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  #1  
Old 03-21-2011, 06:22 PM
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RolloTomasi RolloTomasi is offline
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Originally Posted by Indian Charlie View Post
On the Line was more than able to sit and pounce. He could blaze away, or sit back off the lead. It made no difference. If he fired that day, he wins. To this day I'd rate him one of the top five sprinters I've seen.
The question then becomes would he have fired? IIRC, he had been routing in the fall, not sprinting, and also was coming off bad, recent beats at Oak Tree in CA and Aqueduct in NY. Seems like he was a tired horse at that point, not a horse sitting on a BC Sprint win.
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  #2  
Old 03-21-2011, 11:21 PM
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Originally Posted by RolloTomasi View Post
The question then becomes would he have fired? IIRC, he had been routing in the fall, not sprinting, and also was coming off bad, recent beats at Oak Tree in CA and Aqueduct in NY. Seems like he was a tired horse at that point, not a horse sitting on a BC Sprint win.
His most recent start before the BC was a 5th by 2 at AQU going a mile, with the winner, Dispersal, going in 132.4

The race before that, he did get his ass kicked, but it was going 8.5 at SA, in which he ran 3rd by 8 to the red hot Present Value and the mighty Rahy. 140 3/5ths was the winning time.

The race before that he won in 133.2 at DMR.

The race before that, also at DMR, he was 2nd by 1/2 to the very underrated Olympic Native. 120 1/5th was the winning time. In third, another whopping eleven lengths back, was Sam Who.

The race before that, also DMR, he won by 3 going 6f in 108 flat.

Yeah, he would have handled Dancing Spree.
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  #3  
Old 03-22-2011, 10:51 AM
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King Glorious King Glorious is offline
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Everyone has an opinion and Java Gold was mine. Had he won th JCGC, he was a lock. But he didn't so it can be reasoned, I think, that the loss of that race cost him the title. Ferdinand ended up winning, even though he lost six of his 10 races that year. One of the losses was to Broad Brush in the SA Hcp, the same horse that Java Gold beat in the Whitney. I know, he got 14 pounds when he did it. The one thing that I took from the Travers was that while the ability of Alysheba and Bet Twice was clearly compromised by the conditions, the form of Cryptoclearance wasn't and Java Gold handled him easily. By measuring how much better he was versus Cryptoclearance against how much better they were, it's clear to me that he was at the very least, on the level with them. He also handled Gulch a couple of other times and Gulch was a high quality horse.

I thought that neither Alysheba or Bet Twice clearly established themselves as the best of their crop and in fact, never really seperated from it. Lost Code came from the minor league circuit and ran them to a draw in the Haskell. Polish Navy handled Bet Twice in the Woodward (Gulch was second). Alysheba ran decent enough in the Super Derby before his excellent Classic.....but if Java Gold is punished for losing the Gold Cup, why isn't Alysheba for his Belmont? Don't tell me he was tired from the exhusting series because the three horses that beat him ran in all three races two and in fact, Gulch won the Met Mile during the series. Was it the Lasix issue? I'd give that more consideration as both of his inexplicably bad races came in NY.

You can have your opinion that Java Gold didn't deserve HOY and I respect your opinions. But I will never be convinced that he wasn't the best of that class or that he didn't prove on the track that at the very least, he was their equal. If not Java Gold, the two best choices were Manila and Theatrical, not Ferdinand, Alysheba or Bet Twice.
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  #4  
Old 03-22-2011, 01:01 PM
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RolloTomasi RolloTomasi is offline
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Originally Posted by King Glorious View Post
Everyone has an opinion and Java Gold was mine. Had he won th JCGC, he was a lock. But he didn't so it can be reasoned, I think, that the loss of that race cost him the title. Ferdinand ended up winning, even though he lost six of his 10 races that year. One of the losses was to Broad Brush in the SA Hcp, the same horse that Java Gold beat in the Whitney. I know, he got 14 pounds when he did it.
Other notes that don't suit:

1) Ferdinand lost to Broad Brush in the Big Cap by a nose, giving the latter--who would go on to carry heavy assignments the rest of the year-- 3 lbs.

2) Broad Brush emerged from the Whitney with strained ankle ligaments, effectively ending his season and career--while giving 14 lbs.

Quote:
The one thing that I took from the Travers was that while the ability of Alysheba and Bet Twice was clearly compromised by the conditions, the form of Cryptoclearance wasn't and Java Gold handled him easily. By measuring how much better he was versus Cryptoclearance against how much better they were, it's clear to me that he was at the very least, on the level with them. He also handled Gulch a couple of other times and Gulch was a high quality horse.
I agree. Java Gold, Alysheba, and Bet Twice were consistently better than Cryptoclearance and Gulch all season long. Not sure how this separates Java Gold from the other two as a leading contender for HOY.

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I thought that neither Alysheba or Bet Twice clearly established themselves as the best of their crop and in fact, never really seperated from it. Lost Code came from the minor league circuit and ran them to a draw in the Haskell.
Huh? The 5 most important races for 3yos during the year are the KY Derby, Preakness, Belmont, Haskell, and Travers. They combined for 4 of those, adding 3 second place finishes to boot.

