Belmont Selections

10 06 2011

Race 6: Grade 1 TVG Acorn

I Want My TVG

The TVG Acorn was placed at the front of the Pick 6 sequence, and this would appear to be at least partially due to the presence of  #2 Turbulent Descent.  The daughter of Congrats is 5 for 6 lifetime, losing only to Zazu last February (whom she promptly returned to defeat next out).  She won’t offer much value at 3/5, but she looks like a worthy favorite and would figure to be very tough to defeat in this race.  She’ll be a single on many Pick 6 tickets and for good reason.  Fellow handicapper Derek Simon has made a few counterpoints regarding the Acorn that are worth checking out, so for those of us singling on the heavy chalk we may find ourselves in Dire Straits attempting to get our money from nothing and our bets for free.

#4 It’s Tricky could be an interesting choice, assuming you are comfortable drawing a line through that last effort in the Gulfstream Oaks.  I think she may be a better horse than either #1 Her Smile or #3 Savvy Supreme, even if the latter can control things from the front end.   All of this sets up what appears to be a very chalky opening to the stakes exotics for the day, so why not spice things up a bit by adding in the longshot of the field underneath at 10/1?  #5 Victoria’s Wildcat is only a neck away from reeling off 4 straight wins since switching to the dirt, and has progressed through the Grade 3 ranks in the process.  She’s improving, has worked well, and at 10/1 I think she’s worth a shot in the underneath slots.

Exacta: 2/4,5

Trifecta: 2/4,5/3,4,5

Race 7: Grade 2 True North Handicap

If (like me) you consider chestnuts to be the most striking of thoroughbreds, the Grade 2 True North is the race for you with 6 of 8 horses sporting the dapper reddish-brown hue.  The formidable coupled entry of Anthony Dutrow runners breaking from the inside and outside (chestnuts both) have earned slight morning line favoritism at 2/1 and would appear to be logical horses you’d have to cover on the exotics.  #1 D’funnybone is best going another furlong, and #1A This Ones For Phil, while very fast, is lightly raced in the last year and a half.  I don’t think they can be considered slam dunks and I’ll make an attempt to beat them in my exacta/trifecta plays.

#3 Trappe Shot (also a chestnut) for trainer Kiaran McLaughlin is my top choice here.  The son of Tapit was 2nd in the G1 Haskell last summer while routing, and has been dangerous on this track and at the distance.  I still think he could have a future going 2 turns as well, but for now the connections seem content on sprinting.  I’ll also take a chance with multiple G3 winner #5 Calibrachoa (not a chestnut) on top in search of slightly greater value.  He’s won four straight before the recent break but will have to bring his best to win this.  #2 Wildcat Brief (another chestnut) could round things out rolling late for and underneath placement.

Exacta: 3,5/1,3,5  

Trifecta: 3,5/1,3,5/1,2,3,5

Race 7: Grade 2 Woody Stephens

There is no Woody Stephens, only Zuul!!!

Looking over the Woody Stephens field, I couldn’t help but remember the line in Ghostbusters just before the Stay Puft Marshmallow Man lumbered his way on screen.  ”The traveller has been chosen!”  That would seem to be a fitting euphemism for this year’s race, given the names of  two logical win candidates in this field.  Unfortunately, they are the top choices on the morning line.

#1 Travellin Man cuts back to the 7 furlong distance that he prevailed at in the G2 Swale.  Of particular interest for this race is his propensity to finish ahead of #6 Little Drama in two of his recent starts (though also note he was defeated by #7 J J’s Lucky Train last out).

James Jerkens will send out #5 Arch Traveller, who made a significant speed figure improvement in his last start over the Belmont dirt.  Bounce players may be looking for a regression, but the son of Sky Mesa has won his last three races that did not include the likes of Dialed In or Shackleford.  We’ll go ahead and make him top selection for now, but will keep a close eye on the tote board to see which travel-themed entry gives us the best value.

As for #6 Little Drama, like the name implies he is capable of making things interesting, but he seems more likely to settle for an underneath placement.   A horse that might be being overlooked here is the outside runner #7 J J’s Lucky Train.  As previously noted , he’s finished ahead of the favorite in the last effort, and has also beaten another of today’s rivals, #2 Justin Phillip (who is still seeking his first stakes victory).  I’ll be adding this one to my exotics and hoping for a possible price.

