#21
|
||||
|
||||
Glad to see Flat Out finally win a major stakes race. I've been following him since his maiden win at Fair Grounds over Country Day. It looked like he might be a player in the Fair Grounds/Oaklawn handicap division this year after his win off a nearly 19 month break, but then he went back on the shelf. DRF reports that he cracked a shoulder after the Arky Derby, and has been dealing with quarter cracks. Hope his connections can keep him together the rest of the year.
__________________
Still trying to outsmart me, aren't you, mule-skinner? You want me to think that you don't want me to go down there, but the subtle truth is you really don't want me to go down there! |
#22
|
||||
|
||||
Quote:
|
#23
|
||||
|
||||
the ark derby was better than it appeared/really
|
#24
|
||||
|
||||
Flat Out, his performance, was better than it appeared to be either on paper, or going by what people said about it, at the time.
Is that better said? |
#25
|
|||
|
|||
I played Flat Out in the Foster and basically just forgot to yesterday. My loss. But the reason I was really on to him had to do with the interview Steve had with Brian Pochman from Lone Star before their big race.
Pochman revealed that every Kentucky horseman he talked to before the LSP Hcp asked whether or not Flat Out was coming to the race. He found that so odd because Flat Out, at that point, was just an allowance winner off a long layoff, and that it was somewhat indicative that this horse had been looking really solid in the mornings at Churchill. |
#26
|
||||
|
||||
Quote:
I would think the reason (any sharp Kentucky) horsemen (with at least one halfway ok horse) most likely wanted to know if FO was going to Lone Star - was because the Lone Star Park Handicap had a 300K purse, Graded status, and handicap conditions ... and it only ended up as a field of five with Flat Out. If Flat Out doesn't go - it's a field of four and becomes a very attractive spot to run. |
#27
|
|||
|
|||
Quote:
|
#28
|
||||
|
||||
You're not making a lot of sense here, Pat.
A competent trainer is one who pays a great deal of care in placing his horses and finding the best spots possible. To do this, you need to worry a lot about who is going where. If I had an older alw quality horse nominated - and I was interested in taking a shot in a 300K handicap that might only draw three or four other horses - sure, I'd be calling every jockey agent, every turf writer I can think of asking about Flat Out or any other similar contender. If every trainer was so affraid of running against Flat Out because he was supposedly working so good - why didn't all of these trainer and clockers bother to bet him? When I was winning those fantasy contests, once a week I would call up trainers and ask them what spots they were considering for a certain specific horse. You can't even manage a friggen fantasy stable properly without knowing who is going where and how tough it might be to finish 3rd. |
#29
|
|||
|
|||
Think what want to think, Doug. Maybe we will disagree here regardless
|
#30
|
|||
|
|||
Not sure how the Prioress has managed to maintain its Grade 1 status. Other than Indian Blessing, the roster of winners over the past 10 years or so is quite forgettable.
|
#31
|
|||
|
|||
Quote:
If you want to debate this, fine, but a little honesty never hurts.
__________________
Just more nebulous nonsense from BBB |
#32
|
|||
|
|||
Quote:
2003: House Party 2004: Friendly Michelle 2005: Acey Deucey 2006: Wildcat Bettie B 2007: Dream Rush 2008: Indian Blessing 2009: Cat Moves 2010: Fanny Freud 2011: Her Smile Like I said earlier, Indian Blessing is a legit Grade 1 horse. Dream Rush? Maybe on her best day. None of the others were worthy of the inflated Grade 1 rating this race has somehow managed to keep. THAT is the truth. |
#33
|
|||
|
|||
Quote:
The Gradings system is far from perfect, and there are many races that deserve reevaluation, but considering it is the only 6F Grade 1 for this division, I think it's grading is relatively warranted, if not moreso. What about the slew of synthetic races that got their Gradings when they were dirt races? Is the Spinster a better Grade 1, or worse, than the Prioress, since the switch in surfaces? Simply put, you can't fairly cherry pick. The discussion needs to be had in its entirety. I am not saying I am against a serious regrading of US races. But, this race always draws these kinds of comments, and they are not as defendable as it may seem on the surface, and the Grading is far more justifiable than any number of annual races.
__________________
Just more nebulous nonsense from BBB |
#34
|
|||
|
|||
Quote:
I get the argument about relative merits, but if you compare the depth of the Prioress to races like the Test or the La Brea (the other grade I sprints for 3YO fillies), the Prioress annually seems to come up short of those two. Perhaps this is unfair, but the Prioress is more often like a prep for the Test than an "end" in itself, and I'm dubious of preps being Grade Is (i.e., when they made the Fountain of Youth a Grade I for a short period of time a few years ago even though it's a prep for the Florida Derby). Not that this year is the best example, but the other thing that has hurt the Prioress in many years is its close proximity to the Azalea at Calder. Both races feed the Test nicely, but they also dilute each other. |
#35
|
||||
|
||||
Quote:
If the Test and the La Brea are drawing better fields a big part of it is the 7f distance each race is carded at. That will draw in several route types on top of the sprint population. The La Brea also has calendar position over the Prioress, being late in the year so that it draws in a lot of well meant comebackers, a few late bloomers, and also has the benefit of an extra 5 months whereby some horses that weren't accomplished around the time of the Prioress, suddenly are major stakes winners. |
#36
|
|||
|
|||
Quote:
Maybe it's just a matter of how you view "Grade I" racing. To me, Grade I ratings should be reserved solely for "championship" quality races. (There are far too many that have the designation these days, but that's another discussion.) While the Test has generally had deep fields worthy of the designation, the Prioress has often not had fields of similar depth or quality. It's not to say that the Prioress is a "bad" race, I just don't believe it's worthy of a Grade I designation. |
#37
|
|||
|
|||
Quote:
|
#38
|
||||
|
||||
Quote:
But that doesn't mean there's some sort of Derby trail-like road to get them to the race. It's a 7 furlong sprint. I think its safe to say for the most part that horses that run in races like the Acorn, Prioress, Azalea, etc. before the Test, are in those races to win. In addition, since most of the same horses shows up from race to race within the division, you have to think that all the Grade 1 races in a given division are affected. If the Prioress has been weak for years now, then I'd presume that the Test itself hasn't been so hot, either. Where's the list of the last 10 Test winners? We already know that a good chunk of them were Prioress winners, too. Quote:
|
#39
|
|||
|
|||
Quote:
|
#40
|
||||
|
||||
All this talk about downgrading g1s is pointless right now, because due to the lack of quality horses lately, there really aren't many grade 1 caliber races being run anywhere in the USA.
And by the word 'many', I'm being generous. |