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  #21  
Old 08-20-2011, 08:20 AM
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Riot Riot is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by RolloTomasi View Post
Come on, horses break down at every class level. In some instances, they even break down during a routine gallop. "Speed" is not the only significant factor.
I didn't say it was. I was referring to mechanisms and physics of injury, and yes, the fast horses - especially young ones - are more prone to have injuries caused by their speed (which involves lever strength, bone maturity, etc) blowing through physiologic limitations (stress fracture origins, muscle tears, strain/sprain, etc).

Yes, all horses break down at all levels. There is a difference between cause the P2 fracture in the 5-year-old claimer at Penn and a catastrophic fractured sesamoid in a 2-year-old colt.
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  #22  
Old 09-01-2011, 04:51 PM
Alan07 Alan07 is offline
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Overdriven, winner of the Grade 3 Sanford, will not race again this year due to bone re-modeling, according to trainer Todd Pletcher.
http://www.drf.com/news/saratoga-overdriven-done-year
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  #23  
Old 09-01-2011, 05:07 PM
freddymo freddymo is offline
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Originally Posted by Riot View Post
I didn't say it was. I was referring to mechanisms and physics of injury, and yes, the fast horses - especially young ones - are more prone to have injuries caused by their speed (which involves lever strength, bone maturity, etc) blowing through physiologic limitations (stress fracture origins, muscle tears, strain/sprain, etc).

Yes, all horses break down at all levels. There is a difference between cause the P2 fracture in the 5-year-old claimer at Penn and a catastrophic fractured sesamoid in a 2-year-old colt.

Dr Riot why do you waste your time with Rollo, he wouldnt know a horse from donkey. He acts like he has actually touched a horse other then in a petting zoo?
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  #24  
Old 09-01-2011, 10:56 PM
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RolloTomasi RolloTomasi is offline
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Originally Posted by freddymo View Post
Dr Riot why do you waste your time with Rollo, he wouldnt know a horse from donkey. He acts like he has actually touched a horse other then in a petting zoo?
If it wasn't for me, how else would we be audience to such a masterful display of back-pedaling? Any faster in reverse and something might have blown apart.

Physiologically, that is...
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  #25  
Old 09-02-2011, 08:06 PM
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Originally Posted by RolloTomasi View Post
If it wasn't for me, how else would we be audience to such a masterful display of back-pedaling? Any faster in reverse and something might have blown apart.

Physiologically, that is...
Excuse me? Your failure to be able to understand anything beyond the utterly simplistic, "all horses break down" isn't backpedaling on my part.

Here, for those other posters that would like to actually learn something about horses and the different types of injury they can get, and why "the good ones" so often seem to get injured:

I pointed out the well-known bone physiologic truth, " ... the fast horses - especially young ones - are more prone to have injuries caused by their speed (which involves lever strength, bone maturity, etc) blowing through physiologic limitations (stress fracture origins, muscle tears, strain/sprain, etc)."

Overdriven has exactly this type of "young, fast" horse injury: "Overdriven, winner of the Grade 3 Sanford, will not race again this year due to bone re-modeling, according to trainer Todd Pletcher. 'Basically, he has some changes to his cannon bones that were signs of immaturity,' Pletcher said. 'No fractures, no surgery necessary, we just decided we’d give him some time off and focus on Gulfstream.' "
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Last edited by Riot : 09-02-2011 at 08:31 PM.
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  #26  
Old 09-03-2011, 01:18 AM
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Originally Posted by Riot View Post
Excuse me? Your failure to be able to understand anything beyond the utterly simplistic, "all horses break down" isn't backpedaling on my part.
Interesting. I say that any horse at any class level and any level of training is at risk to be injured and that is "utterly simplistic". A broad generalization, for sure, but certainly not a simplification.

And yet saying "gotta run the fastest to blow it apart" is apparently some sort of dense, scientific treatise.

Touche.

Quote:
Here, for those other posters that would like to actually learn something about horses and the different types of injury they can get, and why "the good ones" so often seem to get injured:
Oooh, great. Not only do we get the completely condescending preamble, but also hopefully a re-wording of your definitive mantra, put in layman's terms for us peons who can't wrap our heads around "gotta run the fastest to blow it apart".

