FieldOrnaments
Well-Known Member
?I would edit your quote![]()
?I would edit your quote![]()
What else would you call splatting like that after a jump?I'm sure it would have been argued in this case that the horse didn't actually fall, so that rule wouldn't have helped here.
F bomb.
Oh thank you sorry I have edited!!F bomb.
What else would you call splatting like that after a jump?
It was the last jumpRear end fall, sometimes rear end goes sideways
If the front end or rear end goes down that far, or the horse stumbles and goes down and staggers on then recovers
Anyone knows when these things happen serious injury can occur
In any case any fool knows the horse should be pulled up and assessed, galloping on to jump further jumps could result in recoverable injury going catastrophic
It was the last jump
What else would you call splatting like that after a jump?
The jockey will feel the back end drop but not know how low it has gone, only those watching from the side will know if it touched the ground or not.Could they bring in something that if the rear end touches the ground/the horse sits down, it has to pull up. I looked at eventing rules and shoulder and quarters both hitting the floor is classed as a fall
The way they sometimes lose their back end on landing, how can it be known nothing has been damaged internally?
£50-£100k isn't that much for a racehorse, especially not if it has top quality bloodlines.That is an absolute load of tosh! There is no need to set out to breed lower grade horses, plenty are produced via quality breeding projects.
And the multi syndicate’s Reynolds is talking about are hardly low value, the horses cost usually between £50-£100k.
Well we’ll have to disagree on that. I have shares in horses from 3500 shares to 8 and select them all on ‘am I happy with how they will be treated throughout their life’. And I’m hardly alone.£50-£100k isn't that much for a racehorse, especially not if it has top quality bloodlines.
My point was that syndicates unwittingly do dilute racing, it's not that long ago that they barely existed and certainly not in the numbers or with the quantity of 'owners' that they gave now. Put simply racing needed more money injected into it to stop smaller yards and courses going bust - how do you get that? Simple, syndicates; more people = more money and not just for the courses either bookies love them all those 100s of owners all having a punt on 'their' horse. The trouble is the cheaper you make it to have a horse the cheaper everyone wants it to be.

But the jockey was suspended? So it wasn’t ignored.Just seen the pic of the poor beggar who fell at the last in the GN when exhausted. You can see that the horse is out on his feet. This very awkward fall could easily have been fatal.
View attachment 174887
Yes, the stewards investigated, blah blah, but you racing fans are complicit in supporting this horse abuse day in, day out in tbe name of ‘sport’.
Horses pushed beyond their limits.
Is it beyond the realms of todays technology for stewards to instruct jockeys to pull up?
You’d think so.Is it beyond the realms of todays technology for stewards to instruct jockeys to pull up?
You could have something that makes a noise, a beep or buzz or something, to alert a jockey to look for a flag. The starts should have lights too - all the shouting is bound to wind the horses up more than they already are.Given there are incidents of jockeys missing flags to avoid fences/course changes, wondering if an ear piece would the be the only way? If you're in the middle of 30 odd horses at full speed, would you even see a sign that says 'number 15 pull up'?
You maybe don’t care but there is a serious problem in the racing world with young jockeys committing suicide. It’s a hard job for lots of reasons but the constant scrutiny and social media are certainly adding to the pressure. It’s outrageous to post comments like this whatever you think of the Grand National.[Deleted quoted content removed]