have won multiple Gr I
    races against their peers much less against their elders.
    
    As Vicky said, one reason is that there are numerous races for 3 YOs
    which have large purses between May and September. FOr example, the KY
    Derby, Preakness, Belmont, Travers, Molson Million and Louisiana Super
    Derby are all Gr I races for 3 YOs. I think the smallest purse is the
    Super Derby which is $750,000(US). The Molson Millsion is
    $1,000,000(Canadian) or slightly more than $766,000(US)...
    
    The other reason they aren't competing aginst older horses is that they
    are ducking them because the 3 YOs aren't a stellar crop! Not that our
    handicap division is extraoridinary...I think Sea Hero was the only 3
    YO being aimed at the Jockey Club Gold Cup this weekend and he's now
    out for the season.
    
    Our handicap division is not extraoridinary. Early in the season, 
    Devil His Due looked like he'd be outstanding but his form has tailed
    off. He's now won only once in his last 5 starts. On the other hand, he
    always runs fairly well. He's simply not at the top of his game.
    
    Best Pal is a mere shadow of his previous form....as is the 1992 champion
    mare Paseana
    
    We may well see Sky Beauty as Horse of the Year if she wins the
    Breeders' Cup Distaff. She'd be the first female to win Horse of the
    Year without beating males...she was on top of the tirf writers' poll
    this week after her win and Star of Cozzene's loss...so it's
    possible...we'll soon see
    
    John
481.594NY newsDECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle Rain Festival: 1/1-12/31Fri Oct 15 1993 22:1129
    Oh, I forgot...
    
    The magic shoes have been banned in NY... Yes, I do mean turn-downs
    those shoes which have been modified so that the heel of the shoe is
    bent down in a sharp angle. Supposedly gives more traction.
    
    The New York Racing Association(NYRA) has banned the shoes at all its
    tracks(Saratoga, Belmont and Aqueduct; i.e. all the *big* tracks in
    NY). NYRA cited safety concerns as the main issue. They said that they
    were afraid that the shoes would injure fallen jockeys/horses far more
    seriously than regular shoes because the turned down heel would act
    like a knife. They used Krone's spill at Saratoga as an example saying
    that if the horse that trampled her had been wearing turn-downs and/or
    she hadn't been wearing a safety vest, she'd have been killed. 
    
    They also said that the shoes damaged the track by digging in so deep 
    and that this in turn created a safety hazard because the track was 
    getting "pot-holes" in it.
    
    BTW, Krone is now out of the hospital and has been hanging out at
    Belmont to keep her spirits up. They interviewed her on TV earlier this
    month(when she was still in hospital). Some therapist had suggested
    "aroma therapy" to help keep  her spirits up. Krone decided that the
    only thing that would work would be horse smells so she got a dirty
    grooming brush and kept it in her bedside table!
    
    They interviewed her doctors too. They said she'd probably have been
    killed if she hadn't had the safety vest because she got kicked right
    in the chest. Even with the vest, her heart was bruised by the blow.
481.595LAUREL - Euro ContendersRDGE44::ALEUC3Thu Oct 21 1993 07:3874
A fellow user in the "Derby internet" conference asked for any
form on the European contenders in this weekends LAUREL.

I posted the following note

---------------------------------------------------------------------


Laurel Notes
------------

Inchinor   JC Rating 116   3yo (typically 120+ = Grade 1, 114+ = Grade 2)
Ran second on his final juvenile run behind Zafonic in the Grade 1 Dewhurst
over 7f. Has disappointed this year. The winner of his three Grade 3 races
all over 7f, he finished sixth, 8l behind Zafonic in the Grade 1, mile, 3yo 
classic race the English 2,000 gns in April. Ran his best race when 4l third 
to Bigstone in the Grade 1 (all aged) Sussex Stakes over a mile at Goodwood 
on easy ground in July. On his latest English start finished forth beaten
under 1l in the Grade 2 race at Goodwood (muddling early pace). Has run his 
best races when closing off a fast pace. Broke the 7f Newmarket course record 
of 46 years standing in a Grade 3 race this June.  

George Augustus       Rating N/A  5yo
Finished third recently in the USA.
Won a group 3 race in 91, I have no records of him running in 92.
I have a record of 3 races this year. Won a Grade 2 (10f) race (beating a 
subsequent Grade 1 winner Ezzoud) by a short head (sh), on soft ground in
Ireland in May. Beaten 1.5l into forth behind placerville and Urban Sea 
(winner of this years Arc) at Royal Ascot in a Grade 2 (10f) race on 
G/S ground, running on well. Beaten 6l in a Grade 1 (12f) race in Germany on 
his last European start on Good ground.

Kitwood (France)   4yo
I've a record of 5 races in 92. Won a lightly contested Grade 1 race 
at Longchamp in May 92. Second in another Grade 1, again at Longchamp,
in June beaten 3/4 l. Unplaced in two subsequent Grade 1 races that year.
Raced twice in France this year, third in a Grade 3 race, and unplaced in
a Grade 2 race, on soft and heavy ground.

Voleris (France) 4yo
Lightly raced, well bred colt, by Kriss out of the French classic winner 
Braiser Vole. Raced 3 times this year. Won the 7f Grade 3 race on his
re-appearence in May. Off the track for 4 months, returned to be a 2l second 
in a slowly run Grade 3 race over 6f. Returned to a more suitable trip of
a mile on his last start when winning a well contested Grade 2 race at
Longchamp on heavy ground (Kitwood 9l behind) in October. The second horse
Alflora won two Grade 2 races earlier in the year. Has never raced on fast
ground. Improving.

Accommodating (France) 3yo filly
Has raced 5 times this year. Second in a Grade 3 race, fifth in a Grade 2 
race. Ran her best race when third beaten under 3l by Intrepidity (English
Oaks winner) in May at Longchamp. Has run poorly in her last 2 Grade 1 races.

Elizabeth Bay (France) 3yo filly
Tends to sweat in the preliminaries, and has been a little disappointing this
year. Favourite for the English fillies 3yo classic Grade 1 over a mile in 
May, was only able to finish eighth. Finished second beaten a nk by the 
French trained Gold Splash in Grade 1 3yo fillies race at Royal Ascot over
a mile. Ran a close third, beaten under a length by Ski Paradise in a
Grade 2 race at Deauville (France) in July. Ran her best race behind 
Sayyedati and Kingmambo, beaten under 3l in a Grade 1 mile race again at 
Deauville. Beaten 5l in her last race, a Grade 2 race at Longchamp. Appears 
best on easy ground.

Dariyoun (France) 5yo 
Raced over extended distances (15f) in 91 and 92. Has been racing over 12f
this year. Unplaced in two Grade 1 races this year. Finished second and third
in his other contested races, both Grade 3, at Longchamp. The races were on
soft and Heavy ground. Ran eleventh beaten 10 length in this years Arc,
having led for most of the way.

Hope this helps
MartinK
481.596Final North American BC PrepsDECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle Rain Festival: 1/1-12/31Thu Oct 21 1993 22:08105
If you wanted to win a stakes race last weekend, you had a much better 
chance if your name was Shug McGaughey or Chris McCarron! McGaughey trained 
horses won 5 graded stakes races at Belmont last Saturday. McCarron rode 3 
winners on Saturday(including the Jockey Club Gold Cup) and then went to 
Keeneland on Sunday to win the Spinster aboard Paseana.

Paseana looked like her old self in the 9f Gr I Spinster and didn't mind 
the off track at Keeneland. If the real Paseana shows up in the Breeders' 
Cup Distaff she'll be tough to beat. Her owners have announced that they 
will put up the $120,000 to supplement her to defend her title.

In the Jockey Club Gold Cup, 3 of the 5 entrants were 3 YOs. The only older 
horses in the race were Devil His Due and Brunswick. Diazo set a fast early 
pace but tired and finished last. The Jim Dandy winner Miner's Mark was 
close to the pace and took over the lead when Diazo stopped at the top of 
the lane. Miner's Mark looked strong then. 

Devil His Due was boxed in and had nowhere to go until the final furlong 
when a hole along the rail opened up. He started for the hole quickly and 
looked like coming through to win but he couldn't get up a run and finished 
fourth. Frankly, I think he needs a rest. He runs his best when fresh and 
he has not had more than 4 weeks rest between races since the Florida 
circuit last winter. He's danced every dance and he's *got* to be tired so 
late in the season.

Belmont winner Colonial Affair closed stoutly in the middle of the track.
He and Miner's Mark battled to the wire to what looked like a dead heat 
or a win for Colonial Affair. Colonial Affair was going stronger and actually 
forged ahead in the next stride. But, the camera showed that Miner's Mark 
won on the nod(i.e. he had his head & neck down while Colonial Affair was at 
the point in his stride where a horse's head & neck are pulled up and back).
Score 1 for McGaughey & the Phipps Stable...

They hit the wire in 2:02 3/5 which happens to be the same as the Wallenda's 
Super Derby win the week before. Of course, that doesn't necessarily mean
that the performances are equivalent. You'd have to look at speed figures
to take the track conditions etc into account. Belmont was a bit wet but
LA Downs was like an airstrip.

So, here we are 2+ weeks from the Breeder's Cup and not a favorite for the 
Classic in sight. The older horses in the East just got beat by 3 YOs 
from what looks like a mediocre crop. However, Colonial Affair and 
Miner's Mark may be exceptions to that mediocrity. Miner's Mark is 
lightly raced because he's been slow developing. His trainer and owners 
have been very careful to bring him along slowly and this is his second 
race against older horses. He ran in the Woodward and did OK but ... 

Colonial Affair is by Pleasant Colony whose get tend to develop late and 
like a distance of ground. If I remember correctly, Colonial Affair's dam 
is also from a distance loving line known to mature late. He may just be 
coming into his own. We'll see.

In the West, Best Pal chose to run in the $250,000 California Cup Classic at 9 
furlongs. The California Cup is a mini-Breeder's Cup format of races but it is 
restricted to California bred horses. That means that the field wasn't quite 
as tough as it would be in open company but Best Pal won easily and looked 
like his old self. The distance(9f) is not his best but it was a good prep 
over the Santa Anita track. Best Pal is better at 10f. If he's back to his old 
form, he'll be tough in the Classic. 

Bertrando has been impressive lately but I doubt he can beat the best at 10 
furlongs. He's only run well once at that distance...unfortunately, it was 
recently so you can't count him out.

Marquetry won the Gr I Meadowlands Cup at 9f last Friday night. He's looking 
as good as ever. When they let him run his own race(i.e. early speed) rather 
than restraining him early, he's tough too. He's won Gr I races at 9 or 10
furlongs each of the past 3 years. He's going to stud at the end of this 
season. Personally, if he were mine, I'd retire him NOW off his Gr I win 
rather than running in the BC CLassic. But, he'll be there.

Lure won Saturday's Kelso Handicap (mile on soft turf) impressively and 
he's the heavy favorite for the BC Mile. McGaughey with Claiborne Farms this 
time.

The 2 YO Dehere was impressive in winning the Champagne Stakes(1 Mile) on 
Saturday. He sat off a pace which was basically steady 12's(6f in slighty over
1:12). In the final furlong, McCarron asked Dehere to run and he *spurted* to 
the lead. He drew off to win impressively and came home the final furlong 
in less than 24 seconds. Final time 1:35 4/5 which isn't bad for a 2YO on a 
wet track and his first time at 1 mile.

Dehere's good and is likely to win the BC Juvenile. But, he is a Deputy 
Minister and not many of them are real distance horses. In other words, DON'T 
expect him to win the KY Derby if he *does* win the BC Juvenile. Wait until
we see him go 9 furlongs before you place your Derby bets. Besides, *NO* BC 
Juvenile winner has yet to win the KY Derby or *ANY* Triple Crown race.

In the 2 YO filly division, the unthinkable happened. The unbeatable Strategic 
Maneuver not only got beat but trounced! She appeared to pull up fine but
I suspect an injury or bleeding will have shown up after the race. She's 
better than she ran last Saturday. Heavenly Prize won the Frizzete even though
it was only the second race of her career! McGaughey & Phipps Stable again!

Up in Canada, the Rothman's International was run on Sunday. It's Gr I 12f on 
the turf and offers a $1,000,000(Canadian; about $770,000 US) purse. Top 
horses from Canada, Europe and the US showed up. It was a strong 12 horse 
field. Before the race, Dan Kenney(a California commentator who sometimes 
appears on ESPN and NBC race coverage) said that the French horse Husband had 
had a slight fever after he arrived and that he therefore had no chance to 
win. He essentially said, "Don't bet this horse." I said to Jan, "With this 
guy's record, people would be smart to bet *on* that horse." Guess what won?
Yup, Husband did going away. The ground was extremely soft, what I think the 
Europeans would call "heavy going" and the horses tired except for this poor 
sick thing that Danno said not to bet. ;-)
481.597A question of QualityRDGE44::ALEUC3Fri Oct 22 1993 07:5114
    
After seeing the result of the Rothman's International I had a quick look at
HUSBANDS and REGANCY's (3rd) form here in Europe. The computer system I use
generally cover all the GRADE 1, and some Grade 2 and 3 races in France, so 
the form details may be incomplete. 

REGANCY's  had  winning form in Grade 2 races, HUSBANDS only placed in 
two Grade 2 races. REGANCY's failed both time he attempted Grade 1 (once 
I think as act as  pacemaker). HUSBAND had only won a Listed race (Grade 4?). 
This win either demonstrates a greatly improved performance from an 
admittedly lightly raced animal, a freak result due to the HEAVY (reported in 
our press) ground, or a reflection on the quality of the field!

MartinK
481.598Soapbox commentaryDECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle Rain Festival: 1/1-12/31Fri Oct 22 1993 16:4540
    I agree and actually I think it was a combination of all 3. Because
    Husband is so lightly raced it's difficult to tell what his true class
    is. But, I do think the heavy going and mediocre quality of the
    Rothman's Field contributed to Husband's win. The field was 11 runners
    with several 3 YOs who are just coming to hand. After a relatively fast 
    pace early on, nothing was running except Regancy and Husband. The former 
    moved a bit too early and tired a bit. As a result, Regancy couldn't hold 
    on for second much less a win. Cozzenne's Prince which was second came 
    *very* late but too late and with far too little to catch Husband.
    
    The top North American turf horses have not been using the Rothman's as
    a prep for the Breeders' Cup Turf. Last year, even the Canadian owned
    Sky Classic defected from the Rothman's which he had won the previous
    year. He ran in the Belmont Turf Classic which was 1 week earlier. The 
    Turf Classic is the  same grade & distance but much less money. His 
    trainer wanted the extra week's rest before the Breeders' Cup. 
    
    The same sort of thing has been happening with the Laurel International
    in recent years. SO much so that the race has been shortened to 8
    furlongs. Years ago, when it was the D.C. International, it was 12
    furlongs. It had beeen shortened to 10 and now 8furlongs to change the
    character of the race. I don't know if the new distance will entice
    people to use it as a route to the BC Mile or not. I rather doubt it
    because it's only 2 weeks before the Breeders' Cup.
    
    Actually, the Breeders' Cup has been a boon to the horses a cut below
    the best and/or those not nominated to the BC. The time between races
    before the BC has become so important and so impossible that a number
    of Gr I and Gr II races are being deserted by the top competitors which
    leaves the field wide open for those not going to the BC.
    
    As much good as it's done for racing, I'd rather it hadn't started!
    Putting so much importance on a single day is ludicrous. It decides too
    many championships because it's the last thing the voters see. The
    year's campaign and successes are frequently ignored in favor of the 
    horse which prevails on BC day. (Counter examples of course are last
    year's Sprint and Turf races. The victors were *not* their divisional
    champions but it's too often the other way round.) As I've said before,
    many fall races have lost their importance because of the BC but I
    think the BC is here to stay...at least until they run out of money...
481.599Weekend stakes racesDECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle Rain Festival: 1/1-12/31Tue Oct 26 1993 16:3251
    The weekend stakes races(edited to fix booboos!):
    
    The Interntaional Mile wasn't very international! Only 1 foreign horse
    showed up(English based Inchinor) as the airport strike kept the French 
    horses at home. It was a race hardly deserving of graded status much
    less its Gr I rating. Buckhar won coming from just off the pace. He was 
    never challenged. Inchinor never kicked in and faded badly.
    
    Frankly, the fields were better and more international in 2 stakes with
    lesser gradings; The Laurel Dash(6f) and Laurel Turf Cup(12f) both
    grade III turf races. The Dash went to HomeOfTheFree.
    
    The Laurel Turf Cup had a farily large field and was run on the same
    yielding ground that the Dash and the Mile were run over. The early
    pace was quite slow (52+, 1:18+,1:43+, 2:03+) so I expected quite a 
    charge with the European horses getting up at the finish. It didn't
    happen that way. The early leader, Square Cut held on to finish the 12f
    in 2:32 2/5. Wesam was second and the Irish runner, George Augustus
    which had trailed the field throughout did come on for 3rd.
    
    In CA, the Gr II Las Palmas Handicap for fillies & mares(9f turf) was
    run on SUnday. This field was large, good and had more international
    runners that the Gr I so-called Internaional Mile. Of the 5 horses I
    recognized in the field, 3 were French horses that had been recently 
    moved to CA(Gravieres, Potridee and Miatuschka). Campagnarde and
    Skimble were the other 2. 
    
    Pat Day and Skimble set the early pace. Day, a master of pace and the
    hand ride, slowed the pace down as much as possible. Potridee(Alexi
    Solis up) was just a length off the leader with Miatuschka(I'm not 
    sure I'm spelling that right but it's close!) with Corey Black was 3rd.
    Campagnarde and Gravieres were another 2 lengths back. The last
    horse(whose name I've forgotten) was only 6 lengths off the lead.
    
    The order didn't change until the final furlong. Potridee challenged
    for the lead and looked like taking it for a minute. But, Day and
    Skimble had something in reserve and Skimble responded to the
    challenge. Miatuschka swung out and ran on down the middle of the
    track with long free strides. It looked like she would power by the
    leaders easily. She did get by but not easily! Both Skimble and
    Potridee responded but, with Potridee between horses and already behind,
    the win was Miatuschka's by a head. Skimble a good second and Potridee
    a very game third. Best race of the weekend IMHO. But, noticeable by
    their absence were the mare turf division stars, Flawlessly and Let's
    Elope. The later has been running against males recently but I haven't
    seen Flawlessly since the Beverly D at Chicago 8 weeks ago. I expect
    she'll be in the Yellow Ribbon and/or the Matron in CA within the
    next few weeks.
    
    The only other Graded stakes in the US this weekend was Aqueduct's Gr
    III Boojum sprint won by Boom Towner
481.600Racing news: Foolish Pleasure Moved, etcDECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle Rain Festival: 1/1-12/31Tue Oct 26 1993 17:2961
Assorted news from last week's Blood Horse:

"BAN AGAINST TURN-DOWNS SPREADS

The lastets fashion carze in equine footwear may be over. One week after 
turn-down shoes were banned by the New York Racing Association, officials at 
Keeneland, Churchhill Downs and the Oak Tree Racing Association at Santa Anita
jumped on the bandwagon. The ban at Santa Anita means turn-downs will not be 
allowed for the Breeders' Cup."


Santa Anita has installed an on-site gamma-camera to accomodate nuclear 
imaging of horses in training. Nuclear imaging(scintigraphy) can detect 
changes in bone. It is accurate enough to allow early identification of
stress fractures. U. California Davis has a postmortem program which
showed pre-exisiting stress fractures in horses that died of injuries. It is 
hoped that the new equipment will allow veterinarians to identify injuries
before additional trauma makes the condition irreversible.

"FOOLISH PLEASRE TO WYOMING

KENTUCKY DERBY WINNER TO BE PASTURE BRED

Champion Foolish Pleasure, who initially stood for $25,000 at Greentree Stud 
near Lexington, will be turned out next year at Ron Vanderhoef's Horseshoe 
Ranch near Sheraton, Wyo. Vanderhoef privately purchased the 21-year-old 
stallion and is hoping Foolish Pleasure will impregnate some of the Vanderhoef 
mares through pasture breeding.

Foolish Pleasure stood the 1993 season at Harry Oda and Fred Rhyme's Kerr 
Stock Farm in California. Kerr Stock Farm manager Dale Matthews said the 
stallion suffers from declining fertility and is difficult to handle.

Vanderhoef plans on putting 10 mares in the field with the stallion, and 
Matthews hopes to send a couple mares to Vanderhoef's 7,200 acre spread. The 
farm is located near Bighorn National Forest near the Montana border.

Millionaire Foolish Pleasure was champion 2-year-old male in 1974 and he won 
the Kentucky Derby(Gr. I) the following year. Syndicated for a reported 
$125,000 per share in the fall of 1976, Foolish Pleasure stood at Greentree 
until he was moved to Mint Lane Farm near Lexington in the fall of 1982. He 
was moved to Spendthrift near Lexington prior to the 1986 breeding season. He 
stood at Spendthrift until he went to Kerr Stock Farm in the fall of 1982. He 
has sired 35 stakes winners."

Jockey Chris Antley is moving his tack permanently to ride on the California 
circuit. He feels the top NY trainers aren't giving him as many good mounts as 
they were 3-4 years ago. He's been about 5th in most recent NY race meetings 
with Smith, Krone, Bailey, Santos and sometimes Jean-Luc Samyn ahead of him. 

The Jockey Club is switching from bloodtyping to DNA testing for parentage 
verification. The field test involving 2,000 horses is currently underway. If 
successful, bloodtyping is out. The test is simple and conducted by the 
horse's handlers. A nasal swab is taken and sent to the lab. Currently, there 
is 6% redraw rate on bloodtyping and a 3% inconclusive rate. In the pilot 
studies, *every* swab has been successfully processed and typed. 

Northern CA jockey, Ron Hansen was still missing after his car was involved in 
a hit & run accident on Oct 2. His car with his wallet in the glove 
compartment was found near the scene but he had not been found. Police don't 
know whether he's hiding or was the victim of foul-play.
481.601BC Sprint pricesRDGE44::ALEUC3Thu Oct 28 1993 12:2223
BC betting in England

More that one bookmaking firm are betting on the races - so I'll give
the best and worse prices. These prices are the opening show and many
will not be available by the end of the day.

Sprint Cup
----------			Worst 	Best
Birdonthewire			5/2	 5/1
Thirty Slews			7/2	 7/1
Meafara				5/1	 6/1
Gold Spring			6/1	10/1
Fly So Free			6/1	12/1
Alydeed				7/1	10/1
Sayyedati			7/1	12/1
Catrail				8/1	14/1
Cardmania			10/1	14/1
Gilded Time			12/1	20/1
Apelia				25/1	33/1
Demaloot Demashoot		25/1	33/1
Surprise Offer			25/1	50/1

MartinK
481.602BC Mile PricesRDGE44::ALEUC3Thu Oct 28 1993 12:2224
BC betting in England

More that one bookmaking firm are betting on the races - so I'll give
the best and worse prices. These prices are the opening show and many
will not be available by the end of today.

Cup Mile
--------			Worst 	Best
Lure				5/4	 2/1
Ski Paradise			5/1	10/1
Bigstone			6/1	 7/1
Kingmambo			6/1	10/1
Toussaud			6/1	14/1
Barathea			6/1	20/1
Wolfhound			8/1	16/1
Flawlessly			8/1	10/1
Paradise Creek			8/1	14/1
Buckhar				10/1	14/1
Maryland Moon			16/1	50/1
Fourstar Allstar		25/1	33/1
Visible Gold			33/1	33/1
lech				33/1	50/1

MartinK
481.603BC Turf pricesRDGE44::ALEUC3Thu Oct 28 1993 12:2326
BC betting in England

More that one bookmaking firm are betting on the races - so I'll give
the best and worse prices. These prices are the opening show and many
will not be available by the end of today.

Cup Turf
----------			Worst 	Best
Kostashaan			6/4	11/4 (this won't last long)
Bien bien			9/2	8/1
Hatoof				5/1	10/1
Intrepidity			6/1	12/1
Opera House			8/1	12/1
Apple Tree			8/1	16/1
Hernando			10/1	10/1
Luazar				10/1	20/1
Wemyaa Bight			10/1	20/1
Dernier Empereur		10/1	25/1
Fraise				12/1	25/1
Johann Quatz			12/1	14/1
Solar Splendour			16/1	25/1
Fairy Garden			33/1	50/1

Muhtarram (with a run)		12/1	12/1

MartinK
481.604BC Classic pricesRDGE44::ALEUC3Thu Oct 28 1993 12:2326
BC betting in England

More that one bookmaking firm are betting on the races - so I'll give
the best and worse prices. These prices are the opening show and many
will not be available by the end of today.

BC Classic 
----------			Worst 	Best
Bertrando			 9/4	 3/1
Best Pal			 5/2	 4/1
Peteski				11/2	10/1
Marquetry			 7/1	10/1
Miner's Mark			 8/1	12/1
Devil His Due			 8/1	16/1
Wallenda			 8/1	20/1
Ezzoud				10/1	20/1
Colonial Affair			10/1	12/1
Kissin Kris			10/1	20/1
Brunswick			12/1	25/1
Missionary Ridge		12/1	25/1
Diazo				14/1	16/1
Arcangues			25/1	33/1



MartinK
481.605BC - Where's the ValueRDGE44::ALEUC3Thu Oct 28 1993 12:265
Given that the preceding prices are available in England, which
prices represent value for the American runners ?

MartinK
481.606Foolish PleasureGBLAUT::JANICKIV. Janicki DCE Engineering DTN 226-5980Thu Oct 28 1993 13:288
Thanks John for including the information. I can't believe he is
21 years old! I hope some of his foals are being used for breeding.
Given the oversaturation of the breed with Northern Dancer and
Raise A Native, I'd like to see the Tom Fool blood kept around-
at least for soundness. Who would have thought that Bold Ruler
lines would overshadowed?

Vicky
481.607DependsDECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle Rain Festival: 1/1-12/31Thu Oct 28 1993 19:1221
    Martin,
    
    If "value" means which are better performers than their prices indicate, 
    I would say that one could find value in:
    Sprint: 	BirdOnTheWire
    Mile:	Flawlessly and Buckhar
    Turf:	Solar Splendor and Bien Bien
    Classic:	Marquetry and Missionary Ridge
    
    That's not to say that I think those are the horses who will win! Just
    that they have a better chance of winning than those odds indicate.
    Johan Quatz is good too but he is a miler. I thought he was supposed 
    to go in the Mile so I would discount him in the Turf. Perhaps, his
    trainer is reluctant to go against Lure who is virtuallly unbeatable at
    8 furlongs...In fact, I don't think he's lost a mile race since he
    started as a turf horse!
    
    I've been wondering whether or not the wild fires now burning in
    Southern California are going to impact the BC at Santa Anita. The
    area has been devastated by a rash of fires...I don't know how close
    they are to the tracks and/or the airports though.
481.608Track and airports should be okay - air, not so okayBOUVS::OAKEYAssume is *my* favorite acronymWed Nov 03 1993 19:2719
481.609Catastrophe plans?DECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle Rain Festival: 1/1-12/31Thu Nov 04 1993 16:2915
    You're right about the air! It was so bad that Santa Anita cancelled
    racing last Thursday and nearly *all* trainers kept their horses in the
    barn or shipped them elsewhere to work...except Charlie Whittingham...
    "The Bald Eagle" sent Flawlessly out to work prepping for the
    Breeders' Cup Mile. He said the air was probably just as bad at the
    other tracks and Flawlessly needed her work to be ready for the Mile.
    He said he's been through lots of brush fires in So CA and the air never
    bothered the horses so Flawlessly worked out.
    
    I checked on a friend who lives in Irvine(She's OK) and she said that
    the air was full of smoke and ash. The fires aren't very near the track
    at the moment. ... I wonder if the Breeders' Cup management have 
    catastrohpe plans? I mean what if LA had an earthquake like San
    Francisco did during the World Series the other year? Or like when the
    stands at Arlington burned about 10 years ago...
481.610From the internetRDGE44::ALEUC3Thu Nov 04 1993 17:0637
     The following is taken from the Internet DERBY list
     ---------------------------------------------------
    
Hello all,

	It's 4 days to the big Breeder's Cup here out by Santa
Anita, and I thought I would give everyone an update on the 
track biases.

	The main track is playing very fair for a change. Horses
are actually coming behind to win some sprints, which is a big
change from the usual bias at Santa Anita. A slight advantage
has been to horses rallying 2 or 3 wide around the far turn in
the past week or so. The rail in the stretch seems to be tiring,
and when two horses have dueled down the stretch the outside
horse almost always has been winning. Give a slight advantage to
horses with outside posts in Sprints, and inside posts in routes.

	The turf course has been playing fast (especially for those
6 1/2 furlong runs down the hill). Remember for the BC Turf race,
the horses cross the dirt about 3/8ths after the start. The
turns on the oval are very tight, so horses must have a quick 
closing kick and be close in the far turn to win from behind. 

	The air has been clear lately, and the weather isn't too
hot (high 70's to low 80's). None of the horses workout schedules 
were interrupted by the fires. Most of the horses working, went 
to Hollywood Park for works on Thursday. Word is that Kissin Kris
worked exceptionally well. Bertrando worked 6f in some SUPER 
quick time (like 1:10 and change), and Frankel said he went a 
bit fast but had 6 days to recover. 

		More to come in the next days,

			"Santa Anita" Carl

% ====== Internet headers and postmarks (see DECWRL::GATEWAY.DOC) ======
481.611From the internet - 2RDGE44::ALEUC3Thu Nov 04 1993 17:0833
    Internet DERBY list entry
    -------------------------
    
Hello again, here's another update on developments at Santa Anita:

- Gold Spring was scratched from the Sprint after suffering a tendon
injury. The owners also suffered a wallet injury, as they had already
paid their first installment of the supplement ($67,000). OUCH!

- Kingmambo was left at home in France on Monday due to a cough
and high fever.

- Diazo and Pleasant Tango are in the Classic off the also eligible 
list. Hernando has choosen to run in the turf.

- Workouts for the horses:

	Gilded Time		6f	1:10 4/5
	Brocco			4f	:46 3/5 
	(This is my pick for the Juvis. His sire is Kris S and he
	should love the added distance. Has been working well too)
	Flawlessly		5f turf	:59 4/5
	Thirty Slews		4f	:48 3/5

- The newest round of fires isn't close to here. The air here in
Pasadena is crystal clean again thanks to the fine Santa Ana winds
and the temperature is rather warm at 85 or so.


		"Santa Anita" Carl

% ====== Internet headers and postmarks (see DECWRL::GATEWAY.DOC) ======
% Received: by vbormc.vbo.dec.com; id AA22161; Wed, 3 Nov 93 21:49:04 +0100
481.612Inside the Breeders' Cup ;-)DECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle Rain Festival: 1/1-12/31Thu Nov 04 1993 18:16100
    The NY based "Inside Racing" show had its Breeders' Cup preview picks
    last night. Every year, they have local trainer Phil Johnson on before
    and after the Breeders' Cup to talk about the races. He's been pretty good
    the past couple years so I though I'd pass along his comments...and add
    a few of my own...
    
    Sprint: BirdOnTheWire was his pick to win but he thought the now 
    scratched Gold Spring and Cardmania had a got chance. He recommended an
    Exacta box using those 3...The Exacta is a bet on 2 horses: 1 to win and
    the other to place. Order counts! An Exacta box is a combination Exacta 
    bets using multiple horses. One plays all combinations and hopes. In this 
    case, it would have involved 6 different bets: BirdOnTheWire over 
    Gold Spring; BirdOnTheWire over Cardmania; Gold Spring over
    BirdOnTheWire; Gold Spring over Cardmania; Cardmania over BirdOnTheWire
    and Cardmania over Gold Spring...
    
    Forget Thirty Slews, last year's Spritn winner. Eddie Dellahoussaye,
    his jockey last year and his regular rider this year, has decided to ride 
    Cardmania in this year's Sprint. Eddie D and his agent are good at picking
    mounts so I'd say that's a good enough reason not to bet Thirty Slews.
    
    Juvenille Fillies: Exactas with Heavenly Prize over Sardulla and 
    Phone Chatter. Strategic Maneuver is out with a minor bug discovered
    after her loss in the Frizette. Johnson said that Heavenly Prize is a
    queen waiting to be crowned and that he thought she was going to be an
    outstanding race filly. He also said that McGaughey was under no
    pressure to send the filly to the Breeders' Cup and that McGaughey is a
    conservative trainer and manager. In other words, when he sends a horse
    without being pressured by the owner, it's ready.
    
    Distaff: Toughest race on the card to handicap. It's very deep in
    talent. Johnson said Pasaena worked to hard in winning the Spinster to 
    impress him so he feels she might be taking a step backward in her form. 
    He put her out of the money. I think that's a bit hard. The Spinster
    had at least as tough a field as Pasaena will face in the Distaff.
    Seven of the 9 mares in the Spinster were graded stakes winners. The
    other 2 had placed second in Gr I stakes. Pasaena should be in the
    money even if she doesn't win.
    
    His play is Hollywood Wildcat to win and Exactas with Hollywood Wildcat 
    over Dispute and Sky Beauty. When asked why he thought Sky Beauty 
    wouldn't win, he said she didn't impress him very much in her last 
    couple races and that trainer Allen Jerkens didn't really want to send 
    her to the BC. He felt that was a good enough clue that he didn't feel 
    she could do it. Jerkens was pressed into sending her by the owner. He
    made a comment to that effect in a TV interview after her Gr I win in 
    NY a few weeks back. "She wants to go to the Breeders' Cup. What Lola 
    wants, Lola gets." That's a reference to an old song from the 1950's...
    Jockey Mike Smith, who was on camera with him, played diplomat and made 
    light of it by making it sound as if Sky Beauty wanted to go...
    
    Mile: Lure to win and Exactas over Flawlessly(who has run a mile in
    1:33 and change over this course) and Paradise Creek who finished
    second in last year's Mile.
    
    Juvenile Colts: Dehere, which he called a serious horse, over
    Shepherd's Field and Brocco. Dehere has his detractors who say he
    hasn't run fast enough to convince them or he hasn't beat anything...
    There are many fewer now than when he won at Saratoga in August.
    Johnson said he doesn't understand why people "bad mouth" this horse.
    He feels that maybe it's sour grapes because this horse knows how to
    win under the most adverse of trips. I think I know why, though. In a
    word, Arazi. People are scared to put their egos on the line and say
    "This is a great horse" because they got burned by Arazi, the super flop. 
    We'll see about Dehere. He impresses me. Arazi didn't.
    
    Turf: Exacta box with Kotashaan, Intrepidity and Hatoof... Kotashaan
    has won everything at this distance at Santa Anita this season.
    Intrepidity is a 3 YO filly which finished 3rd in the Arc de Triomphe
    but was in front a stride or 2 after the wire. Hatoof is a good solid
    runner at this distance. Johnson gives the edge to Kotashaan because of
    the firm turf... unless it rains which would even it up a bit.
    
    Classic: Exactas with Best Pal, Miner's Mark and Colonial Affair. Plus
    a lonshot bet on Wallenda. Johnson said that he's high on Miner's Mark
    because he's tough and has been carefully managed by McGaughey. He said
    McGaughey's horses are never burnt up at the end of the year because
    he's such a good manager. He felt that the duel between Miner's Mark and 
    Colonial Affair in the Jockey Club Gold Cup marked them as the top of
    their class. He figures Bertrando will be pressed too hard by other
    speed horses like Peteski to win. The speed duel should favor closers
    like Best Pal, Miner's Mark, Colonial Affair and Wallenda. He feels
    Best Pal will win because of his record at Santa Anita and his easy win
    in the recent CA Cup Classic at 9 furlongs which is not his best
    distance. 
    
    I'm not a Bertrando fan even though he won easily in his last 2 Gr I
    races. I don't think he can carry his speed 10 furlongs *WHEN* he is
    pressed. He won at 10 last time out but he was "loose on the lead" and 
    was never pressed. In fact, that was the first time Bertrando has won
    at 10 so I'm skeptical.
    
    I'd like to see Best Pal win but I'm not sure he's at the top of
    his game. Devil His Due has a new rider, Mike Smith. Trainer Allen
    Jerkens was angry that McCaulley continued to take Devil His Due inside
    when he had repeatedly been instructed to take the horse outside.
    McCaulley gets the ride on Wallenda who also likes the outside run.
    We'll see how the race develops.
    
    Me? I'm just gonna watch and see what happens.
481.613POWDML::MANDILEConstant CravingsFri Nov 05 1993 16:1812
    
    A co-worker brought in his Sports Ill. mag for me, which had a story
    on the breakdown of T'bred race horses.  Some very interesting
    information in the article, but some of the pictures are not
    for the faint hearted (photo by photo shots of the GO the Wand breakdown.) 
    
    A subarticle in the story had a new method to save a horse with
    a badly broken leg (like from a racing accidient).  Might not
    have been pretty, but it worked.  I would like to have more on
    this subarticle.....
    
    
481.614What's that?DECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle Rain Festival: 1/1-12/31Fri Nov 05 1993 16:273
    Since I don't read Sports Ill., I don't know what method you're talking 
    about. If you can be a little more specific, I'll see what's in the
    racing/veterinary journals I do read.
481.615More about the BC Classic fieldDECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle Rain Festival: 1/1-12/31Fri Nov 05 1993 16:3719
    Oh, The other thing I forgot to mention in comments about the BC Classic
    is that Bertrando is part of an entry trained by Bobby Frankel. That
    entry includes Marquetry and Missionary Ridge. In the past, Frankel has
    frequently used this trio as an entry but he hasn't let Marquetry be
    Marquetry. Marquetry runs his best when on or near the lead. This would
    put him in direct challenge to Bertrando. Since Frankel is part owner
    of Marquetry, Bertrando is a paying customer and Marquetry also runs
    decently as a mid-pack closer, Frankel has had the jockeys restrain
    Marquetry. In his recent Gr I win, Frankel let Marquetry run his own
    race and Marquetry ran like a fresh young colt! Frankel has vowed that 
    he would do the same in the Classic. 
    
    If he really does let Marquetry run early, Bertrando will be
    compromised. If Marquetry doesn't take him, their other entrymate 
    Missionary Ridge has in the past been good enough to get the job done.
    If he is as good Saturday, he might win.
    
    But, I still think that one of the legitimate closers will win it over
    Bertrando. If I'm wrong, I hope Marquetry gets home ahead of Bertrando.
481.616POWDML::MANDILEConstant CravingsFri Nov 05 1993 17:4910
    
    re .614
    
    Grafting the frog onto the cannon bone, after removal of the
    broken/damaged ankle, and then putting a permanent cast on.
    The frog regenerates, giving the horse feeling in the leg, so
    it ill put pressure on the leg, thus using it.  They showed
    a picture of the mare galloping with the prostisis (sp) cast.
    
    She looked like she was doing well........
481.617Sports Illustrated articleGBLAUT::JANICKIV. Janicki DCE Engineering DTN 226-5980Mon Nov 08 1993 12:4829
I read this article at the doctor's office last week. It is by
Bill Nack who usually does a good job.

I did feel that article could have been more objective. The summary of
the article is that racehorses are breaking down (and being euthanized)
at an alarming rate. Alot of negative PR has been generated by breakdowns
in the Breeder's Cup and the American classics.

The reasons given were:

(1) Indiscriminate use of drugs. Cortisteroids were brought up as major
offender. Apparantly, there was an autopsy of Prairie Bayou which found that
the suspensory ligament was severely weakened by steroid shots. It was
also noted that more and more horses are running on Lasix and Bute.

(2) Commericial breeding. Horses are being bred for the yearling sales
ring rather than their soundness for racing. These yearlings are also
coddled as youngsters instead of growing up in pasture groups and learning
to be tough.

(3) Diagnostic tools (x-rays, flexion tests etc.) do not detect minor
stress fractures which can lead to major fractures under the stress of
racing or training

The story did note some of the improvements in the making. The Breeder's Cup
officials were very concerned about this and this was noted on the Breeder's
Cup broadcast. 

Vicky
481.618Breeders' Cup National Pick 7 winnersDECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle Rain Festival: 1/1-12/31Mon Nov 08 1993 19:269
    On last night's recap show from Santa Anita, Trevor Denman said that
    there were 2 National Pick 7 winners and that one of the tickets was
    issued at Santa Anita. Wonder if it was Carl(aka EASI::GEENEN) who had
    the winning ticket?
    
    If he's back to work, it wasn't! Each ticket was worth about $1.5 MILLION!
    How much do you wanna bet the winners used the "ALL" button in betting
    the Classic? I don't see any other way somebody would have used a 130:1 
    longshot in an exotic bet!
481.619I sure wish it had beenEASI::GEENENVescere bracis meis.Mon Nov 08 1993 22:4720
    Thanks for the thought, John, but I'm sad to say that I didn't have
    the pick seven.  The best I could do was five of the seven, but not
    all on the same card.  I missed with Lech and Bertrando.  So I'm back
    at work after all.
    
    It wouldn't surprise me to learn that whoever *did* win the pick seven
    actually picked Arcangues rather than play the ALL.  According to our
    British friend and noter MartinK, Arcangues was highly thought of on
    the other side of the ocean.  It could be that some of that info
    filtered over here for some enterprising person to take advantage of.
    
    As for me, I had a fairly good day, even though I was a loser overall
    to the tune of $65.  How you may ask do I consider this a fairly good
    day?  You definitely had to be there.  I'll fill everyone in as soon
    as I come back down to earth and take care of the mess that built up
    while I was at Santa Anita (the place falls apart when I'm gone).
    For now all I'll say is I had to keep pinching myself to see if I was
    really there or just dreaming.
    
    Carl (not "Santa Anita Carl")
481.620CA. VET SEEKS TIGHTER RULES ON DRUGSDECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle Rain Festival: 1/1-12/31Wed Nov 10 1993 21:1048
From the Oct 30 1993 Blood Horse:

"CALIFORNIA VET SEEKS TIGHTER RULES ON DRUGS

In dramatic testimony before a key California legislative committee, Dr. 
Greg Ferraro called for a complete overhaul of the state's medication rules, 
including a zero-tolerance policy and severe penalties for owners and 
trainers.

Ferraro, a respected veterinarian and equine surgeon for more than 20 years, 
told the Assembly's Governmental Organization Committee that economic forces
hvae combined with permissive drug rules 'to create an incentive to cheat and 
over-use.'

Ferraro helped write California's rules in the 1970's, but says they have 'led 
us down the wrong path.' He cited the health of the racehorse and the image of 
the sport as the most important factors in his change of heart. The excessive
use of Lasix, Butazolidin, and cortico-steroids, he contends, has turned 
racing into 'a dirty little business' in the eyes of much of the public.

Ferraro said horsemen should not expect racing to survive in a climate of
intense competition or to compete in the gambling market 'if it is not 
perceived as a clean game.'

'Otherwise,' he added, 'horse racing will end up as a lounge act for casinos.'

Ferraro directed much of his criticism  toward his own profession, citing an
explosion in the number of backstretch practitioners.

'When I came into this business in 1972, there were 12 vets and 6,000 horses
between Santa Anita, Hollywood Park and Del Mar,' he said. 'In the old days,
it was easy to be clean. There was plenty of work to do. Today there are 33 
vets and 2,500 horses. Many vets create their own work.'

Not surprisingly, Ferraro's statements met with opposition - or outright 
hostility - in the racetrack veterinary community.

'It was like the parting of the Red Sea when I got to the track Saturday 
morning,' he noted. Ferraro is braced for a further wave of alienation in the 
coming weeks following publication of the Sports Illustrated article in 
which he is quoted at length.

'I think Greg is out of line on some things,' said racetrack practitioner Kurt 
Hoffman. 'If you ban all drugs, the people who don't cheat will be deprived of 
their legitimate use. And the people who do cheat will cheat anyway. What we 
need is stronger enforcement of the rules already on the books.'

by Jay Hovdey"
481.621How to win the Pick 7 DECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle Rain Festival: 1/1-12/31Thu Nov 11 1993 18:3421
    Re How did anybody win the Breeders' Cup Pick 7?
    
    I said: "They used the ALL bet"
    Carl said: "Maybe they knew the European form"
    
    NOT!
    
    I tuned in Santa Anita's recap show last night and Trevor Denman gave
    the *real* story of the person who won at Santa Anita. It was an accident!
    
    Yup, the guy meant to play horses number 1 and 11 in the Turf and to
    finish the Pick 7 with the single play on number 1(The Frankel entry of
    Bretrando, Marquetry and Missionary Ridge) in the Classic. Well, he 
    messed up and *repeated* numbers 1 and 11 in the Classic. Arcangues was
    number 11!
    
    So, now this guy gets about $1.1 million(after federal taxes and all)
    because he made a mistake that cost him the price an extra ticket...
    
    If anybody hears how the other person(from Oklahoma, I think) picked
    Arcangues, please post it!
481.622Better late than...EASI::GEENENVescere bracis meis.Fri Dec 10 1993 17:2380
Hello Horse Racing Fans:

I have a little time so I can fill you in about my day at the Breeder's
Cup at Santa Anita last November 6th.  OK, so I'm a little late, but it's
been a tough month down here at the daily brain drain.

My first estimate was that I had lost about $65, but I was mistaken.  Instead
I lost about $35 but my wife and I had a great time anyway.  It was a PERFECT
day for racing weather wise.  If you've never been to Santa Anita, the
view from the grandstand is magnificent, not only of the races, but of the
    golden California mountains.  Santa Anita is a wonderful structure with
    plenty of charm and character.

We were thrilled to be there to see the greatest horses, jockeys, and
trainers in the world.  With our 10x50 binoculars we didn't miss a beat.
The horses all looked so good it was difficult to pick out any form or
condition problems in the paddock or post parade.

My wife and I met another BCUP enthusiast (met him through the Internet Derby)
and his wife for dinner the night before.  We, of course, talked a bit about
the next day's races and we had many of the same thoughts and ideas (in
addition to having the same given name).  The parallels did not end there.
As it turns out, we are both left-handed, too.  Anyway, it was great to meet a
fellow Derbyer and we had a wonderful time.

I had done most of my handicapping the day before the races.  As it turned
out at the track, I needed every minute between races just to fight my way
through the crowd to the betting windows.  So I didn't get to do things in
my usual ritualistic manner:  stand at the paddock, watch the post parade
and warmup, run to the window at the last minute to make my bets.

Although I had 5 of 7 in the pick 7, not all were on the same card.  I played
$20 worth and struck out.  For the most part I played exactas and a couple
of on the nose win bets.  Here's how it went:

1st race (non BC race) - didn't bet

2nd race - BC Sprint - I played $16 worth of exactas, keying on BOTW and
Cardmania, but I didn't have Meafara under either of them.  I was hoping
for Now Listen or Fly So Free to place.

3rd race - BC Juv. Fillies - I exacta boxed Phone Chatter/Sardula for a
profit of $28.50.

4th race - BC Distaff - I exact boxed Hollywood Wildcat/Dispute for a loss
of $10.  My wife had Hollywood on the nose.

5th race - BC Mile - I had Lech on the nose and lost $15.

6th race - BC Juv. - I boxed Dehere/Brocco/Flying Sensation for a $30 loss.

7th race - BC Turf - I had Kotashaan on the nose and profitted $20.

8th race - BC Classic - I had $50 on Bertrando's nose and the rest is
history.

9th race - (non BC race) - didn't bet, but almost bet on Casual Lies who
came in 5th.  I finally figured that CL needed a race or so before he would
be bettable again.

10th race - (non BC race) - took a chance on a Region/L'express exacta
and profitted by $57.80.

Ok, I took a few chances that didn't pay off, but I didn't have the same
bad taste in my mouth like the other times I've lost at the track.

The guys sitting next to us had flown in from Louisville, KY and seemed to
have a knack for picking out horses based on visual inspection.  "Look at
the ears on that one!", one of them said.  Then he placed his bet because
he liked the ear set.  After each race, both of them made a point of showing
me their winning tickets.  I figure they were up about $600 each by the day's
end.  Neither had Arcangues in the classic, however.  Like me, they were
eschewing the imported horses.

This was the first time I had been to Santa Anita or to any race(s) where
the quality of horses and their humans was so rich and star-studded.  It
was a great spectacle and well worth the effort and expense.  Next year's
BC is at Churchill Downs.   Hmm...

Carl
481.623Thanks, CarlDECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle Rain Festival: 1/1-12/31Fri Dec 10 1993 19:2963
    Thanks for the first hand account, Carl! Sounds like you'll be making a
    trip to Kentucky next Fall!
    
    My own handicapping choices for the BC were a mixture of favorites, 
    body language, faith in a jockey, and some emotional choices. On
    strictly $2 bets, I ended up the day about $25 up. My choices
    went like this:
    
    BC Sprint - Cardmania to win based on his form and Eddie D who jumped
    off last year's Sprint winner to ride Cardmania. Gilded Time to
    show based on his appearance in the post parade and last year's
    performance.
    
    BC Juv. Fillies - boxed Heavenly Prize/Phone Chatter/Sardula in Exactas.
    Heavenly Prize may be as good or better than the other two as a 3YO. Her
    inexperience showed when Mike Smith pointed her at a hole along the
    rail and she balked at going through it. Smith eventually pulled her up
    a bit to get racing room and went to the outside. Heavenly Prize came
    on again but with too little too late.
    
    BC Distaff - boxed Hollywood Wildcat/Paseana in Exactas. I figured
    Paseana beat as good a field in winning the Spinster as she'd face in the
    Distaff and Hollywood Wildcat was the main competition.
    
    BC Mile - Lure to win, Lure over Flawlessly in an Exacta and Fourstar
    Allstar to show. I bet Allstar emotionally! He's better than the 
    odds(50-1) indicated and he's my fav's (FourstarDave) little brother.
    In other words, I thought the odds were an insult to his ability as
    well as his family. ;-) He is an Irish Classic winner after all!
    
    BC Juv. - I liked Dehere but when he went to the post as odds-on
    favorite, Harvey Pack's rule saved me! Harvey Pack is the TV host for
    NYRA's daily racing show. He also used to be on the BC telecast in the
    early years giving handicapping tips. Remeber Pack's Pool? That's him.
    Anyway, his rule is "Never bet the favorite doing something it has
    never done before." Since Dehere hadn't been 8.5f or around 2 turns, I
    passed because I didn't think Brocco had enough exerpience to tell what
    he'd do against a classy field. BTW, Dehere bled in the Juv and is 
    being rested in Fla before preparing for a 3YO campaign.
    
    BC Turf - Kotashaan to win. Expected more competition from the European
    horses but Bien Bien proved the one to make it a horse race! Bien
    Bien's very good & I like him but I simply overlooked him.
    
    BC Classic - Wanted to bet Marquetry but hated Bertrando enough that I
    wouldn't bet the entry. Exactas on Best Pal/Miner's Mark/Colonial
    Affair. Again, this was sentiment. Best Pal for his career even though
    his form this year wasn't true to his earlier form. Miner's Mark
    because he's Personal Ensign's first baby and has been coming on well.
    Colonial Affair for his Belmont win. I consider the Belmont Stakes
    *THE* most important 3YO race. And for his game second to Miner's Mark
    over older horses in the Jockey Club Gold Cup. Actually, Colonial
    Affair's *body* was ahead of Miner's Mark in that race but the head nod
    went to Miner's Mark that day. 
    
    I *always* go against Bertrando at distances over 9f. He seldom
    beats the horse's I select...Unfortunately, the 3 I picked here
    finished 10th, last and next-to-last while Bertrando staggered home
    second! Colonial Affair and Miner's Mark showed that they can't put two
    good races together. Hopefully, they and Devil His Due will do well
    next year after a good rest this winter.
    
    John
481.624Showcase of racing or of chemistry?DECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle Rain Festival: 1/1-12/31Fri Dec 10 1993 20:3348
On the one hand, I was thrilled with this year's Breeder's Cup. On the 
other I was disgusted. Thrilled that there was good racing and everybody got 
home safe. Disgusted when I saw the DRF charts and saw how many of the
horses ran on Lasix and/or Bute. Especially American based horses! But, the
tar sticks everywhere as even European and New York based horses, which are 
not allowed to run on drugs in those jurisdictions, used drugs on Breeder's 
Cup Day!

The charts showed that of the 81 horses in the Breeder's Cup races, *68* of 
them ran on drugs! Is the Breeders' Cup supposed to be a showcase of racing 
or of chemistry?

Summary as follows:

No drugs:	13
Bute:		22
Lasix:		 2
Lasix and Bute:	44 
__________________
                81

Race by race details:

Classic - of a 13 horse field, only 4 ran without drugs. They were the 
two European horses(winner Arcangues and 7th place Ezzoud). Only two American 
based horses(Colonial Affair and Pleasnt Tango) ran without drugs. 4 American
based horses ran on Bute, 1 on Lasix and 4 on both Lasix and Bute.

Turf - In a 14 horse field, *EVERY* American based horse(7 of them) ran on 
drugs. The top 4 ran on both Lasix and Bute as did 2 others. One ran with just 
Bute. Three European horses ran on Bute and the other 4 ran without drugs.

Juvenile Colts - *ALL* 11 horses in the race ran on drugs. Dehere and Blumin 
Affair ran on Bute. Ferrara ran on Lasix. The rest(8 of them) ran on both 
Lasix and Bute. They were all American based.

Mile - In a 13 horse field, 2 horses ran without drugs, Ski Paradise and 
Buckhar. Seven horses including Lure ran on Bute. The other 4 ran on both.

Distaff - In an 8 horse field, 1(Sky Beauty) ran without drugs. Only Dispute 
ran on just Bute. The others including Hollywood Wildcat and Paseana ran on 
both drugs.

Juvenile Fillies - In an 8 horse field, 1(Heavenly Prize) ran without drugs. 
Phone Chatter ran on Bute and the other 6 ran on both Lasix and Bute.

Sprint - In a 14 horse field, 1(Fly So Free) ran without drugs. Three ran on 
Bute and the other 10 ran on both drugs.
481.625NewsDECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle Rain Festival: 1/1-12/31Fri Dec 10 1993 21:0659
    The cover of the Dec 4 Blood Horse looks something like this:
    
    	JAPAN CUP
    	  Kotashaan A Misguided Second
    
    		[insert photo here]
    
    
    				[lower right hand corner]
    				ron hansen mystery
    				night racing proposal
    				flawlessly repeats
    
    
    *WAIT A MINUTE*...what was that? flawlessly repeats? The 1992 Turf
    Champion Mare(and likely 1993 Champion) wins the Matriarch for the 
    *THIRD* consequetive year and this is a minor story? Behind a missing
    jockey and a night racing proposal? And the *big* story is Kotashaan's
    loss? 
    
    But did Kotashaan lose because a) he slipped on the turn. b) his
    jockey misjudged the finish line and stood up at the 8th pole, c) he
    wasn't good enough on the day or d) Some combination of a, b, and/or c?
    
    Who cares? Flawlessly is the news! She set a stakes record of 1:46 in
    the 1992 edition and came close to it again this year with 1:46 3/5 !
    What does she have to do to get top billing?
    
    Other news: 
    
    Super Staff, the Secretariat daughter who beat Flawlessly a couple
    times last year and was a close second in the 1992 Matriarch, has been
    retired. She had been injured in a workout early this year and did not
    race this season. She had recently returned to training but favored the
    injured leg in workouts which prompted her retirement.
    
    Jolypha retired after being injured in a workout at Hollywood Park
    
    No Class, the Blue Hen dam of Sky Classic and granddam of Dance
    Smartly, was put down due to complications from laminitis.
    
    Ron Hansen, Northern CA jockey is still missing 9 weeks after his car
    was involved in a hit-and-run accident. Some believe he's dead; others
    think he's hiding out - perhaps sipping cocktails on a Mexican beach.
    His wallet was in his abandoned car. He hasn't used his credit cards or
    contacted his wife or agent. No one claims or admits to have
    seen/talked to him since about an hour before the accident...
    
    BC Classic winner Arcangues will remain in training after all. His
    owners had previously said they would retire him to stud in France for
    next season.
    
    The last Northern Dancer yearling to have been auctioned will enter
    stud. Northern Park became Northern Dancer's 146th stakes winner and
    will stand at Lanwades Stud in Newmarket. Stud fee is 2,500
    guineas(about $4,000 US)
    
    Gr I winner Cure The Blues and graded stakes winner Line In The Sand
    have been retired to stud.
481.626Lucas seriously injuredDECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle Rain Festival: 1/1-12/31Fri Dec 17 1993 18:438
    Jeff Lucas, son of and assistant to Wayne Lucas, was seriously injured
    when Tabasco Cat got away from a hotwalker on Weds morning. The horse
    spooked and took off. Jeff Lucas stepped in front of the horse & tried 
    to catch him. The horse knocked Lucas down and ran over him causing
    multiple skull fractures and cerebral hemorrhaging and other injuries.
    
    His condition was originally "critical" but as of last night it had
    been upgraded to "serious but stable."
481.627from a person who was thereLABC::PENNEquestrian LadyFri Dec 17 1993 20:436
    I talked with someone who was at Santa Anita when the accident occured.
    This person is an exerise guy. He said they were trying to take the
    bridle or the halter off the horse and put the other on when the horse
    spooked.  Jeff Lucas knows/trains this horse.  The opinion by fellow
    track workers was that Jeff thought this horse would stop and come to
    him.  
481.628exDECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle Rain Festival: 1/1-12/31Fri Dec 17 1993 21:2513
    Re Jeff Lucas 
     
    Yes, the Lucases do train Tabasco Cat...guess I just assumed everybody
    knew that because he(the horse) was on TV recently....
    
    I would have done the same. I've stopped countless loose horses that
    way at shows or just driving down the road...you wouldn't believe how
    many times Jan & I have stopped to catch loose horses in the past 3
    years... 
    
    Actually, lots of folks try similar things but wave their arms
    overhead which just scares the horse more and sends them off again in a
    different direction.
481.629Hollywood Park closing weekendDECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle Rain Festival: 1/1-12/31Wed Dec 22 1993 17:1728
    Hollywood Park finished up its Fall meeting on Monday. The weekend &
    Monday saw a trio of 8.5 furlong graded stakes to wind up the meeting.
    Obviously, these are the last major stakes of the year. NY winter racing 
    is the pits. Fla season hasn't started yet. And Santa Anita doesn't
    start up again until next week and they don't have anything really good
    till January/February.
    
    Saturday: Gr I Hollywood Starlet for 2 YO fillies. Small field(5) went to
    the post with Sardula the odss-on favorite. With Phone Chatter
    sidelined, Sardula had no competition but still set a new stakes
    record!
    
    Sunday: Gr I Hollywood Futurity for 2 YO colts saw Brocco(Breeders' Cup
    Juvenile winner) go off as the odss-on favorite. Valiant Nature(a full
    brother to Gr I Turf winner Tight Spot) broke on top followed by
    Gracious Something(? can't remember the full name), Blumin Affair and
    Brocco. Valiant Nature set early fractions of 23 1/5, 46 1/5 and 
    1:09 3/5. He looked ripe for Brocco to mount a challenge and blow him
    off in the stretch. But, Valiant Nature hadn't read Brocco's past
    performance chart in the Daily Racing Form...or didn't care about it!
    Valiant Nature ran on valiantly and Brocco despite his late run could
    not get closer than 1 length of the winner. Valiant Nature stopped the timer
    in 1:40.78 which is a full second faster than the old stakes record!
    Brocco also got home faster than the old stakes record so this loss
    does him no discredit. He just got beat.
    
    On Monday, the Gr II Dahlia(fillies & mares, 3YO & UP) went to 
    Kalita Melody with Vinista second and Gumpher third. Time was 1:44 3/5
481.630Jeff Lukas update etcDECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle Rain Festival: 1/1-12/31Wed Jan 19 1994 17:0919
    Recent reports on the condition of Jeff Lukas are encouraging.
    
    A week or so ago, he came out of the coma. The Drs had intentionally
    kept him "out" with drugs until the swelling of his brain went down. 
    He was then upgraded to "fair" condition.
    