How was the Haskell a draw, by the way? Lost Code, a very good horse in his own right--who did not run in the classics, was 3rd. Should Burning Roma have been considered for champion 3yo in '01 for running 3rd to Point Given?

Quote:
Polish Navy handled Bet Twice in the Woodward (Gulch was second).
Bet Twice was injured in the Woodward.

Quote:
Alysheba ran decent enough in the Super Derby before his excellent Classic.....but if Java Gold is punished for losing the Gold Cup, why isn't Alysheba for his Belmont?
He was punished...he wasn't HOY or, more importantly, a Triple Crown winner.

He did win champion 3yo, though.

Quote:
Don't tell me he was tired from the exhusting series because the three horses that beat him ran in all three races two and in fact, Gulch won the Met Mile during the series. Was it the Lasix issue? I'd give that more consideration as both of his inexplicably bad races came in NY.
Why couldn't he or Bet Twice or Gulch or Cryptoclearance (the latter 3 all of whom finished the year with off-the-board finishes) be tired?

But let's put that aside, and look at the converse. Why should Java Gold get a pass for passing the Kentucky Derby, the Preakness, and Belmont, never mind the BC Classic? Clearly he and oft-injured Polish Navy, with their belated starts reaped the benefits in the fall.

The fact that the classic-starting 3yos were still slugging it out relatively successfully at that point is a testament to their durability. The fact that Alysheba, alone, was the only classic 3yo to go on and win a major stakes in the fall (Super Derby) and just miss in the final big race of the season (the BC Classic) separates him from the rest of his crop.
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  #5  
Old 03-22-2011, 12:19 PM
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Originally Posted by Indian Charlie View Post
Yeah, he would have handled Dancing Spree.
Maybe...if they ran the BC in the summer.

He goes from running 3 huge races (all at Del Mar) in July and August and suddenly can barely hit the board in two races in October just a couple of weeks before the BC. Not to mention the two horses that just beat him, Dispersal and Sewickley, were also in the race.

Maybe the cutback would have woken him up, but on paper he was a horse with declining form.
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  #6  
Old 03-22-2011, 01:29 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by RolloTomasi View Post
Maybe...if they ran the BC in the summer.

He goes from running 3 huge races (all at Del Mar) in July and August and suddenly can barely hit the board in two races in October just a couple of weeks before the BC. Not to mention the two horses that just beat him, Dispersal and Sewickley, were also in the race.

Maybe the cutback would have woken him up, but on paper he was a horse with declining form.
He was certainly a better horse going 6 than longer. If you remember the horse at all, you'd know that.

A fifth by 2 going a mile run in 132.4 was a perfect setup race for him.
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Old 03-22-2011, 01:32 PM
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Indian Charlie Indian Charlie is offline
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Chris M.s ride on Sheba in the Belmont is why he lost.
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  #8  
Old 03-22-2011, 01:55 PM
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Originally Posted by Indian Charlie View Post
He was certainly a better horse going 6 than longer. If you remember the horse at all, you'd know that.

A fifth by 2 going a mile run in 132.4 was a perfect setup race for him.
On The Line was good at a lot of distances. Most of his stakes wins were in fact longer than 6f.

He was a good sprinter, of course, that isn't the issue. It was whether he was in form or not.

Dispersal outdueled him in the NYRA Mile through very fast fractions (6f 1:08), putting him away and holding off the good closer Sewickley.

We know from his close 3rd place finish (despite getting bushwacked out of the gate) that Dispersal was on his game in the BC, too.
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Old 03-22-2011, 02:05 PM
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Indian Charlie Indian Charlie is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by RolloTomasi View Post
On The Line was good at a lot of distances. Most of his stakes wins were in fact longer than 6f.

He was a good sprinter, of course, that isn't the issue. It was whether he was in form or not.

Dispersal outdueled him in the NYRA Mile through very fast fractions (6f 1:08), putting him away and holding off the good closer Sewickley.

We know from his close 3rd place finish (despite getting bushwacked out of the gate) that Dispersal was on his game in the BC, too.
Most of his stakes races were, in fact, longer than 6f.

I don't see how a 5th by 2 in 132.4 is really that bad off form, especially as he was better at the shorter distance of 6f.

As for being outdueled, there was no way he was going to get the lead in the BC sprint, and that was to his advantage. I always felt he was best sitting a short distance back off a fast pace. Something that was likely to happen in the race.
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  #10  
Old 04-11-2011, 09:17 AM
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The Indomitable DrugS The Indomitable DrugS is offline
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Two horses have already won back from out of Maclean's Music race three weeks ago. Four have run back so far.

* 2nd place finisher Flightofalifetime (95 Beyer against Maclean's Music) - won a fast MSW race under a hand ride on Saturday at Santa Anita. He earned a 94 Beyer.

* 5th place finisher Competent (81 Beyer) ran a 73 Beyer when 4th in MSW next out. He "stumbled at the start"

* 6th place finisher Star Dance MD (beaten 16 lengths with a 69 Beyer) - won on the class drop to MCL $75,000 - he ran a 73.

* 9th place finisher Forward Appeal (beaten 30 lengths with a 32 Beyer) came back to finish 2nd to Star Dance MD and ran a 64

Not surprisingly - the number is holding up.
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