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#21
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![]() The Canadian Spaceship program has been scrubbed.The mere mention of one mile made it dizzy.
In its place,they are now buidling a pseudo universe in the vast,unpopulated bread basket area of Canada. When completed;they will land Canadian Helicopters on the moon and Canadian Satellites ( giant jacks) will pierce the far reaches of Andromeda. Should be fun. |
#22
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![]() For a simple minded person 1:03 may be considered slow for 5 1/2 furlongs. Let's just assume they ran the last 1/2 furlong in a more than respectable 6 seconds. Can you do the math and guess how fast they ran 5 f, still think that's slow?
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#23
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While 57.3 on dirt might be real nice, on most turf courses, that's crawling. For instance, in the first race on the last day of Toga, 25k claimers went 55.2 and 101. In other words, your idea of yielding giving fast times is actually more than a full two seconds slower. In the fourth race that day, a minor stakes, the 5f and final times were 54.4 and 100.4. That's almost 3 full seconds faster than your blazing fast idea of what a yielding turf course is. Are you really this stupid? |
#24
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#25
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Dude, 3 seconds difference at a short sprint distance is enormous. By the way, I forgot to mention. Everytime one of your posts comes up on my screen, the theme music from that old Dragnet show plays. Duhhhmb, duh dumb dumb. Duhhhmb, duh dumb dumb DUUUUMB. |
#26
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#27
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Splitting hairs. |
#28
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![]() Do you think he has any idea that he has no idea what he's talking about?
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#29
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![]() What does 3 seconds difference with another race have to do with 1:03 and change being run on a course that is closer to firm then soft? Could the idiot be any less clear.
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#30
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#31
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![]() I know those two words (I and idiot) have the same meaning to you, but me thinks it was necessary to fix another typo for you to clear up any possible confusion others might have.
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#32
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![]() The Canadian Space Program is a much more fun read..
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#33
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![]() Don't tell me you can't tell the difference if a course that is truly soft or not? My original point was it is high time horseracing progressed and used another system, preferably measuring numerically, the depth of moisture in turf races. That way the "Indian Charlie's'" of the world can have a better and accurate representation of the cut in the ground, rather than making blanket statements that all races with moisture in the ground are either soft or yielding.
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#34
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#35
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But that doesn't change the fact that you've spent two pages trying to point out that a course that's playing about 3 seconds slower at 5.5f is somehow NOT noticeably slower than it would have been on a different footing, ie "firm." That's hogwash, and to use your words, "don't tell me you can't tell the difference." |
#36
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#37
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![]() The fleet of 2 Canadian Spaceships will be dismantled.The disassembled pieces parts will be melted down and reconstructed into huge monoliths to be used in the Canadian upcoming movie entitled ,2001:How Canadian Time Flies.
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#38
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Would 7 seconds be enough to these silly arbitrary designations we have to make sense? 10 seconds? If they had run 5.5f in 1:34.4 would it then have been yielding enough for you to accept these clearly far-too-simpleton-for-your-taste designations? If a "firm" turf course was producing times of, let's say, 1:00.3, and a "yielding" course producing times some 15 lengths slower, it certainly shouldn't matter what job someone has to be able to see that rolling your eyes about the latter being called "yielding" may just be someone with too much time to pass today looking for a "debate" of any kind, yea? Those are the designations we work with, and the differences in times on the two courses listed as "firm" and as "yielding" seems perfectly appropriate to me to label them as such, no distortions necessary. If you want to change the game and rename turf conditions with your special moisture meter, then as I said, that's great and let's get used to that -- that's an entirely different conversation. But given the framework from which we're working in, this is an abjectly frivolous and silly argument to even be having, because it makes the most perfect kind of sense when actually looked at from a time v. condition of turf course perspective. If you really believe that a difference of that kind in a 5.5f race doesn't indicate a significant amount of give in the ground compared to a dry and firm course, then nobody can change your mind. But that, in my estimation, is not so much a problem of an American inability to rate turf courses as it is your ability to understand it. |
#39
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![]() ABC News projecting Ohio, Michigan, Illinois and North Dakota all going with 'The horsey is dead'...
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#40
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