#1
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Thoughts about Belmont Day at Saratoga . . .
1. Was the track souped up or was it just the weather that made it so fast?
2. Sierra Leone would have won if he was't sandwiched out of the gate. That had to throw him off and if the race would have been a mile and a half either here or at Belmont, he was closing at the wire and I believe he would have taken the race in another 1/4 mile. 3 What's the timelone for getting racing back to Elmont, NY? Oh I love Saratoga big time and the crowd was amazing but it just seemed odd. 4. It was a dissapointing race to me for all the above reasons, which is how I felt about The Derby too. 5. I don't even remember who won the Preakness, but I don't remember a lot of things any more. So far, the racing year has been uninspiring to me.
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The wind of heaven is that which blows between a horse’s ears – Arabian Proverb |
#2
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Seize The Gray Won Preakness
Tthe Sonic Boom U Heard After Was The Colorado Cheetah Roar 🐆 |
#3
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The Belmont Stakes is supposed to be at Saratoga in 2025 also.
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"The more I learn about humans, the more I love horses" |
#4
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Quote:
Don't know whether the track was souped up or not. Maybe it was the horses that were souped up. One horse that definitely did not seem to be souped up was White Abarrio. I hope his trip to Saudi was not the end of him. Not sure whether that has anything to do with it or not, but it seems that some that make a trip to that part of the world are never the same. Arrogate was one, but I guess to be fair, lots of hard races probably also take their toll after a while. Last edited by cal828 : 06-09-2024 at 10:42 AM. |
#5
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Nothing behind 3rd at the first call won on Friday so after the True North it was going to be another Casey Jones type of day.
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#6
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I was really impressed with the performance of Mindframe. Prior to the race, I recognized that he was talented and had performed very well in his only 2 career starts. However, I thought that he was up against too many more experienced and race toughened horses to have much of a chance. Never run in more than a NW1X and going up against the Derby winner, Preakness winner, Derby runner up and other winners of a number of graded stakes. Never run anything close to the distance. That he ran so well and was trying very hard at the end suggests to me that he could be a horse to be reckoned with in the future, perhaps the Travers. Todd knows what he is doing.
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#7
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Quote:
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#8
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DonGuido, there is no doubt in my mind that the track was souped up but maybe I'm just bitter?! Let's go to a more reliable source - the over-blessed Chad Brown as quoted in the Thoroughbred Daily News on Saturday night with additional insight from Sierra Leone's jockey, Flavien Prat :
Though he appeared to lug in a bit in the Belmont stretch, that did not cost him the race. Brown noted that the track conditions worked against late-runners. "It's a hard track to close ground on," Brown said. "Really, only one race today someone closed. This would be the second one that closed. It's disappointing the way they had the track today, to be honest with you. It doesn't surprise me that a speed horse won the race." After the rough start, Brown said that Sierra Leone was unable to deliver the type of strategic acceleration he needed to get back into the race. "My horse, he had an opportunity to improve his position on the backside and he really didn't do it," Brown said. "It was a tough beat." Once he got Sierra Leone settled and running into the first turn, Prat figured things were OK. "They were going quite fast so I was happy where I was," he said. "I wish I could have gotten myself a little closer down the backside, but I was not able." Passing the quarter pole, Sierra Leone was on the move, but he found trouble again when Protective (Medaglia d'Oro) forced him to go very wide. "The horse inside kept pushing me out," Prat said. "I wish I could have just cleared him and get going. I was not able to do that. We got to the turn and I took him back to the inside and he came running, but he ran out of room." Me again. Guess who was on Protective and pushed Sierra Leon out even further in the stretch to further insure he got beat? His former jockey - Tyler Gaffalione - that's who. And for the record, my hopes were mainly riding with Seize the Gray who I figured would like the speed-favoring track the most. Here's the link to article I quoted in the Thoroughbred Daily News: https://www.thoroughbreddailynews.co.../tdn240609.pdf |
#9
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That Sound You Heard
At The Finish Line Were Teardrops Falling From The Eyes Of Mine 😿 Tho My Heart Was Wishing Reality Then Set In Just Too Much To Overcome For Seize The Gray To Win 💔 |
#10
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😸p S
PS
Without the bumping and interference at the start I think SIERA LEONE Woulda Won Anyone else agree with that? |
#11
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AGREE! Same thing I said in my first post.
__________________
The wind of heaven is that which blows between a horse’s ears – Arabian Proverb |
#12
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Sierre Leone stumbled rather badly out of the gate. On that track, race over.
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#13
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Chad said he wasn't surprised that a speed horse won the race. I wasn't surprised that a speed horse won. I was just surprised by which speed horse won. Figured it would be Seize the Gray, but I think the race was a little bit different than the Preakness in that there were one or two more "speed" horses than in the Preakness. All that said, I usually don't recognize the subtleties of track bias except when it is really very obvious that every race is won by a certain type of runner. One of these days, hopefully, I'll learn to make these observations before the race and not after. I keep trying, but it seldom works out.
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#14
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We used to accuse CD of getting it like a highway for the Derby.
At least it wasn't sitting there for an hour in the sunshine after getting sealed. |
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