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Oh boy..one of my pet peeves!!! Thanks! (5.00 / 3) (#184)
by FlaDemFem on Sun May 04, 2008 at 12:54:33 AM EST
It's not the breeding that needs changing, it's the investment banker mentality that pervades racing now. When I started out in racing, yearlings were broken to saddle in the fall of their yearling year and then turned back out for the winter. Then as two year olds, they were brought in to start their training in March, or early April up north. They would start racing the last two weeks in July, and the big debut races for two year olds were at Saratoga in August. Horses back then routinely raced into their 5th year, 4th if they were big stakes winners and were going to stud. They also raced often, up to once a week. The average was once every ten days. The more expensive horses ran a bit less often.

These days they don't turn the yearlings back out, they start them in training so they will be ready to breeze, run at racing speed, for an eighth of a mile at the two year old in training sales in Feb. These sales were usually in August when I started. Some in July. Now the first races for two year olds are in mid-April. Some of those horses aren't actually two yet, and they are racing on open knees some of them.

The thing is that a horse's joints close at certain ages, just like people's do. Ankles close as yearlings, knees at about 2 1/2. Breezing on open knees is one of the stupidest things a trainer can do. Or used to be. The spine closes at 4, which why you aren't supposed to jump a horse under 5. That used to be a rule in all horse shows. Isn't anymore, though.

Anyway, when the yearling prices skyrocketed, I mean some fool paid $13.1 million for a horse that hadn't been even broken to saddle, let alone raced!! And he never raced, either. Broke down in training and went to stud. They also started using steroids to bulk up the horses..steroid bloat makes them look great. It also puts useless weight on their legs. Useless in that it isn't muscle or bone that is useful in racing or anything else the horse will be doing. And the steroids can interfere with breeding..Genuine Risk and Cigar are two examples of horses whose breeding ability was compromised by steroids. Of course, they also compromises the immune system including the inflammatory response, which contributes to bone density among other things.

Then after the people pay a lot of money for a horse that has been trained before his body is ready, and medicated to the max, unlike the olden days when no trainer would dream of breezing a horse with open knees and meds were illegal, they can't wait to get their money back and send the horse on to the races.

When Thoroughbred racing gets back to being about the horses and not about how much you can flip them for at a young age, and then get your money back from that, then they will go back to the old fashioned way of doing things and the young horses will be sounder and will not break down in such huge numbers. Being old fashioned is good for some things, like horses in horse racing.

To illustrate the market..a couple of years ago, two people bought a yearling for $495,000, the following Feb. they sold him for $16 million. The colt was named The Green Monkey after a bar at Raffles in Singapore. He pulled a gluteal muscle in training and was out for months. That means he sprained his ass...then he came back and managed to not win any races, the best he did was fourth in an allowance race. Now he is at stud. See what I mean about the investment banker mentality?? It's not about horses and horsemanship any more, it's about profit margins.

[ Parent ]

Thanks for breaking out age and growth (none / 0) (#190)
by nycstray on Sun May 04, 2008 at 02:59:47 AM EST
I commented in here somewhere a mention about dog ages and when they should be active in sport because of growth and bone maturity. For Dalmatians, you wait until approx 18 months or so before you start ramping up the distance and/or intensity. You need to find other ways to wear out those younger ones until their bones/joints are set. Power walking is a good option along with mind games and short activity sessions through out the day. I actually had to work with my Dal because she ran so hard she would crash over her front feet. She basically would out run herself. Freaked me out. At the time, I always made sure I had enough money for a double knee blowout on hand. Gotta give her credit, all the crashes (some into trees!) and she came out in one piece!

Hopefully, they'll soon consider and raise the age for these races. It should be about the horses, not the $$$. Nothing more beautiful than watching an animal doing what it was bred to do.

[ Parent ]

If they went back to the old schedules (none / 0) (#200)
by FlaDemFem on Sun May 04, 2008 at 08:57:02 AM EST
and got rid of the steroids and painkillers, that would probably do it. They are working on getting rid of the steroids. Now if they will just change the sales dates and racing dates to later in the year..sigh.

[ Parent ]
Fascinating (none / 0) (#202)
by gyrfalcon on Sun May 04, 2008 at 11:16:05 AM EST
Thank you for the education!


[ Parent ]
Thanks FLA... (none / 0) (#210)
by kdog on Mon May 05, 2008 at 12:28:35 PM EST
As a huge racing fan I found your post very educational.  I always suspected drugs and diluted blood lines were to blame for the frailty of todays thoroughbred...I had no idea about horses being rushed to the track before they are ready.

I felt sick after the race...Eight Belles ran her heart out, she was the only one to even sniff Big Brown....a great performance that sadly ended in tragedy.  

Pretty lame of PETA to try and blame this on the jockey...I have no doubt that if the jock felt her go lame he would have pulled up.  As if the jockey doesn't surely feel sick enough about it, now he's got the arse-clowns at PETA trying to crucify him.  Jerks.

[ Parent ]

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