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#1
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Maybe he cost himself second losing the photo, but he wasn't running down Summer Bird today. He was much the best. He was checked/steadied 5-6 times down the backstretch, shuffled back to 9th, yet still rerallied to win. Horses rarely win with that kind of trip.
You can say numerically the pace was fast but the fact is the frontrunners never came back (they ran a close 2nd and a close 4th) so he had to make a decision and he went for it when he did. The ride wasn't terrible.
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please use generalizations and non-truths when arguing your side, thank you |
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#2
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The Main Course...the chosen or frozen entree?! |
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#3
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#4
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I was trying to beat the favorites, but double clutched and backed off on the other son of Grindstone. I have many thoroughbred racing photos and art portraits in this room. Summer Bird as best I calculate is a great great grandson of Secretariat, and also a great great grandson of Alydar. He has Northern Dancer on both sides, and of course the immediate connections to Kentucky Derby winners Grindstone and Unbridled. Going way back, there is also Nashua and Mr. Prospector in the bloodline. I wish I would have won my wager, but other than the money lost I have no problem with Summer Bird's win. I'm not also 2nd guessing Borel's ride. He rode it as he saw it. No tears necessary for the connections of Mine That Bird. Winning the Kentucky Derby and hitting the board in all the Triple Crown races amounts to bragging rights for life. |
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#5
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Summer Bird could have finished several lengths better than he did with a less eventful trip. --Dunbar
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Curlin and Hard Spun finish 1,2 in the 2007 BC Classic, demonstrating how competing in all three Triple Crown races ruins a horse for the rest of the year...see avatar photo from REUTERS/Lucas Jackson |
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#6
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But if Dunkirk runs a 25 and 50 opening split, instead of a 23/47 split, then does he still have enough punch left with the speed of the track carrying him to the win, staying ahead of Summer Bird? Why is nobody questioning the splits run by JV in a mile 1/2 race?
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The decisions you make today...dictate the life you'll lead tomorrow! http://<b>http://www.facebook.com/pr...ef=profile</b> |
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#7
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#8
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BTW my avatar Britney Spears said to say hi to YOU!
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The decisions you make today...dictate the life you'll lead tomorrow! http://<b>http://www.facebook.com/pr...ef=profile</b> |
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#9
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so personally I think those fractions are a deceiving. Dunkirk got a very good start and was out there running very comfortably. |
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#10
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#11
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The Main Course...the chosen or frozen entree?! |
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#12
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Dunkirk went wayyy too fast early. However he was at no disadvantage compared to the winner Summer Bird.
Summer Bird was only 4 lengths off the pace when they settled. Those 4 lengths of better pace set-up were cancelled out to some degree by Dunkirk's saving every inch of ground and being on an "easy" lead. In a 12 furlong race it is possible to go too fast AND be on an easy lead. (ulike say a mile race where if the horse is going too fast he is also going too fast to relax.) The best initial pace set-up was Mine That Bird who was unable to keep that awesome position late. and The best set-up of all horses for the entire race was... drumroll plz.... LUV GOV. He really appreciated his set-up. Everybody went too fast and he got to run 5th as probably the worst horse in the race. He is a bet against hopefully vs. allowance company next out. |
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#13
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The only horse with upside who truly figured to relish the added distance was Summer Bird, being the grinder that he is.
I don't blame anyone for playing the what if game... if Mine That Bird started his steady advance 1 1/2 furlongs later, I think we have at least a photo finish. But that's racing. |
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#14
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Funny how we all see it differently, I see it as if Kent D didn't get himself into a box causing him to check Summer Bird a few times down the backstretch and letting him run a little earlier within the horse's comfort zone, that 2 1/2 length win could have easily been 5 or more, even if MTB moved later as most seem to think he should have.
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#15
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Based on his post-race comments, there is little doubt in my mind that an overconfident Borel moved prematurely with Mine That Bird. Also, for a guy who has made reputation for riding the rail at Churchill, this quote from Pat Forde's column on the ESPN site has got to go down as one of the all-timers: Borel has made his name with rail-skimming rides and won both his Kentucky Derbies that way -- his ride on Mine That Bird was a ground-saving genius. Yet this time Borel was rarely near the rail, and when he made his move he was about four-wide on the turn. He said afterward that the rail was dead, which made it a perilous place to run. But winner Summer Bird spent much of his trip down the backstretch far inside. Perhaps if Borel had ridden a race on the Belmont undercard (instead of taking off his sole - albeit turf - mount), or even watched the races yesterday, he might not have reached such a foolish conclusion. I'm not saying that Mine That Bird would have won the race with a decent ride by Borel, but he was certainly hindered by his rider yesterday. |
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#16
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#17
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#18
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The Main Course...the chosen or frozen entree?! |
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