Exacta: 1,5/1,5,6,7

Trifecta: 1,5/1,5,7/1,5,6,7

 Pick 4 (Races 8 through 11): 1,5,7/1,2,5/4,7 /1,5,6,9,12

Race 9: Grade 1 Just A Game

Outside of the contentious feature race of the day, the Just A Game may be the best betting race of the sequence.  It’s certainly among the most difficult to decipher.  Many times handicappers will search for a key race to serve as a barometer when measuring closely ranked contenders.  While we don’t have that here, we do have what might be considered a key horse, as 6 of the 9 runners show a recent tilt against Never Retreat, with varying degrees of success.

Morning line favoritism has been awarded to #2 Aviate, who skipped over the Churchill surface on Derby day to win her first U.S. race (losing her U.S. debut to, you guessed it, Never Retreat).  The Churchill turf was listed as firm that day, but I think there was a little give in the ground and this daughter of Dansili would likely enjoy a little moisture if the heavens decide to open up.  She has trained over the Belmont turf within the last week and certainly is a serious contender you have to respect in the exotics, but as far as single race wagers go this race looks competitive enough to try and beat her at a price.

#1 Gypsy’s Warning heads out for trainer Graham Motion after a very disappointing 7th place finish in the G2 Jenny Wiley in mid-April.  Perhaps she just wasn’t fond of the Keeneland grass?  If you draw a line through that race, she’s a Grade 1 winner at the mile distance, although that was out at Hollywood.  A win for Graham Motion here would be totally mag (gypsy for magnificent), and 5/1 is a fair price in my opinion.   The rest of the field has taken turns beating each other and competing with Never Retreat, making them very difficult to separate beyond these top two.

I thought #5 Strike The Bell was a little interesting here at 12/1 with the always dangerous Ramon Dominguez aboard.  The daughter of Mizzen Mast seems to run her best at the mile distance and seems to do okay on the Belmont turf.  #6 Fantasia and #4 C.S. Silk are also logical contenders at decent odds.  #3 Amen Hallelujah is a near lock to hit the board, but I can’t play to her win as she hasn’t prevailed since last February.

Exacta: 1,2,5 (box)

Trifecta: 1/2,3,5/2,3,4,5,6,7

Race 10: Grade 1 Woodford Reserve Manhattan Handicap 

There’s a decidedly royal theme when looking over the field for the The Manhattan – which is fitting for a race marking the return of the U.S. turf king #4 Gio Ponti.  Gio will have to overcome the much ballyhooed Dubai bounce to prevail, but the 6/5 morning line favorite has been stateside for a while now showing 4 local works over the Belmont turf.  He’s thrived here before, winning 5 races and finishing in the exacta in all 8 attempts.  Just keep in mind that stranger things have happened as Gio lost this race last year to stablemate Winchester in a similar setup (prompting yours truly to declare Winchester “a repeater”).

To be fair, the rest of the field doesn’t look particularly difficult to overcome. We don’t have a contender coming in with form quite like Winchester did last year, but you may want to think about adding in #7 Prince Will I Am as a logical contender for top honors.  The son of Victory Gallop has quietly had a decent 2011 campaign with a victory at the G2 level and a respectable 5th in the G1 Turf Classic.

The other contenders that appear to have an outside chance include #6 Viscount Nelson, who would be more attractive to me if he hadn’t raced in Ireland as recently as 6/3, and #3 Windward Islands who appears to be a logical horse to use underneath in the exotics and could be a Falklands style thorn in the side of the other royals.  Lastly, for the feel-good story of the year, I’ll try to find a way to use #2 Bold Hawk on the bottom of my tickets.

Exacta: 4,7/3,4,6,7

Trifecta: 4/3,6,7/2,3,5,6,7

Race 11:  G1 Belmont Stakes

And down the stretch we come.  Every year it seems the end of the Triple Crown season gets here faster than before.  What a season it’s been for bettors as well.  Animal Kingdom and Shackleford lighting up the tote board in the Derby and Preakness?  Favorites failing in both legs so far?  One would expect that trend may continue here in the final 2 furlongs of the Belmont – a race which has not been particularly kind to Derby and/or Preakness winners in recent history.  That said, I do believe that #9 Animal Kingdom and #12 Shackleford have established themselves as the cream of the crop thus far.  Animal Kingdom in particular should get the Belmont distance without any trouble, but he’s going to need to be a bit closer up than he was in the Preakness as the Belmont does not traditionally setup well for a late closer.  Somewhere around midpack would be ideal, I would think.

