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  #1  
Old 12-02-2008, 06:49 PM
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Riot Riot is offline
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Default "He beat nothing"

"Well, but he beat nothing".

That's all I've heard from many handicappers over the past five years, and I've already heard it plenty in regard to the emerging two-year-olds of this season. Mostly from handicappers that are not old enough to have seen horses from the 1960's - 70's - 80's etc. Handicappers who yawned about Barbaro, who yawned and sighed through the horses of the Street Sense Derby year.

So what does it take, nowadays, to be "something"?
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Old 12-02-2008, 06:55 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Riot
"Well, but he beat nothing".

That's all I've heard from many handicappers over the past five years, and I've already heard it plenty in regard to the emerging two-year-olds of this season. Mostly from handicappers that are not old enough to have seen horses from the 1960's - 70's - 80's etc. Handicappers who yawned about Barbaro, who yawned and sighed through the horses of the Street Sense Derby year.

So what does it take, nowadays, to be "something"?
um er..3 100 plus beyers these days..thats it.lol
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  #3  
Old 12-02-2008, 09:46 PM
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Originally Posted by hoovesupsideyourhead
um er..3 100 plus beyers these days..thats it.lol
I laughed
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Old 12-02-2008, 07:01 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Riot
"Well, but he beat nothing".

That's all I've heard from many handicappers over the past five years, and I've already heard it plenty in regard to the emerging two-year-olds of this season. Mostly from handicappers that are not old enough to have seen horses from the 1960's - 70's - 80's etc. Handicappers who yawned about Barbaro, who yawned and sighed through the horses of the Street Sense Derby year.

So what does it take, nowadays, to be "something"?
I think it's a matter of perspective. If you compare them to what we were used to seeing over the past two decades, it's very hard for today's horses to be something. Very few come up to the levels of some of the best we got a chance to see over the years. And the few times we do get one, it's extremely rare to get more than one in a given division so it's hard for anyone to beat anything else we'd call "something".
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Old 12-02-2008, 07:30 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Riot
So what does it take, nowadays, to be "something"?
A win in the Delta Jackpot!
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  #6  
Old 12-02-2008, 08:12 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Riot
So what does it take, nowadays, to be "something"?
Important enough for Tom Durkin to announce it over the PA system?
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Old 12-02-2008, 08:37 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by RolloTomasi
Important enough for Tom Durkin to announce it over the PA system?
I understand what you are saying, however if they would run them more often, against each other and into their 4-5 yr old years
then everyone would have a better idea to judge so-called top 3 yrs. after the triple crown and 6-7 races alot of these horses are retire to stud or hurt.
however i was impress with this years 3 yrs old that ran this past week-end.
court vision tale of ekati, harlem rocker,etc.. they look like they could become some top notch older horses if they would run them like. spec-bid affirmed seattle slew and so forth.
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Old 12-02-2008, 08:57 PM
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It's tough to gauge the babies but with older more established horses it makes sense to say "he beat nothing" when you watched the final strides of this year's Woodward.
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Old 12-02-2008, 09:59 PM
Dr. Watson Dr. Watson is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by RolloTomasi
Important enough for Tom Durkin to announce it over the PA system?
Twun-Tee Three annn Four !!! Scorching Fractions!!
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  #10  
Old 12-02-2008, 10:01 PM
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At least, with YouTube, people can go watch all the baby races, career races, for great horses of the past.
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Old 12-03-2008, 09:18 AM
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Aren't we breeding a different horse today? I think that makes it tough to compare today's horses with the greats of yesteryear.
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Old 12-03-2008, 11:25 AM
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Breeding a different horse ... I think the bloodlines are perhaps quite narrowed and concentrated compared to 50 years ago.

As a cause I think we have to remember how horses were bred then: a farm would stand it's own stallions, and breed them to their own and client mares on the farm, with a few trade-outs here and there to friends, with 150 covers resulting in a much smaller foal crop of 40 or so (each mare would be covered 2-3 even 4 times until she got pregnant). And the mares bred were strong producers. Nobody wanted to mess with the 2-3 months it took to get junk pregnant.

Quality over volume made money and kept a farm alive, and quality meant a farm produced horses that could run and make money for buyers.

In the early part of the last century alot of horses were being brought over from Europe for infusion into American stock (Nasrullah was brought over from Ireland specifically because he was an outcross that was a proven runner producer). That trend then reversed in the latter part, with American stock being prized and snapped up by non-Americans, thus we lost alot of our best bloodlines, created during the 1940-50-60's, to Europe.

Now there are big stallion stations, we have ultrasound to pinpoint ovulation, we put mares under lights Dec. 15, thus that 150 covers puts 120-130 foals on the ground; then the stallion goes to the opposite hemisphere and does it again (as travel is extremely easy nowadays).

There is a "world pool" of genetics, rather than American, English, French, Irish, etc., and it's fairly diluted.

It's easy now with vet management to get any mare pregnant on one cover, even the more difficult ones, and it seems breeders do indeed now breed any mare standing still - even junk mares, poor race record mares.

Because for the past 20 years, you could sell just about anything.

Too many foals out there by the same stallions and their brothers and their sons (even the good ones), so too hard to make money as there isn't a limited supply of a particular genetic line, we're swimming in it. And it's breed to any mare around.

Now volume makes money, quality can only be purchased by the upper % of buyers with enough money to pay excessive price points (it is an open market where the buyers set the prices). So fewer dedicated breeders have access to a variety of genetics, and a variety of good genetics. It's been years since breeders could dependably go to an auction and know they'd be able to buy what they needed for their farms, genetically and conformationally. They were priced out many times.

Compare the Coolmoore worldwide operation with Claiborn, for example. That business model was outstanding for Coolmore, but it killed the Claiborns.

So where are the exceptional horses? Alot of times they were the result of hybrid vigor, a "nick", and that's pretty homogenized nowadays. Maybe breeders have different opinions than this outside watcher, I don't know.
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