    According to a report on last night's show from Santa Anita, Jeff
    Lukas' condition has since been upgraded again to good. They said he is
    showing daily improvement but gave no projected date for his release
    from hospital...
    
    Santa Anita is usually closed on Monday & Tuesday but they had
    scheduled a holiday Monday card which included a Gr I sprint for
    filles&mares...and then along came an earthquake!
    
    Believe it or not, Santa Anita had racing on Monday! Within 2 hours of
    the quake, they had had structural engineers on the grounds. They
    checked the grandstands and barns and declared them OK. Santa Anita
    management decided to go on with the holiday card as scheduled...
481.6311993 Eclipse awardsDECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle Rain Festival: 1/1-12/31Mon Feb 07 1994 17:1619
    Without comment or ceremony, here are the 1993 Eclipse awards:
    
    2 YO Colt		Dehere
    2 YO Filly		Phone Chatter
    3 YO Colt		Prairie Bayou
    3 YO Filly		Hollywood Wildcat
    Older Male		Bertrando
    Older Female	Paseana
    Older Turf Male	Kotashaan
    Older Turf Female	Flawlessly
    Sprinter		Cardmania
    Steeplechaser	Lonesome Glory
    Horse of the Year	Kotashaan
    
    Jockey		Mike Smith
    Apprentice Jockey	Juan Umana
    Trainer		Bobby Frankel
    Owner 		John Franks
    Breeder		Allen Paulson
481.632Maybe they need Wheaties?DECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle Rain Festival: 1/1-12/31Mon Feb 07 1994 17:3523
481.633More hard luckDECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle Rain Festival: 1/1-12/31Mon Feb 28 1994 20:1923
    The bad luck continued for last year's good horses:
    
    Cardmania(Breeders' Cup Sprint winner and Eclipse champion) was injured
    in a workout and sidelined indefinitely.
    
    Paseana(Eclipse champion older mare) lost in her first start of the
    year. She lost by a nostril while giving away 8 pounds, travelling wide
    throughout the race and not having raced in over 3 months.
    
    Dehere may have started this trend to turn around by winning the 
    Fountain of Youth stakes recently(Oh, I screwed up in the last note. He
    had scratched from the Hutcheson and was being pointed toward the
    Fountain of Youth...I got it backwards) But, Dehere had to work pretty
    hard in winning the Fountain of Youth and didn't seem to have the
    impressive burst of acceleration he had at Saratoga last summer. He was
    also *very* lucky in the Fountain of Youth! A speed duel developed up
    front. Undefeated Holy Bull spent all his energy in that speed duel and
    stopped. He finished last, a very tired horse. The remaining horse in
    front of Dehere bolted on the turn and ran to the outside fence. He
    only beat Holy Bull! So, Dehere didn't have to move as hard to get to
    the lead and he still had to work pretty hard to beat GoForGin and the
    horse that beat Dehere in that allowance race the other week(whose name
    I can't recall at the moment!...something like Slippery Rails, I think)
481.634The season beginsDECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle Rain Festival: 1/1-12/31Mon Feb 28 1994 20:4033
    The racing season starts in earnest this coming weekend. There have
    been a few Gr I stakes in Fla and Ca but not much top class action in
    general. 
    
    That's about to change! From March until November, things will really
    get intersting! This weekend, Santa Anita hosts the Gr I Santa 
    Anita Handicap(aka The Big 'Cap) for 4 YO & up. It surprised me to find 
    Bien Bien(a top grass horse) entered in the race! Not only that,
    he's the high weight in the field! 
    
    Bien Bien has raced on the dirt in the past. However, his only stakes 
    win on the dirt was the Gr II Swaps Stakes(9f for 3 YO's) against a 
    mediocre field. To switch him back to the dirt instead of going after 
    premier grass races seems foolish. The turf races at 10-12 furlongs
    are wide open this year and that's Bien Bien's best game.(hey, they 
    didn't ask my for advice or I'd have told the owners not to do it! ;-) 
    Hopefully, he'll perform like they expect. I'll look like an idiot
    but...that's nothing new!
    
    Bien Bien will carry 120 pounds. Kissin' Kris and Slew of Damascus are 
    in at 119 pounds. Diazo and Wicked North have been assigned 118 pounds.
    
    Santa Anita also has 2 Gr III stakes on the same card as the Handicap.
    
    Sunday, sees the Santa Margarita(gr I for older females) on Sunday at
    Santa Anita. Paseana is expected to run. 
    
    Moving to Gulfstream, the Gr I Gulfstream Park Hcap. is also on Sunday.
    
    I don't think any of these races will be on ESPN or network TV. So,
    I'll post a full report on Monday.
    
    John
481.635It's Ride The RailsEASI::GEENENVescere bracis meis.Tue Mar 01 1994 14:3613
    The horse that finished 3rd in the FOY was Ride The Rails.  Holy Bull
    may have had an excuse for tiring, in addition to the speed duel with
    Halo's Image, the race was run on an off track.  This may have favored
    Dehere a little, too, who has looked pretty good on off tracks in the
    past.  In Dehere's defense, this is his second race with Lasix after
    bleeding in the BC Juvenile.  I almost always figure that it takes a
    race or two to get the hang of it.  But then, we all know just how
    big a Lasix expert I am, so I could be full of, well, you know.
    
    But I doubt seriously that either Holy Bull or Dehere have much of a
    chance to win the KY Derby.  Why?  Dosage, of course.
    
    Carl
481.636What a difference a day makes...DECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle Rain Festival: 1/1-12/31Tue Mar 01 1994 17:2037
    Hey, I knew it was a railroad thing! When you get as old as me you'll
    be lucky if you can remember where you park your car! (I can't unless I
    use the same spot every day! :-)
    
    So, before I forget... There have been some changes to the Santa Anita 
    Handicap field:
    
    Diazo and Slew of Damascus have both been scratched due to injuries
    sustained in recent workouts. Diazo will be out for 6 months to allow a
    cracked canon bone to heal. 
    
    The S.A. Handicap *WILL* be on network TV. ABC's Wide World of Sports has 
    it scheduled. 
    
    Lasix? Actually, the "common knowledge" theory on Lasix is that it moves a
    horse up the *first* time it runs on it. But, we all know how
    frequently "common knowledge" is wrong and how rare "common sense" is!
    
    Now, back to the 3 YO's....
    
    Yeah, Dehere had lots of excuses in his recent races. When he lost that
    allowance race the other week, 1) he likes to run off the pace and
    found himself on the lead in a paceless race; 2) he was on the rail which 
    has been the deepest, most tiring part of the Gulfstream track all 
    meeting; 3) he was just recuperating from a colic and 4) he had been 
    training for the 7 furlong Hutcheson and was entered in a 8.5 furlong 
    allowance race with no time to change his training(i.e. he was short on 
    endurance conditioning)
    
    In the FOY, he was probably still short because you can't condition a 
    horse in the 2 weeks since the allowance race. I expect him to improve.
    
    I figure Holy Bull simply hadn't recovered from his big race in the
    Hutcheson yet and *he* was probably short too! Besides, "If you lead 'em 
    over often enough, they're gonna get beat."
    
    Don't get me started on Dosage, Carl! 
481.637Racehorse Digest? Ugh!DECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle Rain Festival: 1/1-12/31Tue Mar 01 1994 22:0422
    Have any of you seen the new foarmat for ESPN's "Thoroughbred Digest"
    show? For the first 5 years, it was billed as the only national show
    about Thoroughbred racing. Well, suddenly at the end of December, they
    announced that they were going to a new format to cover "all" horse
    racing and changed the name to "Racehorse Diget." Their definition of 
    "all" = TB, Standardbred and QH...I guess they don't know that Arabians, 
    Appys, etc race, eh?
    
    Anyway, the new format stinks(IMHO)! They now have between 5 and 8
    minutes of race recaps/news stories about Thoroughbreds and the rest of
    the show is split between Standardbreds and QHs...
    
    It wouldn't be so bad if they had expanded the show to an hour but they
    kept it as a half hour show. It's really pretty worthless whether
    you're interested in Thoroughbreds, Standardbreds or QHs.
    
    Lots of people have been writing to The Blood Horse and ESPN to
    complain. Wrong place to complain! Racehorse Digest is produced by:
    
    	Winner Communications
    	6120 South Yale, 3rd floor
    	Tulsa Okla, 74136
481.638Ugh!EASI::GEENENVescere bracis meis.Tue Mar 01 1994 22:5819
    RE:  -.1
    
    Your HO is on the button, IMHO.  Thanks, John, for the address.  I'm
    writing them immediately!!
    
    Here's a riddle:
    
      What do Racehorse Digest, vacuum cleaners, and Dracula have in common?
    
    I'll provide the answer to anyone who can't figure it out ;>{)
    
    But I read in one of those TV magazines that ESPN was responding to
    viewers who were complaining about there being no SB and QH coverage.
    Rather than give them their own show, which would be too much money,
    ESPN convinced the show's producers to add the SB and QH stuff in the
    same show still keeping it in the same timeslot.
    
    Count me among the PO'd,
    Carl
481.639News & Racehorse Digest rebuttalDECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle Rain Festival: 1/1-12/31Fri Mar 04 1994 17:0439
    NEWS:
    
    Sir Beaufort(winner of the 1993 Santa Anita Handicap) died of a
    ruptured intestine. He was down on the farm since December of 1993 and
    was scheduled to go to Arthur Hancock's Stone Farm for stud duty the
    following day.
    
    Best Pal(winner of the 1992 Santa Anita Handicap) has been sent to his
    owner's Golden Eagle Farm for rest and evaluation after his poor
    performance in his last race. Best Pal is 6 now and hasn't looked like
    himself since coming back to the races last summer after a long lay-off due
    to injury.
    
    As for the 1994 Santa Anita Handicap, here's the post positions and morning 
    line:
    
    1	Hill Pass; 		C. McCarron; 	115 pounds; 8-1
    2	Bien Bien; 		L. Pincay;	120 pounds; 4-1
    3	The Wicked North; 	K. Desormeaux	118 pounds; 2-1
    4	Nonproductiveasset	C. Nakatani	116 pounds; 6-1
    5	Myrakalu		A. Solis	113 pounds; 30-1
    6	Stuka			C. Antley	115 pounds; 8-1
    7	Region			E. Delahoussey	116 pounds; 7-2
    8	Kissin Kris		J. Bailey	119 pounds; 8-1
    
    
    When the Feb 26 Blood Horse arrived last night(Ain't the mail service
    great? This magazine was mailed on Feb 22 & I get it on Mar 3!), there
    was a "rebuttal" from the president of Winner Communications to all the
    "nasty-grams" they've got over the format change.
    
    He goes on for nearly a page telling how they made constant improvements
    in the show trying to get more sponsors but 1/3 of the ad spots went unsold.
    (That's funny, I always thought they had too many ads!) The short version 
    is that if they didn't get more sponsors, the show was going off the air. 
    The only way they could get enough sponsors was to broaden the scope of 
    the show to include QH and Standardbred racing.
    
    
481.640last weekend's stakes racesDECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle Rain Festival: 1/1-12/31Mon Mar 07 1994 18:0482
    Carl was right about Dehere not winning the KY Derby. Dehere won't even
    run in it! He's sidelined with an injury which showed up after a recent
    workout.
    
    Whew! This weekend had so many graded stakes races that I'm not sure I
    got 'em all but here goes:
    
    You may have seen the Santa Anita Handicap on ABC. It was kind of a
    disappointing race. The field was pretty weak which is what I think 
    prompted the entry of 2 grass stakes runners(Bien Bien and Myrakalu).
    Myrakalu had never run on the dirt before. Bien Bien only won a weak Gr
    II race as a 3 YO...nearly 2 years ago and he's been on the grass ever
    since. 
    
    The Wicked North went right to the front and set early fractions of
    23 4/5 and 47 3/5. Then, Hill Pass took over and went on in 1:11 2/5 and
    1:35 3/5 for the mile. At the top of the lane, The Wicked North went back
    to the lead but, in doing so, he shifted in a couple feet and plugged the
    hole that Myrakalu was barrelling through. The Wicked North got home first
    with Stuka, Bien Bien and Myrakalu rallying well. The stewards decided 
    that The Wicked North had caused Myrakalu to pull up sharply and lose
    all chance. So, The Wicked North came down and was placed 4th. Santa 
    Anita's recap show had an excellent replay of the incident. You may have 
    seen ABC's replay in which it looked like the problem was a bump between
    Myrakalu and a tiring Hill Pass. Nope! The stewards' replay had a better
    angle which clearly showed The Wicked North moving directly into Myrakalu's
    path *before* the bumping. Myrakalu was pulled up sharply and then, while
    he was still off balance, had the bump with Hill Pass.

    Also on the Big 'Cap card were the Gr III Las Flores(6f for F&M) and
    the Gr III Arcadia Handicap(8f Turf). The Las Flores went to Mamselle 
    Babette who got home in 1:06 2/5 over Arches of Gold and Aspasante.

   The Arcadia Handicap went to Meagan's Interco by a head over Tinner's Way
   who raced in Europe last season. Old Ibero managed 3rd. Meagan's Interco 
   crossed the wire in 1:33 4/5.

   Gulfstream had the Gr II Bonnie Miss(8.5f for 3 YO fillies) on Saturday.
   After sitting off a good early pace(23 1/5, 46 2/5, 1:10 3/5), Inside 
   Information made a big move on the turn and drew off to win by 2. 
   Cinnamon Sugar was second and Jade Flush third.

   On Sunday, the big races were the Gulfstream Park Handicap(Gr I, 10f 4 & 
   up) in Florida and the Santa Margarita Invitational(Gr I 8.5f, Fillies & 
   Mares 4 & up) at Santa Anita.

   The Gulfstream Park Handicap saw the scratch of last year's winner, Devil
   His Due. I didn't catch the reason but the track was off at Gulfstream.
   Hopefully, Jerkens decided not to run DHD because of the track rather than
   something wrong with the horse.

   Northern Trend broke on top with Pistols and Roses(winner of the 1993 and 
   1994 Gr I Donn Handicaps) a close second. These two went out far too fast
   (22 2/5, 46, 1:09 3/5) to expect them to hold on in top company. They 
   folded and the closers got up. Scuffleburg won it over local hero 
   Migrating Moon and a fast closing Wallenda got third.

   The Santa Margarita was a classic! Paseana was entered and was assigned 
   the high weight of 123 pounds. She was giving her competitors 4 to 10 
   pounds advantage in weight carried! Paseana broke well and settled into
   her usual 4th or 5th for the early running leaving the lead to Market 
   Booster, Sensational Eyes and StalCreek. On the final, StalCreek took 
   over the lead and looked strong. Paseana began her move and came on well.
   For a minute, it looked like she would have trouble passing StalCreek and
   I had visions of another loss by a nostril for the champion mare. Not 
   today! She only had trouble passing StalCreek because Paseana was 
   travelling wider and had to go a few extra yards to get passed her rival. 
   From the top of the lane to the wire, it was no contest! Paseana won by 3. 
   Kalita Melody took second from a tiring StalCreek.

   On the undercard was the Gr II San Rafael(8f for 3 YO). Tabasco Cat and
   Flyin J Bryan got into a speed duel from the start. This time, one the 
   leaders had something left. Tabasco Cat got home in 1:36 2/5 by a length 
   over Powis Castle. Then, it was 19 lengths back to the third place 
   finisher, Shepherd's Fields! You needed binoculars to find Flyin J Bryan!

   Aqueduct, the home of Equine Speed Skating, had the Gr III Next Move on 
   Saturday and the Gr III Busher on Sunday. The Busher(8.5f for 3 YO fillies)
   went to Forcing Bid with Ask Shananie in second and Little Buckles third.
   I didn't write down the results of the Next Move. Smack my wrist!

   John
481.641Lousy telecastEASI::GEENENVescere bracis meis.Mon Mar 07 1994 19:0723
    The SA Hdcp. broadcast on ABC was the pits!!  Dave Johnson botched the
    call several times during the race.  Charlsey Canty kept trying to
    make a big deal about the weight assignments before the race.  Jim
    McKay lokked and sounded like he was in another time zone.  Down the
    backstretch we were seeing the 3 place and up horses because the
    camera angle was not wide enough to see the two front runners.  And
    then at the end, they were hustling through the rest of the broadcast
    trying to wrap up the show.  Clearly, the steward's inquiry was cobbing
    up their plans.
    
    Anyway, to me it looked like The Wicked North was trying to change
    leads when he strayed off course.  Did you see that, John, or was I
    seeing things?
    
    Dehere's injury just makes it academic, as far as KY Derby pretenses
    go, IME.  I suggest that his breeding is better for 7-9 furlongs
    (Dosage supports this, BTW).  I'm keeping my eye on Brocco, Go For
    Gin, and Valiant Nature, at the moment.  GFG seems to be improving as
    a 3-yo.
    
    Thanks for all the updates, John!!
    
    Carl
481.642YupDECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle Rain Festival: 1/1-12/31Mon Mar 07 1994 21:3139
    >The SA Hdcp. broadcast on ABC was the pits!!  Dave Johnson botched the
    >call several times during the race. 
    
    Yup. It was. I'd rather listen to Tom Durkin or Trevor Denman call
    races anyday. Dave Johnson has botched several calls of major races 
    on national TV(Not that I could do it, mind you!...) I just think DJ's 
    out of practice and/or not paying enough attention to his job.
    
    Unfortunatley, ESPN's coverage isn't much better! WHen they cover a
    race, you lose about half the race because they zoom out so far you can
    see the whole backstretch. They oughta just hire the regular camera men
    at the track! The major tracks in Fla, So Cal and NY all have daily
    shows. Their camera operators do a great job! Heck, most tracks have
    video monitors these days so there's plenty of experience camera
    operators around. 
    
    >Anyway, to me it looked like The Wicked North was trying to change
    >leads when he strayed off course.  Did you see that, John, or was I
    >seeing things?
    
    It's possible but I wasn't paying enough attention. I was looking for
    Bien Bien during the live race. 
    
    >Dehere's...I suggest that his breeding is better for 7-9 furlongs
    
    Agreed. I doubt that he'd go much beyond 9 furlongs. Most Deputy
    Minister's don't...but his dam has enough stamina in her pedigree
    through Secretariat and Damascus to get 9 in good style(and maybe a
    bit more) but he's not breed for true routes(i.e. 10f and up). 
    
    >I'm keeping my eye on Brocco, Go For Gin, and Valiant Nature, at the
    >moment. 
    
    Forget Brocco and bet a Go For Gin and Valiant Nature exacta box with the
    future book in Las Vegas. ;-) Just kidding about the last part. It's
    too early and 3 YOs are too unpredictable to even consider betting on
    them. 
    
    
481.643Next movesDECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle Rain Festival: 1/1-12/31Tue Mar 08 1994 16:5031
    I saw the SA Hdcp on the weekly shows last night. Carl was *NOT* seeing
    things when he thought The Wicked North came over when he changed
    leads. However, I think there was more to it than that. It looked to me
    like Desormeaux intentionally took The Wicked North over at a sharp angle
    at the same time TWN was trying to change his lead. The Wicked North
    moved from lane 4 to lane 2 in a matter of a few strides. I think 
    Desormeaux intended to come over just enough to intimidate Myrakalu
    but The Wicked North changed leads clumsily. They ended up moving 2 lanes
    and damn near causing a wreck. The Wicked North runs a little crooked 
    anyway(hindquarters in and shoulders slightly out) so it's not
    surprising that he's clumsy changing leads. 
    
    Pretty good eye, Carl! The story doesn't end there. The owners of
    The Wicked North have appealed and are threatening court action if the
    ruling is not reversed. I suspect they'll have a hard time making a
    case against the stewards. If Desormeaux doesn't get suspended for this
    ride, I'd like to know why.
    
    This is the 3rd time The Big 'Cap has been decided by a DQ. The only
    horse to win 2 succesive Big 'Caps is John Henry. In the second one, he
    actually finished second by about 2" but was moved up when the first
    horse was DQ'ed.
    
    Just to complete the report, the Next Move Breeder's Cup(Gr III, 9.5f
    Fillies & Mares) was run at the Big A on Sat. Groovy Feeling stalked
    the leaders through a *dawdling* mile in 1:39 and change before she
    kicked home in 12's to finish in 1:59 3/5. She was only 1/2 a length in
    front of Broad Gains who was *last* by 10-12 lengths going into the
    final turn. Broad Gains made a *HUGE* move on the turn and came on like
    the space shuttle through the stretch. If the race were 3 jumps longer, 
    she'd have won it. Megaroux was third.
481.6443 YOs? That's a BIG ?DECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle Rain Festival: 1/1-12/31Mon Mar 21 1994 22:5923
    The 3 YO picture for the KY Derby was further muddied this weekend.
    
    Yesterday's San Felipe(gr II 9f for 3 YOs) at Santa Anita was supposed
    to be a match race between Brocco and Valiant Nature. It looked that
    way at first. Valiant Nature broke sharply and took the lead. Brocco
    stalked the pace in third and later second. On the final turn, Brocco
    moved on Valiant Nature and Trevor Denaman said "Here's the match race
    we've been waiting for." as they came out of the turn. He also said
    something about Soul Of The Matter making a big move from last place.
    
    Brocco and Valiant Nature were head to head. Then, it looked like Brocco 
    would pull off. But, Valiant Nature came back at him and got his head
    back in front to no avail! Soul Of The Matter came *FLYING* and passed
    both of them in what was mostly a hand ride! In the last few strides,
    Brocco came back at Valiant Nature a second time and got second by a
    head.
    
    With the loss of Dehere to injury and Holy Bull's amazing rebound to
    beat GoForGin and Ride The Rails in last week's Fla Derby, it is now a
    free-for-all! Stay tuned for the Santa Anita Derby and the Bluegrass
    Stakes.
    
    
481.6451994 Santa Anita DerbyDECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle Rain Festival: 1/1-12/31Mon Apr 11 1994 22:2633
Well, Saturday's Santa Anita Derby was expected to clear up the
picture on the CA-based 3 YO's aiming for the KY Derby. It didn't.

For one thing, 2 of the key contenders weren't there! Ron McAnnally decided
to send Valiant Nature to KY early. He'll race in the Blue Grass Stakes which
is this coming Saturday. He said it would give the horse extra time to get
used to the KY climate and that the horse would have 3 weeks between races 
rather than the 4 weeks between the Santa Anita Derby and the  KY Derby.
He also made a point of saying he wasn't ducking racing against any other
CA horses(e.g. Brocco). They'll all be in KY anyway.

Soul Of The Matter, who beat both Brocco and Valiant Nature, in the San 
Felipe a few weeks ago, developed a blister on his heel which caused him
pain when he ran. He was scratched. Don't know the current plans for him.

Brocco won the SA Derby but he had to work to beat Tabasco Cat in a *slow*
final time after fast fractions. The final furlong was nearly 13 seconds.
I was not impressed even though Stevens gave Brocco a hand-ride. He said
later that Brocco always gives 100% so the whip isn't necessary. I interpret
that as meaning he couldn't have done any better even if Stevens had gone to
the whip. 

Actually, I was somewhat impressed by Tabasco Cat. He pressed the leader
(Flyin J Bryan) through wicked fast fractions and then took charge himself.
He still had enough energy left to fight Brocco to the wire. Brocco had 
laid off the pace and then came on to win. 

The biggest impression in the SA Derby was made by the strong closing move 
by Charlie Whittingham's colt, Strodes Creek, who took third money. If he 
goes to KY, look out for him. I expect him to be there or there abouts 
when they cross the wire.

John
481.646Serious contendersEASI::GEENENVescere bracis meis.Tue Apr 12 1994 14:4068
    IME, all three, Brocco, Tabasco Cat, and Strodes Creek are bonafide
    KY Derby contenders.  What does Dosage have to say about them?  Here's
    how they shape up:
    
      Horse            DI     CD    EXP   BSF
      -----            --     --    ---   ---
      Brocco           1.74   0.38  126*  105
      Tabasco Cat      3.57   1.00  117   102
      Strodes Creek    2.65   0.83 <116   103
    
    DI is the Dosage index.  According to Dosage theory, an index of 4.00
    or less qualifies the horse.  CD is the center of distribution, which
    should be 1.25 or less to qualify.  EXP is the horse's weight on the
    Experimental Free Handicap.  If a horse is weighted within 10 pounds
    of the current 2 year old champion (or is the champion of another
    country, like the Canadian champ Road Rush) and also has a qualifying
    DI and CD, the horse is determined to be a "dual contender".  Brocco
    and Dehere are, according to the Experimental Free Handicap, this
    year's champions (see the asterisk next to Brocco's weight).  Tabasco
    Cat has been assigned a weight of 117 pounds, but Strodes Creek has a
    weight of less than 116 pounds.  This means that both Brocco and
    Tabasco Cat are dual contenders and Strodes Creek is not.  A dual
    contender is supposed to have an increased chance of winning the KY
    Derby.
    
    But also look at the BSF column.  This is the horse's best Beyer speed
    figure earned this year, last weekend's races not included.  There's
    not much difference between these three horses.
    
    Did anyone see the Remington Park Derby last weekend?  Silver Goblin,
    the HUGE favorite struggled home for third behind Smilin' Singin' Sam
    and Blumin Affair.  Before the race, what little I saw of the horses
    showed that Silver Goblin appeared to be disinterested what with a
    lackadaisical gait and ears pointed flatly to the side.  SSSam was
    prancing around like he owned the place, playing with the escorting
    horse, ears moving all around and pointing forward a lot.  During the
    pre-race gallop, SSSam's jockey was having a hard time restraining him.
    Blumin Affair (my eventual choice) looked to be somewhere between SG
    and SSSam in appearance and demeanor.
    
    SSSam went to the lead and never looked back.  For a while, it looked
    like SG was close enough to reel him in, but SSSam started pulling
    away irreparably by the time they straightened out at the top of the
    stretch.  But an outstanding performance was turned in by Blumin
    Affair, who came from WAY WAY back to pass SG to take second.  I don't
    think anyone could have caught SSSam, though.  And to SG's credit,
    this lackluster horse was still good enough to best all the horses
    except for two.
    
    Here's how their Dosage shapes up:
    
    Blumin Affair    1.48   0.27   120    99
    Silver Goblin    3.80   1.00  <116   106
    SSSam            5.67   1.25  <116    ?
    
    According to Dosage theory, both BA and SG qualify on DI and CD, but
    SSSam does not qualify on DI.  Only BA is a dual qualifier.  106 is
    not necessarily a demonstrably better BSF than is 99, but the
    difference is worth noting.  I haven't seen a BSF yet for SSSam, but
    in his previous race, the Louisiana Derby, he finished back in the
    pack due, I believe, to some kind of health related problem.  SSSam
    may be this year's Rockamundo.
    
    Of the horses examined here, Brocco, Tabasco Cat, and Blumin Affair
    should be given serious consideration as possible winners of this
    year's KY Derby, at least according to Dosage.
    
    Carl
481.647What's serious about dosage?DECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle Rain Festival: 1/1-12/31Tue Apr 12 1994 18:2443
    Dosage, smosage... IMHO, dosage is only slightly more valid as a way to
    select a racehorse on which to bet than using which NFL conference wins 
    the Super Bowl to decide strategy for playing the stock market! I believe 
    there is a *perfect* correlation between the winning NFL conference and 
    bear/bull markets. That doesn't mean that there's any real connection. 
    
    The other reason I put dosage theory in the category of mumbo-jumbo is
    that it's statistical analysis of subjective opinions. Some guy or a
    committee says "Little Baby is a great sire. I/We declare him to be a
    brilliant/professional/intermediate/whatever chef-de-race." 
    
    And, presto-chango, all the dosage indexes of horses are affected.
    That's BS, plain and simple. First of all, who said the people declaring
    Little Baby to be a chef-de-race know the first thing about racing,
    breeding or pedigrees? 
    
    Secondly, dosage supporters frequently make the statement that "No horse 
    with a rating grater than 4.0 has won the KY Derby since 194x." That's 
    false. Strike The Gold had a rating higher than 4 when he won the Derby.
    Later, they declared some stallion a couple generations back in his
    pedigree to be a chef-de-race and, by magic, STG was now "qualified" to
    win the KY Derby nearly 1 year after he *had* won it. BS!
    
    Another thing...what about all those horses *before* 1940-whenever that
    won the KY Derby?
    
    As for the "dual contender" aspects of the theory, that will almost
    always preclude horses trained by conservative trainers, such as 
    Whittingham, from achieving "serious" consideration. The more
    conservative trainers don't push their horses as 2 YO's so they won't
    get ratings at/near the top of the free handicap very frequently.
    
    Even the most rabid dosage supporters don't claim that no horse with a
    rating higher than 4 *can* win the KY Derby. Just that none has(allowing
    STG's rating change, for the moment.) won the KY Derby. It's just as
    valid and perhaps more meaningful to say that no Breeder's Cup Juvenile
    winner has *EVER* won the KY Derby or that no Eclipse Award 2 YO
    Champion has won the KY Derby in 16 years. Those are 1) facts rather
    than subjective opinions and 2) not subject to revision due to changes
    in opinion.
    
    John (whose opinions on what horse is going to win are entirely
    subjective and who admits it freely)
481.648Hocus-pocus...EASI::GEENENVescere bracis meis.Tue Apr 12 1994 21:0821
    RE:  -.1
    
    A rousing condemnation, I'd say.  We had hashed out a lot of the pros
    and cons of dosage last year, John, starting in note .503 as you may
    recall.  I went back and read the thread and I must say that your
    opinions are consistent ;>{)
    
    While I agree with your assessment of it's unscientificness (see note
    .528), I still think it's valid.  In addition, it has pretty good enter-
    tainment value.  You should read the email that flies forth and back
    on the Internet about it!!  Dosage sure does have its believers and
    detractors.  One guy has even written a PC program that does nothing
    but determine the dosage numbers on horses for the sole purpose of
    determining the outcome of only one race -- the KY Derby.  My wife
    picks 'em because they pooped in the paddock.
    
    John, may I post your comments to the Internet, minus of course names
    or other identifiers?  In return, I'll post any Internet comments back
    so we can all benefit from their wisdom!!
    
    Carl
481.649It ain't all that importantDECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle Rain Festival: 1/1-12/31Tue Apr 12 1994 22:4652
    Well, let me further my image as an image-buster...;-)
    [soap box mode on]
    Re "...Dosage sure does have its believers and 
        detractors.  One guy has even written a PC program that does nothing
        but determine the dosage numbers on horses for the sole purpose of
        determining the outcome of only one race -- the KY Derby.  "
    
    This is another sore spot with me. I can't understand why people think 
    the KY Derby is so all-fired(and I'm being polite here) important.
    Every time you turn around, some media person, jockey, trainer or owner is
    refering to the KY Derby as "the most important/famous/significant race 
    in the world." Many of these comments just refer to the race as "the
    Derby" as if it were the original rather than the one at Epsom!
    
    The KY Derby is none of those things. It may be the most famous race in
    the U.S. but it is certainly *not* the most famous race in the world. 
    I'd go so far as to say that England's Grand National
    Steeplechase(among others!) is more famous than the KY Derby! 
    
    The only reason that the KY Derby is famous and important in the U.S.
    can be summed up in 1 word: promotion! You don't have to take my word
    for it. Go to the library and check out "Kentucky Derby Stories" by Jim
    Bolus. He recounts how Matt Winn, beginning about 1910, took a regional
    event at a second rate track and turned it into a circus event that we
    now know as the KY Derby. 
    
    Winn set up offices in NY(which was the center of the US racing scene 
    at the time) so he could spend more time wining and dining important 
    people. Many of these important people were reporters so he could get 
    good(free) publicity for the event. Others were owners that he was 
    trying to talk into sending their horses to KY for the race! They 
    actually had trouble filling the field 70 years ago!
    
    After Winn, others continued the promotional efforts. Now, it's an
    avalanche! The Churchill Downs(still a second rate track!) management
    doesn't have to do a *thing* to sustain the hype. They media does it
    for them.
    
    As for significance or importance, I wouldn't even say the KY Derby is 
    the most important race in North America much less the world. It 
    certainly is one of the most significant North American races for 3 YO's. 
    However, European 3 YO classics are more famous and more important to 
    Europeans and many Americans. 
    
    There are also more important North American races that are not restricted 
    to 3 YO's. As much as I regret it(because it has sapped the importance
    of other fall races), the Breeders' Cup Classic and Turf are two such 
    North American races. Add the Melbourne Cup, Prix de l'Arc de Triomphe, 
    King George & Queen Elizabeth Diamond Stakes, etc and you'll see why I 
    bristle at such accolades about the KY Derby.
    
    [soap box off]
481.650Does that mean yes?EASI::GEENENVescere bracis meis.Wed Apr 13 1994 01:4747
    He stands up politely on his soapbox and begs the listeners' kind
    indulgence:
    
    Hmmm, I didn't know that about the KY Derby's promotional
    beginnings until it was mentioned it in note -.1.  But I'm not
    surprised and I'd be willing to bet that many of the world's great
    sporting events started as something less and were promoted into the
    spectacles they are today.  I'll wager it took a great deal of convincing
    in the beginning to get enough participants and backers to put on many
    of these what are now big events.
    
    Regardless of how it started, the KY Derby has become a unique part of
    our American culture and heritage.  In my mind, and the minds of many
    people I know, May wouldn't be May without it.  I wonder how many jockeys,
    trainers, and owners wouldn't want to be in that winners circle.  Maybe
    it was a bunch of sleight-of-hand in the beginning, but it seems to
    have a life of it's own now.  Many people, media or not, believe the
    KY Derby to be one of the pinnacles of American horse racing
    achievement.
    
    Comparing it to the Epsom Derby?  If I was born in England, I'm sure
    *it* would be a part of my consciousness rather than the KY Derby.
    Important as a horse race?  The point about it's being a race no more
    important than many others has credence and is well taken.  But it's
    more than just a horse race, it's an American tradition, I'm sure much
    like the Epsom Derby is a tradition for the folks in the UK.  I'll
    bet there's more than a few Britishers that dream of winning their
    Derby, just as there are Americans dreaming of winning ours.
    
    Comparing the KY Derby to the Breeder's Cup Classic and Turf?  I sure
    didn't have any problems sitting in the stands last year at Santa
    Anita.  Neither did plenty of other people.  And it also was promoted
    into what it is today with lots of accompanying media hype.  I'll
    predict that if I ever have the chance to go to the KY Derby, I won't
    have any problems sitting in their stands either.  But they have a
    ways to go before they become the same kind of tradition as the
    KY Derby (if ever).
    
    Churchill Downs a second rate track?  For 364 days a year, it sure
    seems to be.  But on that one day a year, it shines!
    
    Ranking the world's horse races in order of importance?  Certainly
    the KY Derby is not the most important, but IME, the KY Derby is just
    another horse race like the Indy 500 is just another car race or that
    Mardi Gras is just another parade.
    
    Carl
481.651It was Winn's obsessionDECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle Rain Festival: 1/1-12/31Wed Apr 13 1994 18:0634
    Re "Hmmm, I didn't know that about the KY Derby's promotional
        beginnings until it was mentioned it in note -.1."
    
    Actually, those weren't the beginnings I was discussing. The KY Derby
    was first run in 1875. I was talking about the period of time 40 years
    later. But, its beginnings *were* another exercise in promotional activity. 
    
    During last year's hype of the KY Derby, one of the TV programs
    interviewed a bunch of people in the street and asked them why the
    KY Derby was in Louisville. Not a single one of the people knew the 
    answer or even had a reasonable substitute! Typical answers were, 
    "Louisville has the best parties" or "Louisville has the friendliest 
    people."
    
    The short version of the answer is, "Louisville is where Mr. Clark
    could get some free land to set up a race track for the KY Derby." A
    longer version follows.
    
    About 1870, group of KY racehorse breeders got together and decided 
    they needed a set of races to showcase their stock. So, a Mr. Clark was
    dispatched to England in the early 1870's to see how their classics 
    were run. He returned to KY and convinced his uncle, a Mr. Churchill, to
    let them use some of his land in Louisville to establish a race track.
    
    They built a track and clubhouse which opened in 1874(I think). The first
    KY Derby was run in 1875 *at a distance of 1 1/2 miles* because it
    was patterned after the Epsom Derby(which is still 1 1/2 miles).
    
    The race and track continued to be of strictly regional importance
    until Matt Winn was hired in 1909. He ran Churchill Downs and *lived* 
    for the KY Derby for over 40 years. His sole aim in life was to make
    the KY Derby famous. He succeeded.
    
    John
481.652Turf racing(my fav!)DECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle Rain Festival: 1/1-12/31Mon Apr 25 1994 22:5530
    Did anybody else see yesterday's San Juan Capistrano from Santa Anita?
    Wow! It was impressive! Bien Bien broke well and settled into 5th. From
    there he just followed a fairly strong pace which covered the first 1.5
    miles in a little over 2:24. Then, he opened up and covered the last
    1/4 mile in 22 seconds *without* pushing himself at all. McCarron
    looked like he was sitting in a rocking chair rather than winning the
    longest Gr I race in the U.S.! He never went to the stick. They left
    the field 5 or 6 lengths behind. Trevor Denman expressed it best when
    he said "Bien Bien won it without taking a deep breath". To kick home
    in 22 seconds so eaily after going the first 1.5 miles in steady
    12's(i.e. each furlong took 12 seonds) is impressive!
    
    This may  be the year that Bien Bien gets over his chronic case of
    "seconditis" and becomes the top turf horse at his distances. He's already 
    won 3 Gr I races at 12 to 14 furlongs and it's only April! He's pretty
    good at 10 furlongs too so we may see him go head to head with Lure in
    turf races like the Arlington Million later this year.
    
    Speaking of Lure, he's back from his winter rest. On Apr 15th, he won 
    the Gr II Elkhorn(9f - turf) so easily it was incredible. You may
    reacll that Lure was scratched from last year's Arlington Million because 
    of soft ground. Well, it rained in KY the day of the Elkhorn but Lure ran 
    anyway. He handled the yielding turf fairly well and won drawing off by 
    6 lengths under a hand ride. To be that fit after not racing in 5 1/2
    months(he has been rested since the Breeders' Cup) says a lot about the
    horse and his trainer's conditioning program!
    
    If Lure and Bien Bien meet in the 10 furlong turf races later this
    year, those meetings will probably decide the turf championship as well
    as possibly Horse of the Year! We'll see as time goes by...
481.653derby-94MKOTS3::ADAMS_TSun May 01 1994 13:555
    does anyone see a real standout for the derby? I think this year is
    really tough holy bull is favored. Imoh i don't think he will win
      
    
                                                     tom
481.654KY Derby RamblingsDECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle Rain Festival: 1/1-12/31Mon May 02 1994 17:3057
    This year's 3 YO crops seem to be as deep in talent as last year's was 
    lacking in stars. Personally, I don't think Holy Bull will win but I'm
    hoping he will! Why? Because he'd blow a hole in dosage index theory
    *so* wide that you could sail an aircraft carrier through it! ;-)
    
    After a chat with Carl, I'm mellowing out a *bit* on dosage. It's a 
    reasonable way for handicappers to evaluate pedigrees and the various 
    influences of speed/stamina/etc without having to memorize tons of
    breeding data. But, as a predictor of who will win what races, I doubt
    that it is legitimate.
    
    There are several good horses that have been injured and are out of the
    KY Derby. 2 YO Champion Dehere is out. Ihrgun is out with a minor foot
    injury. Concern(who was one of my personal choices) is passing the KY
    Derby and training for the Preakness.
    
    Brocco and Valiant Nature usually lay close to the pace and  make a
    late finish. Both horses are very professional in their races. Brocco
    is magnificent to look at but I have reservations about him beyond 9
    furlongs. H'e been between twice at 8.5 furlongs and barely won the
    Santa Anita Derby at 9 furlongs. Another thing that makes me suspicious
    of Brocco is that he hasn't won a stake race at any track except Santa
    Anita. That's not to say that he has run poorly at other tracks just
    that he seems to like Santa Anita's track and the KY Derby isn't run
    there.
    
    Valiant Nature hasn't even won at 9 furlongs but he has improved every
    time out and he's a full brother to Tight Spot who won Gr I stakes at
    10 furlongs. VN is one of the horses who beat Brocco at 8.5 furlongs in
    last December's Hollywood Futurity. After his last race when he was 
    second to Holy Bull in the BlueGrass, Hall of Fame jockey Laffitt Pincay 
    said Valiant Nature ran like a horse who was 1 race away from his best
    condition. The KY Derby is his next race...
    
    Kandaly and Strodes Creek are trailers who make a strong
    middle run and charge like h*ll in the stretch. If Strodes Creek
    weren't so inexperienced(he didn't race at all as a 2 YO), I'd make him
    my choice. But, he has acted very "green" in a couple situations. If he
    learns quickly, he's good enough. And trainer Charlie Wittingham is 
    never a disadvantage!
    
    Kandaly runs like Strike The Gold who was also sired by Alydar. STG 
    closed like crazy to be 3rd in the 1991 Blue Grass and went on to win 
    the KY Derby. Kandaly closed very well to be 4th behind Holy Bull's 
    very slow pace in this year's Blue Grass. BTW, did you realize that
    every quarter mile in Holy Bull's Blue Grass was *slower* than the 
    previous quarter? He did kick home the final furlong in 12 1/5 seconds
    but he's not gonna be able to so slowly early on in the KY Derby.
    
    I liked Soul Of The Matter who beat Brocoo *and* Valiant Nature at
    Santa Anita about 2 months ago. But, his last race was at 8.5 furlongs
    and he didn't show the same finish that he used to win before. This
    suggests that either he can't compete at the longer distances or he's 
    not ready right now. 
    
    That probably muddies the water rather than clearing it but...
    John
481.655Love your Ramblings...ELMAGO::HBUTTERMANMon May 02 1994 20:2818
    
    	Well John... I don't know if your info muddies or clears... but I
    	love the information and the conversation that happens in this
    	note.  It is fun to sit in front of the tv and have as much data
    	as I do from reading this file... everyone probably thinks I'm a
    	race expert and really all's I remember is some of the little bits
    	and pieces.
    
    	So!  Regardless... keep it up.  I sure hope that some day I can see
    	the Kentucky Derby w/my own eyes and enjoy all the 'stuff' that
    	goes with the race.  I *Really* don't like large crowds of people
    	but would be tolerant in order to take the Derby in.
    
    	Thanks!
    
    	h
    
    
481.656Non KY Derby NewsDECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle Rain Festival: 1/1-12/31Mon May 02 1994 21:1925
    In case anybody's wondering what happened to Julie Krone, she's nearly
    recuperated from her nasty spill in a Saratoga race last August. She's
    had 3 operations to repair damage to her ankle and other injuries
    sustained in that spill. She's been walking on it since New Year and
    began galloping horses at the track a little over a week ago. She said
    in an interview that she had been apprehensive about returning to the
    track because it would be a media circus. She still limps and struggles
    and is a bit shy about it so she would rather have come back quitely.
    She said that she had been riding her jumper for a while and had
    already had a minor fall which she handled OK psychologically(i.e. she
    wasn't afraid of falling off).  She thinks she'll be riding races in
    another month. The first day back at the track, she went up to the
    young apprentice who had caused the spill and told him "Next time, you
    better use your turn signals." She said she did that to break the ice
    with him because she knows he feels really bad about causing the wreck.
    
    Arcangues, the suprise winner of last year's Breeders' Cup Classic,
    made a successful return to racing *on the turf* in yesterday's John 
    Henry Handicap at Hollywood Park. You may recall that last year his
    owners said he would stay on the dirt because they felt his sore back
    was less of a problem there. He trailed early on in the John Henry and
    made a move very much like that in the BC Classic to win by a couple
    lengths.
    
    John
481.657Another Derby horseDECWET::DADDAMIODesign Twice, Code OnceMon May 02 1994 22:5211
    There is one horse that John didn't mention that I like for the
    Kentucky Derby - Blumin' Affair.  He was 2nd to Brocco in the Breeder's
    Cup Juvenile, and was 2nd in the Arkansas Derby to Concern.  He and
    Concern came from next to last and last to blow by the whole field. 
    Concern was a bit ahead, but Blumin' Affair was gaining slowly and only
    lost by a head.
    
    I also like Kandaly and Strodes Creek.  Because I'm not really
    impressed with either of them, Holy Bull or Brocco will probably win!
    
    						Jan
481.658And Tabasco CatDECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle Rain Festival: 1/1-12/31Tue May 03 1994 00:0018
    Geez, Jan. How are ya gonna get a price on your bet if you tip every
    body to the horse? ;-)
    
    Yeah, she's right I just forgot about Blumin' Affair. If you want to
    use the Breeder's Cup Juvenile as an "selector" of Kentucky Derby
    winners, remember that *no* Juvenile winner has ever won the KY Derby.
    However, several *third* place finishers in the Juvenile have won
    the KY Derby(e.g. Alysheba). That suggests Tabasco Cat for this year's
    KY Derby pick. Carl says he's got the numbers too. So, how can you go
    wrong? He fits every theory and restriction:
    	Dosage? he's OK.
    	Beyer Speed Figure? he's pretty good.
    	No Juvenile winner but several third finishers? He was third
    	No horse unraced at 2 has won since 1882(i.e. 112 years)? He ran at 2
    	etc and so forth
    	
    Only thing against him is D. Wayne Lukas. He's not noted for training
    horses that can get a distance of ground.
481.659Handicapping anglesEASI::GEENENVescere bracis meis.Tue May 03 1994 16:3077
    Hello KY Derby Fans:
    
    And here's some other selection criteria:
    
Dosage index should be 4.0 or less with a CD of 1.25 of less.  Preference should
be given to horses with a bell shaped dosage profile.  At the least they should
have some representation in the stamina wing of the profile (last two numbers).

Should be rated within 10 pounds of the high weight on the experimental free
handicap or a 2YO champion in a foreign country.

Horses with good tactical speed and the ability to stalk have preference over
pure speed or rally from way back types.  Proven ability to handle bad traffic
situations is a plus.

Whoever is leading at the 1/8th pole has always won.

Do not pick a horse with a jockey change.  It has been a long time since a
    horse with a new jockey won.

No gelding has won since 1929.

At least one race on a Kentucky track is a plus.

Should have finished in the money in his last pre-Derby start.  Since 1957, only
Sea Hero has broken this and he was 4th beaten narrowly.

No post time favorite has won since 1980.

If a son or grandson of Damascus, they traditionally don't run well at 1 1/4
miles until at least 4YO.

No Louisiana based horse has won since 1924.

Don't pick one with a first time Derby trainer or jockey, this has only won 2
times since the 1950's.

Don't pick a post position outside of 10 as very few winners have come from
those post positions so far.

Must be a stakes winner.  Only two non stakes winners have won since 1933 and
one was a DQ'd stakes winner and the other a winner at 1 1/4 already.

No former claimer has won since 1970.

No horse has won without a 1 1/8 prep race since 1950.

Winners by color:  Bay 56, Chestnut 37, Dark bay or brown 17, Black 4, Gray 4,
Roan 1.

Only 3 maidens have won:  Broker's Tip 1933, Sir Barton 1919, Buchanan 1884.


Thanks to Cindy Pierson for the above info.
    
    In other KY Derby news, Mike Battaglia, oddsmaker for Churchill Downs
    has posted the following early odds for some of the participants:
    
    Holy Bull            8-5
    Brocco               3-1
    Tabasco Cat          6-1
    Southern Rhythm      8-1
    Strodes Creek        8-1
    Valiant Nature      12-1
    Blumin Affair       15-1
    Powis Castle        15-1
    Soul of the Matter  15-1
    Go For Gin          20-1
    Kandaly             20-1
    Mahogany Hall       20-1
    Meadow Flight       20-1
    Smilin Singin Sam   20-1
    Ulises              20-1
    
    If Holy Bull doesn't win, there could be some excellent payoffs!!
    
    Carl
481.660Perspective on selection criteriaDECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle Rain Festival: 1/1-12/31Tue May 03 1994 18:1656
    >Whoever is leading at the 1/8th pole has always won.
    
    It's a little too late to place a wager by the time they reach the
    1/8th pole! So, I wouldn't count on using this as a handicapping angle
    unless you've got some dumb friends in the living room with you. ;-)
    
    >No horse has won without a 1 1/8 prep race since 1950.
    
    I'm not sure about that. Tim Tam won in 1958 and his prior race was the
    Derby Trial which is run at 1 mile. He may havee gone 9f in an earlier
    race but memory fails. That was 36 years ago after all! BTW, the Derby 
    Trial is now run 1 week before the KY Derby but, in 1958, it was held 
    only 4 *days* before the KY Derby. Tim Tam is also the last horse to 
    win both the Derby Trial and the KY Derby. Tim Tam also went on to win 
    the Preakness and finished second in the Belmont despite an injury that 
    ended his racing career. He stood stud until he was in his mid-20's 
    before being pensioned in the late 1970's or early 80's
    
    >Winners by color:  Bay 56, Chestnut 37, Dark bay or brown 17, Black 4,
    >Gray 4, Roan 1.
    
    That's just about the proportion of those colors in the population so
    forget color as a factor. Besides, people frequently get colors wrong.
    Remember a horse that ran in the KY Derby in the 80's called Jaklin
    Klugman? He was owned by and named for the actor, Jack Klugman. So, why
    was it called Jaklin? Because when the colt was born, the farm staff
    got the sex wrong and the colt was registered before anybody noticed!
    If they can get the sex wrong, I wouldn't count on the color.
    
    >In other KY Derby news, Mike Battaglia, oddsmaker for Churchill Downs
    >has posted the following early odds for some of the participants: ...
    
    Remember that a track oddsmaker/handicapper is estimating what he or
    she thinks how the *public* will wager on the horses. It is not
    *his/her* opinion of who will win. It is simply their opinion of who
    the public thinks will win. In this case, Battaglia thinks that the
    public will make Holy Bull the favorite and that the payoff would be $8
    for every $5 wagered if Holy Bull wins. Similarly, he thinks the public
    will make Brocco the second choice with a payoff of $3 for every $1 bet
    on Brocco if he wins. 
    
    So, what good does the early odds or "morning line" do you? It tells you 
    when the public is betting in an unexpected manner. For example, if
    the public bets more money on Brocco and Holy Bull than expected, it would
    change all the other odds. Why? Because in parimutuel betting, the
    public is always betting against other members of the public. The money
    all goes into 1 pot. The track and the state take out their "overhead"
    and taxes respectively and whatever is left is paid out to people who
    bet on the winner.
    
    A proficient handicapper can use the current odds information and
    decide to place a bet on a horse that has a good chance of beating Brocco 
    and Holy Bull with a possibly outstanding payoff. In the stock market,
    I think they call that a good return on investment...
    
    John
481.661Brocco updateEASI::GEENENIllud cape et ei fibulam adfige!Tue May 03 1994 20:1919
    Also gleaned from the Internet:
    
>From the last paragraph of Beyer's column in today's Wash. Post (May 3),
>reporting this week from Churchill downs:
    
" The horse who has most impressed knowledgeable observers at Churchill
Downs this week is Brocco.  Zito (Nick), who won the 1991 Derby with 
Strike the Gold, said Brocco has been looking better day by day.  
Another top trainer, who has been watching Brocco for months,
said that the colt is at his absolute peak now.  Even laymen can
see how robust he is.  Such objective assessments are much better
indicators for the Derby than any trainer's approving nods."

(end excerpt)

----------------------
Thanks to "Smitty" for the above excerpt.
    
    Carl
481.662No winner this year!EASI::GEENENIllud cape et ei fibulam adfige!Wed May 04 1994 20:2434
Applying the handicapping angles in note 481.659, it appears that no horse
    can win this year's KY Derby.  The following has been edited from the
    Internet.
    -----------------
    These horses are out:

Holy Bull (dosage)
Brocco (first-time trainer)
Southern Rhythm (non-qualifier on experimental free weight)
Strodes Creek (free weight, jockey change, non-SW)
Blumin Affair (jockey change, non-SW)
Powis Castle (dosage, free weight, 1st-time trainer, gelding)
Soul of the Matter (Damascus line, free weight, no 1 1/8 prep)
Go for Gin (jockey change)
Kandaly (free weight, out of money last start, Louisiana based)
Mahogany Hall (free weight, 1st-time trainer)
Meadow Flight (free weight, jockey change, 1st-time trainer)
Smilin Singin Sam (dosage, free weight, 1st-time trainer, no 1 1/8 prep)
Ulises (free weight, jockey change, no 1 1/8 prep)

Who's left?  Tabasco Cat and Valiant Nature.

But Tabasco Cat barely qualifies on dosage, with nothing in the
stamina wing.  Plus he has Pat Day who, until the flukey 1992
Derby, was a well-established disqualifier.

So that leaves Valiant Nature who'll probably draw the lone position in the
    outer gate.  Then no one will win.
    -----------------------
    end of excerpt

Thanks to Pat O'Neill for the above commentary.
    
    Carl
481.663More KY Derby StuffEASI::GEENENIllud cape et ei fibulam adfige!Thu May 05 1994 18:00117
KY Derby Fans:

FWIW, here is the dosage info on the probable starters in the derby:

HORSE             DOSAGE PROFILE         DOSAGE INDEX    CENTER OF DISTRIBUTION
-----             --------------         ------------    ----------------------
BLUMIN AFFAIR      3- 3-19- 0- 1             1.48              0.27
BROCCO             3- 6-15- 2- 0             1.74              0.38
GO FOR GIN         8- 5-16- 7 -6             1.00              0.05
HOLY BULL          6- 5- 2- 1- 0             6.00              1.14
KANDALY           10- 4-18- 0- 0             2.56              0.75
MAHOGANY HALL     10- 3-12- 0- 1             2.71              0.81
MEADOW FLIGHT      9- 6- 8- 0- 1             3.80              0.92
POWIS CASTLE      10- 4- 3- 1- 0             6.20              1.28
SMILIN SINGIN SAM 11- 3- 6- 0- 0             5.67              1.25
SOUL OF THE MATTER 5-10- 7- 2- 0             3.36              0.75
SOUTHERN RHYTHM   14- 4-14- 0- 0             3.57              1.00
STRODES CREEK     16- 5-19- 2- 0             2.65              0.83
TABASCO CAT        7- 3- 5- 1- 0             3.57              1.00
ULISES             7- 8-12- 1- 0             3.00              0.75
VALIANT NATURE     9- 2-35- 0- 4             1.33              0.24

(Thanks to Mark E. Savey for the above data)
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Kandaly update:

From today's (May 5) Washington Post, Andy Beyer writes 
of KANDALY:

"He looked good in New Orleans because he was meeting weak
competition, but he is not Kentucky Derby material."
......

"..Ronnie Lamarque is not going to have anything to sing
about on Saturday night."

(Thanks to Smitty for the above info)
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Recent workouts at Churchill downs:

BLUMIN AFFAIR       Has not worked at CDX

BROCCO              5-2:  Bullet 5F in 1:00.3 (#1/26)
4-25: 8f in 1:40.0 (#1/1)
4-20: 5f in 1:03.0 (#10/25)

GO FOR GIN          5-1:  6f in 1:15.0 (#2/3)
4-25: 5f in 1:04.3 (#25/30)

HOLY BULL           5-2:  6f in 1:14.3 (#3/6)

KANDALY             4-26: 6f in 1:15.4 (#3/4)

MAHOGANY HALL       5-2:  5f in 1:02.4 (#15/26)
4-26: 4f in  :49.3 (#8/23)
4-10: 5f in 1:03.2 (#3/4)
3-29: Bullet 4f in :48.3 (#1/13)

MEADOW FLIGHT       4-28: Bullet 6f in 1:13.1 (#1/4)
4-20: 8f in 1:40.2 (#1/1)

POWIS CASTLE        4-27: 8f in 1:41.1 (#1/1)
4-21: 7f in 1:27.2 (#1/3)
4-15: 5f in 1:02.2 (#6/16)
3-30: Bullet 4f in :48.3 (#1/18)

SMILIN SINGIN SAM   4-28: 6f in 1:15.0 (#3/4)
4-21: 4f in  :51.2 (#7/14)

SOUL OF THE MATTER  Has not worked at CDX

SOUTHERN RHYTHM     4-18: Bullet 5f in 1:01.0 (#1/24)
4-11: 5f in 1:02.4 (#3/13)

STRODES CREEK       5-2:  5f in 1:02.3 (#13/26)
4-26: 8f in 1:42.4 (#1/2)
4-21: 5f in 1:03.4 (#6/16)

TABASCO CAT         5-2:  6f in 1:15.0 (#4/6)
4-26: 8f in 1:42.4 (#1/2)
4-19: 5f in 1:02.3 (#8/28)

ULISES              5-2:  5f in 1:02.0 (#8/26)

VALIANT NATURE      5-2:  Bullet 6f in 1:14.0 (#1/6)

Current Las Vegas odds for the KY Derby:

HORSE            SANDS  MIRAGE

HOLY BULL        8-5    2-1
BROCCO           2-1    2-1
TABASCO CAT      4-1    5-1
SOUTHERN RHYTHM  5-1    12-1
VALIANT NATURE   6-1    6-1
SOULOFTHEMATTER  8-1    10-1
STRODES CREEK    8-1    8-1
GO FOR GIN       10-1   8-1
KANDALY          12-1   15-1
BLUMIN AFFAIR    12-1   12-1
POWIS CASTLE     15-1   20-1
MAHOGANY HALL    25-1   ----
MEADOW FLIGHT    30-1   ----
SMILIN SINGINSAM 25-1   ----
LAKEWAY          30-1   20-1
ULISES           50-1   ---

Odds  provided by Las Vegas' Sands Casino oddsmaker Bob Gregorka and
Mirage Race and Sports Book (updated as of May 2).

(Thanks to Mark E. Savey for the above data)
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
My last note discounted Blumin Affair's chances because of the jockey
change angle.  BA's new jockey is Jerry Bailey, who was aboard for the
first time on Arcangues at last year's BC Classic.

Carl
481.664KY Derby Post PositionsEASI::GEENENIllud cape et ei fibulam adfige!Thu May 05 1994 19:1730
    
	Here are the post positions for the 1994 Kentucky Derby:

	1.  Soul of the Matter
	2.  Valiant Nature
	3.  Powis Castle
	4.  Holy Bull
	5.  Ulises
	6.  Mahogany Hall
	7.  Strodes Creek
	8.  Go For Gin
	9.  Tabasco Cat
       10.  Brocco
       11.  Smilin Singin Sam
       12.  Southern Rhythm
       13.  Blumin Affair
       14.  Meadow Flight
       15.  Kandaly
	
    Looks like Holy Bull will get the early lead, which is just what I was
    hoping, because I don't think he has what it takes to go wire-to-wire.
    Valiant Nature should be close early, saving ground near the rail.
    SSSam may have a wide trip or burn too much energy trying to get near
    the early lead.  Tabasco Cat, Brocco, and Blumin Affair seem to be
    in good shape for a come-from-behind bid.  Kandaly may have to come
    from WAY back if he's to have any chance.
    
    My picks?  I'll tell you tomorrow after I read the DRF.
    
    Carl
481.665KY Derby UpdateEASI::GEENENIllud cape et ei fibulam adfige!Fri May 06 1994 16:50101
From the Internet, thanks to Smitty of the NOAA, the weather picture for
tomorrow's KY Derby:

>The question now appears not if it will rain, but how
>much it will rain.  
>
>Both short-range models have a bullseye of rain centered 
>right on Louisville around midday on Saturday.  Louisville
>probably has the highest probability of precipitation of any
>major city in the country for Saturday!  A cold
>front is supposed to stall and become stationary over
>the region.  If it stalls to the south of Louisville the 
>rain could be steady and heavy at times.  If it stalls to the 
>north of Louisville, the precipitation would be more in the
>form of intermittant warm showers and thunderstorms. 

