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#1
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![]() The pace in the Preakness was a +4. Which means it was a pace that you would describe with words like: "fair" "even" "average"
Extreme paced races range from +20 or more (Insanely fast) to -12 or slower (very slow) The Kentucky Derby (+30) would be an example of the former, and Friday's Pimlico Special (-15) would be an example of the latter. When the pace is +4, it becomes an irrelevant factor in the analysis of a replay. And, as it turned out, it was an irrelevant factor, the winner did it from on the lead. The 2nd place finisher was in Mid-pack. The 3rd place finisher closed from dead last and was only beaten about 2 lengths. The decisive moment for Oxbow was when Kevin Krigger avoided a speed duel and allowed him to cross and clear his mount Goldencents. The loose lead was all Oxbow needed. Itsmyluckyday had a very wide trip on both turns, his sheet figures will look great, but that trip wasn't a big deal. He was second best. Rosie Naprovnik stayed true to Mylute's running style, and kept him positioned 10.75 lengths back at the first call, and the son of Midnight Lute made his usual spectacular turn move. This horse has always been haunted by his hanging stretch habits. He's a very good underneath horse. Of the top four, Orb was the only one with a little bit of a trip. Despite some unbelievably ludicrous comparisons (the AP actually printed that he "might be better than Easy Goer and Personal Ensign") Orb has never been much of a figure horse. In his gold standard performance on a fast track, he won the Florida Derby in a time slower than 3 different Todd Pletcher fillies at the same distance. Orb has a steady-grinding running style...and Joel Rosario rode him in the Preakness like he was supposed to be the best horse. With five and a half furlongs still to go, Rosario allowed Orb to split horses and make a little move to get closer to the pace. A longshot sprinter, Titletown Five was under restraint and waiting on Orb, and when Orb came to him, Julian Leperoux pulled the trigger and Orb got outmoved. Rosario never panicked and went to a big ride, but the early move for position flattened Orb out a little bit...and he "stayed on" to finish 4th. There was a big debate here after the Kentucky Derby, 'What if Orb had Normandy Invasions trip' ... well, I think the Preakness result did a lot to answer that debate. Orb may come from off the pace like Easy Goer, but he's no Easy Goer. If you asked Easy Goer to split horses with 5.5 furlongs out, and a sprinter like Titletown Five is there waiting on him, he'd have not only held level position, but he'd have accelerated past him in dazzling fashion and the early move wouldn't have flattened him out. Circumstances allowed the chinks in his armor to finally be exposed, but Orb is obviously better than his 4th beaten 9 lengths result yesterday will suggest. Still, had Rosario been more patient, I'm not sure it would have mattered enough. The result quite possibly could have been just a more competitive 4th place finish. However, he rode him like he was on a 3/5 favorite. Javier's ride in the Derby was far more questionable, especially consider the +30 pace and Normandy Invasions running style! Rosario's Preakness ride was like going for the pin instead of playing it safe and laying up. A lot of 3/5 favorites with his running style get away with similar moves everyday, at all class levels, just because they're clearly better than their opposition. That wasn't the case yesterday. |
#2
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![]() Nice write up Doug, thanks....
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#3
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![]() Quote:
I thought Joel gave a nice ride. Orb just couldn't do it yesterday. Lost every cent every which way but oh I do still love this horse. Thanks for your insight. |
#4
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![]() How many times in the past 30 years have the fractions been slower? These were the slowest fractions I can ever remember. Oxbow ran the half in :48 3/5. Let's look at the fractions over the last several years in the Preakness. Last year they went :47 3/5. The year before that :46 2/5, the year before that :46 4/5, the year before that :46 2/5, etc.
That being said, I still think the best horse won. This was actually the slowest final time in the Preakness in 50 years. However that could be somewhat misleading because the track was on the slow side yesterday. Last edited by Rupert Pupkin : 05-19-2013 at 02:11 PM. |
#5
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![]() Quote:
Cheap claimers can run 21 and change at Turf Paradise because the surface is lightning fast. Whenever you see a turf course get yielding, good horses can go 25 and change and 51 and change and easily get caught. Like I said, the pace was a +4. That means the pace figure was 4 points faster than the final time figure. |
#6
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![]() Quote:
The Preakness fractions were ridiculously slow yesterday. If you ran those same horses there 20 times under those exact conditions, that is the slowest half you would ever see. The average half (under those exact track conditions would be somewhere around :47 2/5. That would be the average. If everyone gunned, they might go :46 2/5 or :46 3/5. If they let someone crawl alone on the lead (like yesterday), they would go :48 3/5. That would probably happen 1 time out of 20. Beyer obviously thinks the track was very slow yesterday. He gave Oxbow a 106. I think that number is way too high but we all have different opinions. |
#7
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![]() Quote:
The spread between the pace figure and final time figure is computerized. Algorithms. On a 100 point scale, the pace figure for the Preakness is 4 points faster than the final time figure. It doesn't matter if you think the race should get a 106 Beyer or a 96 Beyer...the pace figure will be a little faster than the final time. If you want to see what an actual slow pace going 9.5 furlongs at Pimlico looks like, here's a chart of Friday's Pimlico Special: http://www1.drf.com/drfPDFChartRaces...20130517&RN=12 This race was a -15. The very good Eighttofasttocatch went 49.91 for a half mile. |
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