Shack-attack drew fairly poorly to the outside, which means he may have to run a step or two quicker towards the first turn than they’d prefer.  His best chance would be to get clear and then try to slow things down, I would think.   As for the “world’s biggest Shackleford fan” here at home with me (my wife)?  She thinks he doesn’t have a good chance to win here due to the distance, and I’d tend to agree with her.  I’m still going to cover him in the exotics, but I’m definitely leaning elsewhere with my top selections.  As for the Animal?  Big chance – but the odds are too low to get excited about.

Looking elsewhere in the field, I thought #1 Master of Hounds was a logical horse to consider adding in at a square price of 10/1 on the morning line.  He finished respectably in the Derby (5th) and like the favorite should be able to handle the distance without too much difficulty.  I haven’t heard much about him this week though, and coupled with Animal Kingdom would make my selections a tad closer-heavy for the moment.

#6 Nehro is a fairly obvious contender to include on my plays.  To be honest, I’d probably make the fiddling emperor top choice if not for slight concerns I have about the distance and with respect to jockey Cory Nakatani’s ability to get a prime trip out of him.  That move he made in the Derby to challenge Shackleford looked like it was going to win the day, and a similar trip gets him first jump on Shackleford as the field enters the stretch, which should give him a big shot.  There’s not much value to be had though at 4/1.

I’m also going to add in #5 Brilliant Speed as the bomber play for my tickets.  Admittedly it’s a wing and a prayer, but I do love me some Dynaformers and I’d like to see trainer Tom Albertrani take a Triple Crown race like I thought he might do with Odysseus last year.  Hopefully, as has been rumored, he’ll be closer up early on and not just another late running closer in my selections.

Obviously then, if recent history is any indication, your likely winners will be the horses I’m not playing, in particular #2 Stay Thirsty, #4 Santiva, or #10 Mucho Macho Man.  I could make a case for these guys as well, but you know the drill – can’t pick ‘em all.

Exacta/Superfecta: 1,5,6,9,12 (box)





The Belmont needs a hero

30 05 2010

With one week to go until the 2010 Belmont Stakes, it’s time to get back in the saddle and start focusing on the race at hand.  Gone are the Derby and Preakness winners in Super Saver and Lookin at Lucky – and gone is most of the national media attention due to the absence of a Triple Crown being on the line.

With the 3-year-old division still essentially up for grabs – and with the bulk of the summer racing action yet to come – might the time be right for a colt to rise to the occasion?  Despite the lack of star power, the race itself could setup to be very intriguing.  The place horses from each of the first two Classics is back – Ice Box and First Dude.  Add into the mix dangerous looking runners like Fly Down and Stately Victor, and fan favorites Drosselmeyer and Uptowncharlybrown and suddenly you have the recipe for a pretty good betting race.

Here we take a humorous look at the plight of racing on the eve of the Belmont.  In this clip, an effeminate Setsuko plays the role of Otsu to Ice Box’s samurai – explaining the desperate situation and pleading with the son of Pulpit to return from the race triumphant.

It’s not quite Hitler and Odysseus – but few things are.

Enjoy!

Note:  If for some reason Youtube takes the above video down – which would be par for the course with my creations – there’s a backup version saved here on Daily Motion.

In case you’re wondering about the whole Otsu/Setsuko thing – no, I haven’t made one of my trademark faux pas and confused the gender of an effeminately named male again.  Think of it as a convenient (for this video clip) play on the fact that Setsuko is usually considered a female name in Japan.  I should also point out that no – I do not quite subscribe to the sentiments of Otsu/Setsuko in this video clip as I feel that Ice Box, First Dude, Fly Down, and Stately Victor are all capable of winning the race.

Which brings us to the most important part of the post – our first chance to gauge public opinion and see where the loyalties are lining up for the big race on Saturday.  You know the drill – sound off like you’ve got a pair!





It’s gotta be the shoes!

23 06 2008

Photos are now being posted at ESPN showing that Big Brown, the 3-year-old son of Boundary that took a run at the Triple Crown earlier this year, may have been running with a loose shoe during the Belmont.

http://sports.espn.go.com/espn/gallery/enlargePhoto?id=3457690&story=3456907

Rumor of the photos began trickling in earlier in the day.  The photos do show a loose left rear shoe.  This should not be confused with his already injured left front hoof with the much publicized patch/crack issue.