Also, here is some info from Thursday at Churchill downs, thanks to Mark
Savey:

>INDIVIDUAL NOTES FROM THURSDAY: (total race records in parentheses)
>Derby odds provided by Mike Battaglia
>
>BLUMIN AFFAIR:        15-1 odds    (8-2-4-0, $430,155)
>Galloped  two  miles Thursday. Van Berg believes his late-running colt
>will not be bothered by his outer post position.
>
>BROCCO:               3-1 odds     (6-4-2-0, $968,550)
>Galloped approximately 1 3/4 miles, then schooled in the paddock. Both
>Winick  and Stevens are thrilled with their post position. "I couldn't
>be  happier," said Winick. "In that spot, he won't be in the gate that
>long  before  the  break." Stevens added, "It's a nice long run to the
>turn, so we should be able to get position."
>
>GO FOR GIN:           15-1 odds    (9-4-3-0, $399,540)
>Schooled  in the gate, then galloped about 1 5/8 miles. Zito had hoped
>to  draw  the  four or five hole, but ended up with the eight post. He
>would have liked a position near Holy Bull in order to stay close with
>the front-runner in the early going.
>
>HOLY BULL:            8-5 odds     (8-7-0-0, $990,760)
>Galloped  two miles and is reportedly "strong, fresh, and feels good."
>Croll  had  said  all week he would love to draw the five post, and is
>tickled to take the number four position. "The post is great!"
>
>KANDALY:              30-1 odds    (5-3-1-0, $246,050)
>Walked  under  tack for the second straight day and is scheduled for a
>final 1 1/2-mile gallop on Friday. Roussel wanted on the rail, but got
>exactly the opposite with the outside #15 hole.
>
>MAHOGANY HALL:        30-1 odds    (6-3-0-2, $153,610)
>Galloped  1  3/4  miles.  Baker's wish was granted when he asked for a
>position  anywhere  between the three and nine spot. He believes Powis
>Castle and Brocco will both run big on Saturday.
>
>MEADOW FLIGHT:        30-1 odds    (7-3-1-1, $200,900)
>Jogged  two  miles.  Ryerson  said  Holy  Bull  and  Brocco  are  both
>impressive  but  feels  this year's Derby offers more talent than just
>the top two choices.
>
>POWIS CASTLE:         30-1 odds    (6-3-3-0, $229,421)
>Jogged a mile, then schooled in the paddock prior to the fifth race.
>
>SMILIN SINGIN SAM:    30-1 odds    (8-3-2-0, $241,005)
>Galloped  1  1/2  miles after schooling in the gate. Niall O'Callaghan
>summed  up  the  line-up  for Saturday: "I think we are in good shape,
>given  the  fact this horse can relax. We are outside of the speed. If
>they don't go, we'd love to have it (the lead), but if they go for it,
>we'll just tuck in behind them and let them show us the way around."
>
>SOUL OF THE MATTER:   20-1 odds    (6-3-1-2, $205,700)
>Walked under tack for a half-hour after working the day before.
>
>SOUTHERN RHYTHM:      15-1 odds    (6-4-1-0, $205,655)
>Worked a half-mile in :48 1/5, clicking off fractions of :12, :24 1/5,
>:36,  and  out  5F in 1:01 4/5. "It was a little faster than I wanted,
>but he does it easy anyway," said trainer Jim Keefer.
>
>STRODES CREEK:        8-1 odds     (4-2-1-1, $122,600)
>Galloped  about  1  1/2  miles and schooled in the paddock with horses
>racing in Thursday's third race.
>
>TABASCO CAT           6-1 odds     (9-5-1-1, $483,037)
>Galloped his normal routine and is scheduled to do the same Friday.
>
>ULISES:               30-1 odds    (5-4-0-1, $33,221)
>Stood in the gate prior to his usual two-mile gallop.
>
>VALIANT NATURE:       12-1 odds    (5-2-1-1, $421,500)
>Galloped  a strong 1 3/4 miles, then stood in the gate. He schooled in
>the  paddock  prior  to  the  afternoon's  second  race.  Ron McAnally
>speculated  about  Saturday:  "I'm  thinking the speed will go out and
>we'll  be  laying  in  the second pack of horses. We should be able to
>save  some ground and then I'm hoping Laffit will be able to angle out
>down the backside because I'd prefer not to be down on the rail."

Noted handicapper, author, and TB columnist for the Washington Post, Andy
Beyer, is picking Blumin Affair to win the KY Derby, even though he has
been raving about Brocco in recent columns.  Beyer's last successful pick
was Strike The Gold.

Carl
481.666My PicksEASI::GEENENIllud cape et ei fibulam adfige!Fri May 06 1994 22:334
    I'm picking Brocco to win, and exacta-boxing him with Valiant Nature.
    Anyone else want to take a guess?
    
    Carl
481.667KY Derby winner Black GoldEASI::GEENENIllud cape et ei fibulam adfige!Wed May 11 1994 15:2184
Hello KY Derby Fans:

I picked this story up from the Internet.  Thought some one besides me
might find something in it.

Carl

In article <derby-black-goldURc75_4y6@clarinet.com>, clarinews@clarinet.com
(AP) writes:
|> 	LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) -- Painful memories might have kept Richard
|> Freeman away from the Kentucky Derby forever if two of his
|> daughters had not asked him to come with them this year on their
|> first visit to the race.
|> 	Freeman, 71, is a grandson of Rosa Hoots, the Osage Indian who
|> owned 1924 Derby winner Black Gold, a horse whose glorious yet
|> tragic career inspired both a 1947 motion picture and a book that
|> took his name.
|> 	The Black Gold saga began with ``a race between two cheap horses
|> at a dusty fairgrounds in Chickasaw, Oklahoma, in May 1909,''
|> historian Peter Chew wrote in ``The Kentucky Derby: The First 100
|> Years.'' That day a mostly American Indian crowd watched the filly
|> Useeit, the dam of Black Gold, barely lose to a much larger and
|> stronger horse.
|> 	Al Hoots, an Irish-Indian rancher, was in the crowd and fell so
|> much in love with the small, mud-brown filly with the big heart
|> that he traded 80 acres of grazing land for her after the race.
|> 	Hoots nearly lost Useeit when he ran her in a claiming race at
|> Juarez, Mexico, in 1919, then pulled a gun on a man rather than
|> honor the claim. Hoots and his horse were barred from racing. He
|> died the next year, but legend has it that shortly before his
|> death, he had a vision that his beloved Useeit would foal a Derby
|> winner by the Kentucky stallion Black Toney.
|> 	That happened in 1921 when Black Gold was born in a field near
|> Col. E.R. Bradley's Idle Hour Stock Farm on Old Frankfort Pike near
|> Lexington. Rosa Hoots chose the colt's name because oil had been
|> discovered on Osage Indian lands.
|> 	Freeman was only 6 months old when Black Gold won the Kentucky
|> Derby and was only 5 when the horse died, yet the ebony
|> thoroughbred would forever be a part of his life and of racing
|> history.
|> 	Despite frequent lameness and abuse, Black Gold won 9-of-18
|> races as a 2-year-old, including the Bashford Manor Stakes at
|> Churchill Downs, where he fell to his knees during a collision, got
|> up and outran the field. A nail lodged in his already-sore right
|> forefoot in training as a 3-year-old, but his trainer refused
|> veterinary assistance.
|> 	The horse was limping slightly when he won the Derby Trial a few
|> days before the May 17 running of the Golden Jubilee Kentucky Derby
|> in 1924 -- the first year that a custom-crafted gold Derby trophy
|> was awarded to the winner. Rosa Hoots spent Derby Eve in a tack
|> room near Black Gold's stall.
|> 	Jockey J.D. Mooney rode Black Gold to the post the next day
|> against 18 top horses. But they were no match for ``the Indian
|> horse'' that carried his mother's heart, his father's Kentucky
|> blood, the luck of the Irish and the iron will of the Osage. He
|> disposed of them all in the stretch.
|> 	What happened to Black Gold thereafter is what Freeman has spent
|> a lifetime trying to forget.
|> 	The horse was lame after the Derby, but his hard-drinking
|> trainer raced him again in the Ohio State Derby a week later and
|> won. The horse had won 18 races before his foot ailment finally
|> relegated him to stud. Then it was discovered he was sterile.
|> 	His trainer brought the lame champion back to race. In January
|> 1928 he was running the horse at the Fair Grounds in New Orleans
|> when Black Gold's right foreleg snapped above the ankle.
|> 	Racing fans spilled onto the track, pulling hair from his mane
|> and tail for souvenirs as he lay suffering. He was put down and was
|> buried in the Fair Grounds infield. A Black Gold Handicap is still
|> run at the track each year, and a wreath is laid at the grave of
|> ``the Indian horse.''
|> 	The tragedies that befell his family, Black Gold and the Osage
|> people have troubled Freeman greatly, and only in recent years, he
|> says, has he been willing to discuss them with his 11 children.
|> 	``It was a tragedy to the family for so far back ... what
|> happened to everybody, including Black Gold,'' Freeman said. ``My
|> grandmother lost almost everything during the Depression and
|> carried all seven of her children to the cemetery. During the early
|> '30s, someone broke into her house in Tulsa and stole everything --
|> all the Derby trophies and silks -- everything.''
|> 	Freeman's mother died when he was 12, and he worked as an
|> exercise rider at tracks all over the country when he was a boy.
|> His father, a trainer, took him along on the racing circuit during
|> the summer. After his father died, when Freeman was 17, the young
|> man never returned to the track.
481.6681994 KY Derby wrapupDECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle Rain Festival: 1/1-12/31Wed May 11 1994 18:2665
    Well since nobody else did it, I'll close the loop on the 1994 KY
    Derby. 
    
    The race, as usual, didn't go according to script. I *love* it when the
    horses make *idiots* of the so-called experts broadcasting the race!
    
    Both the favorites got off to a bad start. Holy Bull broke flatfooted 
    and was immediately pinched off by the horses next to him. Brocco was 
    tossing his head in the gate and looked like he was practically sideways 
    when the gate opened! 
    
    Horses have broken badly in the KY Derby and won before. For example,
    Ferdinand was in much the same position in 1986. Here's where the
    potential Hall of Fame jockey separates himself/herself from the good
    journeyman (journey-person ? ;-) jockey. Mike Smith was patient and
    tried to work up through the field while getting Holy Bull to relax. 
    Gary Stevens hustled Brocco to get position quickly.
    
    Stevens had no horse left by the time they got to the top of the
    stretch. During the race call, Dave Johnson said that Brocco was 
    flying. NOT! He was struggling to maintain his pace. It just looked like
    he was passing horses because 2 of the 3 horses in front of him stopped!
    
    Smith took smarter approach with Holy Bull but to no avail. In the
    first turn, Valiant Nature had to check to avoid a horse that was 
    drifting out. The other horse drifted out even further causing Pincay
    to check Valiant Nature *again* and move him out from the rail. When VN 
    moved out, he clipped heels with Holy Bull. Smith said that HB spit the
    bit out and quit running after he got stepped on. Maybe so because he
    never ran a yard and, dosage or no dosage, he's better than that.
    
    Go For Gin went to the front, slowed down the pace(every 1/4 mile was 
    slower than the previous 1/4) and won. His front running victory made
    all the "experts" look like idiots! They said repeatedly that speed
    wasn't holding up on the wet track and that the stalkers or closers
    would win. HAH! That's why we run the races because analysis(including
    mine! ;-) is worthless! 
    
    Strodes Creek and Blumin Affair closed impressively off the snail's pace 
    for second and third, respectively. I expect to see some *very* good
    races from Strodes Creek as the season progresses. 
    
    Go For Gin will probably *not* win the Triple Crown. He got lucky last
    Saturday. He's by Cormorant, a NY sire who is known to sire "mudlarks".
    Most of GFG's wins have come on off tracks. Maybe Zito will take up rain
    dancing?
    
    Actually, if I had looked at GFG's pedigree more closely, I would have
    realized that he's very closely related to Pleasant Tap who was a top
    horse for 4 years in the US.
    
    Go For Gin and Pleasant Tap have the same dam, Never Knock. But, they
    are, in fact, 3/4 brothers because Cormorant(Go For Gin's sire) and
    Pleasant Colony(Pleasant Tap's sire) are by the same sire, His Majesty.
    
    Never Knock is a daughter of Stage Door Johnny who won the 1968 Belmont
    Stakes. Stage Door Johnny is a Princequillo line stallion. That line is 
    known for stamina as is the His Majesty sire line.
    
    BTW, the name Go For Gin is a play on his dam's name, Never Knock.The 
    owners are players of the card game called Gin Rummy. They say that every 
    gin rummy player knows that, if you never knock, you have to "go for
    gin".
    
    John
481.669Disproof by counter-exampleDECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle Rain Festival: 1/1-12/31Thu May 12 1994 17:5133
    Re 481.659 Handicapping angles
    
    >Hello KY Derby Fans:
    [big snip ]
    
    >Whoever is leading at the 1/8th pole has always won.
    
    Carl,
    
    You should tell Cindy Pierson that she is flat out wrong! (And you can
    say that I said so!)
    
    That didn't sound right when you reported it because I thought that the
    1987, 1991 and 1992 KY Derby winners(Alysheba, Strike The Gold and 
    Lil E Tee respectively) were *NOT* on the lead at the 1/8th pole. I 
    checked my videotapes of the races and I'm right. They were all *second* 
    passing the 1/8th pole and took the lead within the final furlong.
    Alysheba may have even been third at the 1/8th pole.You may recall that
    he clipped heels and nearly fell near the top of the stretch in his
    KY Derby. He recovered and came on to win but the camera angle on our
    tape is such that you can't really tell whether he was second or third
    passing the 1/8th pole.
    
    I did a little research and found that at least 2 more horses in the
    past 30 years have not been on the lead at the 1/8th pole. Proud
    Clarion in 1967 and Foolish Pleasure in 1975. Again, these 2 horses
    were second at the 1/8 pole.
    
    Still, the leader at the 1/8 pole has a high percentage(about 84%) of
    winning in the past 30 years or so. But, it's still a lousy
    handicapping angle since you can't use it to place a bet!
    
    John
481.670Easy goer dead....DELNI::KEIRANFri May 13 1994 13:259
    Easy Goer died yesterday at Claiborne Farms in Paris, KY at the
    age of 8.  He was best remembered for his rivalry with Sunday Silence
    in 1988, the son of Alydar won 14 of 20 starts with 5 seconds and one
    third and retired in 1990 with earnings of $4,873,770.
    
    His groom was giving a tour of the farm to a group of people, whistled
    for the horse who ran over to him.  He put the lead shank on him took
    him out of the paddock and he fell to his knees.  Shug McGaughey 
    is 99% sure it was a heart attack.
481.671bad name/announcerAKOCOA::LPIERCEThat's my StoryFri May 13 1994 14:1813
    
    Yesterday at Churchill downs there was a race with a horse who has
    a very unique name.  His is something like this "Imbeingshi*on"
    
    Well, the horse was winning the race and the announcer was having
    a hard time saying his name, the announcer cannot swear on the
    air, so we was calling him all kinds of names, names that didn't
    even sound close, evey name out of his mouth was a diff' name.  It
    was quite funny.
    
    Question:  Is there any rules on what you can name your horse?
    
    Lou
481.672how the standardbreds do it...DELNI::KEIRANFri May 13 1994 14:277
    In standardbred racing, a horses name can be a max of 18 letters,
    and a max of 4 words.  I'm really suprised they allowed that horse
    to have a name like that!  The other unique thing about harness horses
    is that New Zealand horses names end in N, Australian horses end in
    A, and horses from Great Britian end in GB.  For example, horses I
    have seen racing recently, Tree Fern N, Tane Scott N, Spare Bruce A
    etc.  That way you can tell where a horse came from!
481.673Jockey Club name gameDECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle Rain Festival: 1/1-12/31Fri May 13 1994 17:4652
    >a very unique name.  His is something like this "Imbeingshi*on"
    [snip]
    >Question:  Is there any rules on what you can name your horse?
    
    Did you happen to get a program? That would give the horse's name.
    I doubt that it really had fecal matter in it. I can believe that it 
    was something that could easily be pronounced so that it would *sound*
    like it. I can also believe that Battaglia was having as much trouble
    not saying the word as I am having in not typing it! (I'm assuming that
    the race caller was the usual track announcer, Mike Battaglia, rather
    than a substitute.)
    
    Yes, the Jockey Club has rules on what you can name a horse. I'm not
    sure I can recall all of them but they include things like:
    	1. No vulgarity
    	2. No re-use of names of horses that have raced within the last 10
    	   years. After 10 years, the name can be reused. For example, KY
    	   Derby winner, Unbridled was named after a minor stakes winner
    	   that Mrs Genter had owned 40 years earlier.
    	3. No re-use of the names of famous horses. No more Man O'War's or
    	   Secretariat's!
    	4. No use of names of celebrities without the celebrity's approval
    	5. No names from popular culture forms(music, films, literature)
    	6. No use of Jr., II(i.e. the second), etc. Note that the Jockey
           Club itself circumvented this rule with Nijinsky II. Nijinsky II
    	   was foaled in Canada and raced in the UK. He was registered
    	   there by the British Jockey Club as Nijinsky. When he was
    	   returned to the US for stud duty, our Jockey Club added the II
    	   because there was *already* a Nijinsky in their books.
    	7. No names that sound commercial. For example, Mr Mellon(Sea
    	   Hero's) owner wanted to name one of his horses "Rokeby". Our
    	   Jockey Club turned it down because he called his breeding farm
    	   Rokeby. Being rich and resourceful, he sent the horse to race in
    	   England where he registered it as Rokeby. I believe it won the
    	   Epsom Derby.
    
    Most of the rules are aimed at preventing confusion between horses.
    However, they don't always work. For example, which one of these horses
    won the 1991 KY Derby:
    	Seeking Gold
    	Seeking The Gold
    	Strike Gold
    	Strike The Gold
    	Tri For The Gold ????????????????
    
    I believe all those horses were graded stakes winners in North America
    in recent history(e.g. the past 3-5 years). P.S., I don't think those
    horses are closely related either. Some are by Mr Prospector, others by
    Alydar, etc... Now, if they were all sired by Gold Miner, I could
    understand the similarity of names......
    
    John
481.674it was the S word! REALLYAKOCOA::LPIERCEThat's my StoryFri May 13 1994 18:1212
    John,
    
    The name was spelled with the S word!  Infact Bryant Gumbel and them
    were talking about today on Today!  They could not belive it, they
    even played back the annoucner trying to annouce the name!  The
    person doing the newscast was trying to tell us what the horse
    name was so we subsituted the S word for Manua!  
    
    Bryan was wondering what the rules were to this nameing. You
    should call them and tell them what you know.
    
    Lou
481.675Sad newsEASI::GEENENIllud cape et ei fibulam adfige!Fri May 13 1994 19:4785
Hello TB Racing Fans:

Here's some sad news I picked up from the Internet:

Carl

---------------------------------------------------------------------------
	PARIS, Ky. (AP) -- Easy Goer, a champion whose rivalry with
Sunday Silence excited the horse racing world in 1989, died
Thursday at Claiborne Farm.
	The 8-year-old stallion died of natural causes, it was announced
by Thoroughbred Racing Communications.
	Easy Goer, a son of Alydar, won 14 of 20 starts, with five
seconds and one third, and retired in 1990 with earnings of
$4,873,770. He was the champion 2-year-old of 1988.
	In 1989, Easy Goer won his first three starts and was the
Kentucky Derby favorite, but finished second 2 1/2 lengths behind
Sunday Silence.
	Despite the defeat, the Ogden Phipps bred-and-owned colt was
again favored in the Preakness. Again he finished second to Sunday
Silence, this time by a half length after a stirring stretch duel.
	Easy Goer then ruined Sunday Silence's bid for the Triple Crown,
beating him by eight lengths in the Belmont Stakes.
	Easy Goer won the Travers and when the Breeders' Cup Classic was
held he was again favored over Sunday Silence. This time Sunday
Silence opened up a clear lead at the top of the stretch, then held
on for a neck victory.
	After winning the Suburban Handicap on July 4, 1990, Easy Goer
was retired because of a chip on his right front sesamoid.
	At stud, Easy Goer had 72 registered foals, 36 in each of his
first two crops (1992 and 1993). None has raced yet.

---------------------------------------------------------------------------
And another article:

^By ED SCHUYLER JR.=
^AP Racing Writer=
   His groom beckoned, and Easy Goer came running with the stride
and grace that made him a champion. Then he died.
   The 2-year-old champion of 1988, remembered for an intense
rivalry with Sunday Silence, died Thursday at Claiborne Farm in
Paris, Ky. He was 8.
   ``His groom was showing some people around on a tour,'' Shug
McGaughey, who trained Easy Goer for Ogden Phipps in 1988-89, said
by telephone from his home at Garden City, N.Y. ``He whistled for
him and he came running down. He put a shank on him and let him out
of the paddock. Then he went down on his knees, and it was all
over. He was dead in 10 seconds. I'm 99 percent sure it was a heart
attack.
   ``We're terribly disppointed. He meant a lot to me. He gave us
the opportunity to win a lot of races I'd never won before. I got
my first classic victory with in the Belmont.''
   In that 1989 race, Easy Goer, champion 2-year-old of the
previous year, denied Sunday Silence the Triple Crown after having
finished second to him in the Kentucky Derby and Preakness.
   Gus Koch, assistant manager farm manager at Claiborne, said an
autopsy will be performed at the diagnostic laboratory at the
University of Kentucky, but that results might not be known for a
week. Easy Goer will be buried at Claiborne, where he stood at
stud.
   ``We've got a few of his first crop of 2-year-olds here that we
light,'' McGaughey added. ``It looks like maybe he got off to a
good start at stud and now this happened.''
   Easy Goer, a son of Alydar, won 14 of 20 starts, with five
seconds and one third, and retired in 1990 with earnings of
   In 1989, Easy Goer won his first three starts and was the
Kentucky Derby favorite, but he finished second 2{ lengths behind
Sunday Silence.
   Despite the defeat, the colt, bred and owned by Phipps, was
again favored in the Preakness. Again he finished second to Sunday
Silence, this time by a half lengths after a stirring stretch duel.
   Easy Goer then ruined Sunday Silence's bid for the Triple Crown,
beating him by eight lengths in the Belmont Stakes.
   Easy Goer won the Travers and when the Breeders' Cup Classic was
held he was again favored over Sunday Silence. This time Sunday
Silence opened a clear lead at the top of the stretch, then held on
for a neck victory.
   After winning the Suburban Handicap July 4, 1990, Easy Goer was
retired because of a chip on his right front sesamoid.
   At stud, Easy Goer had 72 registered foals, 36 in each of his
first two crops (1992, 1993) and he was bred to 43 mares this year,
according to Koch.
   ``Unfortunately, there are no starters yet (among Easy Goer's
offspring),'' Koch said. ``But we probably could see one in the
next week to 10 days.''
481.676AKOCOA::LPIERCEThat's my StoryFri May 13 1994 20:045
    
    What is Seattle Slew(sp) doing now?  Is he still alive?  You never
    here about the old timers anymore.
    
    Lou
481.677re last fewDECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle Rain Festival: 1/1-12/31Mon May 16 1994 17:3322
    re last couple...
    
    > I'm being S*** on ... a TV network outgh to be capable of calling the 
    Jockey Club to find out about the naming rules. I'd be surprised if the 
    JC didn't contact them...
    
    > Easy Goer lost the Preakness to Sunday Silence by 1/2 length
    
    Easy Goer didn't lose by no steenking 1/2 length in the Preakness! It 
    was less than 1/2 *NOSTRIL*!!!! I know that those were quotes from 
    newspaper but even those dummies oughta know better than that! The 1989
    Preakness is widely acclaimed to be the race of the decade!
    
    >What is Seattle Slew(sp) doing now?  Is he still alive?  You never
    >here about the old timers anymore.
    
    Seattle Slew(spelling was correct) is alive and still breeding. He
    stands stud at Three Chimneys Farm in KY.
    
    Anytime you wanna know about such things, I'd be glad to llok them up
    in either the Blood Horse or their annual Stallion ad book which is as
    thick as a dictionary(college edition, not the unabridged ;-)!
481.678Preakness scratchesDECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle Rain Festival: 1/1-12/31Mon May 16 1994 17:5225
    Speaking of the Preakness...
    
    I heard on Friday that Brocco, Holy Bull and Strodes Creek will *NOT*
    run in the Preakness. No reason was given in the brief report I heard.
    I'll see what they say on Inside Racing tonight...assuming Sports
    Channel doesn't scratch it in favor of a high school softball game...
    
    There will still be plenty of speed up front: Go For Gin, Smilin Singin
    Sam, and a couple others are front runners/stalkers.
    
    Personally, I don't think it matters whether they scratched or not.
    IMHO, the winner will be either Robert Meyerhoff's Concern, his
    entrymate who ran in the Derby Trial but whose name I've forgotten or
    Charlie Whittingham's Numerous(Derby Trial winner) if he runs. 
    
    Concern has been rested since his impressive last-to-first victory in
    the Gr II Arkansas Derby 4 weeks ago. He'll be fresh and fit. It's also
    his home course because he's Maryland owned and trained. So, look out
    Go For Gin! Concern will be flying in the stretch.
    
    The Derby Trial has been a very important prep for the Preakness in
    recent years because it's 3 weeks prior. There aren't many other good
    stakes that week.
    
    John
481.679Speed KillsTFH::RUGGMon May 16 1994 20:218
    
    	Word has it that Silver Goblin worked three quarters of a mile
    in 1:10 1/5 on Sunday.  Seems there's plenty of speed on what many 
    call a "speed favoring track".  I'm in agreement, GFG will have his
    work cut out for him here.
    
    P.R.
     
481.680The Preakness fieldDECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle Rain Festival: 1/1-12/31Tue May 17 1994 17:5948
    The Preakness field this year will include only 6 horses that ran in the
    KY Derby: Go For Gin, Blumin Affair, Powis Castle, Silver Goblin,
    Tabasco Cat and Ulises.
    
    As I reported earlier, Holy Bull, Brocco and Strodes Creek have
    scratched. Holy Bull is being prepared for the Gr I Metropolitan Mile
    at Belmont. He'll run against older horses in that race. The distance
    and the track ought to suit him. Strodes Creek and Brocco are preparing
    for the Belmont Stakes on June 4th. Apparently, their trainers felt
    that the KY Derby had been too much of a strain on their young horses.
    
    Only 4 horses which did not run in the KY Derby are currently expected
    to run in the Preakness:
    	Concern(Gr II Arkansas Derby winner)
    	Numerous(Gr III Derby Trial winner)
    	Kandaly(Gr III Louisiana Derby winner; 4th in Gr I Blue Grass Stakes)
    	Polar Expedition(Gr II Jim Beam winner; last place in Gr II Illinois
    		Derby)
    
    Me? I like the fresh horses except Polar Expedition(especially if it
    rains as it did in Illinois). Go For Gin and Blumin Affair are also
    good candidates. 
    
    Given that field, I'd say that GFG will rate a little bit and let
    Ulises and Silver Goblin set the pace. If I remember right, Polar
    Expedition is a front runner too. With 3 speed horses up front, there
    is likely to be a speed duel which will set it up for a closer. 
    
    Concern, Blumin Affair and Kandaly all fit that description. I think
    Numerous stalks off the pace which also gives him a good chance. If GFG
    rates well and/or it rains, he's got a good chance. So, there you have
    it. I've ruled out 1/2 the field for various reasons(Ulises and Silver
    Goblin are over their heads in class & distance, Polar Expedition went 
    the wrong way in his last race, Tabasco Cat is probably tired from 
    a long campaign & may not want to go more than 9f, and Powis Castle has
    never impressed me as having Gr I winning potential)
    
    I expect top performances from Concern and Numerous. Blumin Affair will
    be running his third race within a 4 week span. He'll either peak or
    fade. Jack Van Berg prbably knows but he won't tell. Kandaly was
    scratched from the KY Derby because of the sloppy track so he has
    rested 5 weeks since his 4th in the Blue Grass. He shuold close well if
    there's a fast pace. The question is can he close faster than Concern?
    Concern, Blumin Affair and Kandaly all have that Silky Sullivan style
    where they are typically last and then charge like crazy in the final 3
    furlongs. Can they catch Go For Gin and Numerous? We'll see!
    
    I'm looking forward to a great race on Saturday.
481.681Preakness updateEASI::GEENENIllud cape et ei fibulam adfige!Fri May 20 1994 01:2737
Hello Racing Fans:

Here are the post positions for the Preakness Stakes at Pimlico:

1.  TABASCO CAT (Day)
2.  GO FOR GIN  (McCarron) 
3.  CONCERN  (Gomez)
4.  SILVER GOBLIN (Cordova)
5.  POWIS CASTLE  (Bartram)
6.  BLUMIN AFFAIR  (Bailey)
7.  LOOMING (Seefeldt)
8.  POLAR EXPEDITION (Bourque)
9.  KANDALY  (Perret)
10. NUMEROUS (Valenzuela -- Eddie D. sick)

Looks like the speedsters should have no trouble getting to the front.
Tabasco Cat may have an easy trip along the rail, but according to talk
from Pimlico on the Internet, there is no rail speed bias.  I'll wait
'til I see the DRF before I make any predictions, although I really like
Looming's breeding.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Preakness Day Forecast update:

Things are looking rather good now.  Only one model
still gives Baltimore a chance for clouds and showers
on Saturday.  All the others indicate sunny, warm (mid '70s)
and low humidity.  I will go with the concensus and
say ideal weather and a fast, dry track at the Old Hilltop.   
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Thanks to Smitty of the NOAA for the Pimlico weather information.

It also looks like the weather will be good enough to hinder GFG's chances
and keep Polar Expedition and Kandaly from scratching.  Both of their
trainers made it widely known earlier in the week that if the weather
turned sour, they wouldn't run.

Carl
481.682PREAKNESS PICKSMKOTS3::ADAMS_TSat May 21 1994 11:567
    I WILL TRY MY LUCK ON THE PREAKNESS AND PICK TABASCO CAT TO WIN 
    THEN I WILL PUT SOME PERFECTAS/EXACTAS WITH GFG, LOOMING,POLAR EXP,
    AND BLUMIN AFFAIR.IMO GFG IS THE CLASS I THINK HE MIGHT BE TIRED
    FROM THE DERBY AND HE ALSO WON'T GET THE LEAD TODAY.IF HE DOES 
    OH WELL I'VE BEEN WRONG BEFORE.
    
                                                TOM 
481.6831994 PreaknessDECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle Rain Festival: 1/1-12/31Sun May 22 1994 18:2214
    >OH WELL I'VE BEEN WRONG BEFORE.
    
    Not this time! I had picked Concern and Kandaly both ways in Exactas. 
    They finished right but 6 lengths back of Tabasco Cat!
    
    I was amazed that the pace was so slow. Polar Expedition and Silver
    Goblin were up front with Go For GIn but nobody wanted to push the
    pace. They went about as slow as GFG did on the Derby lead(1:11 4/5
    for 6f and 1:37 at the mile mark) and closers had *no* chance of
    catching them. 
    
    GFG and TC strolled home in an extremely slow 1:56 and change.
    
    Pace makes the race and it sure did this time. 
481.684Me TooEASI::GEENENIllud cape et ei fibulam adfige!Mon May 23 1994 15:1077
    I didn't get the DRF until late Friday night so I didn't get a chance
    to post my Preakness picks.  I'd said in my last note that I liked
    Looming's breeding.  After looking at the DRF I still liked his
    breeding, but not his track record.  He'd have to run the race of
    his life (like Rockamundo last year in the Arkansas Derby) to have
    any chance of beating this group.
    
    On the Internet, the talk about Pimlico was that speed was holding up
    well, but there were very few wire-to-wire winners.  This means that
    most races were being won by off-the-pace horses and not speedsters
    or closers.  I should have taken this advice.
    
    Based on my examination of the DRF, I'd separated the entrants into 3
    groups:  speedsters, off-the-pace horses, and closers.  Of the speed
    horses, Go For Gin was my top candidate with Silver Goblin being my
    second choice.  The best of the off-the-pace bunch was Tabasco Cat and
    Powis Castle in that order.  The best of the closers was, IME, Blumin
    Affair and Concern.  But for betting, I figured there was not much
    value in either GFG, TC, or BA, and they were indeed the crowd faves.
    So I settled on Silver Goblin.  Bad bet as it turned out. SG's hopes
    went out the window almost out of the gate when he didn't break as
    quickly as is his usual style.  By the first turn, Polar Expedition
    had gotten to the front along the rail with GFG to his immediate
    outside and slightly behind, and SG another lane outside of GFG and a
    little further back.  Let's see, not an optimum break plus a wide trip
    was spelling disaster for SG, and for my bet.  SG continued his wide
    ways and by the time he got to the top of the stretch he had nothing
    left.  SG finished 7th, well beaten.  Word is that he came back lame
    after the race.
    
    The early leader Polar Expedition finished last.  PE was much bally-
    hooed on the Internet, but I didn't see where he did much spectacular
    in the DRF past performances.  He won a few races, but I didn't see
    where he beat many horses of any importance and his Beyer Speed Figures
    were not impressive.  While I don't use BSFs as an end-all-be-all
    factor in my handicapping, when a horse's BSFs are so much lower than
    other horses' BSFs, and PE's were, there must be a reason.
    
    Blumin Affair looked pretty darn good on paper, but he never fired to
    form down the stretch.  While this might add credence to the idea that
    speed was holding up well at Pimlico, thus discounting the chances of
    closers, BA "flipped a palate" during the race and was never a factor.
    
    Tabasco Cat had a fairly easy rail trip, laying just off the leaders.
    He moved up within a length of PA and GFG on the far turn and when
    GFG asserted his lead over a tiring PA, TC was also there to mount his
    challenge.  By the 1/8th pole, the outcome was pretty much certain.
    Powis Castle was out of it, and of the closers only Concern, and to
    a lesser extent Kandaly, were gaining any ground.  But GFG's and TC's
    lead was never in any danger of being overtaken.  TC's "mini-surge"
    about the 1/16th pole was too much for GFG to overcome, although he
    did hold on gamely to lose by only 3/4 length.  I'm sure the DRF's
    past performances comments for GFG will say something like "gamely"
    or "second best".
    
    Numerous, after that wide and wild start (shades of Halo's Image,
    except at the start instead of the stretch), was able to salvage 5th
    place.  Kandaly finished 4th, I think, and word is that he bled and
    Lamarque will rest him awhile.
    
    For TC's victory, thre must be a sense of vindication in the Lucas
    camp.  TC, as may be recalled, was the horse that almost ended Jeff
    Lucas' life last December, when TC got away from handlers and ran over
    Jeff, causing him serious head injuries.  Jeff's wife hated the horse
    for some time (who wouldn't?) and even wanted him put down at one
    point.  When TC failed in the KY Derby, it seemed like the pall of
    doom was still hanging over their heads.  But Jeff and Wayne never
    lost hope and remained confident that TC would vindicate himself.  Did
    anyone notice TC's fractious paddock behavior?
    
    GFG's and TC's humans say they'll be at the Belmont June 11th.  They'd
    be crazy not to.  If it's anything like last year, there's $1 million
    at stake for the horse that compiles the best triple crown record.
    Unless GFG breaks down (heaven forbid!!) looks like he has a lock on
    the dough.
    
    Carl
481.685belmontMKOTS3::ADAMS_TMon May 23 1994 15:289
    carl
    I thought chrysler cancelled the million dollar bonus after last year.
    Im sure that they'll both show up for the belmont as long as they came
    out of the preakness healthy. I think that is why whittingham chose
    not to run strodes creek in the preakness because there wasn't any
    bonus.it should still shape up to be a big field in the belmont.
    
    
                                                            tom
481.686You beat me to itEASI::GEENENIllud cape et ei fibulam adfige!Mon May 23 1994 15:4411
    RE -.1
    
    I was just about to correct my last note, having just learned from the
    Internet that the bonus was no longer being offered.  It was said that
    the bonus was discontinued because of Union City's and Prairie Bayou's
    breakdowns and the conjecture that the lure of the big bucks might
    cause some to run not completely sound horses just to get the money.
    But I don't think Whittingham would fit into that category, bonus or
    not.
    
    Carl
481.687DECWET::DADDAMIODesign Twice, Code OnceMon May 23 1994 19:398
    Chrysler is still offering the $5 million bonus for winning the Triple
    Crown.  It's just the $1 million for the best if no one wins all three
    that was withdrawn.  The winning jockey in each race still gets a car.
    
    I can't remember exactly but I think Whittingham did say in a interview
    that he would have entered Strodes Creek if there was a bonus.
    
    						Jan
481.688Another rambleDECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle Rain Festival: 1/1-12/31Mon May 23 1994 20:348
    Yes, Whittingham did say he would have entered Strodes Creek if there
    was a bonus. He also said that he's glad to have the option of resting
    Strodes Creek until the Belmont. Both those comments make me think 
    he's pretty confident about winning the Belmont. Think about it. A
    Belmont win and a 2nd place KY Derby finish would have put Strodes
    Creek in the thick of it for the $1,000,000 bonus. 
    
    John
481.689Internet commentsEASI::GEENENIllud cape et ei fibulam adfige!Thu May 26 1994 01:3948
Hello TB racing fans:

I posted John D'Addamio's "dosage-smosage" comments to the Internet Derby,
expecting to generate a discussion that would attract opinions from either
extreme.  But the only reply was the following excerpt, which tends to
support John's position in no uncertain terms.

---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Tony Morris' column "Across the Pond" in Thurs DRF (May 19)
is entitled "Dosage proponents just like Flat-Earthers"

Here is an excerpt:

"Dosage is the most idiotic theory yet devised by man in 
relation to the racehorse.  It has been proven to be a 
false idol, but its devotees carry on regardless, luring the
gullible into ways of thinking that cannot add to anyone's
true understanding of the game.  There is no more logic in
saying that Holy Bull was beaten because his dosage was wrong
than in suggesting that he was the public's No. 1 choice."

(end excerpt)
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
I also posted John's comments about the relative importance of the KY Derby
and it attracted only one comment:

Golden Gate Carl posted an article from another newsgroup about how Col.
Matt Winn made the derby what it is from, according to the writer of the
original, promotion. The poster went on to say how the British classics
are better. (Blah, blah, read it--it's a few posts back.) Well, good.
Fine. Thank you Matt Winn for giving me something to do during the
spring, particularly two weeks from the event, particularly something so
exciting.

(end comment)
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
My guess is that the writer of the above comments is not supportive of
John's position.

In the Internet Derby, I'm known as "Golden Gate" Carl so people won't get
me confused with "Santa Anita" Carl or any of the other Carl's that
frequent the Internet Derby.  Really, I don't hang out at the racetrack on
a regular basis and I wouldn't want anyone to get the idea that I squander
the rent money and leave my spouse at home alone.  Actually it's *her* that
squanders the rent money and leaves *me* at home alone.  We call her
"Master Card" Marie.  Just kidding!!  ;>{)

Carl
481.690It's just the seventh race at ChurchillDECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle Rain Festival: 1/1-12/31Thu May 26 1994 17:1229
>Golden Gate Carl posted an article from another newsgroup about how Col.
>Matt Winn made the derby what it is from, according to the writer of the
>original, promotion. The poster went on to say how the British classics
>are better. (Blah, blah, read it--it's a few posts back.) 
    
    This person should take his own advise and re-read my comments. I never
    said that the British classics were better. The closest I came to
    saying anything of the sort was "European 3 YO classics are more
    famous and more important to Europeans and many Americans." The only
    thing I said about British 3 YO Classics was that the Derby at Epsom 
    was the original. (See 481.649)
    
>Fine. Thank you Matt Winn for giving me something to do during the
>spring, particularly two weeks from the event, particularly something so
>exciting.
    If this single race is the highlight of this person's spring, they
    better get a life! It's only 2 minutes and as one trainer said many years
    ago, "It's just the seventh race at Churchill on the first Saturday in
    May." Of course, it's no  longer the 7th race but you get the idea!
    
Re who squanders the rent money and leaves the other at home...
    Why not take Master Card Marie to the track with you. Husbands and
    wives should share the important responsibility of squandering the rent 
    money! ;-) That way neither can point fingers at the other..
    
    Just remember "There is hardly a man now alive that paid the rent
    betting at 3 to 5"
    
    John
481.691Horse SenseEASI::GEENENIllud cape et ei fibulam adfige!Thu May 26 1994 17:3050
Hello TB Racing Fans:

    RE: -.1  I'm sure glad my wife doesn't have access to this conference
    or the Internet Derby.  If I were to take her to the track with me,
    she'd lose the rest of our money!!  But then, she'd probably bet
    on horses just going by their names and win a fortune!!
    
A recent Internet Derby thread concerns the cognitive processes of TB race
horses.  In other words, what do TBs know about racing and their environ-
ment, if anything.  Here are some of the questions that have been asked:

1. Does a horse know where the finish line is?

2. Are horses aware that they've just won or lost the race?

3. Do horses know how long the race is and pace themselves?

4. Does a horse know that he/she is about to be in a race?

Not knowing much about horses, but applying what I know about cats, I'd
have to think that horses pick up most of their cues from what is going on
around them and how people are behaving in their presence.

I think that horses do not know where the finish line is.  The jockey's
behavior tells the horse that they're near the end (all the whipping and
arm pumping) and when the jockey stands up, that's the end.  In long races
like the KY Derby, the horses don't stop when they go by the finish line
the first time.  On the other hand, horses like Halo's Image tell me that
they know where the exit back to the barn is!!

Lots of praise and pats and a sudden crowd and the flash of cameras
probably let the horse "know" that it has just won the race, as opposed to
none of that happening meaning that it has just *not* won.

If horses are anything like cats, they're creatures of habit.  From their
training, horses probably have a fair idea of how fast to run at differnet
places around the track, but I'll bet that it also takes cues from the
jockey to reinforce the effort.  After all, the horse doesn't train or race
by itself.

Human activity on race day probably gives horses clues that it is about to
run in a race (that habit stuff, again).  And when the get led to the
paddock and get a saddle on their backs, I think they have it pretty much
figured out by then.

Interesting questions, no?  What does anyone else think?  I don't think
I'm too far off on this one, but I've been wrong before:  I bet on Silver
Goblin in the Preakness!!

Carl
481.692Awareness or 'conditioning'?DECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle Rain Festival: 1/1-12/31Fri May 27 1994 18:0089
>    RE: -.1  I'm sure glad my wife doesn't have access to this conference
>    or the Internet Derby.  If I were to take her to the track with me,
>    she'd lose the rest of our money!!  But then, she'd probably bet
>    on horses just going by their names and win a fortune!!

Did you watch "Cheers" on TV? There was one story where Woody placed a 
parlay bet on sports that he didn't know anything about. He just played
team names that "jumped out and grabbed him." Some people are like that.
I think that's as valid a way to play as any other. 
    
>A recent Internet Derby thread concerns the cognitive processes of TB race
>horses.  In other words, what do TBs know about racing and their environ-
>ment, if anything.  Here are some of the questions that have been asked:

>1. Does a horse know where the finish line is?

>I think that horses do not know where the finish line is.  The jockey's
>behavior tells the horse that they're near the end (all the whipping and
>arm pumping) and when the jockey stands up, that's the end.  In long races
>like the KY Derby, the horses don't stop when they go by the finish line
>the first time.  On the other hand, horses like Halo's Image tell me that
>they know where the exit back to the barn is!!

Mild disagreement here. I think they do know where it is from repeated
experience but I don't think they have the conceptual ability to consider
it anything except a place marker. After a horse has shown what it's best
distance is, I'd think they know what happens at "this place" in a race
from experience whether they pass the place once or twice. In other words, 
they have learned which time passing the marker is the one where they run 
the hardest.

>2. Are horses aware that they've just won or lost the race?

>Lots of praise and pats and a sudden crowd and the flash of cameras
>probably let the horse "know" that it has just won the race, as opposed to
>none of that happening meaning that it has just *not* won.

Strictly speaking, I'd say that horses  don't know that they've just won 
or lost a race because they don't have the conceptual ability to put such 
names on their experiences. However, the sport of racing is based on 
several equine instincts(flight from harm and dominance) which are probably
reinforced by human behavior after the race. In other words, I think they
can learn that "getting to that place before the others" is a good thing.

Of course, there are horses like John Henry who *everybody* who ever
worked around him claimed knew whether he won or lost. He'd stop before and
after a race and look at the infield board. They used to joke that before
a race he was checking the odds. After the race, they said he was checking 
to see if he beat the one he wanted to beat.

>3. Do horses know how long the race is and pace themselves?

>If horses are anything like cats, they're creatures of habit.  From their
>training, horses probably have a fair idea of how fast to run at differnet
>places around the track, but I'll bet that it also takes cues from the
>jockey to reinforce the effort.  After all, the horse doesn't train or race
>by itself.

I'd say that they know from experience how fast to run at different points 
too. But, I don't think they know how long a race is. Take horses like
Bien Bien who runs at distances of 9 to 14 furlongs. When he goes to the 
gate, I don't think he has a clue how far he's going in that race. However,
once he's into the race, he knows what to do on the backstretch, to move
going into the turn and run like crazy down the stretch.

I'd also agree that it usually takes cues from the jockey. There are
always a few "professional" racehorses around that anybody who can make 
the weight could get home as winners. Again, John Henry was such a horse.
Every jock who rode him said that John Henry knew what to do and that they
were just passengers. His jockeys included Hall-of-Famers like Shoemaker 
and McCarron among others so we ain't talking about somebody who didn't know
the difference!

>4. Does a horse know that he/she is about to be in a race?
>
>Human activity on race day probably gives horses clues that it is about to
>run in a race (that habit stuff, again).  And when the get led to the
>paddock and get a saddle on their backs, I think they have it pretty much
>figured out by then.

Agreed. Probably their first clue is the feeding schedule changes that occur
on race day. Second clue, handling and exercise changes. So, yeah, they know.

    In other words, I think most of a racehorses "awareness" about races
    and raceday events are what pschologists/behaviorists would call
    "conditioning" (i.e. repeated pairing of circumstances and behavior)
    rather than cognitive reasoning abliity.
    
    John
481.693Krone's comebackDECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle Rain Festival: 1/1-12/31Fri May 27 1994 18:2031
    Julie Krone is riding races again 10 months after her spill at
    Saratoga. She had 2 mounts on Weds at Belmont. The first of her 2 rides
    was in the fourth race. The press was following her around like it was
    the event of the year. Her mount went off the favorite because the
    public was betting emotionally("Julie's back! Bet on her!"). The horse
    should have gone off at something like 6-1 but went of at even money.
    
    Krone managed a respectable third in that race. Her other mount got
    home fourth.
    
    Yesterday, she had 2 more mounts. The first race she rode had several
    ironic aspects: 
    	1. It was a turf race like the one in which she fell at Saratoga
    	2. The mare she was riding(Consider The Lily) hadn't raced since 
    	   the day Krone fell
    	3. The jockey who caused the Saratoga spill was riding the
    	   entrymate of Krone's mount.
    
    Consider The Lily is one of Krone's personal favorites. She just
    likes the mare's personaility and ability. They laid off the pace and
    moved to the front at the head of the stretch. The entrymate made a
    late move and looked for a minute like catching Krone & Consider The
    Lily. But, Lily responded to Krone's hand ride to win by 2 lengths.
    
    A little alter on the card, Krone got her  lonshot mount home second to
    pay over $10 on a $2 show bet! This was Krone's first race back where 
    the public hadn't bet with their hearts. 
    
    Not a bad beginning for a comeback: a win, place, show and fourth from 4 
    mounts. 
    
481.694it works for me...GRANMA::JWOODTue May 31 1994 13:2612
    betting on names...
    
    Last year at Pimlico on the day before the Preakness, my wife and I
    made our annual trip to the races.  Since my lifelong ambition has been
    to have a horse of my own and my dream has always been to have enough
    land to keep it at home  (we call our place Wood'n Horses) -- I couldn't
    pass up John's Ambition and Wooden Dreams as an Exacta bet.  It came in
    and paid around $ 85.
    
    I'm convinced; how about you?
    
    John Wood of Wood'n Horses
481.695Handicapping with catsEASI::GEENENIllud cape et ei fibulam adfige!Tue May 31 1994 14:2421
    Yesterday, my wife and I went to Golden Gate Fields for a day at the
    races.  I was interested to see if "Master Card" Marie could pick 'em
    any better than I could.  She picks the horses that poop in the paddock
    but only if they're pretty too and have a cute name.  At the end of 4
    races, she was 3 for 4 and ahead almost $50 on $2 bets.  I was 1 for
    4 and ahead $23.  Our cat, Newton, an 8 month-old Devon Rex was 1 for 1
    and ahead $15.20.
    
    Earlier that morning I had the DRF spread out open on the floor and
    little Newton came up to see what I was doing.  He sniffed at the paper
    and tested the surface with a carefully placed paw.  His paw hit right
    on "I Like Your Zeal" a horse in the fourth race.  My wife was watching
    the whole thing and decided that Newton wanted us to place a bet for
    him.  Coming down the stretch, the horse burst from the pack and
    overtook the favorite at the wire.  A lot of longshots came in
    yesterday.  They were all pretty horses, had cute names, and pooped or
    were pawed by a cat!!
    
    I think I'm going to start publishing Marie and Newton's Tip Sheet.
    
    Carl
481.696PPPCNPCIVS1::WOODTue May 31 1994 14:355
    Thanks, Carl you made MY day...
    
    A future poop, paw, pretty, cute name bettor...
    
    John
481.697Soviet ProblemEASI::GEENENIllud cape et ei fibulam adfige!Tue May 31 1994 16:3727
    Yesterday's feature race at Golden Gate Fields was the 6 furlong
    8th race that included some of the top west coast sprinters:
    Soviet Problem, based at GGF and two shippers from SOCAL, Sir Hutch
    and Gundaghia.  On paper, it looked to be a two horse race between
    Soviet Problem and Sir Hutch.
    
    Soviet Problem is the filly who a couple of weeks back blew the doors
    off of the stallion Lazor in a much ballyhooed match race (the first
    match race in about 100 years in NORCAL) at GGF.
    
    The gate opened and SP ran right to the front and never looked back.
    Sir Hutch came out of the gate flat-footed and could never catch up.
    SH finished last.  Gundaghia gained a little ground in the late
    stretch but not enough too late.  SP's lead was too much to overcome.
    
    BTW, SP is a very pretty horse and performed a rather large paddock
    defacation.  Although the name is not cute, per se, it is intriguing:
    "How could they name a horse Soviet Problem when the iron curtain has
    come down and they're no longer a problem?"  Therefore, the horse is
    not going to be a problem and, in fact, will win the race.  Which she
    did.
    
    SP went off at about even money and paid $4.20.  Yours truly was looking
    for better value and settled on Gundaghia at 5-1.  The cat passed this
    race.
    
    Carl
481.698Holy Cow!DECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle Rain Festival: 1/1-12/31Fri Jun 03 1994 22:0841
    Oh Carl, Thanks for the laffs! I'm gonna miss you if you get sold
    into slavery....
    
    Speaking of Golden Gate horses vs So Cal Horses... That nice GG mare,
    Work The Crowd, went down to Hollywood Park over the
    weekend and whooped every good filly/mare that entered the Honeymoon
    Handicap. I think it's a Gr III at 8.5 furlongs. It was her first race
    in open company. She'd been winning stakes restricted to California bred
    horses prior to this.
    
    The major stakes races Memorial Day weekend were Monday in NY and
    LA(Belmont Park and Hollywood Park respectively). Belmont featured the
    Gr I Metropolitan Handicap(8f for 3 & up) and HP featured the Hollywood 
    Turf Handicap(Gr I at 10 furlongs).
    
    The Hollywood Turf Handicap was supposed to be a showdown between
    Breeders' Cup Classic winner, Arcangues and SO Cal turf star, Bien
    Bien. It wasn't. Arcangues broke on top from his outside post
    position(post 12) but Eddie Dellahoussaye wanted to stalk the pace. 
    So, Eddie D took him back a little so that he was second going into the
    first turn. This is a bit of a change since Arcangues' style was that of
    a closer in every race I've seen Arcangues run. Chris McCarron also
    changed tactics with Bien Bien and took him back a little farther than
    usual. That may have been the key to the race. 
    
    Arcangues faded down the backstretch and was never in serious
    contention after that. Bien Bien had some traffic problems and had to
    go very wide in both turns. Grand FLotilla (who ?) saved all sorts of
    ground and finally got through on the rail when the leaders faded. He
    got up by 2 lengths over Bien Bien. Bien Bien ran pretty well. He just
    got beat by a horse of similar ability who got a better trip.
    
    In NY, Holy Bull faced a *STELLAR* field of older horses in the Met
    Hcap. The field included Devil His Due, Virginia Rapids, Colonial
    Affair and Cheorkee Run among others. All 4 that I named have won Gr I
    stakes going a route.
    
    I'll make a mile race short. It was Holy Bull gate-to-wire winning by 6
    lengths in a time of 1:34 and change. It was the single most impressive
    race by a 3 YO I have seen this season. Cheorkee Run took second by
    a nostril over Devil His Due.
481.699Did a wasp sting kill Easy Goer?DECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle Rain Festival: 1/1-12/31Mon Jun 06 1994 20:5037
From the May 28 1994 The Blood Horse:

"EASY GOER: ANAPHYLACTIC SHOCK

Anaphylactic shock caused the death of Easy Goer, autopsy results show.
Claiborne Farm, where Easy Goer stood, released the findings on May 23, 
11 days after the 8-year-old son of Alydar collapsed in his paddock and died.

The postmortem, performed at the University of Kentucky's Livestock Disease
Diagnostic Center, also revealed that Easy Goer was suffering from 
mangiosarcoma, a cancer that originates in the vascular system. The 
malignancy, thought to have developed first in the spleen, had metastasized
to the liver, lungs and mesentery(the sheet of connective tissue that 
suspends the intestines).

The cancer "was probably not related" to Easy Goer's death, but eventually
would have been fatal, said Gus Koch, Claiborne's assistant farm manager.

Anaphylactic shock is a severe and sometimes fatal systemic reaction. The
victim typically is a susceptible individual who is exposed to a specific
antigen, such as wasp venom, after previous sensitization. Koch said it
had not been determined what had triggered the reaction in Easy Goer. "We 
do know that it wasn't an injection because he hadn't been given one," he
said.

A homebred raced by Ogden Phipps, Easy Goer was champion 2 year-old male of
1988. He won 12 added-money-events and earned $4,873,770. Easy Goer entered
stud in 1991."

In an earlier issue, TBH had printed an obituary containing information
previously posted here, so I didn't repeat it. The only additional 
information in their earlier report was that Easy Goer had bred a mare about
5 1/2 hours before his death and that he had been scheduled to bred later
that afternoon. They also mentioned how many mares he had already bred 
this season but none of that matters much.

John
481.700Danzig: Fifth sire of 100 SWsDECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle Rain Festival: 1/1-12/31Tue Jun 07 1994 18:3635
    According to an article in the May 21 Blood Horse, the prominent sire,
    Danzig, was recently represented by his 100th stakes winner. His
    daughter Polonia won the Sixty Sails(a Gr III race for fillies) and
    made Danzig only the *fifth* stallion in history to sire 100 or more
    stakes winners.
    
    Maybe I should have saved the rest of this for a trivia question but 
    here goes. Danzig's sire, Northern Dancer, was the first stallion to
    sire 100 stakes winners. Before Northern Dancer the record was held by 
    Nasrullah who had sired 98 stakes winners. The Blood Horse says that
    Nasrullah was mistakenly credited with 99 for many years but that the
    correct figure is 98.
    
    The second horse to sire 100 SWs was another son of Northern Dancer,
    Nijinsky II. Here's a table with somee stats on all 5 stallions
    
    Name  		#SWs	% 	Date of 100th SW & Stallion's Age 
    				of all			   at the time
    				foals
    Nijinsky II 	149	18%	November 1987; aged 20
    Northern Dancer	146	23%	December 1983; aged 22
    Mr. Prospector	130	15%	August 1990; aged 20
    Riverman		104	12%	May 1993; aged 24
    Danzig		100	18%	May 1994; aged 17
    
    
    Some of Danzig's famous offpsring are Lure(Breeders Cup Mile winner
    twice), Danzig Connection(Belmont Stakes winner), Dance
    Smartly(Canadian Triple Crown winner, Breeders Cup Distaff winner)
    Pine Bluff(Preakness winner), and Versailles Treaty.
    
    Not bad for an unsound horse who only ran in 3 races(winning all 3) and 
    never ran in a stakes race! I'll bet Claiborne is glad Woody Stephens
    talked them into syndicating this horse!
    
481.701Disappointing BelmontDECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle Rain Festival: 1/1-12/31Mon Jun 13 1994 21:0256
    Was anybody else as disappointed in the Belmont Stakes as I was?
    Tabasco Cat over Go For Gin by 2 lengths with Strodes Creek third.
    
    All season long, the racing press has been saying that this crop of 3 YOs
    was the best in many years, etc. From my perspective, they're not any
    different than last year's crop which the same press said were the
    worst in years because they kept beating each other in races with 
    mediocre final times. You could(and *I* do) say the same about this
    year's 3 YO's. 
    
    The Belmont was just another such case. On a day when 2 track records
    fell as well as a North American record for 7 furlongs(1:20) on the 
    previous day(i.e. Friday), I expected a bang-up race in the Belmont.
    BTW, the 7 furlongs in 1:20 was on the turf in the Jaipur Stakes(Gr
    III) which was so full that they had to run 2 divisions. The second
    division ran the 7 furlongs in 1:20 1/5. One of the track records set
    Saturday was for 10 furlongs on the turf in 1:57 3/5 in the Gr I
    Manhattan.
    
    The Belmont was *far* from that! The first mile went in 1:35 2/5 which 
    is a decent time for claimers. However, I remind you that the great 
    gelding John Henry ran his last serious *workout* before his retirement 
    in 1985 in 1:35 flat. The point is that this was *not* a sizzling pace 
    for the first mile.
    
    They got even slower coming home! After 10 furlongs, the clock
    read 2:00 2/5. Compare that to the 10 furlong turf time! The good news 
    is that it was faster than this year's KY Derby but I credit the 
    "improvement" to the dry, hard Belmont track. 
    
    If you do the arithmetic, you'll see that they had slowed down and ran 
    the 9th and 10th furlongs in 24 4/5 seconds where they had averaged a 
    little under 24 seconds for each of the first 4 quarter mile segments. 
    
    It got worse! They slowed down to 26 2/5 for the final quarter mile
    finishing in 2:26 4/5. Now, if you look through the Belmont history, 
    2:26 4/5 looks pretty good because it rates in the top 10 times. But,
    the track was playing *very* fast due to the recent lack of rain in NY.
    Add about 3 seconds to compensate for track bias and the time doesn't
    look so good. (I picked 3 seconds because the turf time was over 2.8
    seconds faster for 10 furlongs).
    
    The Triple Crown races this year have produced *no* impressive
    performances except for the consistency of Go For Gin. GFG seems to be
    a sound, hardknocking colt but he ain't brilliant. IMHO, the best of
    this 3 YO crop didn't run or didn't perform well in the Triple Crown.
    Holy Bull(who showed an abnormal blood count for a few days after the
    KY Derby) was *brilliant* beating older horses in the Met Mile. Brocco
    Ihrgun and Dehere have beaten Tabasco Cat and Go For Gin earlier this
    season at 8-9 furlongs and should be capable of beating them easily at 
    10 to 12 furlongs. All 3 are injured at the moment. When they are back 
    in good health, we'll see decent 3 YO racing but unless they show
    something better than GFG and Tabasco Cat at 10 furlongs and beyond,
    I'll write this crop off as mediocre for any races of substance.
    
