Down here, the Melbourne Cup is Australia's richest race: a field of open-class, 24 horses, that has been making bookies rich for 140 years. Sounds like a similar story with the big-field K Derby for 3-year-olds. Did you have a nice day, JJ? :cat:ChefJJ said:What a race! I had Freisan Fire for the mud play and Papa Clem for the good price, but who knew Mine That Bird would dominate...the jockey drove that light horse through traffic like it was nothing!
They don't consider the Derby the toughest race to handicap for nothing! :joker:
good luck
I made my bets on the way to a wedding, so I wasn't at a track to watch the race go down (actually listened to it on the radio in the car). Outdoor wedding, very nice, open bar...I had a good time :grin:Katweezel said:Down here, the Melbourne Cup is Australia's richest race: a field of open-class, 24 horses, that has been making bookies rich for 140 years. Sounds like a similar story with the big-field K Derby for 3-year-olds. Did you have a nice day, JJ? :cat:
A gelding too .... not like he was running to be put out to stud.ChefJJ said:What a race! I had Freisan Fire for the mud play and Papa Clem for the good price, but who knew Mine That Bird would dominate...the jockey drove that light horse through traffic like it was nothing!
They don't consider the Derby the toughest race to handicap for nothing! :joker:
good luck
Less junk in the way, I supposeGeorgeD said:A gelding too .... not like he was running to be put out to stud.
No sperm from a gelded anything. Period.shadroch said:Can you clone a gelding and get sperm from him? I'm curious how cloning will affect horse-racing. Will we see multiple clones of Big Brown in the Derby in a few years?
Cloning needs DNA, not sperm though. Shad has an interesting thought, but nothing I want to dwell on for too long. :laugh:embryostud said:No sperm from a gelded anything. Period.
I heard on Bloomberg News that the owner of the sire of Mine that Bird, I don't remember the ladies name, will be getting $20,000 per shot.... I mean studding fee.FLASH1296 said:Stallions who are derby winners tend to command stud fees between $5,000 and $10,000.
Lets remember that the horse's performance was not exactly fast. His "time" was average.
His winning time was three (3) seconds slower than Secretariat's derby record.
At 1.25 miles that is a difference of > 15 lengths.
A couple of thoughts on this:FLASH1296 said:Stallions who are derby winners tend to command stud fees between $5,000 and $10,000.
Lets remember that the horse's performance was not exactly fast. His "time" was average.
His winning time was three (3) seconds slower than Secretariat's derby record.
At 1.25 miles that is a difference of > 15 lengths.
A couple of thoughts on this:ChefJJ said:A couple of thoughts on this:
1) The race was in the slop, so the 3 seconds difference from Sec's record does need some temperence.
2) It is interesting to know that a horse's stud fee increases dramatically when his offspring have success. And by dramatically, it could be six figures.
Secretariat beat a lot of good horses by >15 lengths in his career. "Big Red" won the Belmont by 31 lengths.FLASH1296 said:
His winning time was three (3) seconds slower than Secretariat's derby record.
At 1.25 miles that is a difference of > 15 lengths.