What kind of an impact this may have had on the colt remains in question, but clearly he didn’t fire his usual race that Saturday in New York.  Whether everything can be blamed on the shoe or some combination of the shoe, the heat, the trip that Big Brown received, and perhaps even a bit of heel clipping during the race will likely never be known. 

If true that his shoe was loose as it appears in the photos, Big Brown may have been running on a loose nail.  Yeah, the thought of that is enough to make you cringe a little bit.  Who knows?  Perhaps this happened when he seemed to clip heels?  The photos are purportedly taken within the first 200 yards of the race. 

WIll this mystery ever be solved? Probably not, but does anyone else find it ironic that our bids for Triple Crowns since Affirmed in 1978 have perhaps been foiled by a safety pin (Spectacular Bid in 1978 ) and a nail (Big Brown in 2008)? 

Sources:

http://sports.espn.go.com/sports/horse/news/story?id=3456907

http://news.bloodhorse.com/article/45846.htm

 





Big Brown is back to business

27 05 2008

Apparently we can all breathe a deep sigh of relief – at least for the moment.  After the disturbing news broke this weekend that Triple Crown hopeful Big Brown had a quarter crack in his left-front hoof, nearly everyone following the sport was thinking, if not saying “here we go again!”

It is with great pleasure than that we learn of Big Brown’s return to the track this morning under the eye of trainer Richard Dutrow. 

Source: http://www.ntra.com/content.aspx?type=news&id=32727

Apparently his shoes have been fit so as to reduce the pressure on the quarter crack, and the colt has been anxious to get back out on the track.

Hopefully his march towards unification of the Triple Crown will continue without further drama.  I can’t say this wasn’t anticipated, as the colt has had foot problems his entire career, but getting the bad news over the weekend with the Belmont just a couple of weeks away felt too painfully close for something to go wrong now.  We’ve been down this road too many times before and come oh so close.  It’s time to knock the Triple Crown right out of the park. 

Perk up there, big feller, for but once in a lifetime does so much hope and expectation travel on the brittle hooves of an animal like you. 





The ghosts of Belmonts past

22 05 2008

My good friend George sent me an email today that started the old hamster wheels churning in my cobweb filled brain.  Not sure if anyone saw this or not, but Rick Dutrow is apparently a bit upset with Edgar Prado, who rode longshot Riley Tucker in the Preakness, for what he feels was an attempt to box his colt in during the 2nd leg of the Triple Crown.

Source:http://sports.espn.go.com/sports/horse/triplecrown08/news/story?id=3406888

The story gets a bit dramatic when you consider that Prado is Dutrow’s regular go-to guy for his best mounts.  In fact, Prado was supposed to be Big Brown’s jockey, but due to an injury appears to have missed his date with destiny aboard the super-colt. 

All this got me thinking.  We’ve got the Belmont coming up.  Big Brown’s biggest challenger is likely going to be the lightly raced Casino Drive.  Casino Drive needs a jockey.  Could it be? Nah, you don’t think…could Edgar wind up on him?  We’ll have to wait and see, I guess. In the meantime…

Flashback for a moment to our last bid for a Triple Crown with Smarty Jones in 2004.  Many racing fans still feel that Alex Solis and Jerry Bailey aboard Rock Hard Ten and Eddington ran the race in a fashion that sought to ensure that Smarty Jones would be defeated.  In their defense, these guys aren’t paid to simply let Smarty roll on to history.  Sometimes I think folks forget that rather conveniently.  Regardless, Smarty was never able to settle, and in the end was caught by the longshot Birdstone in the final 100 yards. 

Birdstone was of course ridden by none other than Edgar Prado!  Can you see where this is going? 

How ironic would it be if Prado were able to play the roll of spoiler in yet another Triple Crown quest – a quest he was seemingly destined at one point to be on himself?

Need more irony? Don’t forget that it was Kent Desormeaux who rode Real Quiet in 1998. Real Quiet had of course won the Kentucky Derby and the Preakness, the second year in a row that trainer Bob Baffert had placed himself in striking distance of a Triple Crown.  Real Quiet was sent by Desormeaux perhaps a bit too early, and was in front by as many as 7 lengths before Victory Gallop started swallowing up ground behind him.  At the wire, Desormeaux’s Real Quiet had been bested by a nose.