    John
481.702Slight differenceGBLAUT::JANICKIV. Janicki DCE Engineering DTN 226-5980Mon Jun 13 1994 21:1322
Hi John,

I enjoyed the Belmont this year. I like Go For Gin because he
always tries and tries hard. I was a bit surprised at Tabasco Cat's
win since I didn't even consider him and thought he was finished on the
far turn when Go For Gin opened up a couple of lengths on the field.

But in retrospect, the 3 year olds are lacking in being other than 
consistent. I don't see these horses being able to find that extra
gear when needed.

I think Holy Bull is a tremendous sprinter. I still have my doubts on how 
far he can go in tough company. I am anxious to see if those on the injured
reserve list return to make the fall interesting.

Does anyone else think that Strodes Creek is not the horse everyone wants
him to be? The excuse in the Belmont where he finished thirds was that
he shied from the crowd noise again. He looks like a nice colt, but I
don't think he will live up the expectations. I was not impressed by
his Belmont run. He just flattened out in the stretch.

Vicky
481.7033 YOs againDECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle Rain Festival: 1/1-12/31Mon Jun 13 1994 23:0528
    re 
    >Does anyone else think that Strodes Creek is not the horse everyone
    >wants
    >him to be? The excuse in the Belmont where he finished thirds was that
    >he shied from the crowd noise again. He looks like a nice colt, but I
    >don't think he will live up the expectations. I was not impressed by
    >his Belmont run. He just flattened out in the stretch.
    
    Yes, I was disappointed in the performance of Strodes Creek in the
    Belmont. After the KY Derby, I figured he would win the Belmont. As for
    the excuse, I find it difficult to accept that as the reason he
    finished third. I grant you that he did run greenly through the stretch
    but I don't think he was going to close any farther on Tabasco Cat.
    
    Don't feel lonely in having overlooked Tabasco Cat. I got the
    impression from some of the interviews with Lucas that *he* had his
    doubts about the horse getting 12f in Gr I company!
    
    Re Holy Bull.
    I think his best distance is about 1 mile; maybe 8.5f which is typical
    of his sire's get. Most of them are 7f sprinters with a fair proportion
    able to get 8f or 8.5f. He's the *only* horse by Great Above to have
    won *any* race(claiming, allowance or stake) at a distance of 9f or
    more. And, Holy Bull "stole" the couple 9f stakes that he won. (FYI,
    "stealing" a race refers to a "speed" horse going to the front and 
    setting very slow fractions so as to reserve enough energy to repel 
    challenges in later parts of a race )...Anyway, I too doubt he's a 10f
    Gr I horse.
481.7043 YO *FILLIES*?DECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle Rain Festival: 1/1-12/31Mon Jun 13 1994 23:2123
    In other Gr I races this weekend...
    
    The 3 YO filly, Hollywood Wildcat, switched to the turf and challenged 
    Flawlessly(perennial champion turf mare) in the 8.5f Gamely Handicap. 
    Flawlessly broke poorly and was last going to the first turn. McCarron 
    made a good move with her going into the final turn but Flawlessly was 
    fanned 6 wide. Losing so much ground, her closing kick wasn't enough to 
    get her home first. Hollywood Wildcat had stalked and got a good clean 
    trip around the track. Hollywood Wildcat won by a head over longshot 
    Miss Zilber with Flawlessly about 2 lengths back.
    
    The second leg of NY's Filly Triple Crown, the Mother Goose Stakes, was 
    run on Sunday. It featured Inside Information who won the first
    leg(Acorn Stakes) and Lakeway who's only loss was a dull performance in
    the KY Oaks. I figured it would be Inside Information's race with
    Lakeway second. Those two broke well and hooked up *immediately*. They
    went at it hammer and tongs all the way around the track. I was sitting
    there thinking, "OK, which closer is going to catch them after they tire
    each other out?" NOT! At the top of the stretch, they were going
    strong. Suddenly, Inside Information shortened stride and Lakeway ran
    on to win by about 5 lengths. Inside Information got caught by the
    filly that ran second in the Acorn (I've forgotten her name). Maybe the
    3 YO *fillies* are the good part of this crop?
481.705CBS has rediscovered racing!DECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle Rain Festival: 1/1-12/31Mon Jun 27 1994 17:4558
    Welcome CBS back to the broadcast of live racing!
    
    For the last 2 weekends, CBS's Sunday sports show, "Eye On Sports" has
    broadcast live horse racing. Last week, CBS broadcast the Gr I Hempstead 
    Handicap from Belmont. This was the first race CBS has broadcast in 8-9
    years! They got a good matchup too. Sky Beauty gave away 10 pounds and
    was nearly surprised at the wire by You'd Be Surprised. It was
    basically a match race as YBS stalked SB all the way around the track. 
    The rest were far back. The stretch duel was hard to beat...
    
    But they got lucky and yesterday's racing was even better! CBS picked
    up the broadcast rights to the Caesear's International at Atlantic
    City. In recent yearsd, NBC has ben broadcasting it. They rounded out
    an hour with the Gr III Jersey Shore Sprint(also at Atlantic City) and
    the Gr II Post-Deb Stakes(which has a new name that I've forgotten ...
    something like the Joe Schleeze Jr Handicap). Both the "undercard"
    races were good on their own but the International was really an
    outstanding horse race!
    
    First of all, it featured a rematch of Lure and Star Of Cozzene. SOC
    has been returned to the US for training and racing up to the Japan
    Cup. He was sold and sent to Japan for last year's Japan Cup. He was
    expected to stay there and train/race up to this year's race. Lure was
    in need of a win to reclaim status as a top turf horse this season
    after 2 losses to Paradise Creek. Astudillio and Four Stars Allstar
    (He's FS Dave's, my personal fav, little brother) were coming into the 
    race off only 7 days rest as they had run in the Gr III NH Sweepstakes
    the previous Sunday. 
    
    Lure broke on top and lead around the first turn and into the
    backstretch. Then, it looked like Lure took a bad step and Mike Smith 
    started easing him to the outside. Marco Bay came through the opening
    Lure left at the rail and took the lead. Lure was now running well
    again. I thought Smith had lost his mind! He was just sitting there
    but going wider all the time. 
    
    Smith kept Lure in second. Look! Here comes Four Stars Allstar running
    as fast as we wish our trains could go! He's in third. Now he passes
    Lure like Lure was standing still! It looks like Dave's little brother
    is gonna get another Gr I win to go with his Irish Guineas win at age 3!
    
    Wait! Lure's coming on again! Maybe, Smith had a method to his madness.
    Allstar is running his heart out and looks very strong. Lure shows why
    he's a champion race horse and is grinding away the lead. Then, they're 
    head to head and duel to the line. Lure gets his nose in front to win
    over a *very* game Four Stars Allstar, who just may pass his older
    brother as the leading alltime NY-bred racehorse!
    
    Star Of Cozzene never really got into the race. He finished a decent
    but distant third.
    
    CBS is going to broadcast more racing from NY later in the season. I'll
    try to keep you posted on the dates for those who'd like to watch. I
    intended to tell you about yesterday's race broadcasts last Friday.
    Unfortunately, our DECnet comm links were out all day and I couldn't
    get into notes at all!
    
    John
481.706July 4th weekend racingDECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle Rain Festival: 1/1-12/31Tue Jul 05 1994 18:28100
There was so much good racing this weekend, I don't know where to 
begin! In the 3 days, there were at *least* 17 graded stakes run at 
various tracks and all but 2 or 3 made it on TV in some form or other.

There isn't time to tell you about all of them so I'll just hit the 
highlights.

Saturday:
	Hollywood Gold Cup (Gr I 10 f) Billed as a match race between
		The Wicked North(3x Gr I winner) and Arcangues(BC CLassic 
		winner). Turned out, they did battle down the stretch but for
		next to last place. TWN won that battle and Arcangues 
		finished last. 2 ways to look at TWN's humiliation:
		1) He finally showed his true class or 2) Horse's are not
		machines and he had a bad day. Arcangues is an up and down
		horse. Saturday, he was down. The win went to the Northern
		CA horse, Slew of Damascus who lead wire to wire.
	Bowling Green(Gr II 11f T) Featured Sea Hero, Fraise and a cast of
		other Gr I winners. The win went to Turk Passer who stole 
		the race on the lead. Sea Hero a good closing second and
		Fraise 3rd.

Sunday:
	Beverly Hillbilly's Handicap(Gr I 9f fillies & maresT) Billed as a 
		rematch between Hollywood Wildcat and Flawlessly. Both were 
		highweights in the field giving away 7 to 10 pounds to the 
		others. Racing luck could easily have cost either of them 
		the race. Flawlessly and Chris McCarron broke on top from 
		the inside post postiion but settled back in 3rd. McCarron 
		decided to stay on the rail. Hollywood Wildcat broke well 
		from the outside post and settled into last place for most 
		of the trip. Going into the final turn, HW had to go very 
		wide and circle the field to get running room. Flawlessly 
		was trapped in a box of horses at the top of the lane and 
		couldn't get clear. Finally, Corrazon(one of the horses 
		pinning Flawlessly to the  rail) moved out a little to make 
		her own run and Flawlessly had some room. McCarron aimed at 
		a hole between horses but it closed before Flawlessly got 
		there so he had to go around the tiring leaders. Flawlessly 
		got back to the rail and kicked on. Hollywood Wildcat came 
		charging on the outside. Corrazon was flying between them. 
		They hit the wire together with Corrazon's head in front and 
		Flawlessly and Hollywood Wildcat in what looked like a dead 
		heat for second. One jump passed the wire, Flawlessly was 
		ahead of both of Corrazon and Hollywood Wildcat but at the 
		line she was third. BTW, Corrazon means heart in Spanish and
		that's what it took to beat these 2 champion mares. Corrazon
		may be one to watch in the future.

Dwyer (Gr II 3 YO 8.5 f) Holy Bull in a romp! Blistering mile(1:32 +) but I 
		forget the final time. Second horse nowhere in sight at the 
		wire.

Monday:

	American Hcap(Gr II 9f T) Blues Traveller over Gothland and Johann 
		Quatz. Favorite Furiously was nowhere to be found.
	Suburban(Gr I 10f) Devil His Due never gets his due! He's a good 
		horse who has won more than $3.5 million. He's game, *sound*
		and consistent but he's no Forego, John Henry or Kelso. 
		Although he's one of the best handicap horses in the US, the 
		bettors rarely take him seriously. After his brilliant 
		performance in 	the Brooklyn Hcap a few weeks ago, they sent 
		him off as the favorite but just barely. DHD stalked the 
		leader for most of the race and took over on the final turn. 
		He drew off and won easily with Mike Smith hand riding most 
		of the way. He did draw his stick in the final furlong 
		because DHD has a tendency to loaf when alone on the lead. 
		Valley Crossing and Wallenda's closing kicks weren't enough 
		to catch Devil His Due.

		BTW, his trainer, Allen Jerkens, is *really* on a roll in NY
		this year. Last year, he and Shug McGaughey tied for most 
		stakes wins in NY with 14 each. Devil His Due's Suburban win 
		was the 16th NY stakes win for Jerkens and it's only July!

		Jerkens also won the mid week Tremont stake for 2 YO's with a 
		stellar performance from DeNiro who romped home by 8-10.
		DeNiro's next start is supposed to be the Sanford on opening
		day at Saratoga.

	Poker Stakes(Gr III 8f T) There were about 5 good milers in this
		field(e.g. A In Sociology, Roman Envoy, etc) so the public 
		sent 2 time stakes record setting winner of the Poker, Fourstar
		Dave, off at insultingly high odds. On the final turn, it 
		looked like the punters were right about old Dave(he's 9 now)
		and that he couldn't compete in graded company anymore. He was 
		5th about 6 lengths out of it with the others running strongly.
		I should know better! Both Dave and his kid brother(Fourstars
		Allstar who almost beat Lure last week) are stretch running 
		marvels! Dave got clear and came flying. I thought he'd never 
		catch the leaders but, half way through the stretch, he was 
		still gaining quickly and looked like he might make it. It 
		was a 3 horse battle to the wire with the tightest 3 way
		photo I've ever seen short of the triple dead heat at
		Arlington Park a few years ago. Dominant Propsect won the
		photo by about an inch. Dave got his nose over Roman Envoy's
		by another inch so the old gelding still has a bit of class!

John
481.707Racing newsDECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle Rain Festival: 1/1-12/31Mon Jul 11 1994 17:2834
    The 4th of July weekend racing was so mind boggling, I forgot to
    mention 1 that "Golden Gate" Karl would probably be interested in:
    Work The Crowd shipped from San Francisco to Chicago to win a graded
    stakes on the turf at Arlington Park. 
    
    Also in the news: Casual Lies has been sold to stand stud in New
    Zealand. The reported sales price was $750,000; not bad for a colt that
    cost $7,500 as a yearling.
    
    Jockey Chris McCarron won his 6,000th race the other week. He's only
    the 11th jockey in history to win that many races and only the 3rd to
    do so before age 40(McCarron's 39). The ohter 2 jockeys to reach 6,000
    before age 40 were Willie Shoemaker and Lafitt Pincay. 
    
    This weekend's racing was kind of disappointing. Despite the fact that
    there were 2 Gr I races, I think the best *race* of the weekend stakes
    was the Gr II NY Handicap(10f Turf fillies&mares). The 2 favorites,
    You'd Be Surprised and Dahlia's Dreamer dueled to the wire in 1:59 3/5
    which is a good time after *very* slow fractions(e.g. about 50 for the
    1/2 and 1:12 2/5 for 6f). You'd Be Surprised won by a head.
    
    NY's CCA Oaks(Gr I 10 f for 3 YO f) was very disappointing. A second
    rate field showed up and gave a mediocre performance. 
    
    On the other coast, the Hollywood Oaks(Gr I 9f for 3 YO f) at Hollywood
    Park was billed as a match race between Sardula and Lakeway. In fact, it 
    was a run away victory for Lakeway. This daughter of Seattle Slew is the 
    best racehorse he's sired in years. SHe broke on top and duelled through 
    quick early fractions. It looked perfect for Sardula to come from off 
    the pace and win going away. But, it was Lakeway who won going away 
    after Sardula challenged briefly at the top of the stretch. Lakeway won 
    by 5 easy lengths and never worked hard. 
    
    John
481.708Live racing from SaratogaDECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle Rain Festival: 1/1-12/31Wed Jul 13 1994 23:346
    Oh, I almost forgot. CBS will have *live* racing from Saratoga's
    opening weekend on Sunday July 24th. It will be the "Eye On Sport"
    variety show that is aired on Sundays. Check you local listings but I
    think the show is usually on at 2:30 P.M. EASTERN time. Last time, you
    got boxing as well as the racing. The other time, they had gymnastics
    and something else.
481.709News through July 17DECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle Rain Festival: 1/1-12/31Tue Jul 19 1994 18:0449
    
    Re the previous about CBS & Saratoga
    
    The race is the Gr I Go For Wand Stakes and it will be on "Eye On
    Sport". The show begins at 4:30 P.M. EASTERN time(1:30 PM Pacific)
    this Sunday.
    
    NEWS:
    
    Add Lyphard(by Northern Dancer) to the list of stallions who have sired
    100 or more stakes winners.
    
    The Blood Horse says that 1978 Triple Crown winner, Affirmed has now
    sired 50 stakes winners. Affirmed is now 19 years old.
    
    American champion miler, Lure, is scheduled to ship to Canada tomorrow
    enroute to England where he will contest Goodwood's Gr I Sussex at a
    mile. Lure will face a stellar European field as the Sussex is known as
    the European Miler Chamionship. He will also be racing right handed and
    over an undulating course for the first time. European are used to
    going both right and left handed as well as not having level ground.
    This will give them a slight edge if either factor puts Lure off his
    best game.
    
    BC Juvenile winner & 2 YO Champion, Arazi, underwent colic surgery
    recently. He had a displaced large intestine and a twisted small
    intestine. The surgeons didn't have to cut into his intestines so full 
    recovery is expected .
    
    This past weekend at Belmont saw two surprising accidents, both
    involving the whip and the rail. Fortunately, no one(human or horse) was 
    seriously injured in either. On Saturday, Julie Krone rode the 3rd race 
    and broke from the inside post position. A couple jumps out of the
    gate, she went to the stick to encourage her horse to get the lead. Her
    horse bolted instead and hit the rail, dumping Krone. When she hit the
    rail, the horse started bucking. It looked like she jumped right on top
    of Krone. 
    
    Apprentice jockey, Michelle Lutrell, was leading by 6 lengths in the
    stretch on Sunday. A horse was closing on her mount so she went to the
    stick, righthanded. The horse jumped away from the stick and went
    through the rail at full speed. These 2 accidents were strangely
    similar in that both horses were on the rail, hit right handed and then
    went into the rail.
    
    Both riders were banged and bruised but helmets and safety vests were
    credited with preventing serious internal injuries.
    
    
481.710Lure lockoutRDGE44::ALEUC3Wed Jul 20 1994 12:247
    
Unfortunately Lure has been refused permission to enter the UK
because he tested positive for Equine Viral Arteritis (EVA). This is the
result of a vaccination he received last year, but rules are apparently rules.
This means he will miss the Sussex Stakes at Goodwood next week.

MartinK
481.711More newsDECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle Rain Festival: 1/1-12/31Thu Jul 21 1994 23:4818
    Belmont's summer meeting closed yesterday. 
    
    Leading rider: Jerry Bailey (who(IMHO) deserved the Eclipse Award as 
    Champion jockey last year for getting Sea Hero home in the KY Derby & 
    Travers as well as Arcangues in the BC CLassic, among other things)
    Bailey had a 24% win rate with his mounts at Belmont this meeting.
    
    Leading trainer: Allen Jerkens who has an extremely good win rate
    lately. At one point in the Belmont meeting, his horses won every
    stake race in 2 successive weeks. As of 2 weeks ago, he has won 17
    stakes races already this season. He's won at least 1 more in the
    recent races but I've lost count!
    
    Both the fallen jockeys(Krone & Lutrell) were back in the saddle by
    Tuesday. Both have posted wins since returning from their spill.
    
    Saratoga meeting opens Friday with 2 graded 6f stakes for 2 YOs(1 open 
    and 1 for fillies). 
481.712The "Legend of Saratoga"DECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle Rain Festival: 1/1-12/31Fri Jul 29 1994 19:1232
    Did anybody see last Sunday's Eye on Sports on CBS? If you tuned in at
    the beginning of the show, you could have seen ole Fourstar Dave win
    for the umpteenth straight year at Saratoga. It was only an allowance
    race, not a stake but there's a story behind it...
    
    A day or 2 before the race, CBS told the NY Racing Association(NYRA)
    that they wanted to broadcast another live race in addition to the Gr I
    Go For Wand. There were no other stakes scheduled for Sunday so NYRA had 
    to scramble to come up with something worthy of TV time. 
    
    Fourstar Dave and his full brother, FourstarsAllstar, were scheduled to 
    run in the Gr III Daryl's Joy (8.5f Turf) on Monday. NYRA convinced
    Dave/Allstar's owner Richard Bomze and trainer Leo O'Brien to scratch 
    Dave from the Daryl's Joy and run him in Sunday's allowance race 
    at 8f on the turf. They thought the human interest story would make the
    race worth the air time.
    
    They were right. CBS did a decent set of interviews and reviews of
    Dave's previous races(e.g. He had won the Daryl's Joy twice and placed
    in it 1 or 2 other times). They referred to him as the "Legend of
    Saratoga" etc. Then, just as if it were a script, ole Dave went out and
    ran a bang-up race leaving much younger horses many lengths behind!
    Tom Durkin's a good race caller everyday but sometimes he gets very
    excited when there's something really good going on. Then, he's even
    better! His race call in that allowance race was one of the most
    exciting calls I've ever heard. It ranks right up there with his call
    of the 1988 Breeders' Cup Distaff when Personal Ensign caught Winning
    Colors at the wire to retire undefeated.
    
    Allstar went off as the even money favorite in Monday's Daryl's Joy. He got
    boxed in for most of the race and couldn't get clear for his run
    until too late. He did manage to close enough to get 3rd money though.
481.713Film at lunch?(I WISH!)DECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle:Life in the espressolaneFri Aug 12 1994 21:5626
    As much as I like Fourstar Dave, I think Bomze and O'Brien have lost
    their respective minds! They've entered him in today's Bernard Baruch
    Hcap at 9 furlongs. What's wrong with that? He's going up against Lure
    and Paradise Creek both of whom are multiple Gr I winners at 8 to 10
    furlongs. Secondly, Dave's "best" distances are 8f and 8.5f. Besides,
    his "kid" brother, FourstarsAllstar, would have a better shot at beating 
    them as he *nearly* beat Lure in the Gr I Caeser's International(9.5f) 
    last month. He's almost a cinch for 3rd but I think Dave will need help 
    from the weight assignments and the best trip to win here. 
    
    On the other coast, this Saturday will see the Pacific Classic run at
    DelMar. It features the return to Gr I competition for Best Pal and
    Bertrando. Both have had one prior race since their layoffs. Bertrando
    stood the season at stud and then came back to the track. Trainer
    Bobbie Frankel objected to the idea, so he's been replaced as trainer.
    Best Pal just never came back right from his splint injury last year.
    So, he was given some more time off. He too has changed trainers
    although I don't know the reason. 
    
    The quality of the field is suspect(IMHO) as Best Pal and Bertrando are
    the favorites. WHen Trevor Denaman ran down the list of post positions 
    on the replay show the other day, I didn't see any Gr I winners other 
    than BP and B. 
    
    Details on both races Monday
    
481.714Major races Aug 6 - Aug 13DECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle:Life in the espressolaneMon Aug 15 1994 18:30189
I set out to give the results of 6 good stakes I'd seen in the past 
10 days. I did that but it turned into a "soap box" comparison too. 
So, It's pretty long. Feel free to skip the opinions if you're only 
interested in the results. ;-)

The So. Californian racing media are always bragging about how they have 
the best racing and the best horses . They cite as evidence the "fact" that 
Eastern horses can't go to CA and win. They frequently whine and complain 
that Eastern races get undeservedly better grading status in general and, 
in particular, that the Saratoga meeting should not get greater billing 
than Del Mar's summer meeting.

Are they right? Do Eastern races/horses get better press just 
because the "old guard" of racing and the top people in the Jockey 
Club are in the east? Let's take some selected races run at Saratoga 
and Del Mar between Aug 6 and Aug 13 1994 and look at those CA claims.

From Del Mar, I selected:

	1. The Gr I Ramona($300,000 purse; 9f T, fillies & mares, 3 & up)
		run on Aug 6th
	2. The Gr I Eddie Read($300,000 purse; 9f T, 3 & up) run Aug 7th
	3. The Gr I Pacific Classic($1,000,000; 10 f, 3 & up) run Aug 13th 

Saratoga had only a single Gr I race that week so I selected the best 
races of similar distances:
	1. The ungraded Saratoga Cup ($250,000 purse, 9f, 3 & up) run Aug 6th
	2. The Gr II Bernard Baruch Hcap($100,000 purse, 9f T, 3 & 
		up) run Aug 12th
	3. The Gr I Alabama($200,000 purse, 10f, 3 YO fillies) run Aug 13th

The Ramona Hcap was a 5 horse field lead by Hollywood Wildcat and 
Flawlessly; both are multiple Gr I winners. Skimble was the only 
other graded stakes winner in the field. Skimble broke well and took 
the early lead Flawlessly and Hollywood Wildcat were taken back and 
trailed most of the race. Skimble set slowish fractions and McCarron 
moved Flawlessly a little early because of the slow pace. They were 
floated 4 wide in the final turn. Eddie Dellahousaye had HC stuck 
behind that wall of 4 horses on the turn so he took her outside F at 
the top of the stretch. HC came flying down the middle of the track 
and clsoed well. However, Flawlessly prevailed over Hollywod Wildcat 
by a nose. Skimble was a length back in third. Final time 1:48 1/5

The Eddie Read saw an undistinguished field of 7 horses go to the post:
Earl of Barking, Furiously, and Johann Quatz had won Gr II 
races in 1993. Most of the others in the race competed in Europe 
last season. Approach The Bench, Blues Traveller, Fastness, and Wharf did 
not win any graded/group stakes in 1993. Furthermore, none placed in 
a graded event in the U.S. Approach The Bench won over Fastness and 
Johann Quatz in a final time of 1:48 4/5.

The Gr II Bernard Baruch drew better horses than the Gr I Eddie 
Read. All entrants in the 6 horse field were graded stakes winners.
Lure and Paradise Creek are both multiple Gr I winners. Old 
Fourstar Dave(who has won Gr II or Gr III races every year for the 
past 6 years) and his brother Gr I winner Fourstars Allstar were 
entered but Allstar was scratched. Binary Light and Astudillio 
completed the field. Both are graded stakes winners.

Lure and Fourstar Dave broke on top but Astudillio went to the lead. 
Dave had the inside post and Migliore decided to keep that advantage 
so he asked Dave to move up to the lead before they got to the first 
turn. Lure was being rated in 3rd by Mike Smith.

Dave tried to steal the race and set easy fractions for the first 
half mile(24 3/5 and 48 1/5) before he started to pick it up. The 
third quarter was run in 23 1/5 for a 6f split time of 1:11 2/5.
Astudillio couldn't keep up and he started to fade. Paradise Creek's 
started to move to Lure and Lure started to move after Dave. 
Lure caught up to Dave on the final turn but, after 1 mile in 1:34 3/5, 
old Dave was still in front! ... but not for long. Just after the 
mile mark, Lure put his head in front. Dave wasn't finished but Lure 
was just too good. Paradise Creek went by Dave pretty easily too. 
Lure finsihed the 9f in 1:46 flat. Paradise Creek was a length back 
and Dave finished 3rd about 4 lengths further back. Note that the 
fractional times got faster as the race progressed. The first 1/4 in 
24 3/5. the second in 23 3/5, the third in 23 1/5, the fourth also 
in 23 1/5 and the final 1/8th in 11 2/5. Now, that's good racing!

Not only was the winning time of this Gr II race(1:46) faster than 
both the Gr I Eddie Read(1:48 4/5) and the Gr I Ramona(1:48 1/5) but 
even the 3rd place finisher was faster by more than 1 second! I took 
my stopwatch and timed Dave's finish. He was about 0.9 seconds behind 
Lure which means he finished in 1:46.9 or maybe 1:47.0. That's 
consistent with the handicapping rule of thumb that 1/5 = 1 length 
as Dave was 5 lengths behind Lure.

Now, it's not strictly valid to look at turf course times from 2 different 
tracks and say that horse A is faster than horse B at the distance. 
But, So Cal is known for its fast turf courses. Saratoga's course is not 
particularly fast at the moment as they have had more than 10" of rain 
in first the 2 weeks of the meeting. The average for the entire month of 
August is only 4+ inches at Saratoga. So, I'd bet that the "speed 
figures"(which claim to adjust for differences in the tracks) for these 
races would show that the Gr II Bernard Baruch performances were far 
superior to those in the Gr I Eddie Read.

The field for the Pacific Classic was a little deeper than I thought 
but not much. Best Pal and Bertrando were solid Gr I performers in 
the past but each had only raced once this year and that was in 
minor events. Slew of Damascus is a solid Gr II and Gr III performer 
at 8-9 furlongs on the turf. He switched to the dirt for the Gr I 10 
furlong Hollywood Gold Cup and got a lucky win. So, he was entered 
in the Classic. Stuka finsihed second in the Gr I Santa Anita Hcap 
last winter but was placed first when The Wicked North was 
disqualified for interfering with another horse. Tinner's Way was 
the most distinguished of the remaining horses in the field. He ran 
in England last year and won no Group stakes races there. He had not 
won a stakes race here either but he placed in several Graded 
stakes this season. He nearly won his last time out on the dirt. The 
others had no credentials to be running in this caliber race.

Best Pal's stable mate, Dramatic Gold broke on top in the Classic 
but Bertrando and Slew of Damascus hustled up to lead by the first 
turn. Dramtaic Gold was in 3rd, followed by Del Mar Dennis, Stuka, 
Tinner's Way, the 3 YO  Silver Music, Best Pal and long shot Risen 
Roman.

The 2 leaders essentially "cooked" each other with a protracted 
speed duel. They set fractions of 21 3/5, 44 2/4, 1:08 3/5 before 
they began to fold. Those are great times for a 6f sprint but suicidal 
for a 10f race! Bertrando was done after 6f and faded to near last. 
Slew of Damascus lasted longer but faded as badly. 

Best Pal was now trailing the field and McCarron started his move as the 
leaders started to fade. He was running like the BP of 2 years ago. 
Eddie D had Tinner's Way positioned a little better than BP and waited 
until BP came to him. TW went right along with BP and they were 
flying. BP had to go 4 wide around the new leader, Dramatic Gold. TW 
was just inside BP and running like his daddy for the first time in 
his career. BP & TW battled down the stretch. TW finished 1 length 
ahead of BP and equalled the stakes record of 1:59 2/5 for 10f. 
Outstanding efforts by both horses.

Compare the Pacific Classic field to that of the ungraded Saratoga 
Cup field. There were 8 horses entered: 6 of them Gr I winners at 9 
to 12 furlongs; some had won *several* Gr I races; the other two 
entrants were stakes winners who had placed in graded stakes. The 6 
Gr I winners were: Colonial Affair, Miner's Mark, Pistols and Roses, 
Thunder Rumble, West By West and Wallenda. Thunder Rumble won in a 
romp, seemingly glad to be back to his old trainer and to Saratoga.

The Alabama was supposed to be a romp for the CA shiiper, Lakeway. 
This daughter of Seattle Slew had only been beaten once in her life 
and was looking like the 3 YO filly queen. Unfortunately for her, 
the East coast trainers weren't about to play dead and they sent 
several other multiple Gr I winners to the race. One of them was 
Heavenly Prize; another was Two Altazano. Other accomplished fillies 
entered included Plenty Of Sugar, Sovereign Kitty, Lady Reiko and 
Jade Flush. If memory serves corrrectly, they are all stakes 
winners with most of them being graded stakes winners and the rest 
graded stakes placed.

Two Altazano took the lead with Sovereign Kitty in 2nd, Lakeway 3rd 
and Hevaenly Prize fourth on the rail. They stayed that way for the 
first 1/2 mile(fractions 23 4/5, 48). Then Lakeway went to the lead 
and drew off by a couple lengths. She hit the 3/4 mark in 1:12 just 
coasting along. Heavenly Prize was taken outside on the final turn
and started to move after Lakeway. Lakeway covered the first mile in 
a dawdling 1:37 2/5(25 2/5 for the 4th quarter mile!)

HP came to Lakeway at the top of the stretch. With 1 tap of the whip as 
she passed Lakeway, Heavenly Prize took the lead just past the 1/4 pole. 
She drew off under a hand ride to win by 6 or 7 lengths in 2:03 1/5.

So, it seems to me that the depth and quality of the fields is 
greater at Saratoga in ungraded stakes and Gr II stakes than at Del Mar 
in Gr I stakes. If the Alabama is any indication, the depth of the 
eastern filly & mare division is comparble to the west coast's too. 
It seems to me that, if there is a bias in the graded status of the races, 
the facts surrounding this year's races suggest that the bias favors 
Del Mar rather than Saratoga. 

Lakeway is the pride of the So Cal filly division. She has gone east 
to race three times once in KY and twice in NY. She lost two of 
those 3 races. SoCal graded stakes winner, Kingdom Found did no 
better when he went to NY for the Gr I Suburban Hcap. He finished 
well up the track in 7th or 8th. Then, he went back to SoCal and won 
a graded stake a week or 2 ago.

My point is not that West coast horses can't ship East and win or 
the other way round. My point is that many horses simply do not do 
well when they ship long distances due to differences in climate and 
track conditions. These kind of things say little or nothing about the 
relative ability of the horse. They only suggest that horses are less 
adaptable than humans would like them to be. There is also the 
medication issue since Lasix is not allowed in NY. Many CA horses run 
on Lasix even though they have no history of bleeding in a race. They 
go to NY where they run without it and frequently lose. 
481.715Mud-wrestling tomorrow at Soggy TogaDECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle:Life in the espressolaneFri Aug 19 1994 19:2031
    Saratoga holds the Travers Stakes this Saturday. It will be televised
    "live" by ABC on Wide World of Sports at 4:30 PM Eastern time.
    
    The field and morning line odds are:
    
    Post position	Horse			Odds
    
    1			Holy Bull		4/5
    2			Tabasco Cat		6/5 Entry with the #6 horse
    3			Concern			12-1
    4			Copper Mount		15-1
    5			Unaccounted For		5-1
    6			Commanche Trail		6/5 Entry with #2
    
    Wayne Lukas has entered Commanche Trail as a rabbit for Tabasco Cat.
    The theory being TC can stalk easily while CT pushes Holy Bull early
    on. I don't think much of Tabasco Cat's chances because Saratoga has
    had so much rain it should be renamed "Soggy Toga" (That's what Roman
    emperor Julius Caesar was wearing after he got caught in the rain. ;-)
    Sorry, I could resist. Anyway, they had over 10" of rain the first 2
    weeks. It's been raining in Saratoga since Weds and it's supposed to
    rain tomorrow. This year the Travers will be swum at 10 furlongs 
    instead of run at 10f!
    
    HB runs well in the slop but this may be too much for him. I've seen
    manure pits on dairy farms that looked more solid than the main track
    looked yesterday! Unaccounted For won the Jim Dandy at Soggy Toga a 
    couple weeks ago so he's run over the track. Key question: Can he swim? 
    How about Concern? Forget closers in swimming meets.
    
    Maybe they'll turn it into a mud-wrestling contest instead?
481.716Crawl or breast stroke?TURRIS::EASI::GEENENIllud cape et ei fibulam adfige!Fri Aug 19 1994 22:356
    Forget traditional handicapping and exacta box the biggest horse in
    the field with the smallest horse in the field.  Reasoning?  The big
    horse may have enough strength to fight through the mud, while the
    small horse will not be heavy enough to get bogged down ;>{)
    
    Carl
481.7171994 TraversDECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle:Life in the espressolaneMon Aug 22 1994 17:1621
    Soggy Toga got lucky and had no rain on Saturday. (Even Noah only had
    rain for 40 days!) I was amazed at the condition of the track by the
    time the Travers went off. For the first race, it was still sloppy from
    Thursday's heavy rain & Friday's rain. But, all hail the grounds crew!
    They must have worked that track till they were exhausted. It was
    upgraded to fast(although still wet-fast) by the time the feature went
    off.
    
    The rabbit went to the lead and burned up the track. Holy Bull laid a 
    length or so off him and just waited. The rabbit was finsihed after the 
    first half mile. After that, Holy Bull looked a sure winner because
    nobody was even close until Concern made a fast sweeping move on the
    final turn.
    
    Holy Bull won by a head over the fast closing Concern. Darn good race by
    both of them. The final time of 2:02 wasn't close to the stakes record
    but it was fairly fast considering the track. The over-rated(IMHO)
    Tabasco Cat was 15 lengths behind. 
    
    He may not have the dosage to win at 10f but he did...and in better
    time than the KY Derby winner even though both were on wet tracks.
481.718More on 1994 TraversTURRIS::EASI::GEENENIllud cape et ei fibulam adfige!Thu Aug 25 1994 17:3244
Hello TB racing fans:

I picked up this item of interest from the Internet Derby.  Hope you find
it as interesting as I did.

Carl

<begin excerpt>
One of the most unlikely outcomes of this year's Travers is that it
produced a Himyar-line exacta.  Holy Bull (by Great Above) traces
to Himyar's son, Plaudit, winner of the 1898 Kentucky Derby.  Concern
(by Broad Brush) traces to Himyar's son Domino (immortalized on his
gravestone as "the fleetest runner the American Turf has ever known,
and one of the gamest and most generous of horses").
 
Himyar was the prohibitive favorite for the 4th Kentucky Derby (1878).
His defeat by Day Star prompted numerous allegations of chicanery.
 
The Himyar line has been extremely important in American racing, but it
is now hanging on by a thread.  The 1994 Stallion Register displays only
two Plaudit-line sires, Great Above and Dr. Blum (by Dr. Fager).  More
dramatically, Broad Brush is the sole representative of the Domino
line in this year's Register.
 
Domino died young, siring only 19 foals.  Nevertheless his line has
produced such legendary runners as Colin, Peter Pan, Equipoise, Bimelech,
Black Toney, Blue Larkspur, Stymie, Carry Back, and Ack Ack.
 
Was the Travers an aberration, or will this historic line be revived?
There is clearly some sentiment in the breeding community for some "new"
blood to replace the stallion stars who have died in the past five years
and to outcross with the myriad Northern Dancer-Raise a Native mares.
Whether these lines will become fashionable is an open question, with so
few individuals, the odds are against it.
 
For his part, Concern is beginning to look a bit like his sire.  Broad
Brush was also a game colt who made lots of money, but tended to just
miss in the biggest races.
 
As for Holy Bull, his sire is by a son of Rough 'n Tumble, out of a 
daughter of Aspidistra.  Rough 'n Tumble and Aspidistra?  Could the
Bull really be the second coming of Dr. Fager himself?  Similar breeding,
similar running style, similar charisma...
<end excerpt>
481.719Another one bites the dustTURRIS::EASI::GEENENIllud cape et ei fibulam adfige!Thu Aug 25 1994 18:09131
Hello fellow grievers:

Just a tad late I'm afraid, but with great sorrow I present the following
obituary.  I didn't spot an obituary topic, but since the deceased was
    associated with TB racing, I decided to add it here.

Carl

From The Sporting Magazine, April 1821.
(Originally posted to the Internet Derby by MartinK.)

THE LATE SIR CHARLES BUNBURY.
============================
On Saturday, the 31st of March, at his house in Pall-Mall, departed
this life, Sir Thomas Charles Bunbury, Bart. having nearly completed
the eighty-first year of his age. On the following Saturday,
his mortal remains proceeded towards Milden Hall, in Suffolk,
in order for interment in the burial place of the family.
For the memoirs of Sir Charles, and of his late brother,
Henry William Bunbury, Esq. the celebrated caricaturist,
father of the present Baronet, and head of the family,
we refer our readers to Vol. XL. page 198, and Vol. XLI. page 94,
of the _Sporting Magazine_; whilst we proceed to give such additional
particulars as time has produced, or have come to our knowledge,
of this celebrated sporting character.

Sir Charles, after making the grand tour, returned from the Continent and
from Ireland, where he had also been engaged very early in public life.
On the death of his father, the Rev. Sir W. Bunbury, and succession to
the family estate, he seems to have at once fixed himself for life,
both with respect to his views and avocations, and to his residence.
The former consisted in his parliamentary duties, having been chosen,
whilst abroad and young, to represent his native county, Suffolk,
continuing his public services to a very late period of life, and
of his racing concerns; and the latter, in his constant country sojourn
at the family mansion, Great Barton. His town residence was first in
Privy Garden, Whitehall; during the last thirty odd years, in Pall-Mall.
Quitting at once the service of Government, he became an independent
Member of Parliament, generally attached to the Whig party, and
to the measures of his friend, Mr. Fox. He was one of the most
enthusiastic opponents of the slave trade. His life throughout
was thus very fairly and equally divided between his parliamentary duties,
and the avocations and amusements of the turf, to which he had the strongest
attachment, and in which he ran stoutly over a long course of nearly
threescore years! beating Old Frampton in count of years, and truly
acquiring the title of father of the turf. He was twice married, leaving
a widow of most excellent and benevolent character, and who in her youth
was a singularly fine person.

Sir Charles Bunbury, with a strong predilection for the horse from
his earliest youth, at the age of three and twenty, consigned himself
to the tuition of his friend, Mr. Crofts, of Norfolk, the proprietor
of the famous racer and stallion, Brilliant, by Old Crab. In fact,
he did honour to his tutor, by the rapidity of his progress in their
interesting profession; for in 1765 he possessed a considerable string
of racehorses; and in 1767, the compiler of these minutes first made
his bow to the Baronet at the Ipswich Meeting, where upon the course
and the betting stand, he was amongst the busiest, indeed the crack of
the sporting gentlemen assembled. Sir Charles had purchased Bellario,
by Brilliant, of Mr. Crofts, one of the first racers of his time, and
distinguished for his speed, but this, as well as other good horses,
had the misfortune to be contemporary with the 'terrible, terrible,'
matchless, and superequine ECLIPSE, which, to use an old Newmarket phrase,
never failed in a single instance of meeting, _to give them all their gruel_,
and the need of a spy-glass to see which way he went, and how far he was off!
It is a curious fact, however, that Sir Charles Bunbury, to the very last,
never would seem to be convinced of the vast superiority of O'Kelly's
horse, notwithstanding the evidence of his own eyes at York in 1770, and
elsewhere, and the decided conviction of his own horse, his favourite
Bellario. This will be regarded as one of the constitutional _bizzarraries_,
or oddities of the Honourable Baronet, a case in which, of course, his
usual sagacity did not operate.

Bellario did not prove a successful stallion, the case of many capital
racers, witness Mark Antony, Gimcrack, Shark, and many others.
He covered at Barton until 1776, the best of his get being Mr Carteret's
Borascha, a half-mile horse of considerable speed, short races being
about that period much in vogue - Lord March's Rocket gelding - and
Lord Clermont's Masquerade, standing first and first in that description
of racers. The next favourite at Barton was Diomed, a grandson of King Herod,
a powerful horse, and a good runner. Sir Charles named this horse, and
his full brother Ulysses, in 1780, the first year of the Derby stakes at
Epsom, which were won by Diomed. In the following year he was backed,
at high odds, to win the great stakes at Nottingham, where he was beaten
by a middling horse, Lord Grosvenor's Fortitude; but whether against
his will or not, the present deponent undertakes not to say, although
it be in his power to say something on a variety of such matters, from
genuine original authority. Diomed soon after went out of training, and,
as a stallion, Sir Charles's chief acquisition by him was Young Giantess,
which proved a capital brood mare, and bred his famous mare, Eleanor, by
Whiskey. This latter horse, a son of the blind horse, Saltram, by Eclipse,
was next at the head of the breeding stud at Barton, Diomed having been
sold to America, where he lived to nearly, or quite, forty years of age,
and got much capital stock. A portrait of Diomed graces the first number
of the _Sporting Magazine_.

Whiskey, the sire of Eleanor, had considerable success as a stallion, but
was, at the usual period, stricken with hereditary blindness, as was also
his son Young Whiskey. Eleanor not only won the colt or Derby stakes at
Epsom, on their renewal in 1801, the first and only time that they have
been won by a filly, but she also won the Oaks in the same week, being
the second instance of Sir Charles Bunbury's success with the great
sweepstakes at Epsom, which was rendered still more complete by
the succeeding good fortune of Smolensko.

The next, and most favourite stallion at Barton, and which survived his
master, was Sorcerer, a large and powerful black horse, and capital racer.
He was got by Trumpator, a grandson of Matchem, out of Young Giantess,
so named from Giantess, by Babram, the dam of Diomed. Sir Charles profited
more, in a very considerable degree, from this stallion than from any of
the former. He was the sire of Thunderbolt and Smolensko, for the former
of which Sir Charles refused two thousand, for the latter four thousand
guineas. The unfortunate manner in which Thunderbolt was lost, will be
found detailed in these pages, at the time when the accident happened;
as also the extraordinary success of, and uncommon public interest
excited by Smolensko, too recent to be here repeated. All that need be
further said of this stud is, that it will be submitted to the hammer,
in the approaching Craven Meeting. Sir Charles was the breeder of the
celebrated Highflyer, but unluckily sold him [as] a yearling, and for
a very moderate sum.

The memoir of Sir Charles Bunbury in these pages already referred to,
leaves little to be said in regard to his character, of which
he preserved a uniformity to the last. He had his humours and
peculiarities, but never was a kinder or more tender-hearted man.
Such character is hereditary in his family. He was generally noticed,
and with regard, by the public, and was much respected by the Royal Family,
more particularly by his Royal Highness the Duke of York.
The present writer cherishes his memory with affection, as an old and
highly respected friend.
=================
481.720Plus or minus 2 minutesDECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle:Life in the espressolaneThu Aug 25 1994 18:227
    Thanks for the 2 interesting historical notes, Carl. I always wondered
    how late someone would be when they said they'd be a "just a tad late".
    Now, I know they mean anything up to 173 years and 4 months! ;-) I used
    to have two friends who were predictably late. One was always about 45 min
    late. The other about 20 minutes. If you wanted to get started on time, 
    you had to subtract their standard lateness factor! Try getting *both* of
    them to the same place on time. It was almost impossible...
481.721"Superstar at Saratoga"DECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle:Life in the espressolaneWed Aug 31 1994 23:11165
Extracted w/o permission(but it's legal as long as I give credit) 
from the Aug 20 1994 issue of The Blood Horse. Although there are a 
couple mistakes, it's a very good article. When I catch something I 
know more about, I'll add comments in []'s. If you want to know why
a 9YO horse can still compete against champions like Lure, read
O'Brien's comments near the end!

"Superstar at Saratoga" By Bill Finley

For 47 weeks of the year, every year, he is just a horse; a good 
horse but the sort that comes and goes, wins a few races, then fades 
away. There have been tens of thousands before and there are tens of 
thousands to come. For 47 weeks of the year, at whatever racetrack he 
may be competing, FourstarDave goes quietly about his business of 
being an old chestnnut gelding who wins a a nice allowance race or 
New York-bred race.[The author overlooks Dave's wins in graded races
like the Gr III Poker Stakes at Belmont and the Gr II St. Paul Derby]

Maybe he's just particular. Why put on your best show when the show 
has yet to come to Broadway? And Saratoga is the one stage where New 
York racing still shines.[Objection your honor! NY racing has 
difficulties caused by the state's excessive taxation but the racing 
is still great.]

He has never won the Kentucky Derby(gr. I), a Breeders' Cup race, an 
Eclipse Award, or even a grade I race. But for five weeks, at one 
racetrack. Saratoga is a one-horse town and that horse is 
FourstarDave.

"He is," said part-owner Richard Bomze, "becoming a cult figure."

Bomze is not guilty of hyperbole, not in the least. FourstarDave has 
his own fan club with a president lobbying to get him into the Hall 
of Fame. His appearance on the track or in the paddock brings 
thousands of fans to the rails, and his victories bring them to 
their feet with the sort of applause the even Easy Goer did not 
hear.

He has been given the keys to the city[photo with Dave getting some
"edible" keys to Saratoga], he has been featured on ABC and CBS, and 
New York Racing Association officials are working with politicians 
to have Aug. 27 officially declared FourstarDave Day in New York 
State.[Ceremony was held at Saratoga last Saturday. Huge "get-well" 
cards(about 4' x 8') for Dave signed by thousands of people. His 
stall has been retired...after he's done with it!] Everybody, even 
Gov. Mario Cuomo, loves FourstarDave.

There is a lot to this story but it all centers around one amazing 
fact: the 9-year-old gelding has won a race at Saratoga eight 
straight years. It is both one of the most remarkable and unusual 
streaks in racing history. Realistically, there is no chance that it 
will ever be surpassed. What other horse could even run at Saratoga 
eight straight years?

FourstarDave won this summer at Saratoga before suffering an injury 
in the Bernard Baruch Handicap(gr II), in which he finished third to 
Lure and Paradaise Creek on Aug. 14. The injury apparently sidelined 
him for the rest of the year, but chances are good he'll be back to 
try and keep the streak going next season.

It began in 1987, when the 2-year-old trained by Leo O'Brien and 
ridden by Randy Romero[who recently retired] won the Empire Stakes 
by 2 1/2 lengths. Even though a stakes winner at Saratoga, he was a 
New York-bred by an unfashionable sire(Compliance) out of a 
mare(Broadway Joan) Bomze had picked up at a sale for $2,500. 

No one paid much attention to him when he won the 1988 Albany by a 
nose under Angel Cordero Jr. Nor was much fuss made a year later 
when Richard Migliore guided him to victory in the West Point 
Handicap in the waning days of the meet.

By 1990, however, people were starting to pat attention. Obviously, 
when it came to August and Saratoga, there was a transformation - a 
good horse became a special horse.

He won the 1990 Daryl's Joy (gr. III Turf) and came back the 
following year to win the ace again, completing the 1 1/16 miles in a 
sizzling 1:38 4/5, the fastest time at the distance on any surface 
in the history of New York racing. So the legend grew.

In 1992, after two straight losses at the meet, he came through when 
it mattered most and won an allowance race.

Last year, at age eight, he won a handicap race in the middle part 
of the meet. He was a sharp second behind Lure in the Daryl's Joy, 
and he turned in a remarkable race in the West Point, falling to his
knees at the start, spotting the field several lengths, then making 
a courageous run to cross the wire first. It may have been his 
best race ever, but he was disqualified for allegedly interfering 
with another horse in the stretch.

They keep wondering when he will slow down - "He's a 60-year-old man 
out there competing with college kids," said Bomze - but it just 
doesn't happen. He kept the streak alive on the third day of the 
1994 meet when he won an allowance race by five.

"I've never been around a horse so popular and with so much 
charisma," Migliore said after the race. "It's a wonderful 
experience to ride him and be part of the atmosphere."

Folowing the Baruch, his record at Saratoga stands at 9-for-18 with 
three seconds. Elsewhere, his record is 12-for-77, which includes an 
0-for-21 record at Aqueduct, a track O'Brien said FourstarDave hates 
as much as he loves Saratoga, which may be evidence that the horse 
has a sense of taste along with the rest of his attributes.

His favorite spot[that's a subtitle in italic print]

Saratoga loves FourstarDave and FourstarDave loves Saratoga. O'Brien 
never grows tired of telling people about it. Every year when 
FourstarDave arrives at Saratoga he picks his head up, refreshed by 
the Adirondack air and the slower atmosphere.

Even the setting of his barn is part of the tale. He has a window at 
the back of his stall which looks out on the Oklahoma training track 
and the cars that pass by. The gelding spends hours happily staring 
out that window.

"He is three or four lengths better here," estimated O'Brien. "He 
has liked it here right from the start. He takes a great interest in 
looking out that window. By the second year he came here, it was 
like he recognized the place, that he knew he was back in his old 
favorite spot."

It would have been remarkable enough had he just lasted until six or 
severn, a time when most horses have lost a step or two. Not 
FourstarDave.

Prior to the Baruch, he had never had a serious injury, has never 
raced on any medication, and through Aug. 12 had made 92 lifetime 
starts. O'Brien said taht his longevity is partly due to his 
schedule and partly due to his pedigree.

"A lot of this has to do with the fact that we give him a vacation 
every year," he said. "When the weather starts to get cold around 
the end of the Belmont [Fall] meet he starts to grow hair. As soon 
as that happens, forget about it.

So we send him to Country Road Farm in Ocala[Florida]. Every year 
he has the same paddock and the same field. He gets off the van, 
drops to the ground in the sand, and rolls around and enjoys 
himself. He stays in the field for 2 1/2 months, then goes to 
Another Episode Farm in Flordida and trains there for 2 1/2 months. 
He's only with me about six months a year."

O'Brien said that the offspring of Compliance, many of whom he has 
trained(including FourstarDave's full brother, FourstarsAllstar), 
are "extremely sound horses, the type that have no problems, even
if they can't run." [I think he means "even the ones that can't run."
Compliance has sired several other stakes winners since Dave broke 
the ice!]

To celebrate FourstarDave Day at Saratoga, NYRA marketing head Allen 
Gutterman is busily trying to figure out a way to get fans a 
hoof-o-graph of the gelding.

"I was involved with John Henry when I worked at the Meadowlands," 
said Gutterman. "This horse is really Saratoga's. You try not to 
sound corny about those things but he is a living legend."
[end of article]"

IMHO, if every racehorse was handled the way Bomze and O'Brien 
handle FourstarDave, racing would be in a lot better shape!

John
481.722The Woodward is this Saturday!DECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle:Life in the espressolaneTue Sep 13 1994 19:0050
    If you like racing and subscribe to the ESPN sports channel, tune in
    this Saturday afternoon! They're broadcasting the first of Belmont's 
    2 major Saturday packages of Gr I races. This weekend includes the Turf 
    Classic(12f) and the Woodward(9f 3 YO & up) among other races. I won't
    mention the rest of the races because I always get this and the 
    October package confused as to which races are which days. ;-) But,
    I'm pretty sure there's a female handicap race and that Sky Beauty's in
    it. I think there's a 2 YO race too.
    
    The Turf Classic is always a good race and usually wide open. There are
    several European horses shipping in to use the Turf Classic as a prep
    race for the Breeder's Cup Turf as they'll have time to acclimatize
    before Novemeber.
    
    The Woodward may just be the race of the year! Holy Bull and Go For Gin
    will go against an amazing list of older handicappers: Bertrando,
    Brunswick, Colonial Affair, Devil His Due, Tinner's Way. All are Gr I
    winners and most seem to be at the top of their form. 
    
    Colonial Affair & Devil His Due just duelled to a head bobbing finish
    in the Whitney last month at Saratoga. CA won but DHD was giving away
    weight(8 lbs if I remember right) and hadn't raced in 2 months. Both
    should be peaking.
    
    Brunswick is coming back from a layoff and wasn't ready for the Whitney
    so he passed. He came back in an allowance race at Belmont 2 weeks ago.
    He should be ready too.
    
    Tinner's Way just won his first Gr I in the Pacific Classic at DelMar
    last month...in stakes record time. He's very consistent but has had a
    bad case of "second-itis" until the Pacific Classic. He runs on both
    dirt and turf. From Secretariat's last foal crop, TW is trained by
    Bobbie Frankel.
    
    Holy Bull just won the Travers 4 weeks ago at Saratoga. He has already
    beat nearly every horse in this field in the Metropolitan Handicap in
    May...but that was at 1 mile. This is 9f. HB is very good. Is he good
    enough to beat a top field of handicappers going long? We'll see.
    
    Go For Gin had not raced since the Belmont Stakes but came back a
    couple weeks ago at Saratoga. He ran very well but only managed 3rd in
    part because of bad racing luck and/or jockey errors. Zito had told
    McCarron to keep GFG outside and clear so he'd have an easy race as a
    comeback. McCarron took GFG inside and got trapped until late. GFG came
    on well to even get 3rd. Zito said he was mad at McCarron but wan't
    gonna replace him because Cordero has retired and Arcaro's too busy
    playing golf. [Both Cordero and Arcaro are retired jockeys who are in
    the Hall of Fame.]
    
    Sounds like fun!
481.723RDGE44::ALEUC3Wed Sep 14 1994 15:174
    
    Do you have the names of any of the European runner for the Turf?
    
    MartinK
481.724Sorry.DECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle:Life in the espressolaneThu Sep 15 1994 20:3515
    >    ...    I won't 
    >mention the rest of the races because I always get this and the
    >October package confused as to which races are which days.
    
    Did I say Turf Classic(12f)? I meant Man O'War Stakes(12f)! The Turf
    Classic is part of the October package. See what I mean!
    
    No, I haven't heard which European horses are shipping in for the Man
    O'War. I'm on the wrong coast for the Daily Racing Form to tell me
    what's happening in NY(the DRF has various editions for each of our far
    flung racing centers). My Blood Horse magazine only tells me about
    races from 2 weeks ago. That means I'm stuck with whatever the TV folks
    want to tell me. All they said on the weekly show is "The Europeans are 
    coming" and, on yesterday's NY racing show, "The Europeans have arrived." 
    Sorry.
481.725ARC ResultRDGE44::ALEUC3Mon Oct 03 1994 10:4574
 PRIX DE L'ARC DE TRIOMPHE  G1

 Reports compiled from UK BBC/ITV Teletext Services

 Going: Good

 1) CARNEGIE      T JARNET    W 4.00 P 3.40
 2) HERNANDO      C ASMUSSEN         P 3.50
 3) APPLE TREE    J REID             P 6.10
 DIST: SNK 1/2 SNK SH 1 NK 3/4 HD 1/2 NK 3/4 3/4

 4  EZZOUD        10 KING'S THEATRE
 5  BRIGHT MOON   11 CELTIC ARMS       16 SIERRA MADRE
 6  WHITE MUZZLE  12 RICHARD           17 BIG TOBIN
 7  ONLY ROYAL    13 INTREPIDITY       18 TRULY A DREAM
 8  LANDO         14 MUCH BETTER       19 VERT AMANDRE
 9  MILLKOM       15 BROADWAY  FLYER   20 DANCIENNE

 - At the finish 7 Lengths covered 16 of the 20 runners.

 Under a brilliant ride from Thierry Jarnet, Carnegie completed a fourtimer
 with a brilliant success in Europe's championship middle distance race.
 The Andre Fabre-trained Carnegie just held Hernando in a desperately
 tight finish, having produced the colt with a challenge with 300 metres to
 run, and the pair held off a series of rivals by a short neck.
 The three-year-old was giving the trainer his third arc but it was
 the first time that owner Sheikh Mohammed has captured the prize.
 Fabre also saddled the third, apple tree, ridden by John Reid.

 Andre Fabre, was understandably delighted after the race.
 "I had five runners and although Carnegie could not be called the
 best before today, as he had only won a group two, he was certainly
 the most promising of the bunch. He is progressive and is bred to win this
 race as his mother Detroit  also won it in 1980. I was worried when Broadway
 Flyer went so far in  front but we got there. Apple Tree also ran a good race,
 he is a consistent horse."

 The absent Sheikh Mohammed was represented by his racing manager
 Anthony Stroud who commented:
 "I think that will probably be it for the year for him and the Sheikh
 will decide whether Carnegie will stay in training next year."

 Reactions from other arc connections

 Jockey Cash ASMUSSEN said: "that is the Hernando I know and love, he is
 back to his best. We just got beat by a better horse on the day.

 John Reid said of third Apple Tree: "He was only a last-minute ride but
 the horse has run out of his skin. I had a great run until over one and
 a quarter furlongs out and then I hit trouble with EZZOUD. I bounced off
 the paint three times and I think it probably cost me the race," said
 the Irishman.

 Walter Swinburn, rider of fourth horse EZZOUD said: "I have no excuses.
 I thought we were sure to win two out but room became tight. He has run a
 great race and I feel he stays 12 furlongs." However the  jockey later 
 received a four-day ban for causing interference. 

 Frankie Dettori (Only Royale): "The horse wanted softer ground."

 Pat Eddery (Intrepidity): "I was going as well as anything two
 furlongs out, but she just didn't pick up when I asked her for an effort."

 Yutaka Take (Japan) is certain to come in for heavy criticism after an
 uninspired ride on white muzzle, trainer Peter Chapple-Hyam was
 clearly very unhappy and he said:
 "Let's just say that he was given a  lot to do - no further comment."

 The Japanese rider still managed to have a further disaster.
 tragically he won the SUNSET and VINE PRIX DE L'OPERA on Erin Bird
 but was later disqualified and the race awarded to Andromaque.
 Interference early in the straight was the cause of the amended result.

MartinK
481.726Prix De L'Abbaye resultRDGE44::ALEUC3Mon Oct 03 1994 10:4939
 3.05 PRIX DE L'ABBAYE 5F G1

 1) LOCHSONG        L DETTORI  W  1.70   P  2.00
 2) MISTERTOP'GO    K DARLEY             P  2.20
 3) SPAIN LANE      W SWINBURN           P  2.30

 Trained by Ian Balding (England)

 DIST: 5L, 2L

 Frankie Dettori and Lochsong defied the critics with a blistering display
 in the Prix De L'Abbaye De Longchamp.

 The key to her performance was that the French authorities held no parade
 and allowed her to be accompanied down to the starts.  When the gates opened
 the race was as good as over in a matter of  strides as the 6yo came home
 alone. 

 Lochsong's trainer Ian Balding was close to tears as he said:
 "It has been terribly worrying to bring her back from the disaster at
 York and I thought temperamentally she might have gone but she hasn't!
 she is unique and it would be a shame not to go to the breeders cup
 with her - there's nothing like her, this has always been her time of
 year. She loves the autumn."

 Jeff Smith, the owner of Lochsong, confirmed that the mare's next stop
 will be the Breeders' Cup Sprint  on November 5: "She goes to America
 for sure, as long as she is sound after this. The French were wonderful
 today. They let us do what we liked. She did one circuit of the parade ring
 and then walked to the start."

