Thanks for the apology, I can see your point but just feel strongly that this is not "any other race" and anything other than something that clearly serves justice for the best horse should be let go. The declaired winner is simply the most fortunate horse because without the bumps he prolly finishes off the board.I apologize for being condescending .
I'm not sure either, Rosario clearly didn't gel with Game Winner, he could never get him to the correct spots. Seems crazy to me that Bob is pulling Irad off Improbable for Mike Smith. Irad in my opinion is the best jock in the world right now. He gave Improbable an outstanding ride in the Derby Improbable just couldn't get the distance. I'm praying he's going to stick Irad on Game Winner.I dont know why Baffert stuck with Joel Rasario. He usually prefers cali based jockeys. Why didn't he call up Martin pedroza. I belive Victor Espinoza us still out , but baffert has had look with pedroza Rosario for some reason makes Game Winner go 4 wide the while race . Rosario Is decent jock, I just dont know why he does that with game winner. He has won the derby before (Orb), and has rode some good horses.
Wait ... are you telling me that discussion of the derby can still be found three or four days later on forums that are specific to that topic? Wow ... Mind. Blown.Then you have one big bubble in which you live in. Go look under the Kentucky Derby handles and NBC Sports handles on anything pertaining to this race.
That country house isnt running in the Preakness tells you all you need to know. The owner knows that horse will get dusted.
That country house isnt running in the Preakness tells you all you need to know. The owner knows that horse will get dusted.
You people who are saying it was the right call because he left his lane ignore the fact that this happens in nearly every race. If lanes were so important then paint lines on the track, and start them staggered like human races. Admit that "jockeying for position" is just white privilege for the winners. But you can't, so you won't. MS had the lead. As far as I'm concerned it's the trailing jockeys job to avoid wherever he wants to go. Snowflakes think it was the lead jockeys job to be polite, and lose the race. That's why the second I saw the chief steward was a woman and was dithering that there was going to be a bad decision.
You just admitted that the impeding was obvious. If it was SO obvious, why did the decision take so long? It took so long because she was getting her "feels" all in order.
Why does horse racing rely on the jockeys and owners to call foul? Why don't the track stewards do it? Seems to be like letting Coach K call a foul after he lost the game and letting it stand.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/spor...a584b4-701c-11e9-8be0-ca575670e91c_story.html
Washington Post’s horse racing beat reporter of nearly 40 years disagrees with the decision as well.
Some excerpts
“Racing fans know issues involving interference and disqualifications are not nearly so simple. In a rough-and-tumble sport, horses regularly bump into or veer in front of one another. In most cases, the stewards take no notice and no action. (Probably nobody would have paid attention if Maximum Security had swerved in front of War of Will on the first turn.)
Stewards disqualify horses when a foul has clearly affected the outcome — or when it’s so egregious that it eliminates other horses from contention. Even then, racing officials are often reluctant to take action in big races, just as basketball or football referees don’t want to decide the NBA Finals or the Super Bowl with a whistle.
After watching video of the 145th Derby over and over, I believe the Churchill Downs stewards made a bad decision when they took down Maximum Security’s number and made Country House the official winner. Yes, there was a foul. No, it didn’t merit a historic disqualification
When I watch races and make notes on them, I always try to estimate how much an incident of trouble cost a horse. In this case, I estimated one length. The consequences of Maximum Security’s misdeed could have been catastrophic, but they weren’t. War of Will recovered quickly and resumed his chase of the leader. He had a virtually clear path ahead of him and a quarter mile to catch the front-runner. He accelerated and got within a length of Maximum Security, but the leader repulsed his bid, and in the final sixteenth of a mile War of Will ran out of gas. He faded to finish eighth. Without the trouble, he might have finished fifth. He would not have won.
The other colts who were involved in the chain reaction after Maximum Security’s infraction, 54-1 Long Range Toddy and 71-1 Bodexpress, were going nowhere when the incident occurred. The trouble they encountered surely cost them a higher placing, but they finished 14th and 17th and weren’t going to be contenders under any circumstances.
If Maximum Security had veered into the path of Country House, then defeated him by less than two lengths, there would have been no debate about what the stewards should do. The foul would have cost Country House a legitimate chance to win, and the resultant disqualification would have been prompt and uncontroversial.
But because Maximum Security’s infraction did not affect the outcome, disqualifying the winner was a bit like deciding the NBA Finals on a foul away from the ball.
What purpose was served by disqualifying the winner? If it was to make a statement about the importance of safety in race-riding, the stewards could slap jockey Luis Saez with a significant suspension. But Maximum Security was the best horse in the field, and he deserved to have his name in the record books. Gary and Mary West, who bred and own him, deserved the glory of a Derby victory after 30 years in the business. The bettors who thought Maximum Security was the best horse deserved to cash their wagers.
Certainly, no justice was served by elevating Country House from second place. He had a relatively easy trip in the Derby, sitting outside the leaders and avoiding most of the trouble on the turn. If he couldn’t win the Derby on his own merits, he doesn’t deserve to have the stewards declare him the winner.
That is very clear, well written and a perfect explanation, I still think it was BS mainly because Country House barely broke stride, and a bunch of horses ended up almost dead even with 1/4 or maybe 3/16 of a mile to go and a clear lane to run. They just didn't get to the line first, Maximum Security did.
How was Court supposed to know whether his horse was not (hurt) when he filed his objection? Serious question. All Court knew was that Max got his rear legs mixed up with Toddy's front legs. But could he possibly have known for certain whether Toddy had not been stepped on, scrapped painfully during the turn, at the moment when he had to make the choice, whether to object?As a matter of opinion we can argue that the officials should’ve “swallowed their whistles” since no one was hurt and it was the Derby; but the call was correct.
Will be interesting to see the response to this.New video that claims war of will instigated the whole thing and MS had no choice
https://www.courier-journal.com/sto...TW8F-2rwOz7f1O-77OcE36PdVWvf05Dmn5LhQWpjA2M5Y
New video that claims war of will instigated the whole thing and MS had no choice
https://www.courier-journal.com/sto...TW8F-2rwOz7f1O-77OcE36PdVWvf05Dmn5LhQWpjA2M5Y
Pretty convincing. He literally caused everything. None of this happens if WOW doesn’t do that.
1st it was a cameraman
Then it was a puddle
Now it is WOW's movement
No excuse or reason is going to change the fact that MS served across 4 lanes and clipped another horse, which is a violation and cause for DQ.
It is pretty cut and dry
And now the jockey has been suspended for not controlling his horse
I dont think I missed the point
1st it was a cameraman
Then it was a puddle
Now it is WOW's movement
No excuse or reason is going to change the fact that MS served across 4 lanes and clipped another horse, which is a violation and cause for DQ.
It is pretty cut and dry
I found the video pretty convincing
We’ll never know.Damn shame Maximum Security's jockey turned his horse into a drift racer on that final turn in the derby. Cost War of Will a shot at the triple crown.
Damn shame Maximum Security's jockey turned his horse into a drift racer on that final turn in the derby. Cost War of Will a shot at the triple crown.
Or it’s a damn shame that WOW’s jockey anticipated a spot and it wasn’t there, bumping LRT, clipping Maximum Security, and pushing everyone wide.
Don’t forget that
Maximum Security
Tacitus
Country House
Code of Honor
All sat out this race. All of them beat WOW.