"IT AIN'T HOW YOU START THAT COUNTS ..."

" ... it's how you finish!"

That age-old, time-honored observation holds sway in golf - i.e., the back nine on Sunday at Augusta National; baseball - i.e., the NY Mets, circa 2007; all sports, and life itself.  It has particular significance in the sport of horse racing, as I and others on here have been pounding home from Day 1 of these pages, yet routinely have found countered and remanded - i.e., War Pass and Indian Blessing - by our young Mavens of the Sport either who didn't believe us, or just didn't get it.

Following Gayego's victory yesterday in the Arkansas Derby, winning rider Mike Smith and winning trainer Paulo Lobo were interviewed apart from each other. Neither had a clue about the other's immediate reaction to Gayego's run.  Here's what each said:

Smith:  "We set some fractions.  He did the dirty work and finished that final quarter well."

Lobo:  "I think he did a lot of things today.  First of all, he tracked a very fast pace for the track and he finished very well, first time on the dirt."

For anyone with an abiding understanding of the game, Smith and Lobo's observations were both poignant and predictable.  Every great rider from the dawn of time and every conditioner of young horses worth his salt knows when it comes to the Kentucky Derby, the only thing that matters is conquering the great unknown: that final, daunting, and completely mysterious extra furlong where champions are crowned, and pretenders are relegated to the small print of history's archives.  In short, that it's all about "how you finish."

FTR, I excerpted Smith and Lobo's quotes from the Daily Racing Form.  Like our young JNs, clearly Mr.'s Crist and Beyer would be better served this time of year to do a bit less writing, and a whole lot more reading, starting with their own publication!

Rave

onApril 13, 2008at12:44 PM

Rave,
What do you make of both Randy Moss and Jerry Bailey on ESPN's coverage picking out Z Fortune vs. Gayego going forward to the Derby. Moss and Bailey pointed out ground loss, suffered by Z Fortune, would have reversed the result. Bailey, if given the choice of the two horses to ride in the Derby, would pick Z Fortune who he feels is better bred to handle the 10f. I believe that Gayego was more impressive of the two considering the fractions he pressed/set, showing an ability to settle the first 1/4 before engaging Tres Borrachos (very game in 3rd), and was really extending his stride down the lane. The DRF chart showed Gayego extended his advantage by a 1/4 length indicating that there was no way Z Fortune was going to get by with another 1/8th. I'm not sure Gayego looks like a Derby winner but he's got that "winning" style that will win many, many graded races up to 9f and he could get 10f on synthetics.
Are you hinting that Tiger will be on the line despite starting the day five back :)? By the way, a horse named Tiger Woodman won this weekend with a stirring stretch run on the grass.
onApril 13, 2008at4:16 PM

Robert, Bailey and Moss both bleed East Coast blue! That said, the "Z" horse ran huge, and is starting to remind me a LOT of Bluegrass Cat who ran second to Barbaro the year I used ALL the West Coast rats underneath and got squat. Could be a repeat of '06 w/Big Brown & the Z horse.
onApril 13, 2008at8:29 PM

Rave:
Nice work in the BRISnet contest........

Comment on this entry

Registered users may login here




Graphical Security Code


About me
Blog-List
21Publish - Cooperative Publishing