 (She had bolted to the start in her two previous races during compulsory
 parades, losing both).

 After a long embrace with his equine partner, Lochsong's jockey Frankie
 Dettori, added: "That was the ultimate feeling. she's won in style on
 a great stage."

MartinK
481.727Lochsong & BC crowds?DECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle:Life in the espressolaneMon Oct 03 1994 16:3721
    Thanks for the timely update, Martin! We won't see the Arc on TV until 2
    weeks from now, if then. Most years they show it a week or 2 before the
    Breeders' Cup and then talk about the horses that will run in the BC
    Turf...as if the Arc were a mere prep race and the BC Turf were more 
    prestigious than the Arc! But, that's amercian tv for you...I wouldn't
    even get to read about it in The Blood Horse until the middle of next 
    week, so your report is most welcome...
    
    
    Re Lochsong
    
    For those who aren't familiar with her history, she is easily excited
    by crowds. In a recent race at York, the authorities insisted that she
    participate in a post parade. She got excited and ran off with the
    jockey ...for 5 furlongs, I believe. She then ran poorly in the race
    which everyone attributes to her running off.
    
    Martin, did her owner/trainer say how they planned to deal with the
    crowd and parade at the Breeders' Cup?
    
    John
481.728Breeders' Cup Preview; Fred & GingerDECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle:Life in the espressolaneMon Oct 03 1994 17:2468
    Speaking of the Breeders' Cup...NY holds the second of its special
    Saturday packages this weekend. This one is dubbed 'Breeders' Cup
    Preview' and will be broadcast on NBC so check your local listings for
    Saturday afternoon...The 'headline' race is the Jockey Club Gold Cup 
    at 10f for horses 3 & up.
    
    You won't see Holy Bull(Florida Derby, Met Mile, Haskell Invitational,
    Travers Stakes & Whitney Hcap winner) there. He's done for the season. 
    Owner/trainer Jimmy Croll said it has nothing to do with the horse not 
    being nominated to the Breeders' Cup. He's just doing the right thing 
    for his horse. He said that HB has been training and racing since early 
    in the year and needs a rest. He said the BC will be on the horse's 
    schedule next year and that he will plan the racing campaign with that 
    in mind. The Breeders' Cup was not part of the plan this year and he 
    doesn't think it's in the horse's best interest to change the plan.
    
    Tabasco Cat(winner of Preakness, Belmont Stakes, KY Cup Classic) *will*
    be in the Jockey CLub Gold Cup. D. W. Lukas is trying to make a case
    for Tabasco Cat to be Horse Of The Year over Holy Bull. His plan is
    to win the JC Gold Cup and the Breeders' Cup Classic and then say,
    "Hey, we're the champs. Holy Bull is good but we won 2/3 of the Triple
    Crown and beat older horses in these 2 championship races."
    
    If Tabasco Cat *does* win the JC Gold Cup and the Breeders' Cup
    Classic, I'd(reluctantly) say that Lukas is right. I'd be reluctant
    because Tabasco Cat has *not* impressed me much even in his classic
    victories. He seems an "over-achiever". I think Lukas has finally
    developed the knack that Charlie Whittingham has had for decades:
    getting a little more out of a horse than his natural ability suggests. 
    For example, Whittingham has developed a number of horses who excelled
    on the track but were totally unimpressive at stud. Lots of people say
    that this is because Whittingham is a wizard and gets more out of his
    horses than other trainers could. 
    
    Although Holy Bull *has* impressed me several times this year, I doubt
    that I would say he's Horse Of The Year even if Tabasco Cat loses
    *both* his remaining races! Why? Simple. Even though he's been
    impressive when winning against older horses, he's gotten a weight
    advantage each time. Each time, the weight advantage resulted in a
    margin of victory which was very consistent with handicapping
    principles for the weight difference. That suggests that he *may* not
    be significantly better than the older horses he's defeated.
    
    For example, in the Whitney, Holy Bull carried 121 pounds. Track
    announcer Tom Durkin was going crazy calling the fractions fast etc.
    He's an excitable sort and a very good race caller but this time he was
    simply wrong. The pace was reasonable rather than fast. Holy Bull got
    the mile in 1:34 3/5 while carrying 121 pounds. He finished the final
    furlong in about 12 2/5 seconds. Not particularly impressive
    considering the weight.
    
    An hour earlier, Sky Beauty carried 130 pounds. It was the first time
    in over 10 years that any filly/mare had been assigned that much weight.
    The last filly/mare to *win* in NY carrying 130 pounds was TaWee more
    than 20 years ago! Not only did Sky Beauty *win* with that weight but
    she also ran as fast as Holy Bull while carrying it! She got the mile
    in 1:35 1/5 a mere 3/5ths more than Holy Bull. The early fractions were
    identical too. Although the race was 8.5 fulrongs rather than the 9 that
    Holy Bull ran, Sky Beauty ran her final furlong in about 12 2/5
    seconds, the same as Holy Bull. But, she did it while carrying 130 
    pounds and fighting off a late challenge!
    
    Will she get Horse Of The Year? No. She's a female. Remember Fred
    Astaire and Ginger Rogers? Who is remembered as a great dancer? Fred is
    even though Ginger did everything he did backwards while wearing high
    heels!
    
    John
481.729Small nitGBLAUT::JANICKIV. Janicki DCE Engineering DTN 226-5980Tue Oct 04 1994 12:358
John,

It was the Woodward, not the Whitney that Holy Bull won over older
horses.

Sky Beauty's chances are also hurt because she has only won in New York.

Vicky
481.730Australian Virus NewsEASI::GEENENIllud cape et ei fibulam adfige!Tue Oct 04 1994 12:5554
    Hello TB Fans:
    
    I copied this thread from the Internet Derby.
    
    Carl
    
    (begin thread)
    -------------------------------------
    
Subject: Australian Horse Virus Cause Sought

    BRISBANE, Australia (AP) -- Veterinarians continued tests
Saturday hoping to discover the cause of a virus that has killed 11
horses, left a leading trainer seriously ill and forced the
cancellation of all racing in the south of Queensland state.
    Trainer Vic Rail was hospitalized in serious condition and 10 of
his horses died after a mystery outbreak of an illness at his
suburban Brisbane stables.
    Another horse at an adjacent stable in the suburb of Hendra died
Thursday and five more are undergoing treatment.
    Bob Gibbs, the Queensland state Minister of Sport, has ordered
all racing cancelled until next Thursday and said Saturday the ban
may be continued if the virus is not traced.
    Preliminary tests have failed to determine the cause of deaths
of the horses at the stables of Rail and fellow trainer John
Fitzgerald.
    ``I'll receive advice on Monday at a meeting with Department of
Primary Industry officials and decide whether the quarantine period
should be extended for another week,'' Gibbs said Saturday.
    ``I did not want to risk the situation of thoroughbreds worth
millions of dollars mingling at racetracks and have a major
outbreak occur next week. It is better to err on the side of
caution in these circumstances.''
    Testing for African horse sickness, equine influenza, equine
herpes or poisoning has come up negative.
    Rail was reported in stable condition in a hospital after being
admitted on Tuesday with symptoms similar to those suffered by the
affected horses.
    Veterinary surgeon Peter Reid said the horses that died had been
hemorrhaging through their noses and mouths.
    
    -------------------------------------------
    
Sad update:  Vic Rail died a couple of days ago.  The cause(s) of his and 
his horses' illness is not yet known.

    ------------------------------------
    
A minor update - the horses' death toll was up to 14 last I heard, and the  
trainer, Vic Rail has died. He is thought to have contracted Legionaires  
Disease, but that's pretty tentative. An autopsy is underway.
    
    ------------------------------------
    (end thread)
481.731LochsongRDGE44::ALEUC3Tue Oct 04 1994 15:2112
Lochsong's trainer Ian Balding was reported as saying:

"There are obstacles to overcome but Lochsong will be suited to the way
sprints are run there. She hits the stalls very fast and her early speed
will help. Most horses are over the top by November, but this is her time
of year and being ponied to the start should not pose problems because
she has been ponied with us all year".

For me its the bend and the extra furlong that will cause the problem.

MartinK
481.732senility sets inDECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle:Life in the espressolaneTue Oct 04 1994 17:409
    Vicky,
    
    There's no such thing as a *big* nit! ;-) Thanks, I'm *always* getting
    those 2 races confused. Even worse, I sometimes say "the Wood" when I
    mean the Woodward. Anybody who follows the trail to the KY Derby knows
    that the Wood Memorial is a race for 3 YOs run in March at Aqueduct as
    a prep for the KY Derby; not an open race in September...
    
    It'll happen to you when you get old too
481.733Preview lineupDECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle:Life in the espressolaneThu Oct 06 1994 16:4345
    Here's the lineup for Saturday's "Breeders' Cup Preview" at Belmont.
    No screwups this time, at least not by me. I wrote down what they said
    on yesterday's recap show from Belmont. NBC will be broadcasting 3 of
    the 6 races live with taped coverage of the other 3. 
    
    Gr I Frizzette (2YO fillies 1 1/16 miles) - Flanders is the favorite in
    a field of 5
    
    Gr I Champagne (2 YO colts 1 1/16 miles) - Montreal Red and On Target
    are expected to be the favorites
    
    Gr III Kelso (3 & up 1 mile turf) - Lure with A In Sociology a distant
    second choice in a field of 6
    
    Gr I Turf Classic(3 & up 12f turf) - Many of the same horses as ran 3
    weeks ago in the X: 
    	winner Royal Mountain Inn is the 8/5 favorite, 
    	French runner-up Flag Down is the second choice over Fraise and
    		Alex The Great.
    
    Gr I Beldame(fillies & mares; 3 & up 9f) 
    	With Sky Beauty resting until the Breeders' Cup, Heavenly Prize is
    	the *heavy* favorite. She's got a new rider as Pat Day replaces
    	Mike Smith. Smith is the regular rider for both Heavenly Prize and
    	Sky Beauty and has commited to SB for the Cup. So, trainer
    	McGaughey decided to put Day up now. Apparently, Heavenly Prize has
    	scared off every other filly/mare who was considered for the race
    	as only 3 other will run.
    
    Gr I Jockey CLub Gold Cup(3 & up 10 f) The expected favorites include:
    	Devil His Due(Post 7) at 8/5, Tabasco Cat(Post 6) at 5/2, and
    	Go For Gin(Post 3) at 5/1. Other key contenders are Colonial Affair
    	and Kissin Kris. With little speed in this race, this seems to be a
    	jockey's race. Strategy will make the difference. Colonial Affair
    	and Kissin Kris may have to be a little closer than is their norm.
    	DHD has been running as a closer but can also stalk. With regular
    	rider, Mike Smith making the racetime decisions, I'd say DHD has got
    	the best chance. I don't think Go For Gin is good enough to beat
    	this lot of proven distance horses by running on the lead. I don't
    	think Tabasco Cat is good enough to be in the money against this
    	field much less win the BC Classic. If I were betting this race, 
    	I'd bet DHD over Colonial Affair in an Exacta wager and reverse 
    	that(C.A. over D.H.D.)...Talk about stickin' your neck out! I can 
    	feel the guillotine falling now! ;-)
    
481.734The guillotine missed!!EASI::GEENENIllud cape et ei fibulam adfige!Mon Oct 10 1994 13:1735
    Looks like you nailed the CA-DHD exacta, John.  Good going!!  I
    would have liked to see TC and GFG battle it out like they did in the
    Preakness and Belmont, adding credence to their Triple Crown races
    performances.  But until they show something, we'll probably have to
    consider them as having performed beyond their true abilities in the
    Triple Crown races.
    
    Since reading 3 or 4 books on horse behavior and TB inspection, not to
    mention a lot of information from John D'Addamio, I've become an OK
    judge of the race-day condition of TBs -- at least I can eliminate some
    horses based on their appearance and behavior in the paddock, post
    parade, and pre-race warmup.  While some may say that Tabasco Cat
    exhibited his usual fractiousness, his pre-race behavior eliminated him
    from my consideration.  The whites of TC's eyes were showing, which in
    a lot of cases means the horse is frightened.  TC was using up a lot of
    precious energy with his constant jumping around.  It's no wonder that
    TC had nothing to give when Pat Day put the whip to him.  TC was in
    perfect striking position along the rail with a clear track ahead of
    him.
    
    Also noticed during pre-race inspection in the JCGC:  DHD looked really
    great physically and exhibited many positive signs.  CA looked great
    too, but didn't exhibit as many positive signs as did DHD, at least the
    little I saw of any of the on NBC's mediocre, IME, coverage.  GFG
    looked flat and disinterested.  He was an easy elimination as was TC.
    Kissin Kris?  I don't know what's happened to this horse lately.  He
    didn't look physically as fit and muscular as the other horses.
    
    Based on the info in the DRF and my TV pre-race inspection, I'd picked
    DHD to win.  Better luck next time, huh?  John, I don't know how you
    can pick an exacta like that sight unseen.  Have you been practicing
    animal communication behind our backs?
    
    May the horse be with you,
    Carl
481.735Thanks for the copying us on the communiqueGRANMA::JWOODMon Oct 10 1994 13:383
    I GOT it! ;) Nice report, Carl.
    
    
481.736BC Preview prattleDECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle:Life in the espressolaneMon Oct 10 1994 17:1499
    >John, I don't know how you can pick an exacta like that sight unseen.
    
    Well, it's true I picked that before race day but I watched these horses
    all year long. That particular selection was based on class and the
    performances of these same horses against each other and against common
    opponents. DHD was the easy part. He's consistent and always gets a
    paycheck. He's a good solid handicap horse. When he peaks, he's tough
    to beat. When he's not at his peak, he's still tough. 
    
    Colonial Affair wasn't much harder. He's been improving all summer and
    I got the impression he was building for the fall campaign. He and DHD
    have been trading placements in good races recently. He is by 
    Pleasant Colony which is a late maturing and durable line. I expect
    Colonial Affair to improve a bit going into the BC and even *more* next
    season.
    
    As for the 3 YO's, I've always contended that Go For Gin and especially
    Tabasco Cat are *not* the cream of the crop. They just happened to peak
    and had the racing luck with them during the Triple Crown. I don't
    think either of them will be a top handicap horse next season.
    
    Of the 3 YO's that *will* be going to the Breeders' Cup, I have a lot
    more respect for Soul Of The Matter and Concern. Soul Of The Matter ran
    poorlt in the KY Derby and then took 4-5 months off. He's back at the
    races now and has had 2 starts: an allowance race against older horses
    which he won *very* impressively and the Gr I Lousiana Super Derby
    which he won with the fastest final 1/4 mile of any winner of that 
    race yet.
    
    Concern was second to Holy Bull by a head in the Travers after a
    medicore pace. Concern also ran a close second to Soul Of The Matter in 
    the Super Derby with the fastest final 1/4 mile of any horse. He just 
    needed a couple more jumps or a slightly faster pace. The intermediate
    fractions of the Super Derby were terribly slow. Pat Day was trying to
    steal the race on the front end with Bay Star(? something liek that)
    and slowed it down to a crawl.
    
    So, those are the 4 US based horses that I think have a shot at the 
    BC CLassic in 4 weeks. My final selection would be based on a) what
    happens with their health/training between now and then, b) what sort
    of "speed" shows up in the race, c) what European horses are entered
    and d) the size of the field. The bigger the field, the less chance
    Concern(who will probably be 20 lengths off the lead!) has of getting 
    through all the traffic! A potential speed duel would improve the chances
    of all 4 as they are stalkers/closers.
    
    Picking the Gold Cup would have been a little harder if I'd known that 
    Flag Down was in the race. He was announced on Weds as being run in the 
    Turf Classic at 12f on turf and that's the race I'd handicapped him in 
    and which I thought he'd win over Royal Mountain Inn. Flag Down went
    in the Gold Cup and Royal Mountain Inn scratched from the Turf Classic.
    
    One thing this weekend's races showed: we don't have a decent 12 furlong
    turf horse in the US this season. Both the Turf Classic in NY and the
    Oak Tree Invitational showed serious shortcomings in the favorites.
    The Turf Classic went to a European horse. On TV, they said that all
    the top 3 were European horses but I'm pretty sure that second placed
    Vaudeville has been racing in the US (CA and Chicago) before the NY
    race. The Oak Tree went to a Brazilian horse(Sandpit) which was 
    recently shipped to the US by his Brazilian owners to run for better
    money than is available in South America. Sandpit was Brazilian 3 YO
    champion and may do well here in the US but he's not nominated to the
    BC. Grand Flotilla ran second and is nominated but has not impressed me
    as a serious threat to the top horses.
    
    Did ya see Lure in the Kelso mile? [tongue-in-cheek/satire mode on]
    He's all washed up, doncha think? He can't take 2 months off from
    racing, give away 14 pounds in weight, run a mile any faster than
    1:34 flat and win a head bobbing finish. He must be through if he
    couldn't win under those conditions! [tongue-in-cheek/satire mode off]
    Seriously, Lure *will* be a major factor in the BC Mile. He might even 
    pull the hat trick by winning it for the 3rd straight year. Depends on
    what European milers come over. There are several European milers who
    are of Lure's caliber. While there are several US horses who have on
    occasion defeated Lure, Paradaise Creek is the only horse in the US 
    who has enough ability to beat Lure more than once. But, even Paradaise
    Creek will have trouble with Lure at 1 mile. I think Lure's best
    distance is a flat mile while Paradaise Creek excels When they go a 
    little farther like 9 or 10 furlongs. 
    
    Paradaise Creek is running in the DC International at Laurel this
    weekend. That's a 1 mile race but I keep hearing he's pointing for the
    BC Turf. I can't recall PC ever running in a 12f race and it doesn't
    make sense to me to use a 1 mile race as a prep for 12 furlongs so I 
    wouldn't be surprised to see him tackle Lure in the BC Mile.
    
    Distaff? Sky Beauty and Heavenly Prize are the top eastern contenders. I
    don't know who's running from the west. Hollywood Wildcat has been
    running on the turf but she might switch back to dirt. Haven't heard of
    Lakeway or Sardula in months. Paseana is *NOT* running. She's not
    nominated and owners refuse to put up the extortion money...I mean the
    supplemental entry fee... to get her in this year.
    
    Sprint? I don't know who's running yet.
    
    the 2 YO's? I don't care. They're meaningless races to next year's 3YO
    campaigns or the handicap divisions.
    
    j
481.737How are they TODAY?EASI::GEENENIllud cape et ei fibulam adfige!Tue Oct 11 1994 14:3716
    re:  -.1
    
    By knowing a horse's breeding and by watching them all year a person
    can have a pretty good assessment of a horse's overall capabilities and
    potential.  I'm trying to come up with how to assess how a horse is
    feeling on raceday to see if s/he will live up to those capabilities
    and potential.  My attempted assessment is based on observation of the
    horse's physical condition, conformation, and behavior displayed in
    the paddock, post parade, and pre-race warmup.
    
    I figure that a serious student of the horse world like you, John,
    will have the overall breeding, potential, and capability stuff nailed.
    But I still am amazed that you can pick 'em without looking!!  Do you
    publish a tout sheet :>{)
    
    Carl
481.738Final preps for BC '94DECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle:Life in the espressolaneMon Oct 17 1994 18:17101
    This weekend, the final North American races that are used to prepare for 
    the Breeders' Cup were run. They included the Ancient Title(Gr III 6f) 
    and the Goodwood(9f Gr II) in CA, the Spinster(Gr I 9f for fillies &
    mares) at Keeneland, the Washington DC INternational(Gr I 10f turf) and 
    Laurel Dash(Gr III 6f turf sprint) at Laurel(Maryland) and the Rothman's 
    International(Gr I 12f turf) at Woodbine(Toronto Canada)
    
    The Ancient Title should have little effect on this year's BC Sprint 
    unless Cardmania improves off this comeback race. The best CA 
    sprinters(IMHO) are Memo, who is not eligible for the BC, and Soviet 
    Problem, a brilliant sprinting mare who runs exclusively on the turf.
    
    The Goodwood should have little impact on the BC CLassic. It was won by
    Bertrando who has been in poor form all season. Although his gameness
    was impressive when he lost the lead and came back to win, this was the
    only decent race he's run all year. If he wasn't good enough to win
    last year when he was at his peak, why supplement him for $360,000 when
    he's not even near peak form? The horse to watch in this race was
    Dramatic Gold who was a good 3rd in the Pacific Classic against older
    horses and then won the Molson Million up in Canada. Dramatic Gold
    looked like winning it at the top of the stretch but didn't go on when
    asked. Jockey Corey Naktani blamed himself for the loss saying he
    paused the horse's run as he came to the leaders. The trainer said he
    doesn't think the horse wants to go 10f. Since Dramatic Gold has very
    little turn of foot and has run well at 10f before, I'm more inclined
    to agree with the jock than the trainer. 'Course neither I nor the jock
    have much to say about whether Dramatic Gold goes to the BC!
    
    The Spinster saw Dispute blow off a field of good distaffers including
    Sardula who is said to have "run down" in her hind legs. (BTW, running
    down is a minor injury rather like "skinned knees" in humans. In race
    horses, their fetlocks(ankles) sometimes get scraped up on sandy tracks.) 
    Judging by the Nort American entries, I think the BC Distaff will be the 
    deepest most talented field on the BC card. Sky Beauty, Dispute,
    Heavenly Prize and You'd Be Surprised are scheduled to some from NY.
    Hollywood Wildcat is expected from CA. If she's coming, she's been
    prepared from works alone. I haven't seen or read of her racing in over
    2 months. Another thing, she's been running on the turf against the
    likes of Flawlessly and winning. So, I'd expect her to go in the Gr I
    CA turf races like the Matron and The Yellow Ribbon which decide the 
    Turf Mare championship rather than go in the BC Distaff. Anyway, all
    you need is Lakeway and this will be the deepest Distaff in years!
    
    Speaking of Soviet Problem, she won the Laurel Dash on Saturday by 3 over
    Cool Air. These 2 mares were supposed to met in a match race at DelMar
    last summer but Cool Air came up with a minor problem a week before
    the race. Mamsell Babette substituted for Cool Air and was handily.
    Soviet Problem is the most impressive sprint mare I've seen since 
    Safely Kept. I doubt she'll run in the BC Sprint because it's on dirt.
    
    The DC International. Sorry if I misled you all saying it was a mile
    race. They changed it from last year(when it was a mile) to 10f w/o
    clearing it w/me! ;-) So, I didn't know. 'Course this is the 4th or 5th
    time in the last 10 years they've changed the distance! It was
    originally 12f, then 10f. Then last year, they shortened it to 8f to
    try to get trainers to use it as a prep for the BC Mile. They didn't so
    it was changed back to 10f. 
    
    Anyway, Paradaise Creek won *very* easily. Pat Day never really asked
    the horse to run. He sat very still throughout the race and merely let
    the horse lengthen his stride in the quietest hand ride I've seen in
    years. Paradaise Creek is scheduled for the BC Turf at 12f. He's never
    run a step beyond 10f. So, why didn't he run in the Man O'War or Turf
    Classic at Belmont to prepare for a 12f race and find out if he'll stay
    the 12f distance? Simple. Money. He won the Arlington Million at 10f
    at the beginning of Sept. The Man O'War was run mid-Sept and offered a
    purse of $400,000. The Turf Classic was run Oct 8 and offered $500,000.
    The DC International purse is $600,000 and there was no serious
    competition.
    
    The most interesting race of the weekend was the Rothman's
    International which offers a purse of $1,000,000(Canadian). It drew a 
    field of 9, six of them from Europe! The European contingent included
    White Muzzle, Volochine, Husband, Urgent Request, Petit Loup and
    RainTrap. The Canadians sent out a veteran gelding, Cozzene's Prince
    who has run in this race 5 consecutive years and finished 2nd last
    year, and a good filly named Alywow.
    
    One interseting thing about the race is taht it was run over Woodbine's
    new turf course. Woodbine has been remodeled for year round use. The
    old Marshall Turf Course was destroyed. An inner winterized dirt track
    was built mainly for harness racing use(the harness racing facility has
    been turned into condos or something). A marvellous new turf course
    was created *outside* the main track. It's called the E.P. Taylor
    course after the breeder of Northern Dancer. It features the longest
    straight in North America and is so close to the grandstands that fans
    are very close to the horses.
    
    Urgent Request, a confirmed front runner who looked more like a
    runaway, took the lead and set a moderate pace. Husband, last year's
    winner, made a wide and perhaps premature move in this *very* long
    straight. The commentators said the straight was 60 strides from the
    banked turn. Since the average racing stride is about 24 feet, this is
    a 1/4 mile straight! 
    
    Volochine moved inside of Urgent Request. The filly, Alywow moved
    outside him. For a minute, it looked like those 2 would duel to the
    wire. But, Raintrap who had been blocked behind those 3, swung out and
    won by 2 lengths going away. Alywow drew off to be a clear second.
    The photo showed Volochine got third over a game Urgent Request.
    Husband tired to 6th and White Muzzle was last.
481.739odds & endsDECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle:Life in the espressolaneMon Oct 24 1994 21:2726
    There were some retirements recently which will affect not only this
    year's Breeders' Cup but also the Eclipse Awards...
    
    1. Colonial Affair - retired due to injury received in a stall accident.
    			the report I heard said he fractured a sesamoid
    			while acting up in his stall. I expected him to be
    			the favorite among the US contenders in the Classic
    2. Flawlessly - was being trained for the Yellow Ribbon & Matriarch.
    			Trainer Whittingham & owners decided she'd done
    			enough and retired her from racing rather than risk
    			injury in those final races. To paraphrase
    			Whittingham when he retired Sunday Silence for a
    			trivial injury, they'd look pretty foolish hauling
    			a champion like her off the track.
    
    3. Miner's Mark - last year's Jockey CLub Gold Cup winner was retired
    			due to minor injury.
    
    Other news that may affect the BC races, Soul Of The Matter returned
    home from the Super Derby with a bandaged foot. He apparently banged it
    in the gate and then opened up the injury during the race. It's not
    clear whether he'll be ready for the BC Classic or not.
    
    Since I was thinking of playing an exacta box with Colonial Affair,
    Soul Of The Matter, Devil His Due and Concern, I'll have to handicap it
    all over again!
481.740Champion 2yo (UK)RDGE44::ALEUC3Tue Oct 25 1994 08:2468
Its nice to have a champion 2yo with something special to set our hearts
beating in anticipation for next years classic. Here in the UK, in the last
Grade 1 race of the season for 2yo we've found that star. The following is an
extract from TELETEXT reports of the race and the reactions of the principles. 

----------------------------------------------
CELTIC SWING annihilated his seven rivals to capture the Group One  Racing Post
Trophy in breathtaking fashion from Annus Mirabilis.  The Lady Herries-trained
2yo colt absolutely ran away from a highclass field to fire to the top of the
ante-post Classic markets. 

Fahal made the early running, but the  evens favourite was always going well
and cruised into the lead 3f out. And once Kevin Darley pressed the button the
son of Damister lengthened right away from his toiling rivals to win by a very
long looking 12 lengths. 

Owner Peter Savill has an ante-post voucher with Celtic Swing quoted at 250/1
for the 1995 Epsom Derby and what a reasonable wager that now looks! 

He said:
"We thought he was very special but the soft ground was a worry. You don't know
how they will handle it until they have met it. He is by a long way my best
ever horse and he will probably now go for the 2,000 Guineas. He is still
unfurnished and can only improve. I told Kevin Darley to push him  out if he
was clear as it would be nice to have the champion juvenile" 

Celtic Swing's trainer Lady Herries said:
"Michael Stoute (trainer of the second) told me that the second here is 18 lbs
better than the one we beat at Ascot (by 8 lengths)!  He is very laidback but
we kept having to find faster horses to work him with as nothing could go with
him at home. Kevin Darley told Peter Savill to buy him after seeing him work in
March. The negotiations then started and my mother sold him and another horse
to Peter. The other one sadly died of colic but it's swings and roundabouts". 

Jubilant jockey Kevin Darley said of Celtic Swing's superb display:
"He is a funny horse as he has such a flowing action that you think that he is
going nowhere. When he is front he looks about and it would have helped him if
he had something to race with. He handled soft going well - they say good
horses handle anything but I think good going would be best. He floats over the
ground and is definitely the best I have ridden." 

Bookmakers William Hill make Peter Savill's colt 2/1 for the 2,000 Guineas
and 7/2 for the Epsom Vodafone Derby.

Their PR spokesman David Hood said:
"This horse is an absolute monster. He is one of the shortest winter favourites
for the Derby ever. When Reference Point won the same race he was only 5/1 for
the Derby afterwards. But this was probably the easiest Group One success since
Shergar's Derby triumph in 1981." 


  1995 CLASSIC  ANTE-POST LATEST

 2,000 Guineas  LADBROKE  HILL  CORAL

 Celtic Swing     5-2      2     9-4
 Pennekamp        ---      4      6
 Sri Pekan         8       8      7

 Derby

 Celtic Swing      6      7-2     5
 Pennekamp        12      12     12

 It will be interesting to see if the 6/1 offered by Ladbrokes lasts the day.
 (morning update - now best priced 5/1 for the Epsom Derby)

MartinK
481.741Soviet Problem is in the SprintDECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle:Life in the espressolaneWed Oct 26 1994 21:5524
    I just heard on Monday that Soviet Problem will be supplemented to the
    Breeders' Cup Sprint. So, my interest in the Sprint just shot up. 
    I don't recall her running on dirt before although she may have done.
    After her win from off the pace after a bad start in the Laurel Dash, 
    we know she's not only fast and game but multi-dimensional as well.
    She's also won on the lead. Speaking of the Laurel Dash, her share of
    the purse was $120,000 which is exactly what is necessary to supplement
    her to the Sprint. Of course, that's not all the expenses($25,000 to
    start, travel expenses, etc). She's got to place or win to make a
    profit from the purse.
    
    Cardmania had some bad luck in the Ancient Title and did well to finish 
    4th. He broke through the gate before the race. While that's sometimes
    an indication of being overly anxious, I don't think it was this time.
    I noticed that when he broke through that a gate 2-3 stalls over
    had popped open first. I think that may be what caused him to jump 
    forward and break through. He thought they'd been sprung! He was also
    taken back to last and had some traffic troubles. He's usually a late
    running sprinter so his good closing kick got him 4th after a long
    layoff. He should improve next time out.
    
    If they look good on raceday, I might play SP to win and SP-Cardmania 
    and Cardmania-SP exactas.
    
481.742Euro Sprint QueenRDGE44::ALEUC3Thu Oct 27 1994 15:5234
BC SPRINT
    
Lochsong        (Song, Picketts Well - Lochnager)

Won 3/6 G1 races.

5yo Mare. Started her 4yo career in Apr92 in a 0-80 6f handicap rated 72 by the
handicapper. Finished off that year on a rating of 111 having run 2nd in her
first Grade 3 race. That year she won 4 of her 7 races, including three of the
top handicap sprints . She only once raced at less than 6 furlongs. 

She started 1993 in abysmal form losing her first 4 races (grade 2 and 3)
before opening up her account for the season in a listed race. She followed up
with a Grade 3 and Grade 1 victory over 5f, but failed when stepped up to 6f in
her next G1 race. Finished off her season in spectacular style winning the Prix
De L'Abbaye (G1 5f) by 6 lengths on heavy ground showing spectacular speed 
from the gate. 

Started this current season with victories over 5f in a G3 and two G2 races. In
the G1 July Cup over 6f, she bolted on the way to the start and subsequently
ran no sort of race, beaten over 6 lengths. Won her next race, a G3 affair in
dour rather than spectacular style. In her penultimate race, a G1 over 5f, she
again bolted having got very stirred up in the parade ring. In the race itself
she was soon flat to the boards and trailed in 10 lengths behind the winner. 

In this years Prix De L'Abbey (5f) she was allowed to be walked to the start by
her lad. In the race itself she exploded from the stalls with all her old dash 
winning unchallenged by 5 lengths. The fact the she is unbeatable when on song
over 5f in Europe is as much a reflection on the current crop of G1 sprinter as
on her own abilities. At her best she's about 5/6 lengths better that her 
contemporaries. At 6f (+100 feet) on dirt I think she might be vulnerable, but
my heart will be willing her home. 

MartinK
481.743Mare power in the Sprint!DECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle:Life in the espressolaneThu Oct 27 1994 17:0519
    >The fact the she is unbeatable when on song
    >over 5f in Europe is as much a reflection on the current crop of G1
    >sprinter as on her own abilities. 
    
    That same comment applies to Soviet Problem. She is an excellent
    sprinter who faces mediocre competition. 
    
    >At her best she's about 5/6 lengths better that her
    >contemporaries. At 6f (+100 feet) on dirt I think she might be
    >vulnerable
    
    Again, Soviet Problem shares the vulnerability. The dirt may be the bigger
    factor as she's defeated everything here at 6f on turf.
    
    I hope to see these two fillies in a dead heat for the win. That way
    neither has to lose. I don't think the BC Sprint has been won by a
    filly/mare yet even though the great sprinting mare Safely Kept was 
    our Eclipse Champion Sprinter for 2 years. That would be an extra bonus
    should either Lochsong or Soviet Problem get home in front.
481.744Euro turfersRDGE44::ALEUC3Fri Oct 28 1994 08:3997
Euro challenge for the TURF
---------------------------

BRIGHT MOON - France
Won 0/6 group 1 races. 
4yo filly. Unplaced in last years Arc. Has won two G2 races this year.
In her last two G1 races has finished 4th to Apple Tree and 2nd to
White Muzzle. 5th in the Arc, after the race she was reported to have
broken down?


CELTIC ARMS (Comrade in Arms, Amour Celtique - Northfields) France
Won 2/6 Grade 1 races.
3yo colt. Sustained a hairline fracture over the winter, returned
looking in need of the run to finish 4th to Tikkanen in the Grade 2
Prix Greffulhe at Longchamp in April. Won his next two Grade 1 races
Prix Lupin (10.5f) and the French Derby (12f) against his own age group.
Could only manage 3rd behind Millkom in the G1 Grand Prix De Paris
(10f). Returned after an 11 week rest to run third behind the
impressive Carnegie in the Prix Neil, looked in need of the outing.
Ran unplaced in the Arc. Won the Prix Lupin clocking 0.4 seconds outside
the course record and may be best suited by a firm surface.


HATOOF (Irish River, Cadeaux D'Amie - Lyphard) France.
Won 3/10 Grade 1 races.
Finished 5th in last years BC turf on ground faster than she likes, having
previously won the Champion stakes at Newmaket (G1 straight 10f). Started this
year with a 4th behind Bigstone at Longchamp (G1 9f). Rested for 8 weeks.
Returned to beat Ski Paradise at Deauville (G2 8f). Went on to beat Flawlessly
in the Beveley D at Arlington on firm ?? going (was there any rain, as she
normally goes best on the soft). Was beaten when favourite in her last race
(champion stakes) by Dernier Empereur. She was unable to settle in a slowly
run race and was outsprinted in the last 2 furlongs. Likes to be held up, comes
with a rare rattle to win her races. For me she's best in a strongly run race
at 10 furlongs. 


HERNANDO (Niniski, Whakilyric - Miswaki) France
Won 2/5 Grade 1 races. 
4yo colt. Won last years French Derby. Has had splint problems. Unplaced in
last years BC Turf having reportedly lost a shoe. Lightly raced this year.
Easily won a G3 race on his return over 10 furlongs in August. Beaten 5 lengths
in the Prix Foy (G3 12f) behind Richand Of York having been boxed in 2 furlongs
out. Bounced back to form failing narrowly in a thrilling finish to peg back
Carnegie in the Arc (G1 12f) on his last appearance. Is probably best at 10
Furlongs but showed in the Arc that 12 furlongs hold no fears. May not be
suited by a very soft surface. Has been prepared for an Autumn campaign. 

INTREPIDITY (Saddlers Well's, Intrepid Lady - Bold Ruler) France
Won 3/9 Grace 1 races. 
4yo Filly. Finished 4th, btn 1.5 lengths in last years Arc, Unplaced in the BC
Turf behind Kotashaan. Lightly raced this year, finished 2nd in the G1 Prix
Ganay at Longchamp over 10.5 furlongs in May. Disappointed in the Coronation Cup
at Epsom in June. Rested for 3 Months. On her return she Finished 2nd in the G3
Prix Foy (Grade 1 field) behind Richard Of York. Ran poorly in this years Arc.
Has good form on both firm and soft ground. 

ONLY ROYALE (Caerleon, Etoile De Paris - Crowned Prince) Trained in UK
Won 2/6 Grade 1 races.
5yo Mare. Finished 5th in last years Arc btn 2.5 lengths. Lightly raced this
season, ran moderately in her first two runs in May and June. Given a mid season
rest for 10 weeks. Returned with a very impressive victory in the G1 Yorkshire
Oaks (3yo and up, fillies only) mid August. Fast finishing 7th (btn 2.5L) in
the Arc, not relishing the hurly burly generated by the 20 runner field. Goes
particularly well in soft conditions. Usually held up. 

RAINTRAP (Rainbow Quest, Suntrap - Roberto) France
Won 2/3 Grade 1 races.
4yo colt. Campaigned as a stayer for the last two seasons, finished last season
with a fine win in the Prix Royal Oak at Longchamp (G1 15.5f). Carried a Grade
1 Penalty into 4th place on his reappearance (G2 15.5f) this year. Only able to
finished 4th in the Ascot Gold Cup (G1 20f) beaten 11l by Arcadian Heights in
June. Returned to winning form at Every (listed 15f) in July.  Reverted to
Middle distance after a rest to finish 6L 4th to White Muzzle at Deauville (G2
12.5f). Won the Rothman International on the new Turf track at woodbine, being
produced to lead inside the last furlong. The horses he beat, Volochine, and
Urgent Request are Grade 2/3 performers in Europe. Tends to be held up and is
produced to win his races late on. 

RIVER NORTH (Lomond, Petillante - Riverman) UK
Won 1/2 Grade 1 races.
Grade 2/3 performer whose Grade 1 victory in Germany was against modest
opposition will need to improve to win here. 

WHITE MUZZLE (Dancing Brave, Fair Of The Furze - Ela-Mana-Mou) UK
Won 1/9 Grade 1 Races.
4yo colt. Finished 2nd btn a Neck in last years Arc, unplaced in the Japan Cup
afterwards. Lightly raced this year, finishing 5th in the the Coronation Stakes
at Epsom (G1 12f) in June (btn by Apple Tree), was then a close 2nd, btn a
length by Kings Theatre in the King George and Queen Elizabeth Diamond Stakes
at Ascot (G1 12f) in July (finish 2nd in the previous years running).
Subsequently won at Deauville (G2 12.5f). Finished 6th in this years Arc, his
rider, Yataki Take coming in for severe criticism for holding the horse in last
place (Y. Take said he didn't have the early pace to hold a position). Finished
best of all and was beaten about 2 lengths. Ran a miserable race in the
Rothman International. Reportedly suffers from Arthritis in his left shoulder.
481.745exDECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle:Life in the espressolaneFri Oct 28 1994 19:2420
    
    Martin, what European milers are expected to come to the Breeders Cup
    Mile?
    
    
    In other news...
    
    1993 Ky Derby & Travers winner Sea Hero has been retired. He'll stand
    stud at Lane's End Farm in 1995
    
    Jockey Pat Valenzuela has been suspended indefinitely for failing to
    appear at a stewards' hearing after he had taken off a mounts on short
    notice. Valenzuela has a history of taking of mounts on short notice,
    frequently without offering any explanation. The stewards want him to
    enroll in some counseling program before they'll reinstate him.
    
    Graded stakes winners Navarone, Southern Truce, Rockamundo, Apelia and 
    Mamselle Bebette have been retired. Navarone and Rockamundo will stand
    stud in KY. Southern Truce, Apelia and Mamselle Bebette will become
    broodmares but no mating plans have been announced.
481.746BC Euro MileRDGE44::ALEUC3Mon Oct 31 1994 09:22100
BC Mile - Euro Runners

Missed Flight  Trained in UK
Won 0/1 G1 races.
4yo Colt. Has graduated from Hcp company this year. Won the Prix Du Rond-Pond
at his third attempt in G2 company. Has since run Bigstone to a short head in
the Prix de La Foret (G1 7f). Obviously much improved of late, difficult to
assess. 

East Of The Moon (France)
Won 3/5 G1 races.
3yo Filly, Daughter of Miesque
Started this year with a 2nd when not fully wound up (G3 8f). Won with
authority against her own age group at Longchamp in May (G1 8f). Found the 10f
too far, but still managed to win the Prix Diane Hermes (G1 10f) by a head.
Looked brilliant when completing her three-timer, when beating Sayyedati in the
Prix Du Haras De Fresnay-Le-Buf at Deauville in August (G1 8f). Moving smoothly
at the back of the field, took closer order nearing the 2f marker, and
producing an impressive burst to win going away. Has since been beaten by Ski
Paradise in the Moulin (G1 8f), and again behind Maroof at Ascot (G1 8f) btn
7L. Looked destined for the top at Deauville. 

Bigstone  - 3yo - France (MILE)
Won 3/10 G1 races.
1993
Finished a close second in two grade 1 events over 9 and 10 furlongs restricted
to 3-y-o in France before reverting to a mile and winning the grade 1 Sussex
Stakes on Good/Soft going at the end of July, beating Sayyedati by one and a
half lengths giving her 3lbs. Has since been beaten under a length by Kingmambo
in the grade 1 Prix Du Moulin on good ground. Gained his revenge in a Grade 1
race at Ascot over a mile on good/soft ground. Finished 6th beaten 6L by Lure
in the 93 BC mile. 
1994
Lightly raced this year running 5 times. Looked to be in for a successful season
after winning his seasonal debut the G1 Prix D'ispahan (9f) in May on rain
softened ground. Ran disappointedly after a 7 week rest behind Distant View in
the Sussex Stakes (run in record time) on firm ground, reportedly coughed
afterwards. Again Failed to sparkle behind Ski Paradise in the G1 Prix De
Moulin Ran a little better when sporting blinkers for the first time, chasing
home shock winner Maroof (50/1) and Barathea in the G1 Queen Elizabeth II
Stakes at Ascot. Won the Prix De La Foret from Missed Flight, Ski Paradise 3L
behind. Ideally suited by good/soft ground, wins his races when coming from
just off the pace. 

Barathea - 3yo - England
Won 1/11 G1 races
1993
Ran second to the very impressive Zafonic (who broke the track record 45
year) in the 1 Mile Grade 1 2,000 Gns (3-y-o classic for colts and fillies) in
the spring. Went on to win the Grade 1 Irish 2,000 gns. Failed to stay the 12
Furlongs of the Grade 1 Epsom Derby. Has been placed in his last three run
behind Opera House in the grade 1 Eclipse Stakes over 10 Furlongs, and
Kingmambo in a Grade 1 race in France over a mile, and second to Bigsun in a
Grade 1 race at Ascot. Ran 5th behind Lure in the BC mile suffering from the
scrimmaging at the first bend. 
1994
Won the G2 Queen Anne stakes over 8f at the Royal Ascot on his re-appearance.
Reverted to 6f on his next appearance in the G1 July stakes showing good speed
to be beaten under a length. Looked the winner of the G1 Sussex stakes on his
next outing, taking it up over 2f out, only to be cut down close home by the
tremendous run of Distant View (probably the best European mile race of the
season). Badly hampered behind East Of The Moon at Deauville (unlikely to have
won) when beaten 9L in a G1 mile race. Finished infront of the established
European milers when beaten by Maroof in the the G1 Queen Elizabeth II at Ascot
in September. Usually ridden close to the pace. Has been ultra-consistent on
fast ground this season. 

Ski Paradise 3yo - France (A Fabre)
Won 1/10 G1 races (2nd in 5)
1993
The most consistent filly in Europe last year. Ran six times, winning a Grade 3
and Grade 2 race. She was second in her other four runs, all Grade 1, beaten a
head in each race!! She has been beaten by Madelines Dream (Gold Splash, grade
1 winner behind), Sayyedati (Kingmambo behind), Kingmambo (Bigstone and
Barathea behind) and Dolphin Street. Put up the best European Turf performance
to finish a close 2nd behind Lure in the BC Mile. 
1994
Won the Keio Hai Spring Cup (G2 7f) in Japan in April. Subsequently finished
5th behind North Flight in the Yasuda Kinen (G1 8f). Rested for 11 weeks.
Returned to finish a close 2nd to Hatoof at Deauville (G2 8f) in the Prix
D'Astarte, look the winner 1f out. Well beaten by East Of The Moon two weeks
later (G1 8f). Held up in last place in the Prix Du Moulin, was brought with a
well timed challenge to turn the tables of East Of The Moon (G1 8f). Similar
tactics did not pay off behind Maroof at Ascot (G1 8f) in a slowly run race.
Could only manage 5th behind Bigstone in the Prix De La Foret (G1 7f), staying
on well. 

Distant View (Mr Prospector, Sevens Springs - Irish River) - England
3yo Colt, Won 1/4 G1 races
Has only raced 6 times. Finished 4th on only his second ever start in the G1
2,000 gns at Newmarket in April. Easily won his Maiden on his next start. Ran a
cracking race to go down by a head to Grand Lodge in the G1 St James's Palace
stakes at Royal Ascot. Won his first grade 1 race against older horses on his
next race when producing a tremendous run to catch Barathea close home in the
Sussex Stakes, beating the course record in the process. Disappointed somewhat
having reportedly been catching Pigeons on the gallops when a 5L 5th to Maroof
when 2/1 fav at Ascot. Prior to Ascot was beginning to look like a champion in
the making. Suited by a strongly run race at a mile. 

MartinK
481.747BC Classic - Euro RunnersRDGE44::ALEUC3Mon Oct 31 1994 09:2364
BC Classic - Euro runners

DERNIER EMPEREUR (Trempolino, Dear Colleen - In reality) France
Won 1/7 Grade 1 races (latest race).
4yo Colt. Finished unplaced in last years BC turf. Lightly raced this year
having just three runs. Finished 6L behind Bigstone in the Prix D'Ispahan (G1
9f) on his re-appearance in May. Not seen out again until September when
winning at Maisons-Lafitte (G3 10f) on the soft. Leading at the furlong pole
beating Red Bishop by almost 2L. Won the English Champion Stakes, which was run
at a muddling pace, in fine style, producing a terrific late burst to collar
the long time leader Grand Lodge close home. 

GRAND LODGE (Chief's Crown, La Papaganda - Habitat)  W. Jarvis (UK)
Won 2/8 Grade 1 races.
3yo Colt. Beaten a SHD in the 2,000 Gns (G1 8f 3yo) by Mister Baileys in April.
Ran no sort of race on heavy ground in the Irish equivalent two weeks later.
Ran a cracking race to win the St James's Palace Stakes (G1 8f 3yo), producing
a strong burst to deprive Distant View of victory in the last few strides. The
race was run 0.03 of a second outside the course record. Unable to confirm the
form in the Sussex Stakes (G1 8f) (record time) finishing 3l behind Distant
View. Stepped up to 10f for his last 3 runs finishing 6L behind Ezzoud in the
International, 1L behind Cezanne (hampered) in the Irish Champion Stakes and a
NK behind Dernier Empereur in the English Champion Stakes. Possibly best in a
strongly run race on fast ground over a mile. Not disgraced in his foray's over
10f. 

CEZANNE (Ajdal, Reprocolor - Jimmy Repin) M.R. Stout (UK)
Has won 1/1 Grade 1 races (latest race).
5yo Colt. Handicapper last year. Ran in Dubai over the winter on the dirt
winning 5 times. Raised 30 pound by the handicapper for his winter exploits.
Ran 4th in a 10f Hcp on his re-appearance. Showed himself to be group class by
carrying weight to victory in the 10f Magnet Cup at York. Finished 6L 2nd to
Urgent Request (G3 10.5f) on his next outing. Traveled to Germany to win his
next race (G3 10f) on the soft. Produced his best effort to date in the Irish
Champion Stakes (G1 10f) beating the hampered Grand Lodge (3rd) in a close
finish. Much improved this year. 


MILLKOM (Cyrano De Bergerac, Good Game - Mummys Pet) France
Has won 2/3 Grade 1 races.
3yo colt. Has won his last 10 races, the longest being the Grand Prix Du Paris
over 10 Furlongs, in which he beat the French Derby winner Celtic Arms, and the
Secretariat second (Arlington) Dare and Go. Rested over the summer, returned to
win by a cheeky head in the G3 Prix de Prince Orange, his jockey admitted "I
didn't see Volochine (runner up) until after the line, he was a little rusty
today but he'll be spot on for the Arc".  Originally bought as a sprinter, but
was far from disgraced in the Arc (G1 12f), btn 3.5L, finishing well having
been held up to presumably get the trip. He has been training on the All Along
all weather gallops in preparation for the Classic. 

EZZOUD (Last Tycoon, Royal Sister II - Claude)  M.R. Stout (UK)
Has won 3/12 Grade 1 races.
5yo Horse. Finished unplaced in last years Arc, and 7th behind Arcangues in the
BC Classic. Appears to be a reformed character this year, after some
indifferent prior performances. Won his last two Grade 1 races over 10 furlongs
(Eclipse at Sandown and the International at York), beating a below par Epsom
Derby winner, and an on form Derby second. Unseated his rider in the King
George (G1 12f) having swerved left leaving the stalls. Finished 4th  a length
behind the winner Carnigues, in the Arc (G1 12f) on his last run. In the past
I've never been one of his fans, but in his last 3 completed outings has shown
the best form of his life, and if the home team are only average could run a 
big race. Usually ridden by Walter Swinburn. 

MartinK
481.748BC Juvenile Fillies (Euro)RDGE44::ALEUC3Mon Oct 31 1994 09:249
BC Juvenile Fillies

Belle Genius - (Beau Genius, Time and Tide - Mr Leader) Paul Kelleway (UK)
Won 1/1 G1 races
2yo Filly. Won the Moyglare stakes (G1 7f) in Ireland on her last run, 
springing a real surprise at 20/1. Close up led inside the final  furlong on
soft ground. Progressive. 

MartinK
481.749BC Colts (Euro)RDGE44::ALEUC3Mon Oct 31 1994 09:2516
BC Colts

ELTISH  (Cox's Ridge, Nimble Feet - Danzig) Trained by H Cecil (UK)
Won 0/1 Grade 1 races.
2yo colt. Finished 2nd when favourite on his debut over 7f. Made all the
running to win a Maiden (6.5f) on his next start beating Juyush 1.5L at York.
Was made 16/1 fav for next years 2,000 Guineas after his next victory (G3 7f)
at Goodwood, close up, led 2 out for a comfortable success in front of Mountjoy
(subsequently placed in two G1 races). Confirmed previous running with Juyush
when winning the Royal Lodge Stakes (G2 8f) at Ascot in September, again ridden
close to the pace. Had his limitation exposed on his last run when third (1.5L)
to Pennekamp in the Dewhurst Stakes (G1 7f). Suited by a strongly run race. On
a line through Juyush could be considered about 10L inferior to the highly 
impressive Celtic Swing. 

MartinK
481.750DECWET::DADDAMIODesign Twice, Code OnceMon Oct 31 1994 18:597
    Martin,
    
        I didn't see you mention Flag Down anywhere.  He ran 2 good races
    - one on turf and one on dirt.  I thought they raced him on dirt last
    as a prep for the BC Classic.  Any news on him?
    
    						Jan
481.751Phil Johnson's annual BC picksDECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle:Life in the espressolaneTue Nov 01 1994 21:53109
    Phil Johnson(NY based trainer of more champions than I can name...
    he's like Holy Bull's trainer Jimmy Croll in that he trained lots of
    good horses but most people don't remember him because he's not a high
    profile guy like Wayne Lukas) sorry I got sidetracked...
    
    Phil Johnson has been doing an annual pre-Breeders' Cup discussion on
    New York's weekly "Inside Racing" show for about 10 years. Last night
    was this year's show. He thinks that the track surface at Churchill
    Downs(which is deep and cuppy) will be a factor in some races. Here's
    his list of picks in the races and as many of his comments as I can
    recall. BTW, his bet in all cases is an exacta box of the horses he
    picks for the race...
    
    Sprint: He seemed to think that Soviet Problem is vulnerable in the
    Sprint. He thinks that she may not be up to the task of beating the
    males on the dirt. His choice is Cherokee Run based on his 1-for-1 
    record at Churchill and his record at the 6f distance of this race. 
    He thinks Honor The Hero, who was third behind Soviet Problem and COol
    Air in the Laurel Dash at 6f on the turf is second best. So, his choice 
    is an exacta box of Cherokee Run and Honor The Hero.
    
    Fillies: He thinks the track surface will have an impact here and that
    it will work against Flanders for 2 reasons: 1) She hasn't been around
    2 turns even though she has gone 8 1/2f at Belmont and 2) The Belmont
    surface was very firm and fast for the fall meeting. He thinks the
    fillies who have been conditioning at Churchill or Keeneland will have
    an edge over Flanders in this racve even if they aren't quite her
    caliber overall. His picks are Post It who recent;y won the Alcibiades
    at Keeneland and a CA filly named Call Now who has been training
    impressively at Churchill for in recent weeks.
    
    Distaff: Last year, he picked Hollywood Wildcat when everyone else was
    picking Sky Beauty. This year, he says Sky Beauty will turn the table
    and beat Hollywood Wildcat. In fact, he says that Heavenly Prize will
    fight Hollywood Wildcat for second.
    
    Mile: He says Lure has lost a step since last year and he thinks he's
    vulnerable. He thinks that Megan's Interco has the ability at the
    distance to beat Lure.
    
    Juv. Colts: He picked Tejano Run and Cinch because they've raced over
    similar surfaces at the distance. He doesn't think the field has much
    depth in this race.
    
    Turf:He thinks the distance is a big question mark for Paradaise Creek
    who will be going 12f for the first time. He says that if he were
    training the horse he'd try him in the Mile because he thinks he's
    better at that distance. However, he thinks Paradaise Creek is good
    enough for second money. His pick is Raintrap, a European stayer who
    recently won the Rothman's International up in Canada.
    
    Classic:He essentially dismissed Soul Of The Matter and Concern. He
    dismissed Concern because he's been running second to everybody. He
    dismissed Soul Of The Matter for insufficient data as the horse has
    only run twice since in the past 5 months and his most recent race was
    at least 6 weeks ago. His picks are the European horse, Cezzane because
    he has known dirt form and has won important races in Europe. He thinks
    Devil His Due will be second.
    
    Let's see, betting two $2 exactas on each race would cost $28. If any
    of them other than Sky Beauty & Hollywood Wildcat turn out, one should
    at least break even for the day. On the other hand, I don't like some 
    of his picks so I wouldn't bet that way. 
    
    Sprint:
    I think Soviet Problem's record of 9 wins and 2 seconds in 11 races
    this year say she's the US sprinter to beat. She and Cool Air were the 
    only 2 fillies in the Laurel Dash. They finished 1-2 despite the fact 
    that both had traffic problems. That doesn't justify picking Honor the
    Hero. I don't think much of Cherokee Run's record this year. It's
    fairly unimpressive. He was better last year.
    
    Mile? Lure may have lost a step but I don't think Megan's Interco is
    the horse that can beat him without a significant weight advantage. If
    Lure is vulnerable, I think it will be a European miler who beats him.
    I can't bet this race. I *want* Lure to win because no horse has won 3
    of any Breeder's Cup races. It's bad enough that a horse of Lure's
    caliber will retire without ever having been Turf champion(because they
    usually pick distance horses over milers). If he can win a third BC
    Mile, at least he'll get in the record books.
    
    Distaff? My only quarrel with his pick is that he left out Dispute. 
    If Sky Beauty can handle the Churchill track surface, I think she'll
    win. If she has any trouble Dispute will make it a 4 horse race to 
    the wire and it may be a 4-way photo between SB, Hollywood Wildcat,
    Heavenly Prize and DIspute.
    
    Turf? I too question Paradaise Creek going 12f. He may well get 12f
    because he's a big powerful horse, relaxes well and has a late turn of
    foot. However, unlike Johnson, I think his best distance may well be
    middle distances like 10f. Raintrap is a good choice but I think there 
    are a number of European horses who could win on the day.
    
    Classic? I can't rule out either Concern or Soul Of The Matter. I think
    Johnson was wrong to dismiss them so lightly. Clearly, they are both
    capable of getting the distance in good fashion. It the pace is very
    fast, Concern's closing kick will definitely put him in the money,
    IMHO. He has a good chance as he's been 2nd twice at the distance
    behind *slow* paces. Soul Of The Matter usually runs just off the
    leaders and closed well of a slow pace to win the Super Derby. I think
    both these colts are about the same ability as Devil His DUe. If
    pushed, I'd probably pick Concern and Devil His DUe over Soul Of The
    Matter. Why? I have more faith in their jockeys(Jerry Bailey and Mike
    Smith respectively) than in Soul Of The Matter's jock(Kent Desormeaux
    he who misjudged the finish line in the Japan Cup last year and who
    got disqualified & suspended in this year's Santa Anita Derby because
    he allowed his horse to drift into the path of another while changing 
    leads) Nothing personal, Kent. ;-) I just think the 5-6 years extra 
    experience that Bailey and Smith have gives them a bit of an edge.
481.752Flag DownRDGE44::ALEUC3Wed Nov 02 1994 12:048
Jan,

The only data I have on Flag Down are three races he ran earlier this
year in France. Twice in Grade 3 turf races, winning both. In between
he ran down the field behind Bigstone in the 9f Prix D'Ispahn at Longchamp
on easy ground in the spring.

MartinK
481.753Best Pal in the BC CLassicDECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle:Life in the espressolaneThu Nov 03 1994 17:2119
    Oops, they've done it again(changing their plans without telling me,
    how could they? ;-).... I wondered why Best Pal did not run in last
    weekend's California Cup as had previously been announced. They decided
    to supplement him to the Breeders' Cup Classic. 
    
    Now, I have a problem. I want him to win because it would be the right
    way to have him go to retirement. (No, they haven't announced his
    retirement. I'm speculating). Best Pal had a "bad" year last year. He
    only won 1 Gr I race and a mere $900,000 in purse money. Each other year 
    that he has raced, he won multiple big stakes and more than $1,000,000. 
    He's been struggling coming back to form this year after a layoff.
    
    Once emotion is involved you can't make logical decisions about horse 
    races. Between Best Pal, Lure, Soviet Problem and  Lochsong, I'm too 
    caught up in cheering to be logical. 
    