So I guess we're in for a nice, verbose, boring lecture from some well-reputed and board-certified clinician who has all the answers to the issues and dilemmas that plague Thoroughbred trainers.

Let's all be silent and listen:

Quote:
Overdriven has exactly this type of "young, fast" horse injury: "Overdriven, winner of the Grade 3 Sanford, will not race again this year due to bone re-modeling, according to trainer Todd Pletcher. 'Basically, he has some changes to his cannon bones that were signs of immaturity,' Pletcher said. 'No fractures, no surgery necessary, we just decided we’d give him some time off and focus on Gulfstream.' "
Wait. WTF? A quote from Todd Pletcher? He's the resource we need to consult to "learn" about the complex process (for some of us lesser folks, anyways) of racehorse injury?

Actually, you may be on to something there.

In fact, maybe you should have bolded the name "Todd Pletcher" instead of some of those other fancy buzzwords. That's probably a more important factor in predicting injury than anything that has to do with speed, bone density, and the like.

Now, if you'll excuse me, I'm gonna go download the Vet's List from all available racing jurisdictions. From what I've learned here, it's a better tool than the DRF or the Sheets for identifying the fastest horses.

Class dismissed!
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  #27  
Old 09-03-2011, 01:36 AM
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Rollo, your brilliant treatise encompassing all that you know about equine orthopaedic medicine speaks for you:

Quote:
RolloTomasi wrote:

Huh?
And for those that don't want to stay as dense as Rollo about why "the good fast ones" seem to break - it's because they do. They have to, indeed, run fast to blow apart; and fast horses have different types of injuries than slower horses.

Even if Rollo can't strain his brain enough to believe a basic concept every veterinarian learned second year of vet school is true, and he is more worried about peeing on trees than admitting he's clueless about a basic racehorse veterinary truism, let alone learn something about horses and injury.

For example, one of many on this subject:

Quote:
Bone: Official Journal of the International Bone and Mineral Society Received 7 December 2005; received in revised form 9 May 2006; accepted 25 May 2006. published online 22 August 2006. Verhayen, Price, Lambden, Wood

Abstract

In order to gain insight into those training regimens that can minimise the risk of fracture in athletic populations, we conducted a large epidemiological study in racehorses. Thoroughbred racehorses provide a suitable model for studying fracture development and exercise-related risk factors in physically active populations. They represent a homogeneous population, undertaking intensive exercise programmes that are sufficiently heterogeneous to determine those factors that influence injury risk. Daily exercise information was recorded for a cohort of 1178 thoroughbreds that were monitored for up to 2 years. A total of 148 exercise-induced fractures occurred in the study population. Results from a nested case–control study showed a strong interactive effect of exercise distances at different speeds on fracture risk. Horses that exceeded 44 km at canter (≤14 m/s) and 6 km at gallop (>14 m/s) in a 30-day period were at particularly increased risk of fracture. These distances equate to ca. 7700 bone loading cycles at canter and 880 loading cycles at gallop. Fifty-six fractures occurred in the subset of study horses that were followed since entering training as yearlings, when skeletally immature (n=335). Cohort analysis of this data set showed that, in previously untrained bones, accumulation of canter exercise increased the risk of fracture (P≤0.01), whereas accumulation of high-speed gallop exercise had a protective effect (P<0.01). However, increasing distances at canter and gallop in short time periods (up to one month) were associated with an increasing fracture risk. All training exercise involves a balance between the risk of fracture inherent in exposure to loading and the beneficial effect that loading has by stimulating bone cells to produce a more robust architecture. Results from our study provide important epidemiological evidence of the effects of physical exercise on bone adaptation and injury risk and can be used to inform the design of safer exercise regimens in physically active populations.
But maybe you'd better check the liver, Rollo. Of course, if you want to discuss bone-loading cycles or Wolff's Law, or what type of horse gets a butterfly fracture of the cannon versus a spiral fracture, speak up and add your brilliant knowledge regarding how and why horses get injured to the list. We are awaiting your instruction. Oh, wait - for you, that consists only of listening to the popular trainer rumors on blog sites. Brilliant!
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Last edited by Riot : 09-03-2011 at 02:09 AM.
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  #28  
Old 09-04-2011, 12:43 AM
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RolloTomasi RolloTomasi is offline
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Quote:
For example, one of many on this subject:
Hilarious. Did you even read this abstract before you cut and pasted it?