That’s the kind of defeat that you just know has to haunt a guy. Will Kent Desormeaux overcome the ghosts of 1998 and unify the Triple Crown for the first time in 30 years?  Or will Edgar Prado get a shot to play spoiler again as he did in 2004?  One thing’s certain, things could get a bit more interesting here as Belmont week approaches. 

I’ve no idea if Prado has a good shot or not to get the call on Casino Drive. I suppose he’s just as likely as anyone else. 

For all the Casino Drive fans out there, don’t forget that Birdstone entered the 2004 Preakness as the “horse for the course” angle, having won the Champagne Stakes as a 2 year old.  History would seem to be on the side of Casino Drive following his run in the Peter Pan Stakes and considering his bloodlines (being a half to Jazil and Rags to Riches – Belmont winners both).





Why I’m backing Big Brown

20 05 2008

Now that it’s official and Big Brown has a tremendous chance to enter the history books as the first Triple Crown winner in 30 years (since Affirmed in 1978), the controversy has reached fever pitch amongst horse racing’s faithful.  On one side stand the folks who desperately wish to see him prevail - like a great boxer unifying the heavyweight belts.  On the other side stand the folks who desperately want to see someone, anyone, defeat the colt and upset his bid for the title.

Admittedly, I’ve been back and forth between both camps as the year has progressed.  I ranked him as the #1 colt on the Derby trail immediately following his win in the Florida Derby back in March, and left him there all the way through to Derby week.  Then, for some reason I’ll never quite fully fathom – likely a bad case of “I know – let’s play beat the favorite!” – I decided to officially pick against him in the Derby even though I knew he was the best horse of the field.  Big mistake.  I knew he was the only shot we had for a Triple Crown winner in the field, but figured I’d take one stand against him and see how he responded to the challenge of being drawn 20 wide.  We all know what happened next.  I’ve commented a few times (quietly, since I don’t wish to rile people up, and comments like this always seem to) that he looked a lot like Barbaro to me in that Derby.

Heading into Preakness week, I had decided I was back on the colt’s bandwagon.  I wanted to be a part of history and to come see a colt challenge for a Triple Crown.  What I saw left my jaw firmly dropped to the floor.  I want to be clear about this before I go any further – my support of Big Brown does not reach the insanity levels of some.  I think he’s a fantastic colt, and it’s clear now that he’s head and shoulders above the rest of the crop he’s faced.  We threw the 12 hole at him in the Florida Derby and it couldn’t phase him.  We saw him face the 20 hole in the Derby and he ran ‘em off the track.  We saw him travel to Pimlico on 2 weeks rest and he looked like he could’ve won by 10 lengths if he wanted to. 

What I think we have to be cognisant of when talking about Big Brown, is that while he’s run into what appears to be a very weak overall field of 3-year-olds, and it doesn’t look like we’ll get to see anyone look him in the eye and make him “earn it” in the stretch, the colt has overcome every obstacle he’s faced in brilliant fashion.  WIth this in mind, I’ve decided that I”m not going to knock the colt for what he can’t control.  I’m not going to diminish his greatness by clamoring on about what he hasn’t faced.  It would be easy to do so.  After all, the folks who question the competition he’s faced are right. Instead, I’m just going to give him credit for that which he has accomplished – which come three Saturdays from now could be the first occurrence of a Triple Crown winner since the first month of my existence. 

This doesn’t mean to suggest that I don’t want to see a great race.  Nothing could be further from the truth.  I’d be tickled pink (wait…did I really just say that? tickled pink???) to see Casino Drive turn in a thrilling stretch run, or to see one of the other colts step up and make a name for himself.  Even so, I’d be all the more happy to see Big Brown do what he always does – win the race. 

Perhaps there’s a part of me that thinks our sport desperately needs the excitement of a Triple Crown. Overall interest in the sport is at an all-time low.  Great tracks around the country are closing or are threatening to cease operation wherever you look.  Even my beloved Pimlico has a real shot of someday soon losing the Preakness.  Such an outcome is painful for me to even consider.  I simply can’t imagine a May in Maryland without a Preakness. Add to this the black-eye  the sport took publicly with the tragic death of Eight Belles in the Derby, and we had reached something well beyond critical mass. 