    So, I'm taking to the sidelines for predicting and wagering purposes. 
    This is the primary reason I rarely wager on races. I tend to get too
    involved with the horses and sport of the event to wager on it.
481.754More info on Flag DownDECWET::DADDAMIODesign Twice, Code OnceThu Nov 03 1994 21:504
    I heard on one show or another (can't remember) that Allen Paulsen has
    purchased Flag Down since his last race.  Cash Asmussen rode him in his
    2 previous races, but will not ride him in the BC Classic.  He'll be on
    Millkom instead.  Jose Santos will be riding Flag Down.
481.755BC UK PricesRDGE44::ALEUC3Fri Nov 04 1994 08:0276
Price Update from the UK bookmakers (Thur/Fri)

  6.20  6F (DIRT)  3YO+             (14)
                   DRAW  WM HILL ODDS: Ladbrokes

 LOCHSONG            6        7/2	4/1
 SOVIET PROBLEM      5        4/1	4/1
 CHEROKEE RUN       11       11/2	6/1
 MERITOCRAT          8        8/1	7/1
 AMERICAN CHANCE     4       10/1	12/1
 BIRDONTHEWIRE       1       10/1	12/1
 CHIMES BAND        14       10/1	12/1
 HONOR THE HERO      2       14/1	20/1
 PRENUP              9       14/1	12/1
 END SWEEP           7       16/1	16/1
 EXCLUSIVE PRALINE   3       16/1	25/1
 HARLAN             13       16/1	20/1
 CARDOMANIA         12       20/1	16/1
 KING RUCKUS        10       25/1	20/1

  8.05 1M (TURF)   3YO+             (14)
                   DRAW  WM HILL ODDS:  Ladbrokes
                                        
 LURE               14        6/4       2/1
 MEGANS INTERCO     12        6/1       7/1
 BIGSTONE            6        7/1       6/1
 DISTANT VIEW        5        8/1       8/1
 SKI PARADISE        2        8/1      10/1
 BARATHEA            1        9/1       8/1
 EAST OF THE MOON    7       12/1       8/1
 MISSED FLIGHT      13       14/1      12/1
 ALICE SPRINGS       8       25/1      20/1 
 BLUES TRAVELLER    11       25/1      33/1 
 JOHANN QUATZ        9       33/1      40/1 
 OCEAN QUEST         4       40/1      33/1 
 DOMINANT PROSPECT  10       50/1      50/1 
 UNFINISHED SYMPH.   3       50/1      33/1 
                                        
  9.20 1M4F (TURF)  3YO+            (14)
                   DRAW  WM HILL ODDS:  Ladbrokes
                                        
 PARADISE CREEK     13        EVS       5/4
 HERNANDO           12        6/1       5/1
 HATOOF              2        8/1       8/1
 VAUDERVILLE         4       10/1      10/1
 ONLY ROYALE         8       12/1      10/1 
 TIKKANEN            9       12/1      10/1 
 WHITE MUZZLE       11       14/1      20/1 
 RAINTRAP            7       16/1      14/1 
 BOLAS              10       25/1      16/1 
 FRAISE             14       25/1      33/1 
 INTREPIDITY         1       25/1      20/1 
 CELTIC ARMS         3       33/1      33/1 
 VOLOCHINE           5       33/1      25/1 
 DAHLIA'S DREAMER    6       40/1      40/1 
                                        
 10.05 1M2F (DIRT) 3YO+             (14)
                    DRAW  WM HILL ODDS: 
                                        
 DEVIL HIS DUE       14        6/1
 SOUL OF THE MATTER   9        6/1
 TABASCO CAT          4        6/1
 CEZANNE              1        7/1
 DERNIER EMPEREUR     7        8/1
 DRAMATIC GOLD       13        8/1
 EZZOUD               5       10/1
 CONCERN             11       12/1
 FLAG DOWN            2       14/1
 GRAND LODGE          8       14/1
 BERTRANDO           12       16/1
 BEST PAL             6       16/1
 MILLKOM             10       16/1
 GO FOR GIN           3       20/1

MartinK
481.756Euro Notes WednesdayRDGE44::ALEUC3Fri Nov 04 1994 08:0354
Wednesday Teletext notes (David Hood reports from Kentucky)


The french breeders' cup contingent were all out on the churchill downs track
on wednesday, having flown to the states a day earlier than most of their
british counterparts. Trainer francois boutin arrived to cast his eye over east
of the moon and hernando while their partner, cash asmussen, put his leg over
millkom for the first time. 

"Hernando has come out of the arc in top form. the firmer the ground the better
for him and the track conditions today would seem to be ideal," said boutin. 

Pat eddery picked out grand lodge and eltish as his best chances of adding to
his breeders' cup haul. 
                                        
Eddery has partnered britain's only two breeders' cup winners, pebbles in 1985
and sheikh albadou here at churchill downs three years ago. 
                                        
He has four mounts on saturday - eltish in the juvenile, distant view in the
mile, bolas in the turf and grand lodge in the classic. The horses are in
quarantine and will emerge on thursday to do their first piece of exerecise. 
                                        
Pat eddery said of his breeders' cup mounts: "it's not easy to tell how the
horses are going to adapt here. i won't know until the race." But he added: "I
think eltish and grand lodge are my best chances. "Eltish is bred for this - by
cox's ridge - and will have no problem stepping up to a mile and a half furlong
from seven furlongs. 
                                        
"Grand Lodge is a big tough horse and the surface will be no problem to him. he
is also in the perfect stall in eight for a mile-and-a- quarter race." 

Breeders' cup sprint hope lochsong is in relaxed mood after her flight over to
kentucky. "As soon as she got to her box it was 'lip down, ears floppy' and she
was fast asleep," said kenneth cox, ian balding's travelling head lad. "That's
lochsong. but wait until she hits those gates - then she'll fly. you can be
sure of one thing, she'll give it her all," he added. The mare has been drawn
in six, close to her main rivals meritocrat (8) and soviet line (5). Lochsong
has a dream of a draw but but it is still a case of fingers crossed for her. 
She has got to handle the dirt and stay the trip so all in all the chips are
stacked against her. 
                                        
Reigning mile champion lure would need lightning to strike twice if he is to
win as he has been drawn in box 14 once again. He is the outstanding american
entry but faces a strong challenge from bigstone and barathea, who is drawn in
one. 

Barathea should be better able to cope with the tight bends this year as luca
cumani explained: "Newmarket's gallops manager peter amos has constructed a
bend there to the exact dimensions of the first turn at churchill downs.
"Barathea has gone round the bend plenty of times and he has handled it very
well." Of what looks a tough draw in stall one, cumani said: "i'd rather be
drawn one than 14. he's capable of breaking quickly and will have to." 
                                        
MartinK
481.757Euro notes ThursdayRDGE44::ALEUC3Fri Nov 04 1994 08:0371
Thrusday TELETEXT news (David Hood reporting from Kentucky)

Lochsong has showed her well being prior to the breeders' cup sprint with an
amazing work-out at churchill downs on thursday. After cantering round the
track twice, the mare worked for four furlongs round the final bend and into
the straight. Ian balding's charge proceeded to smash the local work-out
record, being timed at 33.1 seconds over the final three furlongs. 

Local observers regard 35 seconds as fast and 37 seconds as standard. Ian
balding seems increasingly bullish about lochsong's chances in the breeders'
cup sprint. The mare was timed at an unheard of 10.85 seconds for the furlong
round the bend in a workout at churchill downs on thursday morning. 
                                        
"I worked the mare around a tight bend at manton and she showed this morning
that it is absolutely no problem to her," he said. "She only lost four kilos in
her flight over which took eight hours and went very smoothly." 
                                        
Ian balding is expecting a big run from his flying mare lochsong in the
breeders' cup sprint at churchill downs on saturday. "I don't think we'll work
her from the stalls or using the starting bell," balding said. "It will gee her
up and she'll have gone before she hears the bell anyway!" he joked. 
                                        
"I'm happy with her draw, she has a speed horse on her inside and if frankie
wants to settle in and take a lead then that will suit me." Lochsong's usual
pilot Frankie Dettori was very excited by the mare's prospects in the breeders'
cup sprint on saturday: 
                                        
"We just trotted and had a good look round on the first circuit but when we
tried to canter her on the second circuit she got geed up and a bit upset," he
said. "What really pleased me was the way she changed her leading leg like an
American horse. "Once she straightened it was just like stepping up a gear," he
added. "The Americans tell me she worked fast but she just felt like the old
lochsong to me," said dettori of the mare's work-out on thursday. "I haven't
got a game plan," he added. "I will let her run however she wants to. 
"If she breaks well I'll let her run her race but just try to save a little bit
for the end of the race. "Otherwise we'll just have to settle in," the Italian
concluded. 

Frankie Dettori accompanied luca cumani's breeders' cup mile prospect Barathea
on thursday and was very pleased with him: the colt was the first european home
in last year's renewal. "Barathea gave me a nice feel and he has quickened up
very well in the straight," said dettori. "He is more experienced round a bend
than he was last year. the draw in one isn't ideal but he has got a lot of
speed and it is better than being drawn in 14," he added. 
                                        
Frankie Dettori was also pleased with only royale. "She looks terrific and
let's hope she gets a better run that she did at longchamp last-time. "I just
don't know whether the sharp track will suit her," warned the champion jockey
elect. Only royale's trainer luca cumani has backed europe to win three races,
at the price of 25/1. "I am confident. my only worry is there might be four,"
he remarked. 
                                        
Michael stoute's Cezanne and Ezzoud stretched their legs and had a look around
churchill downs on thursday and their trainer michael stoute was pleased with
their progress: "I'm hopeful for Cezanne. he won five out of his five races on
dirt in dubai last winter," stoute said. "He's improved throughout the year but
the opposition looks a lot harder here. "Ezzoud ran very well here in 1993
considering he got a bump. he handles the surface, he travelled well and he'll
go close," he added. 

Many of the european challengers for the breeders' cup went through their paces
on thursday. Henry Cecil accompanied eltish and Distant View on a pony as the
pair had a canter round the track. Barry Hills' Bolas was reported to be
looking magnificent and also did some light exercise as did willie jarvis'
Grand Lodge. 
                                        
Of the french horses, Hernando took a keen hold when cantering around a
circuit-and-a-half of the course while Dernier Empereur, Intrepidity and
Millkom had a look at the track 
                                        
MartinK
481.758BC - My view on Euro RunnersRDGE44::ALEUC3Fri Nov 04 1994 08:0663
I think that this year will be a good one for the Euro contingent now that we've
returned to the more temperate north. Last time the BC was held at Churchill
Down, the Euro-raiders came away with three winners, this year it could be as
high as four. 

For what their worth here are my own views on the Euro Challenge.

Sprint: Lochsong.
 My heart tells me she will win, and my head tells me she might win. The
 spin she had on Thursday demonstrated he well being. I think she'll lead
 soon after the gates, I don't think she'll let Soviet Problem take it up.
 As her trainer says "If anything try's to lie up with her then they're
 going too fast". That last furlong is going to seem an awful long way.

2yo Fillies:  Belle Genius.
 She caused a 20/1 upset when winning her Grade 1 race in Ireland, it
 would be nice if she could squeeze into the first 3.

Distaff:
 Safe in the hands of the locals.

Mile:
 The Euro milers have been busy beating each other although they look
 a decent bunch, and the outcome will very much turn on the weather. If
 the rains stay away then I'll take Distant View to fulfill the promise of the
 Sussex Stakes. On easier ground then Bigstone, back to his best after his Prix
 De La Foret win, will carry my money. Fast ground in required for Barathea
 and probably for East Of The Moon, whereas Ski Paradise can go on either. 

Juvenile:
 Arazi won by 4L after being eased down, Eltish is some way short of that but
 probably so are the American juveniles. Again it would be nice if he could
 squeeze into the frame. 

Turf:
 Hatoof will love any mud, but I wouldn't put my money on her lasting home.
 Harnando will hate the mud but would have a good chance on firmer ground.
 Only Royals G1 wins have come in Fillies only races, but she'll love a
 soft surface, and Tikkenan was not quite G1 grade back home. White Muzzles
 only G1 win was in the un-demanding Italian derby (93) although his last
 run was too bad to be true, and he's now had some time to acclimatize.
 The proximity of Urgent Request throws doubt on Raintraps Woodbine success.
 Bolas could run a big race at a big price, having won the Irish Oaks in
 July, then disappointed behind Only Royal when a 6/5 favourite at York.
 Rested since, there have been encouraging noises of late. Intrepidity has
 been somewhat disappointed this year, with Celtic Arms needing a fast
 surface to produce his best this is a race best watched.

Classic:
 I believe Ezzoud to have a great chance in a  year where the best American has
 stayed away. He showed last year that he has the early pace to lie close to
 the lead. He has only raced once since August in preparation for the Classic
 and that was in the Arc which is longer than ideal. He's run well in  many
 Grade 1 races and two of his three Grade 1 successes have been in  his last two
 10f races. On top of his form he should be at most an 8/1  shot. Coupled with
 Grand Lodge as the field is a bit of a bonus.  This son of Chief's Crown loves
 fast ground and it will be interesting to  see how he copes with the dirt.
 Campaigned mainly over 8f has looked tapped  for toe against the best. His last
 three races have been G1 10f affairs  where a muddling pace caught his jockey
 napping in the first. In his  last two races he's been beaten by heads and
 necks. If he takes to the  dirt will run a good race. 

MartinK
481.759Breeder's Cup '94GBLAUT::JANICKIV. Janicki DCE Engineering DTN 226-5980Tue Nov 08 1994 20:3139
So... what did everyone think? How did the picks pan out?

I came away with the impression that this Breeder's Cup continued the 
excitement of a true championship day. The races were all exciting and
there were a number of really close finishes.

The Sprint: I really hoped Soviet Problem (a mare) would be able to
hold on for the win. She ran her eyeballs out. Cherokee Run is legit.
I was hoping for a 1-2 finish for the Soviet Problem and Lochsong, which
didn't pan out.

Juvenile Fillies: What a doozy of a stretch run between Flanders and Serena's
Song. Flanders showed champion quality by coming back in the stretch to
win. It was shocking to see that she pulled up injuried.

Juvenile Colts: Timber Country proved he is physically and mentally more
mature than his betters with an very impressive turn off speed after being
blocked several times. Nice prospect for the Derby since he is versatile.

Turf Mile: My heart was for Lure to get his 3rd Mile win. He never showed
his old flash and instead Barathea redeemed himself from last year's
bolted turn.

Turf: Paradise Creek showed guts to hang onto third. Tirkeenen (sp) was
last on the first lap and powered by everyone to clinch the win. Hope he
stays in the country for some more matchups with Paradise Creek.

Distaff: Loved seeing the old gray mare One Dream float on the lead never
to be headed. Lovely solid looking mare who looks like her ancester The Axes II.

Classic: Concern finally got up in time to take the big one. I like the gutsy
ones like him so that was satisfying. Tabasco Cat who seemed to be tailing
off redeemed himself with his 2nd place.

I'd give NBC's coverage a B. The Lukas focus got annoying after a while. I
would have rather seem more on the jockeys - the whole controversy over the
"47" symbol or even more on the horses besides Lure (which was a nice piece).

Vicky
481.760I loved the racing;coverage was lousyDECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle:Life in the espressolaneTue Nov 08 1994 22:1894
    I thought this was the best BC racing I've seen(and I've seen them
    all!). Four of the races were won by a neck or less. Nothing was won 
    by more than 3 or 4 lengths.
    
    Re The Sprint: 
    I was a little surprised that Cherokee Run went off as the favorite.
    He hadn't run in 2 months; hadn't won since July and had only won
    an allowance and a Gr II all year. Most of the time he's in the money
    but rarely winning.
    
    I thought the most serious challenge to Soviet Problem would be
    Lochsong but it seemed she couldn't get the distance over CD's main
    track. I thought Cardmania had an outside shot based on his good effort 
    last time out despite various troubles like breaking through the gate. 
    
    Good thing I wasn't wagering because I discounted Cherokee Run almost
    entirely even though P.G. Johnson had said on TV to pick CR.
    Ironically, it was the only time he picked the right horse even though
    he had the right idea in the other races. 
    
    Juvenile Fillies: yeah, what a race! It was a bit of a shock that
    Flanders was injured. However, despite the fact that Day said she 
    didn't shorten stride, she quite clearly *did* shorten stride in the 
    stretch if you watch carefully on the replays. Of course, shortening
    stride doesn't imply injury. It could have been fatigue' usually is.
    Unfortunately, it wasn't fatigue this time. BTW, current prognosis is
    that surgery will *probably* be necessary but her life is not in danger
    
    Juvenile Colts: An interesting race. Timber Country hasn't impressed me
    in his previous races but this one did. He may be a nice prospect  for
    the US Triple Crown races but historically the horse that runs third
    in the BC Juvenile Colts does better. For example, Tabasco Cat was 3rd 
    last year and won 2 Triple Crown races. Alysheba did the same thing as
    have others.
    
    Mile: I was heartbroken to see Lure finish 9th. He's better
    than that. He's never been worse than second in a turf race before in
    his entire career. I hate seeing a horse of that caliber embarassed
    like that. I hope he's OK. Good race though.
    
    Turf: Here too I was surprised that Paradise Creek went off the
    favorite as he'd never been the distance. I also believed that there
    were no US horses that could beat him because we've got *lousy* middle
    distance horses this year. (Yes, 12f is middle distance!) I guess
    everybody else in the US has as much trouble figuring out European form
    as I do. Their top horses seem inconsistent to us because the
    conditions are so different. If it rains, we take our races off the
    turf. They run theirs on anything from hard to boggy turf. The European
    racecourses are different too. Each has a shape and the ground usually
    undulates somewhat. Ours are all oval and flat. They also usually have
    *very* large fields so that racing luck plays a bigger role than here
    where 12 hores is considered a cavalry charge!
    
    The only Euro horses I had seen run were Tikkanen(won 12f Gr 1 Turf 
    Classic at Belmont) and Raintrap(won 12f Gr 1 Rothman's Inernational 
    at Woodbine). Of the 2, I prefered Tikkanen because it's his distance. 
    Raintrap's form says he wants *more* ground than 12f. Both are late
    runners with a good finishing spurt. My kind of horse!
    
    Classic: I've been saying all fall that the only reason Concern was
    second in all those big races this summer is that there has been no 
    speed in any of them. With Bertrando in here, there was going to be a
    fast pace. I was *really* pleased to see Concern get home on top this 
    time, just so people would realize how good he really is. And what 
    about Jerry Bailey? 3 wins in the Classic and all of them on horses 
    that got no respect before the race! Black Tie Affair back in '91(I 
    think), Arcangues last year and now Concern.
    
    Did you notice that the first 4 horses were US 3 YOs? Concern, Tabasco
    Cat, Dramatic Gold(I didn't even know he was entered!) and then Soul 
    Of The Matter. The first older horse under the line was Best Pal who
    was a long neck behind Soul Of The Matter. I can't say I'm surprised
    that Best Pal didn't win but he gave a decent account of himself. And
    Devil His Due was never a factor. He's been the most consistent
    US handicap horse on dirt. I don't think he's been out of the money in
    2 years! Hopefully, he's just tired from a strenuous campaign. It's too
    bad he has to retire with such a bad race as his finale.
    
    Re The Lukas focus 
    
    I thought it was disgusting that they spent soooo much time on him. I
    also thought that their coverage was very pro-Lukas. He's a good
    trainer but I think his reputation is overblown by such media coverage.
    He's no better than the other top trainers. What he's great at is
    finding wealthy clients who can buy/breed lots of top quality stock.
    There are probably dozens of trainers who could do as well as Lukas if
    they had as many top quality youngsters in their barns.
    
    There are other people in racing. Some coverage of them and more time
    on horses would have been very welcome instead of Lukas, Lukas and more
    Lukas. I thought the commentator's statement at the end about the Jeff
    Lukas sage not having a story book ending. Heck, just the fact that he
    and Tabasco Cat were *AT* the Breeders' Cup is a story book ending! end
    of soapbox commentary...
481.761Some good racing newsDECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle:Life in the espressolaneTue Nov 29 1994 22:2735
    A few bits of racing news...
    
    It looks like this year's Turf Mare Eclipse award will go to Hatoof for
    her gallant second in the B.C. Turf and her win in the Gr I Beverly D
    Stakes at Arlington Racecourse back in August. The Las Palmas Stakes,
    Yellow Ribbon Stakes and Matriarch Stakes are the last 3 major filly &
    mare turf races in the US. With Flawlessly retired, those races all 
    produced different winners. So, Hatoof gets the nod because she did so
    well against the males in the B.C. Turf.
    
    Flanders had surgery to repair the leg that was injured in the 1994
    B.C. Juvnille Fillies race. The surgery was successful and she is
    recuperating well. Said to be a model patient. They don't know yet
    whether she will return to racing or will be retired as a broodmare.
    It depends on how things heal, etc. However, the surgeons claim that
    something like 80% of horses with such injuries can return to racing.
    Last year's 2 YO Colt Eclipse winner, Dehere, had a similar injury this
    Spring. He has returned to training but has not yet raced.
    
    Brocco, 1993 B.C. Juvnille Winner, who did very little as a 3 YO, has
    been retired to stud due to an injury.
    
    Jockey Randy Romero has come out of his brief retirement and has
    returned to riding. He had retired due to knee problems which had not
    been corrected by surgery. After retirement, he had a third operation
    on the knee which seems to have cleared up his problems. He spent some
    time in a special "athlete therapy center" to regain his physical and
    mental conditioning for riding. 
    
    Jockey Julie Krone recently had surgery on her ankle that was injured
    in an August 1993 spill at Saratoga. In this operation, the doctors
    removed all the screws and plates that had been inserted to hold her
    shattered ankle together while it healed. She's reportedly doing well
    but will be out for the rest of the year.
    
481.762Best Pal and his brotherDECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle:Life in the espressolaneMon Dec 12 1994 23:0141
Sunday of last week, Best Pal raced again at Hollywood Park. His last race 
prior to that was the Breeders' Cup Classic in which he finished 5th. This 
time, he won easily by 4 lengths and was still going away from the 
rest. The TV announcer said Best Pal is back and that he was now better than 
ever. Owner John Mabee said Best Pal would race as a 7 YO and would be 
prepared for the big Gr I series of races in Santa Anita's winter meeting. 
Trainer Dick Mandella didn't say anything and was barely smiling. He just 
kept looking at the ground.

I hate to say it but I think the TV guy & the owner are overreacting. Sure, 
it was an easy win. Sure, I'm glad to see Best Pal winning a stakes race 
again. But, this was only a little Gr III stake with not much in the 
way of competition and his time was more than 1:48 for 9 furlongs. 

Best Pal is the leading money winner among all horses who are still active 
and is 3rd on the all-time list. He's won over $5,000,000 in his career. 
But, 1994 is the first year that he didn't win a Gr I stake in his 5 
years of racing. In 1993, he won only 1 Gr I stake and that was the first 
year in his career that he earned less than $1,000,000 in purse money. 
This year he's won even less.

Hopefully, the downhill trend of the last 2 years was caused by his splint 
problems and is now over. I'd really like to see him win some big races 
again but I'm a little skeptical at this point. Mandella staring 
at the ground during the TV interview didn't give me any sign that 
the trend is over. After Soul Of The Matter redeemed himself by 
winning the Louisiana Derby, Mandella was bouncing and talkative. To
be so conservative after Best Pal wins a stake doesn't fill me with 
confidence that Best Pal is back and better than ever. I hope so but 
I'll have to see it to believe it.

Speaking of Best Pal, his 2 YO half brother American Chance(Nureyev 
x Ubetshedid) won a maiden race at Hollywood Park this past Saturday.
BTW, Best Pal is by Habitony... Anyway, American Chance won a 8.5 
furlong maiden race for 2 YOs. He was *VERY* impressive although a 
bit green. It looked like he pulled the jock straight to the lead 
and was a little rank about it. But, he was running easily out there 
even though he went 6f in a little over 1:10. He slowed down a bit late 
in the race but still won by something like 14 lengths. If he ever 
learns to relax and not fight the jockey, he should be a star.
481.763Final US Gr I races of 1994DECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle:Life in the espressolaneTue Dec 20 1994 22:3819
    BTW, when I said American Chance in the previous note, I meant 
    American Day...I just messed up.
    
It must be December. There were only 2 Gr I races in the US this 
passed weekend and both were at Hollywood Park. On Saturday, Serena's Song,
who was second to Flanders by a short nose in the BC Juvenille Fillies last 
month, ran in the Hollywood Starlet(2 YO fillies at 8.5f on dirt). 
Serena's Song went to the front and stayed there for the entire trip. At 
the top of the stretch, it looked like she'd walk away from the field but 
Urbane came on in the final furlong to make a race of it. Serena's Song won 
by a nose in a new stakes record time of 1:41.96.

On Sunday, it was the boys' turn. The Hollywood Futurity(2 YO colts  
at 8.5f on dirt) may have shown us a new star. Afternoon Deelites 
won in a romp. His final time of 1:40.74 was a record. He was 7 
lengths in front of second place Thunder Gulch too! They said that 
the margin was comprable to that of Snow Chief and another CA horse 
in the Hollywood Futurity who went on to win the KY Derby the following 
spring. We'll see...
481.7641994 Eclipse AwardsDECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle:Life in the espressolaneFri Jan 13 1995 18:0526
    The 1994 Eclipse Awards(except Horse of the Year) were annouced
    yesterday:
    
    2yo male: Timber Country
    2yo female: Flanders
    3yo male: Holy Bull
    3yo female: Heavenly Prize
    older male: The Wicked North
    older female: Sky Beauty
    turf male: Paradise Creek
    turf female: Hatoof
    sprinter: Cherokee Run
    
    Trainer:  D. Wayne Lukas
    Owner:  John Franks
    Breeder:  William T. Young
    Jockey:  Mike Smith
    Apprentice Jockey:  Dale Beckner
    
    Finalists for Horse of the Year are:
    
    Holy Bull
    Flanders
    Paradise Creek
    
    Guess who'll get it? 
481.765YIELD::STOOKERMon Jan 16 1995 14:424
    I had heard briefly on the news that Julie Crone was hurt in another
    riding accident this weekend.   Does anyone know what happened?
    
    
481.766Julie hurtSTOWOA::MCKEOWNMon Jan 16 1995 21:034
    I read in the paper on Saturday that her horse broke down (broken leg)
    and Julie fell, and then was kicked.  I don't remember exactly, but it
    was 3 breaks, as well as a concussion.  I think the breaks were a leg,
    an arm and her pelvis.
481.767She's gonna be OKDECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle:Life in the espressolaneMon Jan 16 1995 21:5621
    I saw the race last Friday night on TV. Krone's mount, Saratoga Source 
    went down and 2 others tripped over the fallen horse. One of the other 
    horses stepped on or kicked Krone. Krone complained of general soreness 
    and was taken to hospital for evaluation. Initial reports said that she 
    was being held overnight for possible concussion and fractured wrist. 
    
    The other horses and riders were OK. The riders came back later in the
    day on other mounts.
    
    Later reports said that she had a broken wrist and finger. I believe she 
    had surgery on Saturday for the wrist. She's expected to be out for 
    4-6 weeks. She was in contention for the riding title at Gulfstream.
    She's complaining that by missing that much of the meeting she doesn't
    have a chance of winning it. Guess she doesn't feel too bad about the
    spill then, eh?
    
    If I hear anything else, I'll be sure to post it...
    
    BTW, did you know she's engaged to be married? I forget the guys name 
    but he's a reporter that she started dating last summer. They're 
    planning a wedding for this summer.
481.768Good newsDECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle:Life in the espressolaneWed Jan 18 1995 18:142
    There's an update on Krone in the NY Times which says she only had one
    broken bone(pinky finger) and will be back to riding within a month.
481.7691995 Races of the YearDECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle:Life in the espressolaneWed Feb 01 1995 18:0069
    Since there's no "formal" Race of the Year title, everybody gets to
    create their own. Here are 4 different versions!
    
The TRC poll results for "Race of the Year" were:
	1. Travers Stakes
	2. Breeders' Cup Juvenille Fillies
	3. Woodward Stakes
	4. Breeders' Cup Classic
	5. Metropolitan Handicap(i.e. Met Mile)


The Daily Racing Form poll results for "Race of the Year" were:
	1. Woodward Stakes
	2. Breeders' Cup Juvenille Fillies
	3. Travers Stakes
	4. Breeders' Cup Classic
	5. Whitney
	6. Caesar's International
	7. Japan Cup
	8. Preakness Stakes
	9. Ruffian Handicap
	10. Metropolitan Handicap
    
The Blood Horse magazine's poll(of its readers) selected the
Breeders' Cup Juvenille Fillies over the other contenders which 
included(order is alphabetical):
	a. Arlington Million
	b. Beverly D. Stakes
	c. Breeders' Cup Juvenille Fillies
	d. Breeders' Cup Sprint
	e. Hollywood Futurity
	f. Kentucky Oaks
	g. Preakness Stakes
	h. Ruffian Handicap
	i. Travers Stakes
	j. Woodward Stakes

They do allow write-in votes for other races but I've always felt 
that they selected races that were "politically correct" for the 
Blood Horse poll. Note that all races were Grade I. There is a turf 
race, turf filly & mare race, 2 YO colts, 2 YO fillies, 3 YO classics 
for colts & fillies, a filly & mare handicap, a 3 & up handicap, 
etc. I've always felt like the deck was kinda stacked. For example, 
the TRC and DRF polls had the same top 4 races with different 
ordering of the top 3. The Breeders' Cup Classic was #4 in both the 
TRC and DRF polls but wasn't even a candidate dor the Blood Horse 
poll? Well, at least the top 3 form the other polls were included...

    John's choices:
    	1. Ruffian Handicap(Sky Beauty was first mare to win carrying 130 
    				pounds in over 25 years in NY; Dueled w/
    				half of Phipps entry early and held off 
    				late challenge by the other half of entry)
	2. Bernard Baruch Handicap (1. Lure 2. Paradaise Creek 3. Fourstardave)
    	3. Louisiana Super Derby(Soul Of The Matter over Concern in furious
    			final quarter mile. Soul Of The Matter ran fastest
    			winning final 1/4. Concern ran fastest final 1/4 in
    			history of race, win or lose.
    	4. Metropolitan Handicap(aka Met Mile. Holy Bull romps vs older horses)
	5. Caesar's International(Lure & Fourstar Allstar in a furious duel)
	6. Breeders' Cup Juvenille Fillies(undefeated Flanders wins stretch
    			duel while injured)
	7. Breeders' Cup Classic(Concern overtakes Tabasco Cat at the line)
	8. Travers Stakes(Holy Bull barely holds off late charge by Concern)
	9. Woodward Stakes(Holy Bull trounces older horses at 9f)
	10. Hempstead Handicap(Sky Beauty duels You'd Be Surprised into
    		defeat while giving away 14(?) pounds)
    
John
481.770More on Secretariat's PreaknessDECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle:Life in the espressolaneFri Feb 03 1995 21:40122
In a racing mailing list discussion, we got onto the timing of 
Secretariat's Preakness and I repeated what I knew about 
it. See 481.322 but remember that I used decimal tenths in that note 
and the discussion here is in 1/5ths... Anyway, it turns out that 
one of the people on the racing list is a turf writer who was not 
only there but fought for the correct timing! It's fascinating so I 
asked him if I could post it here. BTW, this guy's also the author 
of a handicapping book(Betting Thoroughbreds; second edition due in 
April) as well as a public handicapper.

On 3-FEB-1995 Steve Davidowitz wrote:

Comments by Steve Davidowitz
John's rendition of the Preakness clocking miscue is correct. The only 
reason Secretariat did not get credit for a track record was that the 
teletimer did not run as well as he did. Here is the story behind the story 
(with a few names missing from memory to be 
supplied at a later posting).

Secretariat made a move on the first turn from last to a contending 
position and kept right on going by Sham on the backstretch without Ron 
Turcotte doing ANYTHING. In more than 10 years at Pimlico, I never 
saw a horse make a move on that turn and win, not once!
Laffit Pincay Jr. was absolutely stunned and 
began to ask Sham for a run approaching the far turn. From there to the 
wire, Turcotte never moved his hands more than a little bit, while Pincay 
was flailing away with powerful strokes. He couldn't gain an inch.
I was in the grandstand with family and after being thrilled by the 
performance, looked up at the tote board and saw a pedestrian 1:55.
I didn't know anything at the time, but DRF clockers Frenchy Schwartz and 
Frank ?, independently had clocked the race in opposite corners of the 
press box, in 1:53-2/5.
Later when I was writing my piece for Turf and Sport Digest, Clem Florio 
of the Baltimore News American told me of the two DRF clockings. 
Florio, a sensational public handicapper and a crusader who would 
mellow considerably when he later joined the Washington Post went in to 
see the stewards to challenge the clocking.
The stewards blew him off at first, then checked  their official 
timer, E.T. McLean, who said he had gotten a clocking of 1:54-2/5 
on his stop watch from the winner's circle porch in the infield.
The stewards decided to keep the timing on the board.

 Florio wrote the discrepency in his story, Gerry Strine wrote it in the 
Washington Post and Beyer wrote it in the Washington Star.
 The following morning I called Chick Lang, general manager of Pimlico 
and the stewards, as senior editor of Turf and Sport Digest Magazine, 
based in Baltimore and as radio correspondent for a local station.
I asked them how they could possibly accept a clocking without checking 
it further against the tape, recorded in real time, when we were talking 
about the greatest horse of our time. 
The stewards blew it off as unprecedented and  Lang
 blew it off with the classic and over used line: "Who really cares about 
time anyway," he said. Time is only for people in jail."

A few days later I wrote an extensive letter to CBS Sports, sending 
copies to Lang, the Maryland Racing Commission and Penny Tweedy 
explaining how it would be easy to determine if Secretariat had 
indeed set a track record in the Preakness.
I asked them to measure the length of the Canonero tape against 
the length of the Secretariat tape and if the latter was shorter they 
would have the beginnings of a good argument. When that turned out to be 
the case by a significant amount,  I suggested a 
calibrated electronic clock matched to simultaneous video showings of 
both races to further narrow the time discrepency, which might be 
tough to eliminate fully because of the inexact placement of the starting 
gate behind the official start. 
The executive producer, Bill ? agreed to go forward with the idea on 
a TV show, but  Mrs. Tweedy asked CBS to hold off because she 
 did not want to ruffle the feathers of the Md racing people who had 
treated her so well.

 I called Gerry Strine of the Post and told him where we stood a few days 
before the Belmont and Gerry pitched in to write a column that 
spelled out the last hope we  had to open the case.
What if  Secretariat wins the Belmont and sets a new track 
record, I said, how will history remember racing for denying him the
 three track records in the three Triple Crown races he deserved?

After the Belmont, Bill ? asked Mrs. Tweedy to particpate in a half hour 
TV show and she agreed.I wrote the Commission and asked them to reconsider
and they agreed, providing Mrs. Tweedy filed a formal appeal.
The TV show clearly showed that Secretariat had broken the record and a 
hearing was scheduled late in June in a courthouse in downtown 
Baltimore.

The commisison was not happy about any of this, but it was nearly 
cornered into accepting the obvious, until CBS blew the case.
Instead of providing a clear stop frame presentation to delineate 
the start or even give Canonero a head start, they presented both tapes
side by side accompanied by an  
affidavid from their technicians that said the time was 1:53-2/5.
The commision than met for an hour, threw out the tote board clocking, 
disregarded the CBS clocking and the DRF clockings and refered to 
their rule book which stated that in Maryland the offical time of a race 
shall be the time recorded by the official timer. That was E.T. McLean's 
clocking of 1:54-2/5,  no track record.

This was, of course a disheartening experience for everryone who had 
tried to see truth prevail over arrogance and I have never forgotten 
it, nor given up the issue.
It is my intention in fact, to press for another review in 1998, 25 years 
after the event, or sooner if given any chance to do so, even though the 
clockings have lost their contemporary significance. . But, I do have
one more anecdotal experience to share.

In 1988, when Secretariat's rapidly developing son Risen Star was one day 
away from winning the Preakness, I made my annual trek to the 
Pimlico TV room to watch the  1973 Preakness.
Twenty  minutes later while walking towards the Preakness barn
area for one last peek  at Risen Star 
 I saw  Chick Lang walking towards me from the opposite direction.
Lang actually  had mellowed some over the years and had become 
somewhat friendly to me. 
"Hi Steve," he said. "You wouldn't have the time, would you?"

I said, "matter of a fact, I do Chick." And raised my right hand, turned my 
palm towards him and revealed the stopwatch that still was stuck on the 
same numbers: "It's 1:53-2/5, Chick, the same time it was 15 years ago."
Chick looked at me like I had just dropped in from Mars and walked away 
muttering to himself.
                                                                        
                                                      Steve Davidowitz
481.771A final exchange on Secretariat's PreaknessDECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle:Life in the espressolaneFri Feb 03 1995 21:4433
On Fri, 3 Feb 1995, Joseph DeMotte wrote:

> 
> I see one problem with trying to use CBS's tape of the 1972 Preakness to 
> compare race times of that race to Secretariat's race, and it will sound very 
> familar to the regular Derby subscribers - wouldn't there be a problem with 
> synchronizing the video tapes if the starting gate wasn't exactly in the same 
> position in 1973 as it was in 1972? That is, when would they know when the 
> first horse actually reached the 3/16ths pole to start the timing in each 
> case? 
>  
> Granted, we are talking about over 20 years ago, when these problems weren't 
> widely discussed. 
>  
> Joseph DeMotte 
------------------------------------------------------------------
Joeseph,
      
         I don't know if you saw my posting on this, but I hope it 
answered your basic question. A  little more detail:

I suggested to CBS to note the spokes on the inner 
rail behind the 1-3/16ths mile marker (where the starting gate was placed) 
for the Canonero race and the Secretariat race. As I recall, the gate was 
1-1/2 spokes further back for the Secretariat race and the electronic 
clock was adjusted to compensate. Still there is a very small error 
factor that must be admitted. Working with two dimensional images from 
an angle requires much triangulation. But in the end the clocking was 
very sharp, I believe. 
                                   Steve Davidowitz
p.s.. . .1973 was not quite the dark ages:-). They had horseless carraiges, 
color TV and by gosh, a half dozen men who had walked on the moon:-).

481.772Thanks, again...GRANPA::JWOODSat Feb 04 1995 17:054
    John, thanks for an interesting sidelight on a horse that we ALL
    admired.
    
    JW
481.773Sad news departmentDECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle:Life in the espressolaneWed Feb 08 1995 18:5015
    There was some sad news recently in the racing world:
    
    	1. That nice Gr I winning filly Sardula had to be put down
    	   last week due to a bone infection that did not respond to
    	   treatment. I've been told that it was osteomyelitis.
    
    	2. French trainer, Francois Boutin, who trained Miesque to multiple
    	   Breeders' Cup wins as well as the precocious Arazi, died of
    	   cancer last Weds.
    
    	3. I recently read that 1975 KY Derby winner Foolish Pleasure
    	   was put down in Novemeber due to a burst intestine. He was 22
    	   at the time. He had been pasture breeding on a ranch in Wyoming
    	   for several years after declining fertility meant he couldn't
    	   handle a full traditionally managed season in KY
481.774Sigh...GBLAUT::JANICKIV. Janicki DCE Engineering DTN 226-5980Wed Feb 08 1995 21:025
Thanks John for the updates. An interesting cycle. 20 years ago this
month I watched Foolish Pleasure win the Flamingo Stakes on TV which
started my fascination with horse racing.

Vicky
481.775This weekend's racesDECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle:Life in the espressolaneMon Feb 13 1995 17:2547
    First the "bad" news(although it's not too bad):
    
    Holy Bull was pulled up during Saturday's Gr I Donn Handicap at 
    Gulfstream. Situation is not life threatening but he may well be 
    retired. It happened lieke this: Cigar broke on top and Holy Bull 
    was rating just off him through the first 3/8. At that point, Mike 
    Smith and the Bull decided to take the race to Cigar. They quickly 
    left the rest of the field 5 lengths back. I saw Holy Bull pulling 
    alongside Cigar in a fluid effortless manner as if he were going to 
    go right on by Cigar and never look back. As the Bull drew up to where 
    you couldn't see him very well in the TV side shot, I instinctively 
    said a few choice words because I saw his head bob out of rhythm with 
    his stride. The next stride the Bull started going wide and I knew he 
    was being pulled up. About 3 sec later, Tom Durkin, who had been calling 
    the trailers at the time, realized what was happening and announced it 
    to the track. Cigar went on to win by 4 or 5 lengths.
    
    I later saw some footage of the Bull as he was going onto the
    ambulance. He was bucking and kicking and playing up so I knew he
    wasn't too badly injured. The reports now say that he has some tendon
    and ligament strain in one or both front legs. There's already talk
    that he'll be sent to Jonabell Farm in KY as soon as next week to
    begin stallion duty this season. Sometime late last year, Jonabell 
    bought part interest in Holy Bull as a stallion prospect.
    
    Now the good news:
    
    Best Pal is still going strong. He may not be quite as good as he was
    at 3 and 4 as he seems to have lost some of his tactical speed which
    helped him achieve good position in his races. But, the 7 YO gelding
    can still kick home as strong as ever. Sunday, he broke from post 3 in
    the San Antonio at Santa Anita. It's a Gr II 9f race. McCarron took
    Best Pal over to the rail and stayed there throughout the race. Saving
    all that ground over his usual wide trip and a blistering pace up front
    gave this veteran a good shot. My heart *soared* when I saw him coming
    through a hole on the rail at the top of the stretch. I started
    cheering like a crazy person. He kicked on to win by a good 4 lengths
    in 1:47 and about 3/5...I can't recall the fractions exactly but is 
    was decent...Best Pal's win was heart balm after Holy Bull's injury.
    
    Earlier on the Sunday card, undefeated 3 YO Afternoon Deelite romped
    home in a Gr III 7f race. He's being prep'ed as a KY Derby hopeful.
    He's already won the Gr I Hollywood Futurity at 8.5f but he hasn't gone
    9f yet. Trainer Dick Mandella might try to get another race into
    Afternoon Deelite before the 9f Santa Anita Derby in April. This one
    may be worth watching although some say he won't have enough stamina for
    10f of the KY Derby...
481.776Tendon strainBOUVS::OAKEYI'll take Clueless for $500, AlexTue Feb 14 1995 19:3813
481.777exDECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle:Life in the espressolaneFri Mar 10 1995 18:1017
    TV ALERT:
    
    	ABC's "Wide World of Sports" is broadcasting both
    	the Florida Derby(a 3YO prep for KY Derby) and the
    	Santa Anita Handicap on Sat Mar 11
    
    Short new items:
    
    Holy Bull has safely arrived at Jonabell Farm in KY 
    
    Julie Krone returns to race riding today at Gulfstream
    
    Past Belmont winners in the news:
    	1969 Belmont winner Arts and Letters was pensioned from stallion
    		duty
    	1983(?) Belmont winner Caveat died of a heart attack shortly after
    		breeding a mare
481.778Some of last weekend's 18 graded stakes DECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle:Life in the espressolaneMon Mar 13 1995 18:3285
There was a lot of good racing this past weekend. Many of you may 
have seen the Florida Derby and Santa Anita Handicap on ABC. 

If you did, you probably saw Jerry Bailey get through a hole on the 
rail with Suave Prospect in the Fla Derby. I thought he had it won 
at that point but Mike Smith already had Thunder Gulch moving on the 
outside. Thunder Gulch won a head bobbing finish over Suave 
Prospect. You may have heard hte ABC announcer say that Jerry Bailey 
already had 6 wins on Saturday. When I heard that, I said "No way is 
he gonna win this race." I figured he'd already had his share for 
the day. I was right, he didn't win that race but I was wrong 
thinking that he was done for the day. He came back in the last 2 
races and got a third and a *seventh* win. That's a record number of 
wins at Gulfstream. In the 10 races that I know he had a mount, he 
had 7 wins, 1 second and 1 third. The other one was scratched. There 
were 12 races on Saturday's card. He may have ridden in the other 2 
but the Gulfstream TV show didn't give the jockeys for all the 
races. Even if he had 2 other horses that were out of the money, 
it's not a bad day's work...

BTW, Gulfstream had 7 or 8 stakes races on Saturday. One of them was 
the Swale Stakes for 3 YO at 7 furlongs. That's the won Bailey got a 
third. Julie Krone won it on Mr Greeley(by Gone West...It's a name 
play, get it?)... Mr Greeley had run w/o Krone a couple times while 
she was out witht he broken finger but hadn't won...

In the Santa Anita Handicap, everybody thought it would a match race 
for the 2 grey wonders, Holy Bull vs Weekiva Springs. But, with both 
of them out with injuries, it fell to another grey called Urgent 
Request. I had only seen Urgent Request run once before; in last 
year's Rothman's International up in Canada. That's a 1.5 mile turf 
race. In the Rothman's, he tore off at high speed and lead for the 
first 10 furlongs and then faded a little to be third. I knew he 
could get the distance on the front end. I knew Gary Stevens had 
ridden him in the Rothman's and that he wouldn't fly home from Hong 
Kong(Stevens is riding in HK on a 4 month contract) if the horse 
wasn't any good. Did I pick him? Nah...I wanted Best Pal to come 
back and win it.

Best Pal only fell a head short of winning it though. McCarron gave 
him a great ride saving ground on the rail and then swinging out for
a clear run. It looked like McCarron was gonna split horses and 
charge after Urgent Request. But, one of the other jocks decided to 
close off that hole and Best Pal had to go around him. I think if
he gets to split horses, Best Pal wins over Urgent Request. Even so,
1:59 1/5 ain't bad for an old horse(Best Pal's 7)...

In the Santa Anita Oaks on Sunday, Serena's Song(who duelled with
Flanders down the Breeders' Cup stretch) won her 3rd straight race 
when she held off a hard charging Urbane with Eddie Dellahousaye up.

Sunday's New Orleans Handicap (Gr III 9f) at the Fair Grounds
saw the 1995 debut of Breeders' Cup Classic winner, Concern.

First of all, Bailey was replaced by Mike Smith. Bailey had been 
scheduled to ride Concern and had worked him earlier in the week. I 
heard no mention of why he was replaced by Smith.

The field was decent considering it was only a $200,000 Gr III. Toss 
Of The Coin had shipped in from CA and there were a couple local
horses with decent records in graded stakes...

Concern got piched at the break when the horse outside him broke in 
and the inside horse broke out. Stablemate Sticks And Bricks went to 
the lead and set the early pace 24:0 for the first quater and 47:0 
for the half. After the first half mile, it was clear that Toss Of 
The Coin was struggling and would not be a factor. Concern  was 
doing his thing about 18 lengths off the leader. Local speed 
horse, Adhocracy was stalking and began to challenge Sticks And 
Bricks after 3/4 in 1:10:4. At the same time, Smith was winding up 
Concern. He had moved to get some position about the 5/8 pole and
with 3 furlongs left to run, Smith seemed to have Concern in full 
gear. He'd been hugging the rail but had to circle the field as they 
came off the turn. Fortunately, the stretch at FG is a long one and
he had a full 1/4 mile to turn it on. 

Concern blew past them all to win going away by 4 in 1:49:2 which is
just 3/5 off the track record. After the race, Trainer Richard Small 
said something about picking the race for Concern's debut because of 
the long stretch at the FG. Smith was his usual self-deprecating humble 
self and said something like "I just did what Mr Small told me. I took a 
long light hold of him and waited. About the 5/8, I decided to get a 
little closer and he really went on for me."

John
481.779Contenders for 1995 KY Derby(Part 1)DECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle:Life in the espressolaneTue Mar 28 1995 22:5470
I had promised Lou some info about the 1995 KY Derby 
contenders. Here's the first installment. 

Dr Steve Roman(Creator of the modern dosage index) claims that if 
you use it in conjunction with a measure of 2 YO class, it is an 
excellent tool for betting the KY Derby. He claims that you can use
the Experimental Free Handicap as a measure of 2 YO class. He 
couples the Experimental Free Handicap(EFH) rating and the Dosage 
Index(DI) in the so-called Double Qualifier system. If a horse has a DI
of 4.0 or less, it "qualifies". If it had an EFH rating that was 
within 10 pounds(The EFH rating is a weight assignment like you'd 
see in a handicap race) of the top rated 2 YO, the horse is a 
"double qualifier".

Although I don't put much stock in dosage theory, I'm posting this 
info because Roman says that if you had bet $2 on all the double 
qualifiers who ran in the KY Derby in the past 15 years, you'd have 
doubled your money. Personally, I think that much of that "return on 
investment" would have come from longshots like Lil E Tee that *nobody* 
thought would win the KY Derby.

The double qualifiers for this years Derby are:
De Niro
Eltish(French-bred; English trained & raced)
Evansville Slew
Mr. Purple
On Target
Serena's Song(filly)
Supremo
Tejano Run
Thunder Gulch
Timber Country(US 2 YO Champion & EFH Highweight at 126)
Urbane(filly)
Western Echo

Several of these horses will not even start in the KY Derby. 
Serena's Song is expected to run against the colts on the Jim Beam 
Stakes and then go back to the filly ranks in the KY Oaks. 
Urbane(the other filly) will probably not go against the colts.
Evansville Slew has had a minor injury and is not expected to run in 
the KY Derby.

Of the remainder, Tejano Run was 3rd to Timber Country in the 
Breeders' Cup Juvenille last November but was disappointing in his 
only race this season. He had a good workout recently to finish 
his preparation for this Sunday's Jim Beam stakes at Turfway Park. 

Timber Country has been disappointing so far. He has had 2 races so 
far. He was an unimpressive 3rd to Larry The Legend in the 1 mile 
San Rafael and a weak 2nd to Afternoon Deelites in the 1 1/16 mile 
San Felipe.

Eltish was second to Timber Country in the Breeders' Cup Juvenille 
but has not raced yet in 1995.

Thunder Gulch has won both his races so far: the Fountain of Youth
and Florida Derby. Both were at Gulfstream Park and he had Mike 
Smith up both times

Personally, I would add Talkin' Man to the "dual qualifier" list. 
His dosage is "qualified" at 3.0 and he was Canadian 2 YO champion. 
He also just won the Gotham Stakes at 1 mile in NY with Mike Smith 
up. You may remember that Smith rode Talkin' Man in the Breeders' 
Cup Juvenille last November and finished well up the track. It turns 
out that Talkin' Man had an undetected lung infection that day. 
According to a report in yesterday's Toronto Star, Smith called
Roger Attfield at 6 AM SUnday morning to say that he wanted the 
ride on Talkin' Man in the KY Derby. Apparently he likes Talkin' 
Man's chances better than Thunder Gulch's

481.780Santa Anita Derby Field(Derby Contenders Part2)DECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle:Life in the espressolaneWed Apr 05 1995 20:3890
Last Saturday's Jim Beam Stakes at Turfway saw Serena's Song walk 
all over the colts entered in the race. The only serious KY Derby 
contender among them was Tejano Run. He had been scratched from the 
Louisiana Derby due to a lung infection. In Saturday's Jim Beam,
he was well off the moderate pace but closed fairly well to be second.
I was impressed by his physical appearance and he improved 
significantly from his 2 YO races if you believe the speed figures.
He probably needs more conditioning to be ready for the KY Derby.
Serena's Song is said to be preparing for the KY Oaks run on the Friday.

This Saturday, Santa Anita will host the Santa Anita Derby. The race
will be broadcast on ABC's Wide World of Sports(4:30 PM Eastern 
Time) on Sat April 8th. Next weekend(Apr 15th) ABC's Wide World of 
Sports will broadcast the Wood Memorial and ESPN will broadcast the 
Bluegrass Stakes. These are the last 3 major preps for the KY Derby.
I'll talk about the Santa Anita Derby now and the other 2 next week.

The Jim Beam field was weakened by the fact that Santa Anita 
decided to *increase* the purse for the Santa Anita Derby if 3 or more 
graded stakes winners run in the race. The stakes races must have been 
at 1 mile or more so no sprints would count. If 3 graded stakes 
winners run, the purse will be $600,000. If 4 or more run, the purse 
will be $700,000. The normal purse is $500,000.

Because of that Santa Anita Derby purse increase, Petionville and 
Larry The Legend have decided to stay in CA and wait for the SA Derby
rather than go to the Jim Beam as they had planned. The Jim Beam  
purse is $600,000 and the competition would have been lighter 
because the big horses in CA(Timber Country and Afternoon Deelites)
were going to the SA Derby.

Petionville won the Gr III Louisiana Derby at 9f. He's undefeated in 
5 career starts but the Louisiana Derby was his first graded stakes race.
He had previous won the Gold Rush Stakes at 8f at Golden Gate Park in San 
Francisco. Trainer Randy Bradshaw said he would enter Petionville in the SA 
Derby but has a plane scheduled to take him to NY on April 11th to 
run in the Wood if a bad post or something that makes him want to skip 
the SA Derby.

Larry The Legend is owned by his trainer, Craig Lewis, who got him 
in payment of a bad debt. He won the Gr II San Rafael at 8f over Fanfarel
Dancer and Timber Country back on March 4. He also won the 
restricted Santa Catalina stakes at 8.5f back in Feb beating In 
Character and Awesom Thought. Maybe a useful horse but his class is 
still unknown.

Afternoon Deelites is undefeated in his career which I think is 5 or 
6 starts. He's owned & bred by Burt Bacharach(yes, the musician) who 
owned/bred, Soul Of The Matter, winner of last year's Super Derby. 
At 2, Afternoon Deelites won the Gr I Hollywood Futurity  at 8.5f in a 
*very* impressive manner. It was the single most impressive 2YO race I 
saw all last year and yes I did see Timber Country. In 1995, he won the 
Gr III San Vicente at 7f and the Gr II San Felipe at 8.5f. 
Unfortunately, his San Felipe was not super impressive. He travelled 
wide on both turns and did not draw off from his field as he has in 
all his other races. He got home in 1:42 which is slower than he ran 
the same distance back in the December Hollywood Futurity. His 
trianer, Dick Mandella, may have been using the race as a schooling 
session to teach the horse to rate and he may have instructed the 
Kent Desormeuax to go wide to get some extra distance into the horse.
I don't know but those ideas have been batted around in the media 
and in comments by Desormeuax. If doesn't show any improvement in 
the SA Derby, I would discount his chances in the KY Derby. The 
Churchill track is a relatively deep and tiring track. The So. CA 
tracks are usually firm and fast. If he can't get 9f in good order
this week in CA, I don't see much hope of him going 10f in KY.

Timber Country won the Gr I Breeders' Cup Futurity at 8.5f and a 
bunch of other graded stakes last year so he counts even though he 
hasn't won a race this year. I have not been impressed with Timber 
Country's races in 1995. He was 3rd to Larry The Legend and then
2nd to Afternoon Deelites. He did not look good in either race. He 
appeared to be laboring and did not close well. If he does not 
improve *remarkably* in the SA Derby, I would not expect him to do 
well in KY. If he is back to his 2YO form, he may be a formidable
contender in KY.

Jumron has won 2 1995 stakes at 8.5f. One was the Gr III El Camino 
Real and the other was the Golden State Derby. Both races were in 
Northern CA and were relatively slow due to bad weather. But he 
counts for the purse increase as well as having a reasonable chance
of being in the money. He'd have to improve big time to get first 
money though.

The rest of the field for the SA Derby looks like it will include
a fair number of good horses who ran 2nd or 3rd to the winners I 
mentioned earlier: In Character(2nd in Louisiana Derby and Santa 
Catalina), Lake George(3rd in San Felipe) and Fanfarel Dancer(3rd San 
Vicente and 2nd in San Felipe)

481.781PCBUOA::LPIERCEDo the watermelon crawlThu Apr 06 1995 14:445
    
    Great info on the horses John, Thanks!  I'll be watching the Santa
    Anita closley
    
    Lou
481.782Jerry Bailey injuredDECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle:Life in the espressolaneThu Apr 13 1995 18:285
    Jockey Jerry Bailey was thrown and kicked in the chest during the
    post parade of a 2 YO race yesterday at Keeneland. The initial reports
    said that he had no color in his face for 15 minutes after the incident
    but that there were no obvious broken bones. He's hospitalized while
    they check for internal injuries, etc. More news when available
481.7831995 KY Derby Contenders(Part 3)DECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle:Life in the espressolaneThu Apr 13 1995 21:1138
It looks like the field for the Gr II $500,000 Blue Grass Stakes
this Saturday(will be broadcast on ESPN) is small and perhaps weak:
	Pyramid Peak (Flamingo Stakes winner) will not run; He's 
		going straight to the Kentucky Derby.

	Gadzook
	Jambalaya Jazz
	Suave Prospect
	Tejano Run
	Thunder Gulch
	Wild Syn

The 3 serious horses are Suave Prospect, Tejano Run, and Thunder 
Gulch.Tejano Run won the KY Cup Futurity and ran 3rd in the BC Juvenille 
last fall. After recuperating from a lung infection, he ran a respectable 
second to Serena's Song in the Jim Beam 2 weeks ago. He's improving,
should now be fit and has a strong chance here. 

Thunder Gulch and Suave Prospect battled down the stretch in both 
the Gr II Fountain of Youth and Gr I Florida Derby. Thunder Gulch won 
both races under Mike Smith while Suave Prospect was a game second 
under Jerry Bailey. Both horses will have new riders this time out. 
Pat Day will ride Thunder Gulch in the Blue Grass but he's already 
committed to another horse for Wayne Lukas, Timber Country. Lukas 
trians both Thunder Gulch and Timber Country. Day was unseated in 
the Transylvania Stakes last Sunday but is reported to be OK with 
only a sore hand. Mike Smith lost the mount because he would not 
commit to ride Thunder Gulch in the Blue Grass and KY Derby. He's
riding 4YO Concern in the Oaklawn Handicap in Arkansas this 
Saturday. Jerry Bailey lost the mount on Suave Prospect for a 
similar reason; he's suppsed to ride Cigar in the Oaklawn Handicap! 
Suave Prospect gets Julie Krone for the Blue Grass and KY Derby.

Jambalaya Jazz's only graded stakes placing this season was a third 
in the Fountain of Youth; he was far behind Thunder Gulch and Suave 
Prospect. He'll have to improve significantly to have a chance here.

Never heard of Gadzook or Wild Syn before.
481.7841995 KY Derby Contenders(Part 4)DECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle:Life in the espressolaneThu Apr 13 1995 21:1114
The field for the Gr II Wood Memorial this Saturday looks like 
this:

	Avie's Flag	?
	Devious Course	?
	Key Guy 	Won ungraded Rushaway Stakes at 8.5 at Turfway
			on the day Serena's Song won the Gr II Jim Beam
	Knockadoon  	Won the ungraded Risen Star and 4th in the 
			Gr III Louisiana Derby; both at the Fair 
			Grounds; 4 wins in 5 career races;
	Talkin' Man	Won Gr II Gotham by 9 lengths at Aqueduct; training 
			well at Keeneland

	Talc's Gift	?
481.785Santa Anita Derby outcomeDECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle:Life in the espressolaneThu Apr 13 1995 21:2527
    Santa Anita Derby results:
    
    Larry The Legend beat Afternoon Deelites by a nose. Jumron closed
    strongly to get third;a neck behind Larry The Legend; would have won if 
    he had a little more ground. Timber Country never threatened and was
    1.5 lengths behind Larry The Legend.
    
    The first 3 ran very well. I think Jumron will like the extra distance
    for the 10f KY Derby. Larry The Legend was all out to get Afternoon
    Deelites at 9f. They're both front runners so I doubt either of them 
    would be able to go at the pace required for the KY Derby and hold off
    late challenges from strong finishing horses.
    
    Lukas and Pat Day say Timber Country didn't like the track and couldn't
    race well on it. So why didn't they take him somewhere else? This was
    his 3rd race at Santa Anita in the past 6 weeks. They oughta know by
    now whether or not he likes racing there...Hasn't won a race so far
    this year...looked flat and failed to close much ground...some think
    he'll improve at Churchill because he ran so well there last fall in
    the BC Juvenille...maybe but not likely; check his workouts after he 
    gets there...suppsed to ship in this weekend.
    
    Timber Country's performance makes it more likely that Serena's Song 
    will run in the KY Derby. I think she's good enough to do it but am
    leary of "last minute" changes like that. She's been training for the
    KY Oaks, which is a 9f race like the Jim Beam. She may not have enough
    time to prepare for 10f.
481.786Summary of contendersDECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle:Life in the espressolaneThu Apr 13 1995 21:4139
    The remaining contenders are foreigners:
    
    Eltish will be coming from ENgland. He will have only 1 prep race(next
    Thursday, I think) but has been working 9f at/near racing speed for
    some time. Should give a decent account of himself in KY. UK folks
    think he's come into the year fine and has progressed from last year.
    we'll see after the race next week.
    
    KY bred Ski Captain will becoming from Japan. He's supposed to be hot
    stuff but I don't know what he's won or what his preparation is.
    
    Summary:
    
    It's wide open this year. There will be no overwhelming favorite
    because of Timber Country's poor 1995 season and Afternoon Deelites
    defeat in the Santa Anita Derby. 
    
