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#22
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I'm sorry - but improving 13+ lengths over a career top on an established form - with just four weeks rest - that is no "devolpment curve" - not even close. I'm not saying it was illegal medication that led to one of the great form reversals of all-time .. I don't know what it was ... but it sure wasn't a development curve. When is the right time and where is the right place? never and nowhere? |
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All ambitions are lawful except those which climb upward on the miseries or credulities of mankind. ~ Joseph Conrad A long habit of not thinking a thing wrong, gives it a superficial appearance of being right. ~ Thomas Paine Don't let anyone tell you that your dreams can't come true. They are only afraid that theirs won't and yours will. ~ Robert Evans |
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Another question is what says she was not talented at 2?? So if Aldebutante or Rampillion are running high 70s Beyers late this year we should consider them talentless?? I honestly don't see where those numbers suggest she had no talent.
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In her tragic case... never and nowhere is probably right. I don't have an issue, ever, with retrospective analysis of form as it's a great learning experience, but I just don't get your comparison to this obvious Scott Lake special.
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please use generalizations and non-truths when arguing your side, thank you |
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It wasn't that she devloped - it was how much she developed, how unexpected the development was, how incredibly rare her form is, and how she ended by collapsing with fractures in both ankles while galloping out well after the wire. Quote:
There is no stand to make. Something happened in four weeks time that improved Eight Belles in a dramatic way. When you look at the way she went out - it makes the form reversal impossible to ignore. That's all. |
#29
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You are walking people down a dangerous spectulative road. Can you be right? of course...Do you know the situation well enough to do such speculating especially when you are smart enough to accurately twist some of the facts to make your case..NOPE and therefore I think its to dangerous to lead people in such a direction. Basically you could ask Steve to get Jones on the air and ask him how 8 belles got so good so fast. Maybe we get an answer which helps enlighten the subject vs. darkening a bad day with more crap |
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Additionally, Beyer figures have become so massaged on a daily basis it's IMPOSSIBLE to say conclusively whether one number is truly accurate and repeatable. As CJ noted, even the Derby Beyer this year is questionable at best.
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please use generalizations and non-truths when arguing your side, thank you |
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Two additional points on this...
Recapturetheglory ran 22 points faster than his prior effort and 16 points better than his previous dirt top in the Illinois Derby. Why no question of this? The Bris figures (increasingly becoming more useful than Beyers, and what I use when I don't have my own numbers) had Eight Belles running an 83, 86, 77 (not perservered), 91, and 99 (in the N2L) in the races in question. Not quite the startling form reversal that the Beyers would indicate.
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please use generalizations and non-truths when arguing your side, thank you |
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I'd rather use a blindfold and an abacus than resort to BRIS numbers. To be fair though, I couldn't use Beyer numbers blindly either.
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#38
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please use generalizations and non-truths when arguing your side, thank you |
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When I saw this thread yesterday, I took a look all of EB's races, from 11/30 on.
Here's what I found: 1) 11/30 wide both turns, widest backstretch, no cover, mild move 2nd turn, then backed up --- HARD TO TELL what lead she was on in the stretch, as she was not in the picture from just after they entered the stretch to just before the wire --- only way to tell is with the headon, which, as best as I can determine, is NOT available 2) 12/23 --- similarly wide both turns and backstretch (no cover) but made significant move to take the lead entering and was run down by a last mover (who came OUTSIDE of her). significant improvement AND didn't change leads, with VERY UGLY action That she ran 2nd with a similarly wide trip without changing leads, and being last moved, is a HUGE, but obvious, improvement. 3) 1/21 ----- INSIDE TRIP, changed leads, easily. She was still running green in the stretch, however. Improving horse, better trip, lead change results in a WIPEOUT effort. While the improvement was a huge one, it certainly was evident that the filly was improving. And anyone on top of it got a whopping 5:2. Mucho work, for those that tracked her, for little reward. Then again, we can debate the reason for her improvement, which is much more important than scoring. |
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Anyone who doesn't think she made a monster improvment in the race she won by 15 lengths, while not favored in the betting, with a conservative 100 Beyer .. I just don't know. I'm not saying every horse who makes a mind-boggling form reversal, and proceeds to repeat the race over and over, ends up breaking down on the track. They don't. The vast majority of them disappear though. Alina, who was 2nd to Eight Belles in the Fantasy, is an example of a dramatic form reversal by a horse at a top level who hasn't yet tailed off. She fits the traditional mode of trainer change plus layoff .. Eight Belles doesn't. Bruce L Jackson trained In Excess, who was one of the better horses I've ever seen in my life - before anyone accuses him of being "a bum" like they did with Pino, who consistantly wins at about a 20% clip. |
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