Even at the Preakness on Saturday, you could feel that everyone was still suffering from something like a punch in the stomach.  The cheering was a bit reserved.  The betting lines not quite as long.  The euphoria of years past severely blunted by recent events. The rains on Black Eyed Susan day seemed like some sort of manifestation of the outlook of racing fans around the nation.  Everything seemed doom and gloom.

But then something changed.  Saturday dawned and the sun radiated high in the Baltimore sky.  When the moment for the big race came, you could feel the excitement in the air.  The magic was back.  The minute Big Brown made his move and it was clear that Gayego was beginning to back out of the race, an energy swept the crowd and quickly filled the void that so desperately needed filling.  Suddenly people remembered what the game was all about.  They remembered just what it was they had come hoping to see.  They were within sight of greatness. 

How often can we really say that in our lives?  How often are we truly blessed by being able to observe such greatness?  Sure, he’s no Secretariat or Cigar – heck, he’s probably not even close to Curlin, but we were seeing a performance by an athlete that looked so transfixingly powerful, so magnificent, and so glorious in his strides that you couldn’t possibly turn away.

In the moments immediately following the race, folks in the crowd started turning to one another. Stranger to stranger.  Horse racing fan to horse racing fan.  A certain child like giddiness filled their voices.  “Did we just see a Triple Crown winner?” The question passed from mouth to mouth among those tightly huddled together.  People knew they had just witnessed something special – and that years from now (especially if droughts like the past 30 years repeat themselves) they would be able to tell folks they saw a Triple Crown winner in one of his finest moments. 

Of course, anything can happen a few weeks from now at Belmont.  The distance will once again be a concern, going a full mile and 1/2, including a stretch that has seen a laundry list of magnificent horses go down to defeat.  Real Quiet losing by a nose in 1998.  Charismatic breaking his leg with a furlong to go in 1999.  War Emblem, Funny Cide, and Smarty Jones all coming within inches between 2002 and 2004.   Even my beloved Curlin knew defeat last year in the stretch to the filly Rags to Riches.  It’s a daunting stretch that has seen countless dreams disappear like so much smoke.  

There’s certainly no guarantee that this year will be any different, but for what it’s worth I”ll be throwing my voice out in support of Big Brown as the field turns for home.  I’m sick of the drought.  I’m tired of the insignificance the sport has garnered in recent years.  I’m not saying a Triple Crown win by BIg Brown will be  a cure-all for the sport (in fact, beyond a temporary TV ratings boost if the media hype is successful, it probably won’t fix anything at all), but at least for a moment the entire world will be watching. If all goes to plan a lightly raced colt named BIg Brown will deliver thoroughbred racing to the promised land where it once thrived, showing all where greatness truly lives.  It’s right here in the heart of every racing fan.  It’s in the majestic horses themselves, and it’s in the eyes of those who stand in awe when they recognize that greatness in front of them.  That’s what this game’s all about to me.  And that’s why I’ll be cheering Big Brown home three weeks from now in the Belmont.  

Who’s with me?





The 2007 Triple Crown Series: A Brief Recap

13 11 2007

Sometimes I think we take for granted when truly amazing moments in sports happen in front of our eyes.  Lost in all the obsession of getting a Triple Crown winner for the 1st time in 3 decades was the fact that we had 3 individually incredible races this year.  True, we didn’t get a dominant horse (at the time), but what we did get specifically were runs for the ages in the Preakness and Belmont, along with a celebrity in the making with Kentucky Derby winner Street Sense.   It was a series for all times and was comprised of arguably the best crop of 3 year olds we’ve ever seen. Read the rest of this entry »





Curlin: 2007 Horse of the Year

13 11 2007

For my first post on this blog, I’ve decided to share the video I made to pay tribute to the 2007 Horse of the Year: Curlin.   

Curlin is without a doubt my favorite horse of all time.  I realize that is a bold statement, but from the moment I first saw the replay of his run in the Arkansas Derby I knew he was a special colt.   Going into the Triple Crown I had him pegged as the horse that could win it all for the first time in 30 years.   Thanks to an impossible trip in the Kentucky Derby and a “kiss of death” post position, his chance to claim that honor evaporated.   However, rather than give up he fought on gamely to take 3rd place when many other horses would have surrendered. Read the rest of this entry »








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