That's a one sided view. The people who collected the $132 win, $3,000 exacta, $11,400 tri, $51,000 super and $544,000 high five not to mention a .20 cent pick 6 for $271,000 probably see it differently. It was definitely the right call and took a lot of guts by the stewards. The recent deaths at Santa Anita also added to the importance of the dq because it was almost catastrophic. If either of the horses that clipped heels had gone down it would have been a chain reaction that could have caused death both equine and human. There was no human error either. The 7 horse just bolted when he heard the crowd coming around the final turn. Some great riding by all of the involved jockies, including Saez on the 7.Cost bettors 9 million dollars
It was not the right callThat's a one sided view. The people who collected the $132 win, $3,000 exacta, $11,400 tri, $51,000 super and $544,000 high five not to mention a .20 cent pick 6 for $271,000 probably see it differently. It was definitely the right call and took a lot of guts by the stewards. The recent deaths at Santa Anita also added to the importance of the dq because it was almost catastrophic. If either of the horses that clipped heels had gone down it would have been a chain reaction that could have caused death both equine and human. There was no human error either. The 7 horse just bolted when he heard the crowd coming around the final turn. Some great riding by all of the involved jockies, including Saez on the 7.
It was absolutely the right call. Tyler did a hell of a job checking War Of Will who looked to be ready to roll when he ran his front legs up into and underneath Max Security for 3 strides was fouled majorly and derailed his run. Does he get up to win? I honestly doubt it but he didn't get the chance to roll home. He was right at the point to unleash everything he had and then checks up to avoid clicking heels and having both he and the #7 eat ****.It was not the right call
Anyone who watched the race with an experienced eye spotted the Foul LIVE when it happened. It was that obvious.That's a one sided view. The people who collected the $132 win, $3,000 exacta, $11,400 tri, $51,000 super and $544,000 high five not to mention a .20 cent pick 6 for $271,000 probably see it differently. It was definitely the right call and took a lot of guts by the stewards. The recent deaths at Santa Anita also added to the importance of the dq because it was almost catastrophic. If either of the horses that clipped heels had gone down it would have been a chain reaction that could have caused death both equine and human. There was no human error either. The 7 horse just bolted when he heard the crowd coming around the final turn. Some great riding by all of the involved jockies, including Saez on the 7.
It couldn't have been more right. As soon as the horse moved out and broke the stride of the 1 and 18 he was dq'ed. It was just a matter of whether they would call since it was the Derby. They made the hard call and should be praised for it. We need more of that in sports.It was not the right call
So your argument is that it was a foul, but it was a ridiculous call...hmmm...so what do they do when there is a call?The DQ was ridiculous. It probably was a foul, but you can't tell me that, with a 19 horse field, that same thing didn't happen a dozen other times in that race.
The DQ was ridiculous. It probably was a foul, but you can't tell me that, with a 19 horse field, that same thing didn't happen a dozen other times in that race.
Aww, so new to horse racing I see. Hope you enjoyed watching you first race yesterday.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.
End of discussion. Jockeys/Owners are part of the self-policing process.Only one objection was filed. It was over that single event. Which led to the review. Which led to the DQ.
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.
So it sounds like the wife bought dinnner! Hope you picked something really nice and expensive.It was the right call . My wife won 1,320 on the winner.
I lost about eighty bucks on #7 . Great Derby .
1- It took 16 minutes and all 3 Stewards were unitedYou just admitted that the impeding was obvious. If it was SO obvious, why did the decision take so long?
Perfect...It couldn't have been more right. As soon as the horse moved out and broke the stride of the 1 and 18 he was dq'ed. It was just a matter of whether they would call since it was the Derby. They made the hard call and should be praised for it. We need more of that in sports.
Well said.There is no question there was a foul during the race. Anyone who attends the track on a regular basis knows this. For me, all the jockeys need to be patted on the back for a hell of a job avoiding a disaster that has been in the making for years; running 20 horses in such a crowded race is nuts.
My only beef is with the horse they elevated to first. 3 horses were impeded by Maximum Security but Country House wasn't one of them. In my opinion, War of Will was the only other horse who actually had his placing impacted. He very likely could have won if not for being cut-off having to be then be checked by his rider. However, since Pratt lodged the complaint he got the win.Everyone in this thread saying it was the WRONG call doesn’t know **** about horse racing. Period.
My only beef is with the horse they elevated to first. 3 horses were impeded by Maximum Security but Country House wasn't one of them. In my opinion, War of Will was the only other horse who actually had his placing impacted. He very likely could have won if not for being cut-off having to be then be checked by his rider.
That's a one sided view. The people who collected the $132 win, $3,000 exacta, $11,400 tri, $51,000 super and $544,000 high five not to mention a .20 cent pick 6 for $271,000 probably see it differently. It was definitely the right call and took a lot of guts by the stewards. The recent deaths at Santa Anita also added to the importance of the dq because it was almost catastrophic. If either of the horses that clipped heels had gone down it would have been a chain reaction that could have caused death both equine and human. There was no human error either. The 7 horse just bolted when he heard the crowd coming around the final turn. Some great riding by all of the involved jockies, including Saez on the 7.
The horse left his lane and swerved into the path of 2 horses creating a chain reaction. The jockey couldn't react quick enough to keep it from happening. This "bolting" by the horse effected the race to the point where it had to be a DQ. One of the reasons the stewards took so long was because they had to get the input of probably 10 jocks effected by it but another reason I think was because if they ruled very quickly they would have been criticized for not doing their due diligence. Any other race and they would have ruled it a dq in 5 minutes but it was the biggest race of the year so they took their time and got it right.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.
It just seems tainted to give it to a horse who wasn't going to win regardless. That much was easy to see because War of Will was moving the fastest of the front wave coming into the end of the turn. He appeared to be about to blow by everybody. He gets cut off by MS and knocked into LRT. LRT gets close to CH but avoids contact leaving him moving freely in the 5 path. Then, while correcting, MS interferes with the rail horse who had a legit shot also. So out of 5 horses, the horse who never actually was impeded and still did not have a legit chance to win somehow won because his jockey actually lodged a complaint. It just leaves a lot of disappointment for viewers. However, as the saying goes, the squeaky wheel gets the grease.There's just no way for anyone to predict what might have happened if the foul had not occurred. The only option they have is to remove the DQed horse and rider from the finishing order.
Same exact scenario for me. I'm happy. 20 bucks on each horse to win.It was the right call . My wife won 1,320 on the winner.
I lost about eighty bucks on #7 . Great Derby .