The study was conducted on the premise that the Thoroughbred population is homogenous (ie, all racehorses are equal). No acknowledgment of the silly "fast" horse versus "slow" horse cowboy logic you're trying to purport. According to the study, the specifics of the variable training regimens employed by horsemen influenced the likelihood of injury.

[Insert back-pedal here]
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  #29  
Old 09-04-2011, 07:00 AM
freddymo freddymo is offline
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Dr Riot, you are attempting to teach a peon about something way to advanced for his brain or lack there of. You are a vet he is maybe an assist pharmacist(guessing) who parades himself as a well meaning know it all.. He is baically like Matt Damon's character Will in Good will Hunting an abusived kid who reads alot of books. Effectively just a walking talking posting cut and paste machine that attempts to reverse engine what he thinks he understands.

You are a vet. He is the guy at OTB with some nutty theory that the government killed JFK or that men never walked on the moon. Who could take him seriously a drunk?
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  #30  
Old 01-26-2012, 01:45 PM
Rudeboyelvis Rudeboyelvis is offline
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Steve, anyone... Has anybody heard a thing about him?

The last I can find was an NTRA CC where Mike Bellows asks about him Sept 28th 2011 - where TAP said, "He's doing exceptionally well and, you know, he's just getting some time off but he's down at (JJ Crupe)'s in Ocala and he reports that the horse looks fantastic and we expect to have him back joining our stable when we get down to Florida."


http://www.ntra.com/content/display/...-tele/NDg5NDA=

Pretty amazing that a horse that showed so much at the SPA can just fall off the radar like this...
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  #31  
Old 01-26-2012, 01:55 PM
freddymo freddymo is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Rudeboyelvis View Post
Steve, anyone... Has anybody heard a thing about him?

The last I can find was an NTRA CC where Mike Bellows asks about him Sept 28th 2011 - where TAP said, "He's doing exceptionally well and, you know, he's just getting some time off but he's down at (JJ Crupe)'s in Ocala and he reports that the horse looks fantastic and we expect to have him back joining our stable when we get down to Florida."


http://www.ntra.com/content/display/...-tele/NDg5NDA=

Pretty amazing that a horse that showed so much at the SPA can just fall off the radar like this...
last I heard they were shopping a stallion deal over at Spendrift with all the other laimos
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  #32  
Old 01-26-2012, 02:03 PM
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Kasept Kasept is offline
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FROM WELSCH'S PLETCHER 3YO OVERVIEW ON JAN. 7:

Overdriven, who is owned by Mike Repole, remains on the farm in Ocala and may not return to the track in time to get on the Kentucky Derby trail.

“I just didn’t like the way he was moving last summer so I sent him home,” said Pletcher. “It wasn’t anything serious, nothing surgical, just some minor stuff. He still needs 30 days more on the farm and we might be a little too far behind schedule to make the Triple Crown.”
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  #33  
Old 01-26-2012, 02:35 PM
Rudeboyelvis Rudeboyelvis is offline
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Thnx Steve- don't know what to make of that explanation other than something 'big time' is off with him and he's probably done. Too bad.
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  #34  
Old 01-26-2012, 02:59 PM
freddymo freddymo is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Rudeboyelvis View Post
Thnx Steve- don't know what to make of that explanation other than something 'big time' is off with him and he's probably done. Too bad.
I would expect Pletcher to have this horse ever right again he isnt exactly the king of rehab.
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  #35  
Old 01-26-2012, 03:20 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by SOREHOOF View Post
I met Pletcher at Saratoga last year between races on CCOA day. He was very cordial, took the time to speak with me, not the least bit arrogant. Class act. He gets the better horses to start with.
Nice that he talked to you but that does not make him a class act.

To me this particular TAP storyline is getting old. If he were my trainer I would drive my horse trailer over to his barn, load my horses, and head for the hills.
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