    Assuming the remainin prep races go the way I expect, the 10 top
    contenders for the KY Derby will be:
    
    	Afternoon Deelites
    	Eltish
    	Jumron
    	Larry The Legend
    	Serena's Song
    	Ski Captain
    	Suave Prospect
    	Talkin Man
    	Tejano Run
    	Thunder Gulch
    
    Of those 10, I think there are 4 who won't want to go the 10f
    distance *unless* their trainers put some *serious* "bottom" into them
    within the next 3 weeks:
    Afternoon Deelites, Larry The Legend, Suave Prospect, Thunder Gulch
    
    Still that leaves you with 6 to choose from assuming they all get to
    the post! Remember how AP Indy was scratched dur to a sore foot on the 
    day of the race?
481.787PCBUOA::LPIERCEDo the watermelon crawlFri Apr 14 1995 12:208
    
    Isn't Larry the small TB?  I have not seem him yet, but I have heard he
    is very small for a TB.  but he looks like he is holding his own on the
    track.
    
    Thank for the info John.
    
    Louisa
481.788Yup, Larry's a Mighty MiteDECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle:Life in the espressolaneFri Apr 14 1995 21:5915
    Louisa,
    
    Yes, Larry The Legend is small. His owner/trainer says he's 15 hands
    and about 900 pounds. He's a grandson of Northern Dancer who was also
    small, measuring just over 15.1 hands. Larry has definitely been
    holding his own on the track. 
    
    Larry's owner has been quoted in several places as saying most of what
    there is of Larry is heart. He's definitely a gutsy colt. If that's all
    it took to win a KY Derby, he'd be a cinch. But, stamina, speed and
    good racing luck are also part of winning the KY Derby. Will he have
    enough of all 4? Time will tell!
    
    Have a good trip to KY!
    John
481.789Who cares about the 3YOs when you got handicaps like this?DECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle:Life in the espressolaneFri Apr 14 1995 23:0338
    Jerry Bailey's released from hosptial. Bruised and sore but back to
    riding today. 
    
    I'm really looking forward to this weekend's Oaklawn Handicap! Bailey's
    supposed to ride Cigar. Here are the entry's:
    
    1.  Best Pal          121 lbs.  7/2
    2.  Urgent Request    118       4/1
    3.  Johann Quartz     114      20/1
    4.  Cigar             120       5/2
    5.  Concern           122       2/1  entry
    6.  Silver Goblin     119       5/1
    7.  Sticks and Bricks 108       2/1  entry
    
    This could be the race of the year! Urgent Request recently won the
    Santa Anita Handicap wire-to-wire in 1:59 and change. Best Pal closed
    well in that race to be a good second. Cigar's another front runner who
    should make Urgent Request work to set the pace. Sticks and Bricks is
    entered as a rabbit to insure a fast pace for Concern. Silver Goblin is
    another speed horse but he's learned to rate just off the leaders since
    burning up the track as a front tunner last spring. 
    
    If there's a fast pace(almost guaranteed!), Best Pal and Concern have
    excellent chances to make their big late runs into winning runs. There
    have been dead zones in the Oaklawn strip recently(e.g. the rail has
    been tiring) so positioning on the track may come into play tomorrow.
    
    I can see basically 3 scenarios:
    	1. Urgent Request runs away from the field and hides
    	2. Urgent Request and Cigar battle for the lead but the track 
    		favors speed so Silver Goblin who has been laying back and
    		outside of them wins
    	3. Urgent Request and Cigar battle for the lead and tire each
    		other out; track is not speed favoring; Best Pal or
    		Concern sweep wide and win.
    
    See what tomorrow brings!
    
481.790Bummer about Larry the LegendBOUVS::OAKEYI'll take Clueless for $500, AlexMon Apr 17 1995 19:088
Larry the Legend's owner and trainer announced that Larry the Legend would
be missing the Kentucky Derby.  After winning the Santa Anita Derby, a bone
chip in his left front knee was found.  The injury is not expected to be
career-threatening.  Arthroscopic surgery is planned but not yet scheduled.

Sounds like Larry the Legend will be out 4-5 months. 

481.791How do you bet?TLE::PERAROFri Apr 28 1995 13:576
    
    I'm off to the Derby also.  How does one bet? I am not familiar with
    racing and how this is done.
    
    Mary
    
481.792exDECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle:Life in the espressolaneFri Apr 28 1995 18:1440
    Simplest way to place a bet is to go to a betting window operated by a
    human(Most tracks have automated machines now but they are different at
    every track and I would know what to tell you as I've not been to
    Chuchill Downs)
    
    The teller windows are designated by type of bet (Win, Place(2nd) or
    Show (3rd); Some track have WIn/Place/Show windows where you can make
    any of the 3 bets) and by the minimum amount you want to bet(e.g. $2 
    $5 $10 $20 $50 etc.). 
    
    You tell the teller the number of the horse you want to bet and the amount.
    You have to pay cash for your ticket(s) and you can only bet multiples 
    of the basic amount for the window(e.g. you can bet $4 at the $2 window)
    
    Exotic bets(like the Exacta in which you have to play the first and 
    second place horses to win) are usually placed at separate windows.
    
    How you decide which horse(s) to bet on is another matter. There are
    many "methods". If you want to do some reading about the decision
    making processes, I recommend Steve Davidowitz's "Betting
    Thoroughbreds". The second edition just came out.
    
    The short version is get somebody to show you how to read the past
    performances charts; then look over the charts to see which horses have
    a chance based on their past races and recent workouts; pick one you
    like and bet it. 
    
    I usually make a short list of horses with a chance; then I try
    to remember which of them has beat the other; look them over in the
    paddock or post parade to make a final decision. A horse that has his
    ears up and looks lively maybe prancing a little is feeling food and
    ready to run; one that's acting up may be wasting precious energy that
    s/he will need in the race; one that looks half asleep or dull coated,
    etc probably won't run well; one that pins his/her ears and gives other
    horses a threatening look may be tough to beat if they have any talent.
    Then, I sprint to the window and place my bet. (Might not be able to do
    that on Derby day! The crowds will be huge!)
    
    Good luck and have fun(that's the main thing)
    John
481.7931995 KY Derby morning line etcDECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle:Life in the espressolaneMon May 01 1995 19:5480
    Wayne Lukas announced that Serena's Song will run in the KY Derby
    rather than the Oaks. It's not clear who her jockey would be. Earlier
    last week, he had said that she would go in the Oaks and gave her
    regular rider(Corey Naktani) permission to accept another mount for the
    Derby. He commited to In Character. Whether Lukas *wants* Naktani to 
    ride SS or not is one question. Whether Naktani will honor the
    commitment to ride In Character if Lukas stil wants him on SS is
    another.
    
    Churchill Downs track handicapper, Mike Battaglia, has made the entry
    of Timber Country and Serena's Song the 5-2 favorite. Under KY rules,
    they have to be coupled as a single betting entry because SS's owners 
    have a part interest in Timber Country. Lukas' other horse, Thunder 
    Gulch, has different owners and therefore is a separate betting interest.
    So, if you bet SS or TC, you get them both which is why Battaglia 
    expects them to be the favorite.
    
    Here are the other "morning line" odds set by Battaglia(remember the
    morning line odds reflect how he expects the public to bet the race.
    the morning line odds may or may not reflect his own opinion of who
    will win the race)
    
    A couple notes: Churchill Downs only allows 12 separate betting
    interests. When there are more than 12 horses in the KY
    Derby, some of them are the "field". It's like an ordinary "entry" of
    multiple horses by a single owner/trainer. If you bet any of these horses,
    your ticket is good on *ALL* horses that are part of the "field" entry.
    I've marked them with an (f). I've marked the Lukas entry with an (a)
    and the John T. Ward-trained entry with a (b).
    
    Afternoon Deelites             4-1
    Citadeed                      15-1(f)
    Dazzling Falls                20-1
    Eltish                        12-1
    In Character                  15-1(f)
    Jambalaya Jazz                20-1(b)
    Jumron                        10-1
    Knockadoon                    15-1(f)
    Lake George                   15-1(f)
    Mecke                         15-1(f)
    Pyramid Peak                  20-1(b)
    Serena's Song                  5-2(a)
    Ski Captain                   15-1(f)
    Suave Prospect                12-1
    Talkin Man                     7-2
    Tejano Run                    10-1
    Thunder Gulch                 12-1
    Timber Country                 5-2
    Wild Syn                      10-1
    
    
    This leaves me in a quandry. Most years, I can narrow the choices to 2
    or 3 horses at most. This year, I cna make a case for a *lot* of horses
    including(alphabetically): Afternoon Deelites, Eltish, Jumron, 
    Serena's Song, Ski Captain(a *field* horse no less!), Talkin Man,
    Tejano Run , Timber Country, and Wild Syn. 
    
    That's 9 horses! If pushed, I might toss out Afternoon Deelites,
    Serena's Song, and Timber Country. They may not want to go 10f right
    now. Wild Syn stole the Blue Grass with slow early
    fractions and may be able to go with the big name colts. Jumron and
    Tejano Run have been closing well and seem to want more distance.
    
    But, I think this year's KY Derby may well go to a foreign horse:
    Talkin Man(Canada) hasn't put a hoof wrong this year. Ski
    Captain(coming from Japan)has been interval training so he's very 
    fit and has done racing speed works at 10f so we can expect him to get 
    the distance. Eltish(England) got beat in his only start this year but 
    he was carrying 131 pounds(5 more than he'll carry this Sat!) and giving 
    away a lot of weight to the winner. 
    
    And then there's the Gary Stevens back from Hong Kong angle: He flew
    back to win the Santa Anita Handicap and the Santa Anita Derby. He's
    committed to fly back in time for the Derby even though his Hong Kong
    contract runs till June. KY ain't CA, but a small wager on Mr Stevens'
    mount might be in order. 'Course I can't remember who he's supposed to
    ride! But, I have a vague recollection that it was IN Character to whom
    Nakatani committed last week!!!?????
    
    John
481.794My PickGBLAUT::JANICKIV. Janicki DCE Engineering DTN 226-5980Tue May 02 1995 14:177
I haven't been following the Derby that closely this year. But I did
catch the Wood Memorial and liked the way Talkin' Man won it. So he
is my pick for Saturday. I also like Eltish and will be really 
interested in how Ski Captain does. I've always felt that racehorses should
be using a more comprehensive training system like interval training.

Vicky
481.795CombosTLE::PERAROTue May 02 1995 15:298
    re: 792
    
    Can you make a combination bet, like say you want horse 7, can you
    place a bet for that horse to place or show? Or are they each
    considered separate, like $10 on 7 to place and $10 on 7 to show for a
    total of $20?
    
    M
481.796From USA on Derby FavsTLE::PERAROTue May 02 1995 16:5426
    
    According to USA today, Timber Country is back on the favorite track.
    It says that he has reminded handicappers he might be the colt to beat
    with a workout Monday as impressive as entrymate Serena's Song.
    
    His trainer says he handles the track well, although he has come off a
    three-race losing streak.  His jockey, Pay Day, says that Timber
    Country loves the track. Trainer Nick Zito, a rival trainer, says quote
    "I like his presence". "I think he is the horse to beat, you have to
    like the way he looks".
    
    Thunder Gultch clocked in on Mondays workout 1:002/5 for 5 furlongs.
    This is Luka's third Derby Contender.  He says he is like the stepchild
    of the three, he's in the middle between the juvenile champion
    returning to the scene of his greatest triumph and the filly
    everybody's talking about.  He said he is the least-heralded of the
    three, but not without ability.
    
    Eltish and Citadeed arrived at the quarantine barn and are expected on
    the track on Wednesday.
    
    So, according to the paper, the three favorites are Timber Country,
    Serena's Song, and Thunder Gultch.
    
    Mary
    
481.797was that a slip?GRANPA::JWOODTue May 02 1995 17:071
    Was that a typo or is Pat Day actually referred to as "Pay Day"?
481.798A typoTLE::PERAROTue May 02 1995 17:305
    
    It is a typo, it is Pat Day.  But who knows, it could be "Pay Day" if
    Timber Country wins. :>)
    
    
481.799KY weather report DECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle:Life in the espressolaneWed May 03 1995 18:506
    Weather report for Louisville:
    
    According to this morning's KY weather report (NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE
    LOUISVILLE KY 430 AM EDT WED MAY 3 1995), it will rain Wed night and
    Thursday, drying out Friday and Saturday with highs on Oaks and Derby
    Days in the 70's.  Chance of rain in western KY on Sunday.
481.800My KY Derby picks ;-)DECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle:Life in the espressolaneFri May 05 1995 19:0337
Short version(logic - what there is of it! - to follow): 

	John D takes win bets on:
		Eltish
		Jumron
		Wild Syn 
		Field

Until the PP draw, I thought Ski Captain, Timber Country and Thunder Gulch
all had a shot. But, coming from the aux. gate costs a lot because of losing
the equivalent of 2 or 3 gate positions to the tires and structures of the
2 gates. They'd have to be *much* the best to win from that wide. TC and TG
haven't impressed me enough to overcome the bad draw. I think it's asking too 
much of Ski Captain to do that his first race in the US and a day or 2 after 
clearing quarrnatine. Toss 'em all.

In fact, I've tossed most of the favored horses basically on post! I was 
leaning to Talkin Man but post 11 and Andy Beyer put me off him. As far as I 
know Beyer's never picked a Derby winner and only 14 horses have won from 
posts 11-20 in this century. Yeah, I know that to be scientific about it 
we'd have to factor in the number of horses going to post, etc but I don't 
have the time or the data right now... But, I've never seen a KD with fewer 
than 11 horses so it's a reasonable filter. I also realize that these 
"never happened" filters don't mean much...remember last year(?) when Carl
    posted something from the derby mailing list that used them to "prove" 
    that no horse could win that year's KY Derby? I'd still like to see
    Talkin Man win so I won't mind losing a bet if he does.

I love Serena's Song but I can't see her using her speed to overcome her bad
post *AND* staying 10f under pressure. I think she could do one or the other 
easily enough but not both. I will *GLADLY* eat humble pie if she can!

I liked Eltish and Jumron before the draw, I like 'em better now. So, I'll 
take win bets on Eltish, Jumron, Wild Syn and In Character. Besides, In 
Character is a field horse and that will cover me with Ski Captain in case he
overcomes bad post and the long trip from Japan.

481.801A little about ForegoDECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle:Life in the espressolaneFri May 05 1995 20:5022
February's issue of HorsePlayer had a nice article on Forego 
by John Angelo.  Forego turned 25 this year. Anyway you look at it,
Forego was GREAT horse.  The article lists his career highlights:

	- 34 wins from 57 starts
	- Earned a check in all but 3 starts
	- In the 20 starts in which he carried at least 130 pounds, 
	  he won 10 times
	- In 1974, he won the Vosburgh at 7 furlongs. Three weeks later,
	  he won the Jockey Gold Cup at 2 miles
	- In 1975, he won the Brooklyn handicap carrying 132 pounds, 
	  giving 23 pounds to the second place horse 
	- In the 1976 Marlboro Cup, he gave Honest Pleasure 18 pounds, was 
          behind Honest Pleasure by 4 lengths at the eighth pole, and 
	  won by a head
	- In the 1977 Suburban, he carried 138 pounds and lost by a neck to
	  Quiet Little Table, who carried 114 

Forego, like Secretariat who beat him in the KY Derby, ran at a time 
when purses were much smaller than they are today. Again, like 
Secretariat, he won over $1 million, was horse of the year multiple 
times. Unlike Secretariat, Forego lives happily at Kentucky Horse Park.
481.802Update on Fourstardave and Fourstars AllstarDECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle:Life in the espressolaneFri May 05 1995 21:5532
There was an article about Fourstardave and Fourstars Allstar in the 
Daily Racing Form back in March. It said:

"Richard Bomze, who has given Empire State Breeding so much
exposure with his registered New York bred millionaire brothers
Fourstardave and Fourstars Allstar, is coming out of hibernation
with a 12 horse stable conditioned by Leo O' Brien.

'Both of my champions are back in serious training with Tony
Everand at Another Episode Farm in Ocala. Veterinarians have
X-rayed Fourstardave and confirmed he is over his injury and ready
to race another season. His regular exercise rider, John Hennesey, is
working him in Ocala and raves that he is unbelievable. We are planning
prep races in June and July, and the big objective is to win at
Saratoga for the ninth consecutive year."

Fourstars Allstar is being pointed for the Early Times Triple.

Fourstar Brother, a full brother to both, trained poorly for O'Brien.
Leo considered making him a jumper, but he has improved while
training on the turf for John Voss in Maryland. They are going to
give him a try on the grass in NY soon.

Bomze also owns a yearling half sister to the boys, sired by
Sadler's Wells. She was foaled at Coolmore Stud in Ireland.
She looks handsome in the DRF photo. Bomze is 90% sure he will
race her, but he will consider selling her if he gets an "offer
he can't refuse".

Since that article was published, Fourstars Allstar has returned to 
the races with a 4-length win in the Fort Marcy Handicap over A In Sociology 
and other graded stakes winners. I tmight be a fun season!
481.803Oh what a thrill!!!TLE::PERAROTue May 09 1995 18:4032
    
    Well, Thunder Gulch it was and what a run!! Over 144K people and the sun
    was shinning, then I had to come back to this cold weather.  It was an
    exciting day. We were there for all 10 races and let me say, alot of
    long shots were crossing the finnish line.  If I had bet them, I would
    have a nice little chunk of change. I did win $51 on Thunder Gulch
    though and a couple of other races.
    
    There were two grass races that day.  We pressed against the fence to
    watch them come along, and you could hear the thunder of their feet as
    the rounded the turn, and flew by at a great speed. Gave us goose
    bumps!!
    
    Going to the Derby was the best thing I have ever done!! We also went
    to Clayborne Farm to see Mr. Prospector, Lure and a few others,
    including Afternoon Deelites grandfather. All were standing for stud,
    and all were beautiful and pleasant. The groom would take them out so
    we could meet them.  They were having a breeding at one point, but that
    is not for the public.
    
    We also went to the Kentucky Horse Park.  Forego is there. They were
    having a saddlebred show. We watched that for a bit.
    
    Kentucky is gorgeous!!! Lexington is full of rolling, manicured
    pastures, white fences and horses as far as you can see!! It is a
    breathtaking place.
    
    If you have never been, make your reservations for next year as it is a
    thrill!!
    
    Mary
    
481.804PCBUOA::LPIERCEDo the watermelon crawlWed May 10 1995 14:2318
    
    It was a thrill meeting our Equine Athlets.  Some people get a chill
    meeting there athlets like Michael Jordan, Bobby Orr and others, but I
    got a chill meeting my Athlets.
    
    Forego, Bold Forbes, John Henry, Mr. Prostpector, and a host of all my
    ot her favorites.  We also got to kneel next to Secretariat & Bold
    Rulers graves (Secretariat had fresh roses on his grave) - and to stand
    infrount of Man O' War impressive monument - was a sight.
    
    All these horse's were gentil and loving.  They all seemed to love the
    attention they were getting from all their fans!  They all are very
    healthy and still lots of muscle.. but if you bread to some sexy
    fillies 44 times betweetn Feb - June - you'd be muscula too :-)
    
    More later
    
    Louisa
481.805Why was Swaps great?DECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle:Life in the espressolaneFri May 12 1995 23:1286
I think at this time of year and maybe all season long, racing fans 
need to keep some perspective about greatness. It bothers me when 
some new horse comes along and wins 2, 3, or 4 races and everybody 
says "He's great. Maybe the greatest that ever lived." Last year, 
everybody was high on Holy Bull. Let's not confuse popularity with 
greatness! He was popular and had *potential* to be great but he 
never got the chance to prove it. This year, it's Cigar that people 
are high on...

As with the Forego (.801) and Secretariat(.527, .770 & .771) posts, 
here's some info about why some think Swaps was great.

In a 1993 interview Bill Shoemaker was asked to list the 10 greatest 
racehorses of the modern era; not just his best mount. He rated Swaps as 
above Spectacular Bid, Citation, Ribot, Forego, Secretariat, Sea Bird, 
Alleged, Exceller and Gallant Man(in that order). (Note: even Shoe 
isn't old enough to have seen Man o'War run!)

Note that Shoe rode both #1 Swaps and, for part of the Bid's career, 
#2 Spectacular Bid. I figure that makes Shoe fickle because, in a video 
taped interview, he said that Spectacular Bid was the best he ever rode. 

Anyway, why might Shoe think Swaps was the best? 

Swaps came unheralded out of California a 3YO of 1955 to run what was 
then the third fastest Derby in history. He trounced the much touted 
Nashua. He then returned to California where he beat Determine and 
other older horses while setting a world record for 1 1/16 miles in 
the Californian(1:40:2). He easily won the Westerner (now the Swaps 
Stakes) and went to Chicago where he set an American record for 1 
3/16 miles on the grass. Those that saw it say that all the Match 
Race proved was that Nashua on 4 legs could beat Swaps on 3 as Swaps
had a leg that was sore.

It's difficult to compare racehorses from different eras in any rational 
way, but back in 1956 Swaps as 4yo was favorably compared to Man o' War; 
mainly due to a succession of world record-setting races. Swaps made his 
4YO debut at Santa Anita. He gave weight and a beating to Bobby Brocato, 
winner of that year's Santa Anita Handicap and San Juan Capistrano. Then, 
he went to Gulfstream, where he set a world record for 1 mile, 70 yards
(final time 1:39:3). Back to California where his campaign at Hollywood 
Park solidified his claim to greatness.

His first start at Hollywood Park was a loss; possibly due to a jockey 
error. Swaps had a 4 length lead in the Californian; Shoemaker was
concerned about the weight he would have to carry in future races,
so Shoe eased him a little early. Some say he never saw Porterhouse
coming up and blew it; Swaps lost by a head.

Packing weight never bothered Swaps. After Nashua lost under 130
pounds a couple of times, his owner announced that he would never
accept  an impost over 130. Tenney then  said Swaps wouldn't
carry over 130 until Nashua did. So he carried 128 in his next 
start and then 130 for the rest of his career.

He won the Argonaut, setting a world record for a mile(1:33:1 
breaking Citation's record), giving weight to Mister Gus and 
Porterhouse.

He then broke his own record for 1 1/16 miles in the Inglewood 
Handicap while giving weight to the same horses he beat in the 
Argonaut, plus another horse called Honey's Alibi.

Two weeks later, he equaled the world record for 1 1/8 miles(1:46:4) 
in the American Handicap. Ten days later, he disappointed everyone 
by merely breaking the track record in the Hollywood Gold Cup. ;-) A 
couple weeks later, he was back in form, breaking Man o' War's world 
record for 1 5/8 miles by almost three full seconds in the Sunset 
Handicap(2:38:1)

He went to Chicago for a grass race and got caught by a thunderstorm. He 
ran 7th in what was to be his only bad outting in 2 years. Then, he 
carried his usual 130, giving 15 pounds to Summer Tan, and won the 
Washington Park Handicap handily while breaking the track record and
missing his own world record for a mile by a fifth of a second.

Then, his leg started troubling him again and he was retired to 
stud. (A friend of mine has a TB event horse who is a grandson of 
Swaps).

If I had ridden a racehorse that was faster, at distances from 1 mile
to 1 mile and 5/8, than any horse that had ever lived(to that point), I 
reckon I'd think he was the greatest too. Especially, if he had given away 
15 to 30 pounds while doing it!

John
481.806Man O' War's only lossDECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle:Life in the espressolaneFri May 12 1995 23:3260
    Back in March(around Man O'War's birthday), we talked about him on the
    racing list. Here are some of the more interesting messages. John
    
Man O' War's only loss(Sanford Stakes)

Okay since we are asking questions maybe I can help especially about the
Sanford.  Looked this up a long time ago and my memory is not what it
was earlier today but.....                    

Seven horses entered the Sanford.  Man o'War was 6 for 6.  Carried 130 
lbs in his last 3.  In the Sanford were Golden Broom, Upset, Captain
Alcock, etc.  Knapp, rode Upset.  Johnny Loftus rode Big Red.
The story runs Johnny Loftus had been out drinking the night before, and
had been for several days and wasn't in real good shape.  No one figured
it seemed he had to do more than hold on to get Man o"War home first.
Man o'War was a bit sluggish at the start.  Golden Broom set the pace with
Upset laying off Golden Broom on Golden Broom's outside.  Man o'War 
advanced along the rail.  Man o'War couldn't get through on the rail,
Johnny Loftus kept him there.  Knapp on Upset stayed on the outside of
Golden Broom and kept Man o'War in the switch at the rail.  Apparently
Knapp had enough horse in Upset to pass Golden Broom any time he wanted
but that would let Man o'War out of the switch.

Loftus finally figured they weren't going to let him through (my 
interpretation)and eased Man o'War back and then took him wide for running 
room on the far outside.  At that point when Man o'War was eased back 
Knapp(darn good rider from the sound of the write ups) gunned Upset with the 
whip and got Upset into high gear.  Made Man o'War apparently have to go a 
wider trip than planned at the turn and probably cost the race.  So he lost 
two lengths going wide and then got into his gears but he had too much to
do and too little time to do it in.  Upset was first, Man o'War breathing
down his troat latch was second.

Best horse in the race of course was Man o'War.  So bottom line here it
seems Knapp out rode Loftus--where have we seen this happen before.  Knapp
apparently was interviewed to death about this race and has said if he
had to do it over again he probably would have moved over a bit and let
Man o'War through because he thought he was one horse who should have
retired undefeated.

I have heard two things, Mr. Riddle didn't want to go out west and he also
thought May was too earlier to ask a 3 year old to run a mile and a quarter
at top speed under scale weight so he opted for the black-eyed susies.

Small things which might have mattered.  Sunny Jim Fitzsimmons was an 
underbidder only authorized to go to 4k, the man was bummed.  He was
certain if the owner had been there he could have persuaded him to go
higher.

Rowe who trained for Whitney at the time kept trying to beat Man o'War,
throwing the stables horses his way.  Did it only once with Upset.  Rowe
so disliked the horse he didn't name him when he answered a trainers poll--
he considered Hindoo, Sysonby and Colin the three greatest of all time.
(Hard combo to beat any day).

When Man o'War died on November 1 1947, he lay in state for three days while 
a double line of mourners filed past and then he was laid to rest in his 
pasture--until the Kentucky Horse Park folks thought he should rest there.  

Barb Quigley
481.807More Man O'WarDECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle:Life in the espressolaneFri May 12 1995 23:34174
An admiring thanks to Barb Quigley for the detailed replay of the most
noted race in the history of the American Thoroughbred, Man o'War's loss
to Upset in the Sanford Memorial. 

[My claim to it being the most noted race is based on a historical
perspective.  Certainly there have been other very famous races and
tremendous performances.  But the lifespan of noteriety almost invariably
exceeds that of character - the great races won by the "right" horse are
too numerous to name; the race won by the WRONG horse is remembered always
on the short-list.]

I'd like to add to Barb's post:

> Seven horses entered the Sanford.  Man o'War was 6 for 6.  Carried 130 
> lbs in his last 3.  

The Sanford, run ominously on August *13*, 1919, was Man o'War's 7th start
of the year.  The dates of his previous races: 6 June, 9 June, 21 June, 23
June, 5 July, 2 August.  In his last race Man o'War went off at what
would be the *highest* odds of his career, 9-10.  He won easily, Upset
following him home.  The second choice in the betting, a filly named
Bonnie Mary who carried 127 lbs., finished 4th in the field of 10.

> In the Sanford were Golden Broom, Upset, Captain Alcock, etc.  

Golden Broom was owned by Mrs. Samuel Riddle's niece, Mrs. Walter 
Jeffords, a (Maryland) family which I believe is still actively involved 
in Thoroughbred racing and has had some nice horses in the recent past...
can anyone elaborate?

Golden Broom, a colt bred in England by Sweeper (winner of the 2000
Guineas of 1912) out of Zuna by Hamburg, was sold, as was Man o'War, at
the Saratoga yearling sale of 1918.  Man o'War brought $5000, with the
admonishment from Riddle that if he couldn't run, he would be made into a
jumper.  Golden Broom was the highest-priced horse of the sale, going for
$15,600.  

The Riddles and the Jeffords owned farms next to each other in Maryland,
and each fall and spring they would hold impromptu "training matches" 
between their respective best yearlings/two-year-olds.  In all of these
early contests Golden Broom defeated Man o'War.  As their careers began,
Man o'War quickly established himself as the best 2yo since Colin while
Golden Broom won a few stakes, and plagued by recurring quarter cracks was
retired after the Sanford (I think). 

> Johnny Loftus rode Big Red.  The story runs Johnny Loftus had been out 
> drinking the night before, and had been for several days and wasn't in 
> real good shape.  No one figured it seemed he had to do more than hold 
> on to get Man o"War home first.  Man o'War was a bit sluggish at the 
> start.  

Loftus was one of the great "the race is over, let's go out and have a 
good time" jockeys.  Jon Cloos mentioned that Man o'War was turned around 
at the start.  I have read this account in several sources as well.  

In the days before starting gates, horses lined up behind a webbing
stretched across the track.  As can be imagined, with horses jostling
behind a flimsy barrier it was quite difficult to assure a clean start.
Man o'War had established a reputation as an excitable horse, and rival
jockeys often tried to exacerbate this by bumping into him, pulling their
mounts out of line to delay the start, etc.  On the day of the Sanford the
regular starter, Mars Cassidy (father of Marshall) was sick, and retired
starter and steward Charles Pettingill was asked to fill in.  Like
students with a substitute teacher, the jockeys paid little attention
Pettingill's call for order behind the tape. 

It was precisely in this kind of situation that Charles Pettingill was a
haunted man.  In 1893, the richest race run in the U.S. was the American
Derby for 3YOs at Washington Park in Chicago, with a gross purse of
$60,000, of which $50,000 was guaranteed to the winner.  All the leading
stables in the country set their sights on this race, and there was even
an entry from England.  Minutes before the post parade a dispute broke out
regarding an owner's contractual right to a jockey who had been scheduled
to ride another horse.  It took 45 minutes to straighten the situation and
change riders, after which the horses were called to post.  I now quote 
from a published account of the race:

	"When they arrived at the the post the trouble began...why a 
starter like Pettingill should take almost two hours to get them off is a 
mystery... There is no doubt that the best horse, St. Leonards, was 
beaten by this tiring process... In the hour and thirty odd minutes at 
the post there were twenty-five breaks, in which one or more horses ran 
from an eighth to a sixteenth of a mile... In fifteen of these breaks, 
St. Leonards was among the first three, usually the first..."

Pettingill (unlike Fred Merkle with his "boner") never fully recovered
emotionally from this career-marking incident.  And when he was asked to
fill in for Mars Cassidy as starter 26 years later, and time ticked away
as the Sanford field milled behind the tape, Pettingill doubtless wanted
to avoid a repetition of that nightmare.  But his skills as a starter had
atrophied, and it was of greater concern to him to get the field away as
quickly as possible.  *Most* unfortunately for Pettingill, Man o'War was
half-way tuned around and not in line when he sprang the tape - and the
rest is infamy... 

> (great description of the race)

> I have heard two things, Mr. Riddle didn't want to go out west and he 
> also thought May was too early to ask a 3 year old to run a mile and 
> a quarter at top speed under scale weight so he opted for the 
> black-eyed susies.

Riddle was part of the East Coast Establishment - Kentucky wasn't part 
of "their" circuit.  He was also a Maryland man, and wanted his colt's 
first start at 3 to be in his home state.

Riddle was also cantankerous, self-inflating, selfish and racist.  There
was no divine justice to his luck in buying Man o'War.

> Small things which might have mattered.  Sunny Jim Fitzsimmons was an 
> underbidder only authorized to go to 4k, the man was bummed.  He was
> certain if the owner had been there he could have persuaded him to go
> higher.

We know Man o'War wasn't a Seabiscuit at two!  On whose behalf was 
Fitzsimmons bidding?

> Rowe who trained for Whitney at the time kept trying to beat Man o'War,
> throwing the stables horses his way.  Did it only once with Upset.  Rowe
> so disliked the horse he didn't name him when he answered a trainers
> poll-- he considered Hindoo, Sysonby and Colin the three greatest of all
> time. (Hard combo to beat any day). 

It was Rowe Jr. who trained for the Whitneys at that time.  His father
James Rowe Sr. trained for the the Dwyer brothers and later the 
Keenes, the two greatest stables in the late 19th and early 20th 
centuries.  Rowe Sr. trained Hindoo for the Dwyers, and Sysonby and Colin 
for Keene.  The son stayed loyal to his daddy's accomplishments...

> Outside of the birthday party which I posted last month.  Man o'War 
> died on November 1, lay in state for three days while a double line of
> mourners filed past and then he was laid to rest in his pasture--until
> the Kentucky Horse Park folks thought he should rest there.  

Man o'War was 30 when he died, considered the centennial mark for
Thoroughbreds.  When Will Harbut suffered an attack which forced him to
retire as Man o'War's groom after nearly twenty years of inseparability,
Joe Palmer with touching prescience wrote, 

	"It has for years been a half-jesting comment in Lexington that 
neither Man o'War nor Will Harbut would be able to live without the 
other, the the jest is now getting a little bitter."

Will Harbut died on 3 October 1947. Man o'War followed him on 1 November.

The Thoroughbred Record described his funeral:

	"At the hour of the funeral, all the operating race tracks in the 
nation paused for a moment of silent tribute.  In Tokyo the 3,000 men of 
the First Cavalry Division, which had made Man o'War an honorary colonel, 
accorded him military honors.
	"Some 2,000 admirers and friends of the great horse attended his 
final rites, which were broadcast [nationwide on NBC - ed.] and 
photographed for the newsreels.  Ira Drymon, a prominent horseman of 
Central Kentucky, served as master of ceremonies.  Other speakers 
included Charles Sturgill, president of the Lexington Board of Commerce; 
A.B. Hancock Jr., president of the Thoroughbred Club of America; Leslie 
Combs II, chairman of the Kentucky State Racing Commission; L.L. Haggin 
II, president of Keeneland race course; J.A. Estes of the Blood-Horse;
Neville Dunn of the Thoroughbred Record, and Pat O'Neill, manager of 
Faraway Farm."

At last year's Breeder's Cup I purchased a small photographic card of Man
o'War resting in state in his casket.  The bottom of the photo is cropped
in delicate deference... let's say he died "as a *stallion*". 

> So happy birthday Man o'War.  Now where did I hide the home made wine
> I planned to salute him with.  Hope this helps.	

It did - I've spent so much time in reverie it's now the _other_ Big Red's
birthday.  Ah, the order...

No Jive, Talkin here,
Susan Stanisha
481.808Final Man O'War article DECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle:Life in the espressolaneFri May 12 1995 23:3631
Man o'War was sold in the Saratoga paddock the evening of Saturday,
August 17, 1918.  He was the 7th yearling sold.
Sunny Jim was acting for George F. "Quincy" Johnson.  Johnson was absent
and had instructed Sunny Jim to stop at 4k which he did.  Andy Blakely
on behalf of Tom Shaw went to 4,900.  The story goes someone, Walter House,
told him that was enough for the long-legged beggar.  Andy stopeed bidding
because Tom Shaw was influenced by the derogatory remark and Andy couldn't
get him to go highed despite pleading.  Riddle got him at 5k.

One reason Riddle wanted him was he had obviously not been included, or
they thought he hadn't been included when his agents had looked at the
Belmont band with an idea of buying the whole lot previously.
The day of the sale, Man o'War - sold with name already there - had a
sunburned coat and wasn't fattened like the others. It was obvious they
had intended to keep him and race him themselves.  Made people think he
was special to start with.

The asking price for the entire lot of the Belmont yearlings was
30,000, although later the price was 42,000.    

Sunny Jim was the most disappointed of the under bidders that day.  He
was sure if Mr. Johnson had been there he could have persuaded him to
go much higher and he would have trained Man o'War.

Today, some agents would go higher and see if they could persuade the
owner it was a good deal, or try to find another owner.  A different
owner who managed him properly as a stallion, who wasn't so arrogant
would have been nice.  Though I haven't spent the time to research
Johnson--so maybe it would have turned out worse.

Barb Quigley
481.809more on MoWPCBUOA::LPIERCEDo the watermelon crawlMon May 15 1995 13:0770
    
    Man O' War was also the only horse to be embalmed.
    
    Other facts.
    
    Man O'War was born on March 29, 1917, at Nursery Stud farm near
    Lexington, KY, a beautiful chestnut foal they nicknamed RED.  The 
    foal had been bred by horsman August Belmont II, son of the founder
    of New Yorks Belmont Park.  Although Belmot originally intended to keep
    the colt, after some hesitation, he reluctantly decided to sell his
    son of "fair Play and Mahubah" along with other yearlings at the 1918
    Saratoga yearling Sales.  This decision was one which Belmont would
    regret for the rest of his life.
    
    The colt sold for $5,000 and was the bargain of the century for Samuel
    D. Riddle, owner of Faraway Farm.  Three yrs later, a multimillionair
    offered $500,000, then $1,000,000, and finally a blank check for the
    horse all of which Riddle Refused.
    
    MOW first race was on June 19, 1919, winning by 6 lenghts and earning
    $500.  As a 3yr old he started 11 stakes races and won them all, 
    setting records in 5, equalling one and establishing a record in
    another.  In 3 of the races, he carried more then 130 and in one he
    carried 138.  he lifetime earning were $229,265, a record at that
    time.
    
    In his last race on Oct 20, 1920, called by many the race of the 
    centruy, he ran against Sir Barton, the first Triple Crown
    winner, and outran him by 7 lenghts.
    
    Big Red was retired as a 4yr old to stud duties at Faraway Farm and 
    arrived in Lexington in the fall of 1920.  At Faraway, he sired
    KD winner, Clyde Van Dusen and TC winner War Admiral.  His 379
    offspring won more then $3.25 million.  With MOW in residenace
    faraway soon becoma the #1 tourist attraction in the state.  He and
    his groom, Will Harbut, chamred more then 500,000 visitors that came
    earch yr.
    
    On MOW 21st Bday, celebrities such as "happy chandler, then governor
    of the state, and others attended the celebration and festivites
    were broadcast nationwide.
    
    Will Harbut and MOW were friends and companions for over 20yrs, but in
    1947 both suffered heart attacks.  Although Harbut was supposed
    to remain in his bed, he would slip away each day to vist his freind.
    Harbut died on Oct 3, 1947 and in less then a month at the age of 31
    WOW followed, some say of a brokenheart.  Harbuts obit' read in part
    "he is survived by his wife, six children and MoW"
    
    MoW was embalmed and placed in an oak casket which had been lined with
    his yellow and black racing colors.  His funeral was on Nov 4th 1947
    and was attended by 2,000 people and the servie was broadcasted 
    nationgwide.  At churchill downs a bugler sounded taps and at race
    traks across the country tribute was paid.
    
    9 speakers delivered eulogies at MOW funeral.  Sports writer Joe
    Palmer said "all horses, and all stallions, like to run, exultant
    in there strenght and power.  Most of them run within them selves
    as childer at play. but MOW loose in his paddock at Faraway farm
    dug in as if the pricen of the fallen angles was his throat-latch..
    watching, you felt there had never been, or oculd ever be again, a
    horse like this..as near to a living flame as horses ever get, and
    horses get closer to this then anything else"
    
    An eloquent tribute, but before he died, Will Harbut said it all when
    he declared:
    
    "he is the Mostes' horse in the whole world"
    
    Louisa
481.810First Triple Crown winner? Which one?DECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle:Life in the espressolaneMon May 15 1995 19:5431
    Thanks for filling in the gaps on Man O' War, Louisa.
    
    BTW, re
    
    >In his last race on Oct 20, 1920, called by many the race of the
    >centruy, he ran against Sir Barton, the first Triple Crown
    >winner, and outran him by 7 lenghts.
    
    While we now acknowledge Sir Barton as the first horse to win the
    Triple Crown, regular readers of this note may recall that the 3 races
    were *not* known as the Triple Crown when Sir Barton won them. He just
    won 3 races, called KY Derby, Preakness Stakes and Belmont Stakes in
    1919.
    
    The *term* Triple Crown in referring to these 3 races was first
    proposed by a journalist. Generally, the credit is given to Joe Hatton
    who used the phrase in the early 1930's which would make Omaha the
    first horse to win the 3 races after they were known as the Triple
    Crown. However, someone recently told me that a NY Times writer had
    used the Triple Crown phrase to refer to Omaha'a sire, Gallant Fox, who
    won the 3 races in 1930.
    
    Even more curious is that you *could* call Secretariat the first Triple
    Crown winner! He was the first horse to win the Triple Crown after it
    became an official honor of the Thoroughbred Racing Association in
    1950! In 1950, the TRA decided to create the official award and
    grandfather it to all the previous winners of the 3 races. So,
    Secretariat was the first won to receive a Triple Crown trophy at the 
    time he won the races. 
    
    John
481.811Black GoldPCBUOA::LPIERCEDo the watermelon crawlTue May 16 1995 12:3426
    
    Black Gold:
    
    In 1920 Rosa Hoots, a full-blooded Osage Indian and resident of
    Oklahoma's Indian territory, apporached Col. E. R. bradley, then owner
    of what is now Darby Dan Farm.  She told Bradley that she and her
    husband, Al, owned a tiny mare named U-See-It, and that while on his
    deathbed Al had dreamed that U-See-It would be bred to Bradley's Black
    Toney, and that the resulting foal would one day win the Kentucky
    Derby.  Bradley was a gambling man and the breeding took place.  When
    the foal was born, Rosa named it Black Gold, and although Bradley tried
    to buy the foal, Rosa refused, explaining that she had promised her
    husband she would keep it.
    
    The colt was deliverd to a trainer, and he turned out to be a
    tremendous horse with a great heart.  True to Hoot's prophesy, in 1924
    Black Gold did the KD and many other races as well.  One fateful day,
    however, while racing at New Orleans Fair Grounds, Black Gold broke his
    ankle during the stretch, and the jockey was unable to stop him from
    trying to reach the finnish line.  After the race, he was taken to the
    back of the track, and humanely destroyed, and was buried there in the
    infield.  Since that time, the Black Gold Stakes Race, Black Gold
    Stakes Race is raced in his honor, and after that race, the winning
    jockey places a wreath of flowers on the courageous horse's grave.
    
    Louisa 
481.812This weekends raceTLE::PERAROTue May 16 1995 13:158
    
    Who is running in the Preakness this weekend?  Can Thunder Gulch take
    this one also? At the Derby, they said maybe Serena's Song would be
    entered but that no decision had been made yet.
    
    Any information?
    
    
481.813Serena's Song supposed to go against filliesDECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle:Life in the espressolaneTue May 16 1995 18:046
    Latest reports are that Lukas has entered Serena's Song in the Gr II
    Black Eyed Susan for fillies on Friday and will run her there rather
    than in the Preakness. Gary Stevens is scheduled to ride her as
    Nakatani is serving a suspension and cannot ride. 
    
    Can Thunder Gulch take this one? Sure. Will he? Dunno. ;-)
481.814Eltish to WinPCBUOA::LPIERCEDo the watermelon crawlTue May 16 1995 18:455
    
    If Eltish is running, I think he will breat Thunder Glutch :-)
    but then again - I lost every race I bet on in Kentucky.. hehehe
    
    
481.815Don't place any money!TLE::PERAROTue May 16 1995 19:265
    
    Yeah Lou, like your Wild Syn and he ended up in the back field! :>)
    
    Mary
    
481.816brusePCBUOA::LPIERCEDo the watermelon crawlWed May 17 1995 19:095
    
    Wild Syn got some kind of bruse on his little hoofie, that is the only
    reason he didn't walk all over that Thunder Gultch :-0
    
    
481.817Preakness entries and injury reportDECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle:Life in the espressolaneThu May 18 1995 18:4239
    Here are the Post Positions and morning line odds on the Preakness:
    
    PP    HORSE                 JOCKEY                 ODDS
    
    1     Itron                 Ricky Frazier          20-1
    2     Our Gatsby            Kent Desormeaux        10-1
    3     Mystery Storm         Craig Perret           20-1
    4     Talkin Man            Mike Smith              4-1
    5     Tejano Run            Jerry Bailey            6-1
    6     Pana Brass            Eddie Maple            30-1
    7     Timber Country        Pat Day                 9-2
    8     Star Standard         Chris McCarron         12-1
    9     Mecke                 Robbie Davis           15-1
    10    Oliver's Twist        Albert Delgado         12-1
    11    Thunder Gulch         Gary Stevens            2-1
    
    Note that once again, the KY Derby winner is not expected to be the
    favorite in the Preakness!
    
    I'll take most of the T's(Thunder Gulch, Talkin Man, Tejano Run) in
    Win, Place and Show bets as well as exacta boxes. Also, I kinda like
    Star Standard even though he hasn't had many big races yet. His
    daddy, granddaddy and great-granddaddy all won this race(Risen Star
    1988, Secretariat 1973, and Bold Ruler 1957). Maybe, he could continue
    a family tradition?
    
    Some of my friends still like Timber Country(i.e. the expected favorite). 
    Frankly, I think their nuts! He hasn't run a good race all year, even 
    over his favorite track, Churchill Downs. 
    
    
    BTW, Afternoon Delites was injured in a workout. Minor injury but he
    may be retired. The filly Urbane was injured in the running of the 
    KY Oaks the day before the Derby. She's sidelined until fall. Jumron
    was injured in the Derby(stepped on his front heel and cut it) so he's
    out of the Preakness. Wild Syn did injure himself in the Derby too,
    like Louisa said. I think they said it was a bone bruise to one of the
    foot bones. I can't spell all them big words so I won't repeat exactly
    what the vet said! ;-)
481.818And the winner is...TLE::PERAROMon May 22 1995 12:266
    
    Timber Country it was.  Guess he was saving everything for the
    Preakness.
    
    Mary
    
481.819Seattle SlewPCBUOA::LPIERCEDo the watermelon crawlFri May 26 1995 13:0260
In 1974 a Dark Bay Foal was born on the White Horse Acres Farm in
Lexington, Kentucky.  The foal was so ungainly, had a head so big and
legs so long, that if the other foals didn't laugh, it was only because
they were to well bred.  From the first he was truly an ugly duckling.
A completely resistible yearling at auction, few were perceptive enough
to see the possibilities of the young colt.  But in true storybook fashion
the ugly duckling was bought by Mickey and Karen Taylor, beginners in the
horse racing business, and Jim Hill, with whom the Taylors had recently
formed a partnership.

Jim Hill, a veterinarian, had been trained at the New Bolton Center, 
University of Pennsylvania.  The Taylors were from Yakima, Washington,
where Karen had been an airline hostess and Mickey a logging truck driver
until he struck it big in the wood pulp end of the business.  Although
Mickey was violently allergic to horses, the Taylors had always loved 
them and were now able to indulge their hobby.  

In 1974, the Taylors met Hill at a yearling auction and subsequently
became partners, forming Wooden Horse Investment.  And in 1975, the
partners attended a Kentucky yearling sale, where they were to buy for
$17,500 - this funny looking colt.

The cold was so funny-looking, in fact,that when his new trainer, Paul
Turner, first saw him she immediately dubbed him 'Baby Huey" a nickname
that was to stick.  Baby Huey proved himself to be a good-tempered
colt, clumsy and lovable, through strong and mischievous.  After Huey's
initial schooling, Paula's husband, Billy, took over the colt's training.

Exercise rider Micky Kennedy was not immediately impressed with this 
colt whose legs seemed to head in all different directions.  However, in
September 1976, Huey was entered in his first race at New Yorks Belmont
Racetrack.  He won easily.  In October he was entered in another Belmont
race. Again he won easily.  With some hesitation, it was decided to enter
the horse in the $125,000 Champagne Stakes, the richest contest for
juveniles in the state.  Note only did he win, but he ran in record time,
winning by almost ten lengths and earning $82,350.  In 3 races, he was
named Champion Two-Year-Old Colt, had the racing world's attention and
was no longer knows as "the ugly duckling".

Seattle Slew was rested over the winter in preparation for his 3 yr old
career, which he launched with a record-breaking win at Floridas Hialeah
track.  He then won the $1000,000 Flamingo Stakes finishing 4-1/2 lengths
ahead of the field.  He continued to race and win, while the "Slew Crew"
 (as his owners and trainers were called) planned for May's Kentucky
Derby and Preakness.  In June, he headed for New York and the 1.5
Belmont Stakes, the longest of the 3 races, where many TC hopes were
dashed.  Seattle Slew was first all the way, becoming not just the 10th
TC winner, but also the 1st to win the honor undefeated.

Seattle Slew was defeated as a 3yr old, but was named champion as
a 4yr old. In November, 1978, with life-time earnings of 41,208,726
(69 times his purchase price) he was retired to stud duties  at
Spend Thrift Farm.  The Taylors and Hill syndicated this horse for
$12,000,000, and later moved him to Three Chimneys Farm, where he now
stands.  At age 20, he commands a stud fee of $80,000, which includes
a guaranteed live foal.  With 62 bookings arranged per year, Every
story should have such a happy ending.


481.820Horse Racing Notes ConferenceRDGE44::ALEUC3Fri May 26 1995 13:406
    
For those of you who prefer to focus on horse racing you might like
to try RIOT02::HORSE_RACING.

MartinK
    
481.821Belmont InfoPCBUOA::LPIERCEDo the watermelon crawlFri Jun 09 1995 14:52126
	Belmont Info from the NET.

		Post Positions and Odds

127th Belmont Stakes
$697,400
1 1/2 Miles
Three-year-olds

PP   HORSE                  RIDER           ODDS

1    Citadeed               Maple            8-1
2    Off'N'Away             Smith           12-1
3    Pana Brass             Ramos           50-1
4    Is Sveikatas           Chavez          50-1
5    Ave's Flag             Velazquez       30-1
6    Composer               Bailey          20-1
7    Wild Syn               Romero          20-1
8    Colonial Secretary     Santos          50-1
9    Knockadoon             McCarron        15-1
10   Thunder Gulch          Stevens          2-1
11   Timber Country         Day              6-5
12   Star Standard          Krone            6-1



Perhaps there should be an equine traffic cop
positioned 100 yards beyond the gate for the start of the
127th Belmont Stakes.

Perhaps there should be an equine traffic cop
positioned 100 yards beyond the gate for the start of the
127th Belmont Stakes.

     "I'd like (jockey) Julie (Krone) to stick her left hand
out there and make a quick left turn," trainer Nick Zito
said after the speedy Star Standard drew Post 12 in the 12-
horse field. "If they don't like it, give her a ticket."

     D. Wayne Lukas may have a citation in hand because his
talented duo of Preakness champion Timber Country and
Kentucky Derby winner Thunder Gulch will break from the
posts just inside Zito's colt.

     "We did not draw particularly well," Lukas said. But,
"I don't think (Zito) did a cartwheel either."

     Thunder Gulch, the second choice in the morning-line
odds at 2-1, will leave from Post 10, ironically his best
draw in this year's Triple Crown. He left from the 16 hole
in the 19-horse Derby, becoming the first to win from that
post in 121 runnings, and the far outside in the 11-horse
Preakness, where he finished third.

Timber Country, the early 6-5 favorite in the Belmont,
broke from Post 15 in the Derby, encountered traffic
problems throughout the race and found running room late to
finish third. In the Preakness, he left from the 7 hole, was
never far back and took command in the stretch.

     "I hate to put pressure on the riders," Lukas said,
"but they should be able to stay out of trouble going a mile
and a half."

     That's because even though this is the largest Belmont
field in 13 years, Belmont Park's track has wide, sweeping
turns and the field will have a 3/16-mile straight-shot to
the first turn.

Zito has left no doubt that Star Standard, the 6-1
third choice, will be gunning for the lead right out of the
gate.
     "You lose some valuable real estate getting over, but
the idea is you have to get over. It's a question of how
fast she gets over," Zito said of Krone. "If she makes it,
she makes it."

     If she doesn't, Star Standard could be in trouble.

     "I don't think we can match strides with Timber Country
and Thunder Gulch. They're both in great shape," Zito said.
"We're going to have to steal it."

 Trainer Tom Arnemann has said he wants Wild Syn, a 20-1
shot breaking from Post 7, to lay off the pace in the
Belmont and has been trying to teach him to relax during pre-
race workouts. We'll find out Saturday if the Blue Grass
Stakes winner learned his lesson.

     The 8-1 fourth choice is Citadeed, who drew the rail.
The English colt pressed the pace in the Derby but hung on
gamely for ninth place, then came back two weeks ago to win
the Grade II Peter Pan Stakes at Belmont Park.

     "Citadeed's got some good early speed," said trainer
Rick Violette, Jr., subbing for Peter Chapple-Hyam. "We'll
see how things size up on the outside."

 The 12-1 fifth choice is the mystery horse, Irish
import Off'N'Away, who will break from Post 2.

 "I am not very familiar with most of the horses," Lukas
said, "but the horse that is most intriguing to me is
Off'N'Away. He is hard to assess. He drew the inside and
that may compromise his chances. There will be a lot of sand
coming back at him."

     Lukas said his talented duo and Star Standard have the
best chance to win because they have been tested at this
level of competition.

     "Some horses ... may not be up to it," he said.

     The rest of the field includes Knockadoon, 15-1, Post
9; Composer, 20-1, Post 6; Ave's Flag, 30-1, Post 5;
Colonial Secretary, 50-1, Post 8; Is Sveikatas, 50-1, Post
4; and Pana Brass, 50-1, Post 3.

 The race will be worth $697,400 if all 12 start, with
the winner receiving $418,440, second $139,480, third
$76,714, fourth $41,844 and fifth $20,922.

     All starters will carry the traditional Triple Crown
weight of 126 pounds.

-- reported by Ted M. Natt, Jr.
481.822Seabiscuit, another great racehorseDECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle:Life in the espressolaneWed Jun 14 1995 19:56231
I'm not old enough to have seen Seabiscuit. But, my father is. 
Seabiscuit was one of his favorites. I remember him talking about 
Seabiscuit when I was mere lad of 6 or 7. Since I can't count on Dad 
for a total recount of Seabiscuit's tale, I used several sources to 
compile this account. Enjoy, John.

Seabiscuit, 1933 (Hard Tack x Swing On - Whisk Broom II)

Seabiscuit was bred by Wheatly Stables which was owned by Mrs H. C. 
Phipps(Mother of Ogden Phipps, grandmother of Ogden Mills Phipps) 
and her brother, Ogden Mills. 

Hard Tack was unruly and nervous as a racehorse so he was retired 
and sent to stud at Claiborne. He was well bred as he was by 
Man O' War and out of Tea Biscuit. Tea Biscuit was inbred to her 
sire, Rock Sand. Her granddam, Mahubah was also by Rock Sand.

Swing On was by Whisk Broom II who was the first horse to win the 
so-called Handicap Triple Crown. She too had been bred by Mrs Phipps 
and Mr Mills but they didn't think her worthy of a mating to a more 
fashionable stallion so they sent her to the court of their newly 
retired stallion, Hard Tack, in 1932.

Naturally enough, she foaled 11 months later and produced 
Seabiscuit who was described as a solid bay colt w/ high black points(i.e. 
his legs, mane and tail were black and the black markings were well 
up the leg), clean but plain head, smoothly coupled, compact 
short-barrled body, flat croup and high tail set. Some said he 
looked more like a well-bred cow pony rather than a racehorse because he 
was short legged and chunky. He was unimposing but good natured. His 
good temperament probaly made him a good shipper(more on his travels 
later).

When he came of age, Seabiscuit was sent to Wheatly Stables' 
trainer, Sunny Jim Fitzsimmons who decided Seabiscuit would be a 
second stringer and turned the horse over to his assistant, George 
Tappen. Seabiscuit was deemed stuiable for the overnight hcap and 
claiming ranks.

As a 2YO, Seabiscuit made 35 starts. He broke his maiden in his 18th 
race. His record for the year (35 5-7-5) included a track record at 
Nragansett for 5f in 59:3 in the Watch Hill Claiming Race. He 
started his 2 YO season on January 19, 1935 and raced at least once 
a month through Nov 11th that year. He remained sound inspite of his 
schedule. Seabiscuit had been entered in claiming races for a tag as 
low as $2,500 but he was never claimed.

His 3YO season began on April 18th, 1936 still in claiming races. He 
went to Saratoga and won the Mohawk Claiming Stakes running for a 
tag of $6,000. No takers. But, at that Saratoga meeting "Silent Tom" 
Smith, who trained for a California owner named Charles Howard, saw 
Seabiscuit race again. Seabiscuit had impressed Smith earlier in the 
year at Suffolk Downs while winning at 6f. He urged Howard to buy 
the colt despite being skinny, nervous and having popped knees. 
After seeing Seabiscuit win a $1200 handicap, Howard bought him for 
$7,500.

Seabiscuit then raced his way west. He first went to Detroit and ran 
a series of races placing 4th in his 1st race, then 3rd, then a win, 
then 6th and finally another win. From there he went to 
Cincinatti and then to Empire City(track record for 1m 70 yds in 
1:44) and then Bay Meadows where he set 2 track records(8f in 1:36 
and 9.5f in 1:55:4; Note: that was only the 3rd season for Bay 
Meadows).

At 3, Seabiscuit raced 23 times (23 9-1-5) and raced at least 
once every month from April 18th through December 12, 1936. He then 
got a couple months off and Smith worked on the colt's health, 
weight and mind. His knees improved. He filled out to 15.2 and 1040 
pounds. Smith put blinkers and a chin strap on him; got Seabiscuit to relax 
in the gate and break well; taught him to rate and accelrate on 
command. After Smith got done with his lessons, Seabiscuit became a
monster racehorse.

His 4 YO season began on February 9, 1937 and ran through Nov 11th.
In 15 starts at 10 tracks, he won eleven times; was second by a nose 
twice and 3rd once. 

One of his losses at 4 was in the Santa Anita Handicap, a race with 
which he was to have trouble in the future. In the 1937 Big 'Cap, he 
went up against the 5 YO Rosemont. Rosemont should have been named 
"Upset" but that name had already been take! ;-) He had upset Omaha 
in the 1935 Withers Stakes. He had upset Discovery in the 1936
Naragansett Special. And he beat Seabiscuit by a nose in the 1937 
Santa Anita Handicap after coming from 6 lengths behind.

After the Big 'Cap loss, Seabiscuit set up a winning streak. He won 
the San Juan Capistrano(then 9f) by 7 lengths in track record 
time(1:48:4). He then won the Marchbank and Bay Meadows Handicaps
before leaving for Aqudeuct for the June 18th Brooklyn Hcap. 

In the Brooklyn his old rival, Rosemont was the favorite and high 
weight(127). Seabiscuit(122) took the race by a nose over 
Aneroid(122). Rosemont was never to win another race. Seabiscuit 
went on to win the Butler Handicap which put his impost up to 129 
pounds for the Yonkers at Empire City. He won by 4 lengths breaking 
a 20 year old track record with his final time of 1:44:1.

On Aug 7th, Seabiscuit went to the post for the Massachusetts Handicap 
at Suffolk Downs under 130 pounds. He won by a length over Caballero 
II(108) in track record time.

Seabiscuit had won 7 straight stakes races. He was within 1 win of 
Discovery's 8 race streak. He carried 132 pounds in the Naragansett 
Special which would be his Waterloo as it was when Discovery lost 
to Rosemont in 1936. Seabiscuit ran third losing to Calumet Dick and 
Snark both of whom got significant weight. Interestingly enough, 
Seabiscuit was also entered in the Hawthorne Gold Cup and could have 
run there under 128 on the same day. His owners opted for the 
Naragansett Special in Rhode Island and the rest is history.

Seabiscuit's next win came in the October 12 Continental Hcap at 
Jamaica. He won by 5 lengths. Four days later, he dead-heated with 
Heelfly in the Laurel Stakes while giving 12 pounds to Heelfly.

His next race was the Riggs Hcap at Pimlico. He carried 130 pounds 
and beat Burning Star in track record time of 1:57:2 for 9.5f

The final race of Seabiscuit's 4 YO season was the Bowie Hcap. He 
carried 130 pounds and lost by a nose to a mare named Esposa(115). 
It was her 8th stakes win of the year and she set a track record of 
2:45:1 for the 1 5/8 mile(13f) distance

Even though he was the top money winner in 1937, Seabiscuit wasn't 
"Horse Of The Year". That title and the Triple Crown went to his close 
relative, War Admiral, the son of Man O'War who had won the Triple 
Crown. Seabiscuit got the money; War Admiral got the glory. 
Seabiscuit's career earnings were now $210,085.

Seabiscuit winter at his owner's ranch in California while they 
planned his 1938 campaign. A primary goal was to be the Santa Anita 
Hcap. Unfortunately, George "Iceman" Woolf, who was filling in for 
the injured Red Pollard, rode Seabiscuit into a box in the Big Cap. 
By the time he got racing room, he only had time to lose by a nostril.

The other main goal was to surpass Sun Beau's earnings record of 
$376,444. Sun Beau's was 33 wins from 74 starts over 5 years of 
racing. With the Big Cap loss, Seabiscuit was going to have trouble
breaking that earnings record...unless he won the $100,000 match 
race with War Admiral at Belmont Park. Unfortunately, his knees 
started bothering him and he was rested for a while...no new earnings 
record in 1938...

Seabiscuit returned in the inaugural running of the Hollywood Gold Cup.
He carried 133 pounds and won by 1 1/2 lengths over Specify(109). 

On Aug 12 1938, he ran in a match race with the 6YO Argentinian 
horse, Ligarotti at Del Mar. Seabiscuit carried 130; Ligarotti 115!
Seabiscuit won by a nose in a new track record of 1:49 for 9f. 
However, both jockeys were suspended for foul riding. Noel 
Richardson, Ligarotti's jock, grabbed Seabiscuit's saddle cloth and 
then Seabiscuit's grabbed reins! Woolf(again filling in for injured
Pollard) smacked Richardson with his whip...a real fighting 
finish. ;-)

Interest in a match race between Seabiscuit and War Admiral had not 
died. Pimlico president, A.G. Vanderbilt talked owners Howard and 
Riddle into entering their horses in the Pimlico Special(then 9f) for 
a total purse of a mere $15,000. They were to be the only entries 
and the race went off on Nov 1 1938. In addition, Howard agreed
to Riddle's request for a walking start as War Admiral hated the 
starting gate. War Admiral went off as the odds-on favorite at 1-4.
Seabiscuit was 2-1. Both carried 120 pounds.

Woolf went to the whip immediately. Seabiscuit was a length ahead 
after the first furlong; 2 lengths after the quarter. War Admiral
gradually got hjis stride and closed on Seabiscuit. At the 1/2 mile 
pole, they were head to head. But, the ever game Seabiscuit refused 
to be passed. With 1 furlong left, both jocks were riding furiously.
Seabiscuit came on again gradually edging away from War Admiral.
Charlie Kurtsinger(War Admiral's jockey) whipped hard but War Admiral 
was done. He had given his all. As Seabiscuit edged off Kurtsinger
conceded defeat and eased War Admiral rather than punishing him 
further. Seabiscuit won in record time.

In his 5 YO season, Seabiscuit raced 11 times with a record of 
6-4-1. He was never out of the money that season. 

After some rest over the winter, Seabiscuit was being prepared for 
the 1939 Big Cap. His first race was an allowance at Santa Anita. It 
was to be his last race of the 1939 season as he injured his 
suspensory ligament. He was out for the season and was sent to 
Howard's ranch....where he was bred to seven mares(all of whom would 
produce live foals)...Howard still wanted the Big Cap...

Late in 1939, he resumed work and returned to the races on Feb 9, 
1940 in the 7f Graded Hcap carrying 128 pounds. He wore 4 leg bandages 
and finished third. But, he came back sound.

The following week, Seabiscuit was entered in the San Carlos Hcap. Again, 
he wore 4 bandages. He finished a tired sixth but again came back 
sound.

On Feb 24th, 1940, Seabiscuit was entered in the 8.5f San Antonio 
Hcap. He was back! He beat 12 top handicap horses with a winning 
margin of 2 1/2 lengths. Next, the Santa Anita Hcap....

For the first time that season, Seabiscuit went to the post without 
bandages. He met a field of 13 horses in the Big Cap. The speed 
horse Whichcee went to the lead and got the first quarter in 0:23.
Seabiscuit was lying second. On the backstretch, Wedding Call sped 
up to box Seabiscuit. At last, Wedding Call fell back and Seabiscuit 
surged into the lead with 1/4 left to go. Whichcee stayed until the 
final furlong and then faltered. Seabiscuit drew off. Kayak II(who 
ahd set the stakes and track record the previous year) was now the 
danger. He came flying through the lane. Red Pollard left Seabiscuit 
drift over to the rail and finish as he pleased. Kayak II never got 
to him. Whichcee was third. Seabiscuit crossed the line in a new record 
time of 2:01:1...but the OBJECTION sign went up...Whichcee's jockey 
claimed that Seabiscuit had cut him off. His objection was 
disallowed...he just happened to claim that it took place in front 
of the stewards stand so they had a clear view. ;-)

With that win Seabiscuit had achieved both his owner's goals: he won 
the Big 'Cap and passed Sun Beau's earnings record. His new total 
was $437,730. Howard was urged by many to keep Seabiscuit in 
training. But, trainer "Silent Tom" Smith spoke up. He is quoted as 
saying, "Seabiscuit has done enough. He should never be saddled for 
another race. His place from now on is in the stud. My wish is for 
his immediate and permanent retirement."

Howard was convinced. Seabiscuit was retired to stud. His record was
89 33-15-15 with most of his 29 out-of-the-money finishes at 2 and 
3.

Unfortunately, he didn't make much of a mark at stud. His name does 
not appear in the pedigree of any major winners. Like Easy Goer, he 
died suddenly after a few years at stud. In Seabiscuit's case, he 
died of a heart attack in May 1947 with only a few foal crops...


481.823Jockey Club's naming rulesDECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle:Life in the espressolaneMon Jul 10 1995 23:5383
I realize the question about the Jockey Club's naming rules was some time ago
but a friend recently sent me the following summary of 
Rule 6 - "NAMING OF FOALS" from the 'Principal Rules and Requirements of the 
American Stud Book'.  

I still can't figure out how the name Louisa asked about(with the 
S*** word in it) ever got approved! There's a horse in CA with the 
name ISITINGOOD which the owners got passed the JC by telling them 
that it was to be pronounced as if by a kid just learning to talk 
saying "I'm sitting good" which they said would come out as "I sitin 
good"...and the JC believed 'em?????

Anyway, here's the rules:

6(E) Names which are not excluded under Rule 6(F) are eligible if they have not
been used during the preceding ten years either in the stud or on the turf,
except that names of geldings reported dead may be used five years after death.

6(F) The following classes of names are not eligible for use:

1. Names consisting of more that 18 letters (spaces and punctuation marks count
as letters)
2. Initials such as C.O.D., F.O.B., etc.
3. Names ending in 'filly', 'colt', 'stud', 'mare', 'stallion', or any similar
horse-related term
4. Names involving the repeated use of the same of similar prefix or suffix or
any combination thereof which might cause the name to become confused with
previously named horses
5. Name consisting of numbers, except in some cases numbers may be used if they
are spelled out, for example, Ten Four
6. Names ending with a numerical designation such as '2nd', or '3rd', whether
or not such a designation is spelled out
7. Names of living persons unless written permission to use their name is on
file with The Jockey Club
8. Names of 'famous' people no longer living unless approval is granted by the
Board of Stewards of The Jockey Club
9. Names of 'notorious' people no longer living
10. Name of racetracks of 'black-type' races
11. Recorded names such as assumed names or stable names
12. Names clearly having a commercial significance, such as trade names
13. Copyrighted material, titles of books, plays, motion pictures, popular
songs, etc. unless the applicant furnishes The Jockey Club with proof that the
copyright has been abandoned or that such material has not been used in more
that five years
14. Names that are suggestive or have a vulgar or obscene meaning
15. Names that are currently active either in the stud or on the turf and names
similar in spelling or pronunciation to the above and;
16. Permanent names and names similar in spelling or pronunciation to the
above.  The list of criteria to establish a permanent name is as follows:

	a. Horses in racing's Hall of Fame
	b. Horses that have won an Eclipse Award or have been voted Horse of
	the Year 
	c. Horses that have been voted Champion Older Horse or Mare
	d. Horses that have been voted Champion Three-Year-Old Colt or Filly
	e. Horses elected into the Gallery of Champions
	f. Annual leading money winners-Stakes Performers and Broodmare Sires
	g. Canadian Champions
	h. Cumulative money winners of $2,000,000 or more and;
	i. Horses included in the International List of Protected Names
	compiled by the International Stud Book Committee and ratified by the
	International Racing Conference
	j. Horses that have won the Kentucky Derby, Preakness, Belmont Stakes,
	or The Jockey Club Gold Cup

Sorry if this is too long, but I thought it was pretty interesting.

Michelle B.
brown@esca.com

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% From: brown@esca.com (HINTS AND ALLEGATIONS)
% To: derby@inslab.uky.edu (Horse Racing List)
% Subject: Naming conventions (kind of long post)
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481.824New $4 million raceDECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle:Life in the espressolaneTue Jul 11 1995 00:0720
    The Emirate of Dubai recently announced that they will sponsor a
    $4 million race to be run in Dubai. The race will be run at 10f on a 
    left-handed dirt track. Obviously, they want to attract some American
    horses as those are the same conditions as our top Gr I stakes. The
    top European racess are run on the grass and usually at longer distances 
    12f - 16f. This race will be the highest purse stake in the world -
    highest purse is currently the Japan Cup ($3.something million last
    year) with the BC CLassic checking in at a mere $3 million)...
    I believe the first place purse will be $2.4 million.
    
    The first race is scheduled for 27 Mar 96, probably at 19:00:00 which
    converts to 27 Mar 96, 10:00:00 in the US Eastern TIme zone(7 AM
    Pacific). Hopefully, there will be TV coverage available in the US.
    The Emirate of Dubai TV station broadcasts in the US via satellite
    so I'm pretty sure they'll carry it. They frequently carry UK/Ireland
    races...often live but sometimes with an hour or 2 delay...they
    usually use the BBC telecast and repeat the signal... So, as long as
    they don't broadcast the new race in Arabic, I'll be able to give you
    results at least! ;-)
    if it's only through the Dubai channel on satellite...
481.825Racing summaryDECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle:Life in the espressolaneTue Aug 22 1995 18:1263
    A lot has happened in the past 6 weeks since I noted anything here.
    I've been pretty busy. Here's a short list:
    	1. Paseana retired at age 8 after a minor tendon strain - she was
           just about $100,000 short of the all-time money record in North
    	   America. Canadian champion Dance Smartly holds the record but
    	   the bozos who compute such things haven't heard that there is
    	   an exchange rate between the Canadian and American dollar. They
    	   count Canadian purses as the same value in American dollars when
           they should adjust them for the exchange rate(currently $1
    	   Canadian is about $0.70 American)
    
    	2. Tabasco Cat retired without ever starting as a 4YO.
    
    	3. Timber Country retired with a single win in 5 starts as a 3YO.
    	   Lukas claims TC injured himself in a workout last weekend. But,
    	   this horse hasn't seemed right all spring so one has to wonder.
    
    	4. Don't feel too bad for Lukas though. He's still got Thunder Gulch 
           and Serena's Song. Serena loses every time she runs 10f even
    	   against fillies but beat the colts again in the Gr I Haskell at
    	   9f. When it comes to the Breeders' Cup though, she'll have to
    	   face older fillies/mares. There are a couple good ones like
    	   Heavenly Prize and Inside Information which are likely to beat
    	   her even at 9f. But, Serena's Song will be the 3YO filly champ -
    	   Take that to the bank. Thunder Gulch keeps rolling along the
    	   win trail too. He won the Gr II Swaps Stakes in CA a couple
    	   weeks ago and the Gr I Travers at Saratoga last Saturday. He's
    	   *bound* to be the 3YO Colt champ too. But, he'll get beat by
           older horses, especially in the Breeders' Cup Classic. His race 
    	   times have been DISMALLY *slow* - slowest KY Derby in years; 
    	   slowest Belmont in 3 or more decades; a very slow Swaps Stakes
    	   and the slowest Travers in at least 10-15 years...more than 3
    	   seconds of General Assembly's record which was set in the slop
           while Thunder Gulch had a fast track.
    
    	5. Cigar can't do anything but win. He's resting for another month.
    	   He's expected to run in the Woodward or the Jockey Club Gold Cup
    	   at Belmont and then rest until the Breeders' Cup.
    
    	6. Concern hit his head on the starting gate in the Hollywood Gold 
           Cup and then ran poorly under Mike Smith. He went back to CA for 
    	   the recent Pacific Classic and ran just as bad for his new 
    	   rider, Gary "I Win Everything" Stevens. You have to wonder if 
           having his bell rung in the starting gate last time
           out hasn't affect him psychologically. Concern had been in the
    	   money in 23 of his 24 career starts before he smacked his head.
           These last 2, he's been out of the money even though he's well
           rested and training well.
    
    	7. The Pacific Classic at Del Mar - Won by Tinners Way a 5 YO son of
    	   Secretariat for the second year in a row. Ran the 10f race in 
    	   1:59 3/5 which is 1/5 off his own stakes record of 1:59 2/5
           This is the 4th year in a row that his trainer, Bobby Frankel
    	   has trained the winner of this race. Tinners Way *may* be good
           enough at 10f to beat Cigar. That's right, you heard it here
           first. Cigar has been impressive but he's never had to run a
           faster final quarter than 25 seconds in the finish of a race. He 
           *may* not be able to handle a challenge in the final quarter if 
           he has to run in 24 seconds or less. Since Tinners Way stays
           close to the leaders and then kicks late, he's got a very good
           chance against Cigar. Even a better chance than Concern because
           Tinners Way doesn't have to make up 20-30 lengths like Concern
            does.
481.826Fourstar Dave passes the torchDECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle:Life in the espressolaneTue Aug 22 1995 18:5355
    But, the real news is old Fourstar Dave, the Legend of Saratoga and the
    Beast of Belmont. Who won stakes races for 7 consecutive years at
    Saratoga and kept the winning streak alive with an allowance race last 
    year. Who won the Poker Stakes at Belmont 3 times and broke his own
    stakes record. Who is the all-time leading money winner for NY bred
    horses....
    
    You may remember that Dave was injured when he placed 3rd in last
    August's Gr II  Bernard Baruch Hcap behind champions Lure and Paradaise
    Creek. His injury was more severe than initally believed as he had a
    minor fracture near his left fetlock. He recuperated over the winter and 
    returned to training. 
    
    He ran twice(I think) at Belmont in preparation for his 9th campaign at 
    Saratoga. He didn't run well the first time. In the second start,
    he was prominent early and well positioned when they turned for home.
    He started to move up but, when he switched to his right lead(i.e.
    *NOT* the one that was injured), he stopped & ended up about 5th.
    
    He went up to Saratoga and ran in the first week of the meeting. He did
    the same thing as at Belmont. Folks who saw him in the paddock said he
    didn't have the same attitude as in previous years. He ran again the
    next week...same again.
    
    Yesterday, he went to the post for the 100th time. This time against
    allowance horses who hadn't won 3x in 1994 or 1995. He had his regular
    rider, Richard Migliore, up. Dave's habit has been to run wide
    and circle the field on the turn and kick down the middle of the
    stretch. The Mig kept Dave on the hedge this time trying to save him 
    as much as possible. He tried to get Dave through between horses at the 
    top of the stretch but there wasn't enough room. The Mig swung Dave out 
    for clear run. Dave responded and started to move. The 3 horses in front
    of him kicked away and Dave had to fight to keep 4th from a hard closing 
    rival.
    
    Clearly, his heart isn't in it anymore. Either that or old Father Time
    has caught up with him at last. I expect Dave will be retired. His
    trainer, Leo O'Brien, and his owner, Richard Bomze, are good horsemen
    and will do what's best for Dave. He's done enough. It's time for a
    green paddock and quiet hacking.
    
    But, don't feel bad! Dave has just passed the torch! Bomze and O'Brien 
    have a barn full of his brothers and another Saratoga legend! Fourstars 
    Allstar(Dave's 7 YO brother) won *this* year's Bernard Baruch Hcap even 
    though the turf was soft and he's known to hate soft turf. Fourstar 
    Brother(a 3 YO brother who was unraced at 2) has a win and 2 good 
    seconds in his races that I've seen this year. One week at Saratoga,
    all 3 of them raced in different races! That's some kind of record
    itself: 3 full brothers racing at the same meet...
    
    Stablemate Irish Linnet(a 7 YO mare) is something of a 
    Saratoga legend herself: She's won the Yadoo Stakes(for NY state bred 
    horses) at Saratoga for FIVE(yes 5) straight years. 
    
    To borrow from Mr Spock: Live long and prosper, Dave.
481.827Retired on closing day in SaratogaGRANPA::JWOODTue Aug 29 1995 02:4263
    John, I just read this on Prodigy...
    
    Regards,
    
    JW
    ========================================================================               
    Fourstardave Retires From Race
       SARATOGA SPRINGS, N.Y. (AP) -- Spunky to thefinish, Fourstardave
    bade farewell to thoroughbred racing Monday at the track where he
    established himself as a legend. 
       The 10-year-old gelding, who holds the record of having won at least
    one race at Saratoga RaceCourse for eight straight years, was
    officially retired after failing in three tries this summer to extend his
    streak. 
       After Golden Attraction captured the featured Spinaway Stakes, it was
    Dave's turn to shine under the cloudless blue sky. He was paraded in
    front of a closing-day crowd of 23,000, which responded with a warm round
    of applause as the strains of ``AuldLang Syne'' wafted softly through
    the autumnlikeair. 
       Then it was one last stretch gallop for the``Sultan of Saratoga,'' a
    racetrack version of the curtain call. His trainer, Leo O'Brien,
    blinked back tears as he watched his pal breeze past and then walk
    reluctantly toward him in the winner's circle. 
       The horse they call Dave was ready to run. Instead, it was time for a
    photo shoot, some carrots, and a case of his favorite beer --Guinness
    Stout.    ``It's sad, very sad,'' O'Brien said as he munched on one of
    Dave's carrots. ``But it happens. I'm happy he's going out on top. He's
    sound, happy as can be. He still thinks he's a race horse anyway, which
    he is. He's tough.'' 
       ``I don't really want to think about it,'' said O'Brien's daughter,
    Leona, who was Dave's only walker when he was 2. ``When Dave used to
    win, it was like winning the Kentucky Derby. It was just so emotional and
    such a thrill to watch him run. I guess to say retired, to be so
    finalized about it, it's just very sad.'' 
       Jockey Richard Migliore, who rode Fourstardave to several victories,
    was aboard again on Monday. He, too, was wistful. 
       ``That was really nice,'' Migliore said. ``I'll tell you what, I'm
    not the most emotional person in the world, but at the eighth pole when
    we were jogging up the wrong way I got a lump in my throat. The
    realization that I'm not going to get to ride him anymore. I was
    reflecting on the thrills he gave me, particularly up here.'' 
       The biggest came in the 1993 West Point Handicap. 
       ``He fell absolutely to the ground at the start, got up, had no right
    to even get back in the race and wound up winning,'' Migliore
    said.``Ultimately, he got disqualified -- in traffic, he bumped somebody
    -- but to me that was one of the most outstanding performances I've ever
    been involved in.'' 
       Dave will rest at Saratoga for a couple of weeks and then ship to
    Florida for the winter. O'Brien vowed to bring him back here next year,
    but just to hang out under the maple trees, breathe the country air, and
    greet his adoring public. 
       ``I'd like to joke around and say he'll comeback, but really, he is
    retired,'' O'Brien said.``He's got a heart as big as a house and he
    wants to race. He loves to run. He never let us down, never once. Maybe
    Fourstar Brother will takeover.'' 
       Those final words proved prophetic. FourstarBrother -- Dave's
    brother -- closed the Saratoga meet minutes later with a victory in the
    last race.   ``If I wasn't eating this carrot, I'd probably be crying,''
    O'Brien said. 
    Copied from the PRODIGY(R) service 08/28/95 22:20
    
    John D., thanks for tuning us into this great story... JW
    
481.828Re Dave's retirementDECWET::JDADDAMIOSeattle:Life in the espressolaneTue Sep 05 1995 18:0525
    Thanks for the story on Dave's retirement, JW. He's a grand old racehorse.
    They showed a little bit of the retirement ceremony of the NY racing
    replay show that day. I've been on vacation since then or I'd have
    posted what I saw. Dave galloped down the stretch in front of the fans.
    Migliore was supposed to pull him up and go back to the winner's
    circle. Dave didn't respond immediately and acted up a little. So,
    announcer Tom Durkin laughed and said, "He's supposed to go back to 
    the winner's circle but I think he wants to run some more."
    
    The week before, Dave had a street in Saratoga named after him. He and 
    Mig were out on the street accompanied by the stable pony and big crowds 
    of people wearing T-shirts w/ things like "Fourstardave" and "Sultan of 
    Saratoga" on the front. It was pretty nice. 
    
    I knew O'Brien and Bomze would do right by Dave. They always have. They
    manage all their horses very well. 
    
    Re Fourstar Brother's win in the last race. It was an 9f allowance race
    on the turf for horses that hadn't won 2 or more allowance races or stakes.
    TV show host Harvey Pack said after the race, "No, we didn't set it up. 
    He just laid over this field and was the easiest kind of winner. But,
    he'll have to do it about 8 more years before he matches his
    illustrious brother."
    
    John
481.829Thunder Gulch has been retiredORAREP::OAKEYI'll take Clueless for $500, AlexMon Oct 09 1995 15:249
Just picked up that Thunder Gulch was retired Sunday after a fracture 
was discovered in his left front cannon bone.  He's been returned to
Louisville KY.  It hasn't been decided yet if he'll need minor surgery
or if they'll just let him rest until it heals.

Definitely could have contributed to his lackluster performance against
Cigar on Sat :(

481.830races for 1996PCBUOA::LPIERCEDo the watermelon crawlWed Feb 21 1996 18:19155
                          Televised Races For 1996

   Date                Event, Location              Time (Eastern) Network
          Strub Stakes, Santa Anita                 4:30-5:30 p.m. ESPN
 Feb. 4 
          Hutcheson Stakes, Gulfstream
 Feb. 10  Eclipse Awards Special                    2:00-3:00 p.m. ESPN
          2-Day at the Races                        6:30-7:00 p.m. ESPN2
          Donn Handicap, Gulfstream
 *Feb. 10
          San Vicente Stakes, Santa Anita
          Breeders' Cup Handicap, Fair Grounds
          2-Day at the Races                        6:00-6:30 p.m. ESPN2
          Barbara Fritchie Handicap, Laurel
 *Feb. 17 Breeders' Cup Handicap, Gulfstream
          Santa Maria Handicap, Santa Anita
          Tampa Bay Breeders' Cup, Tampa Bay
 Feb. 24  Fountain of Youth, Gulfstream             4:30-5:30 p.m. ESPN
 March 16 Florida Derby, Gulfstream Park            4:30-6:00 p.m. ABC
 March 17 Louisiana Derby, Fair Grounds             4:30-5:30 p.m. ESPN2
 March 18 Louisiana Derby, Fair Grounds             12:30-1:30 a.m.ESPN
          2-Day at the Races                        6:30-7:00 p.m. ESPN2
          Pelleteri Breeders' Cup Handicap, Fair
          Grounds
 *March 23
          Remington Park Derby, Remington
          Santa Ana Handicap, Santa Anita
          Snow Goose Handicap, Laurel
 March 30 Jim Beam Stakes, Turfway                  6:00-7:00 p.m. ESPN
 *March 312-Day at the Races                        6:30-7:00 p.m. ESPN2
          Oaklawn Handicap, Oaklawn                 4:30-5:30 p.m. ESPN
 April 6
          Flamingo Stakes, Hialeah
 April 6  Santa Anita Derby, Santa Anita Park       4:30-6:00 p.m. ABC
 April 13 Wood Memorial Stakes, Aqueduct Racetrack  4:30-6:00 p.m. ABC
          Blue Grass Stakes, Keeneland              4:00-5:00 p.m. ESPN
 April 13
          Black Helen Handicap, Hialeah
 April 20 Hialeah Turf Cup, Hialeah                 4:00-5:00 p.m. ESPN2
 April 27 Kentucky Derby Preview                    4:30-6:00 p.m. ABC
 May 1    Kentucky Derby Post Position Draw         6:00-6:30 p.m. ESPN

 May 2    [Kentucky Derby] Up Close With Chris      6:00-6:30 p.m. ESPN
          Myers
 May 3    Breakfast on the Backside, Churchill      7:00-9:00 a.m. ESPN2
 May 3    Kentucky Oaks Special                     3:30-5:00 p.m. ESPN2
 May 3    Kentucky Oaks, Churchill                  5:00-6:00 p.m. ESPN

 May 3    [Kentucky Derby] Up Close With Chris      6:00-6:30 p.m. ESPN
          Myers
 May 3    Derby Night of the Stars                  8:30-10:00 p.m.ESPN2
 May 4    Breakfast on the Backside, Churchill      7:00-9:00 a.m. ESPN2
 May 4    Kentucky Derby Special2                   Noon-2:00 p.m. ESPN2
 May 4    Kentucky Derby Special                    2:00-4:30 p.m. ESPN
 May 4    Kentucky Derby, Churchill                 4:30-6:00 p.m. ABC
 May 4    Kentucky Derby Wrap-Up                    6:00-7:00 p.m. ESPN2
 May 11   Illinois Derby, Sportman's                4:00-5:00 p.m. ESPN
 May 11   Pimlico Special, Pimlico Racecourse       4:30-6:00 p.m. ABC
 May 18   Preakness Stakes, Pimlico                 4:30-6:00 p.m. ABC
 June 1   Massachusetts Handicap, Suffolk           4:00-5:00 p.m. ESPN
 *June 8  Racing Across America                     3:30-4:30 p.m. ESPN
 June 8   Belmont Stakes, Belmont                   4:30-6:00 p.m. ABC
 *June 15 Racing Across America                     4:00-5:00 p.m. ESPN
 June 22  Caesars International, Atlantic City      6:00-7:00 p.m. ESPN
 June 30  Budweiser Irish Derby, Curragh            3:30-4:30 p.m. ESPN
 June 30  Hollywood Gold Cup, Hollywood             4:30-5:30 p.m. ESPN
          Caesars Palace Turf Championship,
          Hollywood                                 5:30-7:00 p.m. ESPN
 July 20  Swaps Stakes, Hollywood
          Budweiser Emerald Handicap, Emerald
          Downs
 *July 28 Racing Across America                     3:30-4:30 p.m. ESPN
 Aug. 3   Whitney Handicap, Saratoga                4:30-5:30 p.m. ESPN
          Haskell Invitational Stakes, Monmouth     4:30-5:30 p.m. ESPN
 Aug. 4
          Jim Dandy Stakes, Saratoga
          Pacific Classic, Del Mar                  6:00-7:00 p.m. ESPN
 Aug. 10
          Sword Dancer Handicap, Saratoga
          Travers Stakes, Saratoga                  5:00-6:00 p.m. ESPN
 Aug. 24
          Beverly D, Arlington
          Saratoga Cup Handicap, Saratoga           6:00-7:00 p.m. ESPN
 Aug. 25
          Arlington Million, Arlington
          Woodward Stakes, Belmont                  4:00-5:30 p.m. ESPN
 Sept. 14 Man o' War Stakes, Belmont
          Ruffian Handicap, Belmont
 Sept. 15 W. Va. Breeders Classic                   2:00-2:30 p.m. ESPN
 Sept. 21 Vosburgh Stakes, Belmont                  4:30-5:30 p.m. ESPN
 Oct. 13  Spinster Stakes, Keeneland                3:30-5:00 p.m. ESPN
 Oct. 20  Breeders' Cup Special                     4:00-5:00 p.m. ESPN
 Oct. 26  Breeders' Cup                             1:30-6:00 p.m. NBC
          Hollywood Derby, Hollywood                6:00-7:00 p.m. ESPN
 Dec. 1
          Matriarch Stakes, Hollywood

         * Race names or events with an asterisk are to be verified

                   --------------------------------------

                   Kentucky Derby Week On ESPN And espn2

           I. Racing Across America/The Road To The Triple Crown

 Racing Across America coverage of five of the major races for the 1996
 Kentucky Derby:

     Date         ESPN          Event                 Site           Units
                Airtime
                          Strub Stakes
 February 4   4:30-5:30   Hutchenson        Santa Anita              1
              p.m.                          Park/Gulfstream Park
                          Stakes

 February 24  4:30-5:30   Fountain of       Gulfstream Park          1
              p.m.        Youth Stakes

 March 17     4:30-5:30   Louisiana Derby   Fair Grounds             1
              p.m.

 March 30     6:00-7:00   Jim Beam Stakes   Turfway Park             1
              p.m.

 April 13     4:00-5:00   Blue Grass        Keeneland                1
              p.m.        Stakes

                   II. ESPN Kentucky Derby Extravaganza

 Wed., May 1  ESPN        6:00-6:30 p.m.    Kentucky Derby Draw      1
 Thursday,
 May 2        ESPN        6:00-6:30 p.m.    Up Close At The Derby    1
 Friday, May                                Breakfast on the
 3            espn2       7:00-9:00 a.m.    Backside                 4
 Friday, May
 3            espn2       3:30-5:00 p.m.    Oaks Day Stakes Races    3
 Friday, May                                Racing Across America:
 3            ESPN        5:00-6:00 p.m.    Kentucky Oaks            2
 Friday, May
 3            ESPN        6:00-6:30 p.m.    Up Close At The Derby    1
 Friday, May
 3            espn2       8:30-10:00 p.m.   On The Eve of The Derby  3
 Saturday,                                  Breakfast on the
 May 4        espn2       7:00-9:00 p.m.    Backside                 4
 Saturday,
 May 4        espn2       12N-2:00 p.m.     Kentucky Derby Special 2 4
 Saturday,                                  Racing Across America:
 May 4        ESPN        2:00-4:30 p.m.    Kentucky Derby Special   4
 Saturday,
 May 4        espn2       6:00-7:00 p.m.    Derby Highlights Show    2

                                  [Image]
                    [Return to Triple Crown Home Page]

              [Site Guide][Virtual Churchill][Kentucky Derby]
481.831Genuine Risk foals!DECWET::JDADDAMIOJog? No, ever see a jogger smile?Wed Mar 06 1996 17:1415
    Genuine Risk (1980 KY Derby winning filly) foaled for the second time
    in her life on Feb. 21 about 10 PM. This foal is a colt by Chief's
    Honcho. Chief's Honcho was a graded stakes winner campaigned by the
    Firestones' son. Chief's Honcho won over $1,000,000 on the track so he
    was no slouch. The foal is said to be healthy and well made. Although
    she had had problems in earlier years, Genuine Risk got pregnant from
    one breeding to Chief's Honcho and had no problems during this pregnancy 
    or delivery. She's expected to be bred back to Chief's Honcho this
    year.
    
    Her first foal, Genuine Reward was sired by Rahy(sire of Serena's
    Song). Genuine Reward is now a 3 YO. He did not race at 2 and has been
    delayed in his seasonal debut because he had a cold a few weeks ago.
    He's in training at the Payson Park training center in Florida and is
    expected to race in NY this spring.
481.832Dubai World Cup resultsDECWET::JDADDAMIOJog? No, ever see a jogger smile?Wed Mar 27 1996 13:1623
    Form feed here for those who want to watch it on ESPN this afternoon...
    
    The US 1 - 2 - 3 in Dubai World Cup
    
    The race was jus trun moments ago. I got it live via the sat. dish.
    Cigar did NOT look good going to th epost but he ran one hell of a
    race! He broke in about 5th and laid of the pace; pushed 5 wide in the
    dog leg turn. Cantered along with the pack moving up gradually. Took
    the lead from L'Carriere at the head of the stretch. L'Carriere looked 
    like he was gonna come back and take Cigar but his rally stalled a bit. 
    Soul Of The Matter was last most of the way round the track but Stevens
    rallied him late and he came flying. For a few seconds it looked like
    he would take Cigar but Cigar's determination got him home by 1/2
    length.
    
    !. Cigar $2,600,000
    2. Soul Of The Matter 
    3. L'Carriere
    
    I"ll post more and tell you how to find the Dubai CUp home page on th
    eweb when I get to the office.
    
    Thank you, Maktoum family and the country of Dubai...a great race!
481.833Dubai World Cup web pageDECWET::JDADDAMIOJog? No, ever see a jogger smile?Wed Mar 27 1996 16:308
    BTW, the ESPN coverage will be on "Racehorse Digest" at 4 PM eastern
    time. The Dubai World Cup web page is at:
    
    http://www.dwtcuae.com/sports/dwc/ 
    
    They've already got full details & photos there so I'm not gonna type 
    it all up... BTW, Mosaic doesn't seem to handle their photos so use
    netscape or something else.
481.834DerbyPCBUOA::LPIERCEThe Truth is Out ThereMon Apr 29 1996 20:316
    
    John,
    
    Who do you like in the Derby this yr?
    
    
481.835Nobody...DECWET::JDADDAMIOJog? No, ever see a jogger smile?Tue Apr 30 1996 00:0414
    Nobody! 
    
    I think this year will see the end of 1 or more trends  in who wins the
    KY Derby:
    	1. Unbridled's Song will win and break the jinxes on the Breeder's Cup 
    		Juvenille winner and the favorite
    	2. Skip Away (Bluegrass Stakes winner) will win and break the
    		dosage and dual-qualifier trends
    	3. Zarb's Magic or Grindstone(who take turns beating each other in
    		their prep races) will pull a Lil E Tee like upset
    
    BTW, Unbridled's Song has a minor injury. He stepped on his heel and
    cut it. It's being treated and he continues to workout but what are his
    chances of winning with a boo-boo?
481.836my derby pickPCBUOA::LPIERCEThe Truth is Out ThereThu May 02 1996 15:214
    
    I will go on the chopping block and I will pick Galdstone.
    
    Lou
481.837I won!PCBUOA::LPIERCEThe Truth is Out ThereWed May 08 1996 12:519
    
    I can't belive I miss wrote my derby picks name - (it was Friday what
    can I say) 
    
    But anyway, my horse came in - by a nose!  
    
    we can only hope for a tripple crown this yr.
    
    Lou
481.838Good pickGBLAUT::JANICKIV. Janicki Internet Collaboration Eng. DTN 226-5980Wed May 08 1996 13:4418
Great pick Lou on Grindstone. It was a very exciting Derby with
such a close finish. I didn't have any particular favorite this
year but found myself yelling for Grindstone down the stretch. I
like gutsy, game horses. Cavonnier, who was second, was also dead
game. Unbridled's Song had the race in hand at the top of the
stretch but tired visibly through the long run to the finish line.
He was tough enough to finish 5th.

I think the Preakness is wide-open at this point. If Unbridled's Song
recuperates from his foot problem, he'll probably be the favorite.
You can't count out Grindstone but he'll have to contend with
Cavonnier again and a surprising 3rd place Derby finisher Prince of
Thieves who also closed strongly.

It is a tough year to try to go for the Triple Crown. And isn't Unbridled
off to a fabulous start at stud?

Vicky
481.839Grindstone to winPCBUOA::LPIERCEThe Truth is Out ThereWed May 08 1996 14:3222
    
    Unbridled's song is just to hyper and uneasy.  I don't think he'll
    every do well in a big crowd - he wastes all his energy before the
    race.
    
    I was at the Derby last yr and it was the best time.  I was very upset
    I couldn't attend this year - but at least I was apart of it.  I told
    my sister's and brother to bet on Grindstone - they all went down to
    the Pompono race track (in FLA) for the day and they all bet on
    grindstone (they bet for me to) - this was the 1st time they were ever
    into the Derby - but after me non-stop talking about my Derby
    expierance they all caught the bug!
    
    They were so happy they won - they called me from their cell phone once
    the decision was final - we were all yelling and carring on like we
    were at the Derby - so it still made it a special day for me.
    
    I will go again in 97 - with my sisters and brother.
    
    I really like Grindstone and I think he will win the next race!
    
    Lou
481.840photosPCBUOA::LPIERCEThe Truth is Out ThereThu May 09 1996 15:3113
    
    If you would like a photo of the finish (at the deby) for $18.00 you
    can have one by sending a note to with
    
    Horse Name:
    Date: (starting in 1985)
    Qty:
    
    Four Footed Photos
    224333 S.E. 134 St
    Issaqdah, WA 98027
    
    
481.841Flowers for Belmont winner?ROADKL::MONTVILLESharon MontvilleThu May 09 1996 15:598
    I was at the tack store yesterday, and someone called wanting to know
    what kind of flowers the Belmont winner gets... nobody knew the answer.
    The Kentucky Derby winner gets roses, the Preakness gets black-eyed
    susans, and the Belmont winner gets ____________.  Anyone out there
    know the answer?
    
    Thanks,
    Sharon
481.842not pink!DECWET::JDADDAMIOJog? No, ever see a jogger smile?Thu May 09 1996 18:141
    white carnations
481.843Unbridled's SongDECWET::JDADDAMIOJog? No, ever see a jogger smile?Thu May 09 1996 18:4048
    >Unbridled's Song had the race in hand at the top of the
    >stretch but tired visibly through the long run to the finish line.
    >He was tough enough to finish 5th.
    >
    >I think the Preakness is wide-open at this point. If Unbridled's Song
    >recuperates from his foot problem, he'll probably be the favorite.
    
    Unbridled's Song is not scheduled to run in the Preakness. His trainer
    & owner said they wouldn't risk it  because the horse proved he can't 
    run in egg-bar shoes and they didn't think he'd heal in time. I think
    they said they're considering going in the Metroplitan Hcap (akak Met
    Mile) against older horses on Memorial Day.
    
    What impressed me most abuot Unbridled's Song and Mike Smith in this
    race is that they both gave everything they had in very bad set of
    circumstances. In spite of the bar shoes, the missed training and the
    injury, Unbridled's Song pressed the pace and held on very gamely. He
    only finished 4 lengths behind Grindstone which means he ran the 10f
    in about 2:01 4/5. That's fast enough to win most years. Unfortunately 
    for him, it wasn't good enough this year.
    
    The problem with egg-bar shoes is that they're completely enclose the
    foot and have little or no ability to flex. This in turn means that the
    horse's foot cannot flex & expand as it normally would when it hits the
    ground. The means the horse can't get the traction to push off the
    track. Most of you probably know that a horse's foot hits heel first and 
    rolls over onto the toe. The toe digs into the ground and that's where
    he gets his push-off. With the egg-bar shoes, a horse's foot will actually
    slide around some on the track because the heel hits first and slides
    on the back of the egg-bar.
    
    You may have heard Mike SMith saying in post-race interviews that 
    Unbridled's Song couldn't "get hold" the track properly and that's why
    he drifted out on the turn. He's probably right.
    
    You may also heard Mike Smith say that when he took a stronger hold on
    the reins(like he did early on in the race), Unbridled's Song could
    handle the track better but that holding him slowed him down. Again,
    he's probably right. That's because a horse that's leaning on his bit
    can use the support of the rider's hands as a "fifth leg" and keep
    his balance a little better. So, Smith taking a strong hold would help 
    Unbridled's Song improve his balance and his "action" but not his
    speed.
    
    Could he have won on 4 good feet with a better post? I don't know but
    I think it would have been a 3 way photo!
    
    John
481.844thanks for flower infoROADKL::MONTVILLESharon MontvilleThu May 09 1996 19:494
    RE: .842
    Thank you, I'll pass the info on.  The lady that called in was having
    parties for each of the 3 races, and wanted her floral arrangements to
    match!
481.845Grindstone retired!DECWET::JDADDAMIOJog? No, ever see a jogger smile?Fri May 10 1996 00:034
    Grindstone has been retired. He cooled out lame after a workout today.
    X-rays showed that he had bone chips in his knee(again) Same knee that
    he had operated on last year. Owner W. T. Young decided to retire him
    rather than do another surgery and continue racing.
481.846no tripple crown :-(PCBUOA::LPIERCEThe Truth is Out ThereFri May 10 1996 13:125
    
    You got to be kidding!  Unreal - the poor guy, retired by 3.  thanks
    for the info John.
    
    Lou
481.847Put out to stud while in his prime...RANGER::WASSERJohn A. WasserThu May 16 1996 20:504
> the poor guy, retired by 3.

	Tough life...  Win a pile of money then get paid large fees
	to have sex.
481.848Who won the Preakness?YIELD::STOOKERMon May 20 1996 16:334
    I missed the Preakness.   Could someone enter the results?
    
    Thanks
    Sarah
481.8491996 Preakness.DECWET::JDADDAMIONever say Never ;-)Mon May 20 1996 19:317
    Louis Quatorze won leading wire-wire and tied the stakes record of
    1:53 2/5. Pat Day up and Zito trained. Ironic that Day rode the horse
    that broke Lukas' streak of victories in Triple Crown events as Lukas
    took Day off Prince of Thieves after the KY Derby.
    
    Skip Away was second most of the trip and finished about about 3 lengths 
    behind Louis Quatorze with Edito's Note farther back.
481.850EVMS::MDNITE::RIVERSNo commentTue May 21 1996 13:469
    Louis Quatorze ran in the KY Derby, correct?  Where did he finish in
    that?
    
    
    
    Curious,
    
    
    kim
481.851SechzehntenDECWET::JDADDAMIONever say Never ;-)Tue May 21 1996 17:312
    Although his name means "Louis the 14th", he was "Louis the 16th"  in
    KY. ;-)
481.852Racing returns to SeattleDECWET::JDADDAMIONever say Never ;-)Wed Jun 26 1996 19:5537
    Way back in Note 481.373, I told you all how Seattle's only
    Thoroughbred racing track was due to close because the acreage was sold
    and the land being re-developed. Since September 1992, there has been
    no racing here. And the once healthy Thoroughbred breeding industry has
    faltered. The bottom fell out of the market... Horses were sold or
    shipped all over the country. People who worked at Longacres "moved
    tack"  to comprable tracks like those in San Francisco or to lesser
    tracks like Yakima Meadows and Playfair...The world had ended...
    
    BUT FINALLY, RACING IS BACK! Last Thrusday (June 20, 1996) a new track
    opened. The new track is called Emerald Downs after Seattle's nickname
    of the "Emerald City". Jan and I went to the Opening Day and had a blast! 
    
    The facility is great even though the turf course hasn't been installed
    yet. Where Longacres was run down and in need of restoration, Emerald
    Downs is modern and concenient. I was very favorably impressed with the
    quality of racing on opening day and with the stakes schedule over the
    season which lasts until Nov 4th this year.
    
    They've managed to keep graded status for the Longacres Mile by running
    it at Yakima for the last 3 years. They've also kept the name. But, all
    the other stakes that had Longacres in the name have been renamed,
    often to honor the sponsor of the race.
    
    The very first race over the Emerald Downs oval was a stake race for
    fillies at 1 mile. Strawberry Morn, a horse shipped in from Hastings
    Park up in British Columbia, won as the even money favorite in a time
    of 1:35 4/5. She had the lead every step of the way and went a steady
    sensible pace pulling away to win by several lengths at the finish.
    
    The 10th race was also a stake at 8.5f and included graded stakes winner
    Lykatil Hill in the field. He went off the even money favorite too but
    finished up the track. A "local" horse called Sneakin Jake who was
    graded stakes placed last year but off-form so far this year won easily
    and returned a whopping $37 and change on a $2 win bet.
    
    We're already planning our next trip to the track...
481.853Ibn Shetan!DECWET::JDADDAMIONever say Never ;-)Tue Jul 02 1996 18:4335
    Way back in 1994(Note 481.671), Louisa wrote:
    
>    Yesterday at Churchill downs there was a race with a horse who has
>    a very unique name.  His is something like this "Imbeingshi*on"
>    
>    Well, the horse was winning the race and the announcer was having
>    a hard time saying his name, the announcer cannot swear on the
>    air, so we was calling him all kinds of names, names that didn't
>    even sound close, evey name out of his mouth was a diff' name.  It
>    was quite funny.
    
    For which I finally got the story! It goes something like this:
    
    The horse's name was Ibn Shetan or Ibn Shythone and the incident happened
    when he made his 2nd career start at Churchill Downs after a maiden 
    victory in Florida. Nobody had a clue how to pronounce his name, 
    including his trainer. Mike Battaglia, the CD announcer, contacted the 
    trainer & tried to reach the owner to get the right pronunciation but 
    had no luck. Well, he had luck but al of it bad! ;-)
    
    So Battaglia, confused like everyone else, decided to use about 5
    variations during the call of the race, variations using long/short and 
    pronounced/silent vowels. About the only thing he didn't use was the
    vulgar version; i.e. what you might say a bird flies over you and drops
    his/her calling card...
    
    The result was an entertaining race-call since Ibn Shetan broke on top
    and stayed there, winning by five lengths. As a consequence, the
    variations on the pronunciation were obvious and the crowd got a huge 
    kick out of it.  The call was replayed on the Louisville NBC TV
    affiliate's news, and NBC's Today Show the following morning.
    
    The owner was eventually contacted, and a simple explanation was
    revealed. Ibn Shetan is by Devils bag, and the name is Arabic for 
    "son of the devil".
481.854Wasn't this really The Black?MTADMS::COBURNPlan B FarmTue Jul 02 1996 18:547
    Odd I should know this (REAL odd), but I believe "Shetan", pronounced
    SHAY-TAWN, was the 'real' name of The Black, in the Black Stallion
    series.  Certainly makes sense that the author (who I do not know)
    would pick it, given it's meaning and the storyline.  
    
    My only attempt at trivia, I assure you.
    
481.855The Black... Or was it his son?DECWET::JDADDAMIONever say Never ;-)Tue Jul 02 1996 20:5511
    I think Linda's correct in remembering that Walter Farley's  novels
    used Shetan as the Arabic name for The Black... Or was it his son?
    Jan! You're good at remembering kid's books... HELP! ...
    
    My friend who speaks Arabic tells me that it does indeed mean "devil" 
    but might be spelled in various ways in our alphabet. She also confirms 
    that Ibn means "son of" so the account (which I got from a news
    service) of the name Ibn Shetan meaning "son of the devil" makes
    sense.
    
    j
481.856EVMS::MDNITE::RIVERSNo commentWed Jul 03 1996 14:109
    Nope, the son (or one of them) was named Satan, plan and simple. :)
    The son of the Black who went on to be a harness racer was Bonfire, the
    daughter was Black Minx and there was, of course, Flame, the Island
    Stallion, who was sort of an arch-rival of the Black.
    
    
    kim (who read these books a LOT when she was younger)
    
    
481.8571996 Pacific Classic: a tale of overconfidenceDECWET::JDADDAMIOThink softlyMon Aug 12 1996 18:1265
    Just in case, anybody who cares slept through the weekend...
    The 1996 Pacific Classic was run on Saturday and many (including ESPN)
    expected it to be a procession proclaiming Cigar as the greatest
    racehorse in history. It turned out to be a funeral procession for his
    winning streak instead. 
    
    Siphon (who won the Hollywood Gold Cup wire-to-wire  in 1:59 & change)
    in the race, I fully expected a hot pace because I thought Luthier
    Fever (another front running speed horse) would go with Siphon. I also
    expected Cigar and Tinners Way to be stalking the pace in 3rd and 4th
    waiting to make their respective moves on the turn or coming out of
    the turn and that whichever of those two had the most energy left would
    win. Well, the basic scenario was right but the names have to be
    changed.
    
    Luthier Fever was only there for the $500,000 bonus for
    appearing in all 3 big stakes at the 3 So. Cal. tracks. He broke out of
    the gate and cantered round the track, never racing at all. Tinners Way 
    was next to last and was actually eased soon after they'd gone 3/4
    mile. It was originally reported that he had twisted an ankle but later
    reports say that he was not injured and that jockey Eddie Dellahousaye
    pulled him up after a misstep to insure that he wasn't hurt. Trainer
    Bobbie Frankel says that X-rays show the horse is OK and that he
    thinks the the shoes that Tinners Way wore to protect a foot recovering
    from a bruise caused him to slip making Eddie D. think the horse was
    hurt. 
    
    Back to the scenario. Substitute Cigar for Luthier Fever's role and 
    Dramatic Gold and Dare and Go for the roles I'd picked for Cigar and
    Tinners Way and it went according to script. ;-)
    
    Problem is, when Luthier Fever didn't go after Siphon, that left
    Siphon as the lone speed in the race. His jock would have slowed the
    pace down trying to save his horse for the finish. So, Jerry Bailey was
    faced with a splt second decision whether to have Cigar press the pace
    so Siphon couldn't steal off. No matter which way he decided to go, he
    faced being blamed as the culprit should Cigar lose. As it turned out,
    he believed most of the hype about his horse and chose to press Siphon.
    The only thing he can be faulted for is overconfidence. They went the
    first quarter in 23 flat, the half in 45 3/5, 3/4 in 1:09 and change
    before Cigar put away Siphon and clocked a mile in 1:33 3/5. Nobody
    goes a mile in 1:33 3/5 in a mile and a quarter race. Nobody. The
    fastest mile ever run in the KY Derby was 1:34 4/5. 
    
    With Dramatic GOld and Dare and Go in 3rd and 4th respectively, it was
    only a matter of which had the most left. It was Dare and Go as
    Dramatic Gold had tried to press Cigar a bit  early on. Dare and Go
    took the lead easily and won drawing off to win by 4 lengths. After the
    race, Bailey took all the blame and said he knmew it was over before
    they hit the quarter pole (marking the 1/4 mile to the finish) because
    he could hear Dare and Go coming and that he knew he (Bailey) didn't
    have much horse left. Bailey's a class act as well as a great jockey.
    When Dare and Go passed Cigar, Bailey never cocked his stick. There was
    no point. He knew he was beat. He waggled the stick a little...just
    enough to keep the stewards from calling an inquiry as to why he didn't
    "perservere" with his horse.
    
    Did Bailey make a mistake? It doesn't matter. I've said since last
    year's Oaklawn Hcap that the only way to beat Cigar was to make him run
    fast early and then send closers after him. That's exactly what trainer
    Dick Mandella did Saturday. It just worked this time. What I'd *really*
    like to know is why trainer Mott and owner Paulsen didn't send a rabbit
    to insure Siphon set an honest pace without using Cigar's energy up?
    Probably didn't think they needed to...overconfidence again...
    
481.858Mile DayDECWET::JDADDAMIOThink softlyMon Aug 19 1996 18:5356
Jan and I went to Emerald Downs (the Great White Hope for 
keeping Thoroughbred racing in the Seattle area) yesterday for "Mile Day".
It is the biggest single day of the meeting. The feature race is the 
$200,000 Longacres Mile (Gr. III) and there were a large number of mile 
races on the program. We had a very good time but still came away with 
an overall state of depression about the future of racing here in Seattle.

The Gr. III Longacres Mile had a good field of horses. Southern 
California trainers sent Gr II winners at the distance (Gold And Steel
and Cleante) which figured to be the class of the field. The local
horses included FinalAct and the venerable 9YO gelding, MilitaryHawk
who put on a great headbobing stretch duel in the $100,000 Emerald Handicap 
at the same distance just 4 weeks ago. The SoCal circuit was also 
represented by IsItInGood, an allowance class sprinter. IsItInGood had 
never won beyond 6 1/2 furlongs, never raced beyond 7 furlongs, and 
never won a stake of any kind...until yesterday. 

FinalAct and another front runner set the early farctions with 
IsItInGood stalking in 3rd. Gold And Steel was in mid-pack along the 
rail. MilitaryHawk and Cleante were near the back of the pack, 
bidding their time. In the final turn, FinalAct weakened and faded. 
It looked momentarily that Gold And Steel was starting a rally on the 
inside but he quickly tired and finished well up the track. IsItInGood 
made a sharp move in the 3 path and took command of the race. It was all 
over but the shouting. He opened several lengths at the top of the 
stretch and withstood the late charge of Cleante to win by about 1/2 
length. MilitaryHawk and Humpty's Hoedown(sp?), a Canadian shipper from 
Hastings Park,  also made late rallys to take home smaller pieces of 
the purse.

The Mile was good. The general card was good. We had fun. So, why was 
I depressed? Simple. There was practically nobody there. Reserved 
seats were supposedly sold out and they had track staff going around 
checking tickets to make sure nobody was snitching seats. The crowd was 
so small that they gave up checking after the 3rd race. 

We were there for the grand opening in June when there were about 
19,000 - 20,000 people there. Yesterday, there seemed to be about half 
that number of people. Although the management claimed more than 12,000 
people showed up, I rather doubt it. There were no lines at 
concession stands all day. The lines at the betting windows were 
short, all day. By the time the second feature (a 1 mile stake for
fillies & mares with a Breeders' Cup enhanced purse) went off, most 
of the crowd had gone.

If they can only draw that size crowd for their best day of racing
and the crowd only bet about $1.9 million on 11 good races, how will 
they survive? During the planning stages for this track, they 
guesstimated an average daily betting handle of $1.3 million which 
is slightly less than the $1.4 million the old Longacres track 
averaged. Emerald Downs has been averaging closer to $1 million.
If they can only draw 10,000 - 12,000 people for their big day, their
future is grim. I hope I'm wrong because that would be sad for all of 
us around here.

John
481.859MartinK aka RDGE44::ALEUC3???DECWET::JDADDAMIOThink softlyTue Dec 03 1996 20:2810
481.859IsItInGood Is In Good Form! DECWET::JDADDAMIOThink softlyFri Dec 13 1996 17:1931
481.860Say again ?MTCLAY::COBURNPlan B FarmMon Dec 16 1996 15:114
481.861I say again...DECWET::JDADDAMIOThink softlyMon Dec 16 1996 18:596
481.862Isitingood - world recordDECWET::JDADDAMIOThink softlyThu Feb 06 1997 17:2110
    Isitingood set a new world record by running one mile on the Santa Anita 
    turf in 1:32 Wednesday Feb 5, 1997. Isitingood broke the one-mile
    record of 1:32 1-5 set by Dr. Fager on dirt at Chicago's Arlington Park 
    Aug. 24, 1968. He did this in his first turf race, a minor ungraded stakes
    race called The Bart worth a mere $71,000.
    
    It happened to be the 29th birthday of David Flores, his regular
    jockey.
    
    
481.863Ho hum. Another world record at Santa AnitaDECWET::JDADDAMIOThink softlyWed Mar 05 1997 15:5711
    There's an old saying around the track which says horses don't set
    track record times, tracks do. Which means that more often than not,
    the horse who sets a track record time isn't an all-time great but
    just a horse who happened to catch the track when it was super fast.
    If that's true, what are we to think about the turf course at Santa
    Anita? Remember the other week, IsItInGood set a new world record for
    the mile (1:32.05). Well, last Saturday Atticus ran in Santa Anita's
    Gr II Arcadia Handicap (1 mile - turf). Like IsItInGood, Atticus lead 
    wire to wire and set a new world record 1:31 4/5 or 1:31.89 to be 
    precise. So, IsItInGood was in good in the record books...at least not
    for long! (Much to the relief of some who think is name inappropriate)
481.864What world record????DECWET::JDADDAMIOThink softlyTue Mar 11 1997 16:4819
    When Isitingood and then Atticus went a mile on Santa Anita's turf
    course faster than Dr Fager's dirt time of 1:32 1/5, everybody was 
    talking about these new world records. No place in the media did I see
    or hear anything to the contrary.
    
    However, over the weekend, I was looking at the 1990 edition of
    Guiness's book "Horse Racing" which a friend recently sent me. In their
    record times section, they list the grass and dirt world record times
    for distances up to 2 1/2 miles. The entry for 1 mile had Dr Fager's
    time as the dirt record but imagine my surprise to find this entry for
    the grass record:
    
            1:31 1/10       Al-Torfaran     June 19, 1989, Brighton
    
    So, *neither* Isitingood *nor* Atticus set a world record time!
    Duh, don't we Americans consider England part of the world or what?
    
    
    
481.865Miles: more or less...DECWET::JDADDAMIOThink softlyTue Mar 11 1997 20:4612
    Well, another friend just sent me email which said that times for
    Brighton's mile course aren't recognized as world records because the
    distance is actually 6 yards short of a mile and downhill. He also
    tells me that Al-Tanfaran's track record for Brighton's mile was
    lowered to 1:30.90 on 7/26/90 by Chase the Door.
    
    Apparently, there are other mile courses which either aren't a mile
    and/or are downhill because he also said that Raceform, the UK's
    official charttakers, reports a mile time of 1:30.80 by Traditional Miss 
    in 1981 at Chepstow which isn't recognized as a world record either...
    
    
481.866Santa Anita's Turf...DECWET::JDADDAMIOThink softlyFri Mar 21 1997 18:4922
    In talking about the rash of world records on Santa Anita's turf course,
    I said:
    
    >There's an old saying around the track which says horses don't set
    >track record times, tracks do. [snip]
    >If that's true, what are we to think about the turf course at Santa
    >Anita? 
    
    Part of the answer lies in what's been done to the turf course in
    recent weeks. After 2 world records and an increasing number of
    injuries on the turf course, Santa Anita's track superintendient
    decided that the course was too hard due to compaction. So, he brought
    in a device called the "Verti-Drain" to loosen the dirt under the turf
    course. The Verti-Drain is kinda like a giant mechanical garden fork,
    but the tines on this puppy are sixteen inches long! The machine sticks
    the tines into the ground, rocks them back and forth and then lifts
    them straight up so as not to disturb the turf itself. They also
    watered the course with a solid inch of water.
    
    The net result is that the jockeys say the course now has so give to
    it (which means it's easier on the horses' legs) and that race times are
    about 2 seconds slower than they were before the treatments.
481.867Hand TimesRDGE44::ALEUC3Thu Mar 27 1997 11:296
Races at both Brighton and Chepstow are hand timed. Of the 35
race tracks in the UK which hold Flat racing, only 15 have electric
timing. Dark ages or what!!

MartinK
481.868Welcome back!DECWET::JDADDAMIOThink softlyThu Mar 27 1997 16:3912
    Welcome back, Martin! 
    
    There was a time when I thought we'd lost you as you'd disappeared 
    from ELF and the phone book. Do you know what happened to the 
    horse racing notes conference?
    
    As to electric vs hand timing.. to be honest I find hand timed results 
    to be more credible as the electric timers seem to malfunction
    frequently. With the hand timed results, the typical practice is
    (or at lesat it was in the US when hand timing was the norm) to have
    3 people time the race from different vantage points and compare their
    results before declaring an official time.
481.869I was hidingRDGE44::ALEUC3Wed Apr 02 1997 12:0019
I've been lurking about on this side of the pond.

The Horse_racing conference seem to have disappeared, so I've created
a new version on RDGE44::HORSE_RACING (decnet 45777::) until I can resolve
what happened to the old version. It was never the most active conference,
although maybe if we can get a few hardened veterans together, we can give
it another go.

I've announced the changes in TURRIS::EASYNET_CONFERENCES note 4474


The whole area of race timing is a bit of a black art here in the UK.
It's seems quite routine for the groundstaff to move the running rails
during a 3/4 day meets, to save some new ground for the main feature, thus
changing the length of races which are supposedly over the same distance.

                             
MartinK
481.870Rails & meetingsDECWET::JDADDAMIOThink softlyWed Apr 02 1997 17:2210
    American grounds crews move the inner rail too. Actually, the inner
    barrier is often a hedge and they put temporary rails out from the
    hedge. However, since our meetings are usually measured in months, 
    they do it whenever the inner part of the course gets a bit worn.
    
    To be honest, I wish our meetings moved more frequently. The shortest
    important meetings seem to be the Keeneland meetings in Kentucky. They
    last about 3 weeks each in April and October. There are places (like
    the Dueling Grounds in Kentucky) which have meetings of 1 week or less
    but no major races take place at them.