glenruby
Well-Known Member
They made changes that in theory should make the race safer but yes it seems that it may have had the opposite effect.
I disagree - I think racing taps directly into horses' flight instinct. See my previous post for a clip that shows a top trainer expressing exactly this view.Nothing to do with flight. If they didn't want to do it, and flight was their preferred option, they'd bugger off in the other direction.
Have you seen Badminton change? Or Burghley? Or Bramham?
I disagree - I think racing taps directly into horses' flight instinct. See my previous post for a clip that shows a top trainer expressing exactly this view.
I disagree - I think racing taps directly into horses' flight instinct. See my previous post for a clip that shows a top trainer expressing exactly this view.
I think it's highly relevant. Skip to 6:10 by dragging the slider over.
Oh dear..... I got bored after a load of fat people on fat horses....... no relevance to my mind.........
I think it's highly relevant. Skip to 6:10 by dragging the slider over.
Luca Cumani said he believes horses race because of their flight instinct. One of the posters was called a muppet apparently for expressing this view. I was simply asking if that meant Alligator40 thought Cumani was also a muppet for holding the same view.so you weren't insinuating that he was a muppet then, you actually believe they are running away.
Luca Cumani said he believes horses race because of their flight instinct. One of the posters was called a muppet apparently for expressing this view. I was simply asking if that meant Alligator40 thought Cumani was also a muppet for holding the same view.
So the reason for horses running depends on whether they're flat racers or NH? Interesting!Oh dear - LC trains flat horses .......
I think what happened today in the National is very, very sad. I was brought up by a father who loved racing and it was his proud boast that he'd taken me to every racecourse in the country by the age of fourteen! I was happy to take my dad to see the National as a treat when he was seventy .... now many years ago. From the age of fourteen I rode flapping ponies (racing ponies - flat, not jumping). I always thought they enjoyed it as much as I did.
As I've got older I've questioned more about what we do with horses. My personal feeling, and I appreciate that other people feel differently, is that two dead horses, a horse that needed oxygen and couldn't make it to the winner's enclosure, other horse(s?) who have died at the same meeting, a jockey in critical condition, and (according to the guardian) a five day ban on the rider of the winner of the national for excessive whip use is a big price to pay for a few days of 'sport'. The statistics suggest that the number of horses who die on this particular course is very high. I think it is appalling that these dead/dying horses were described as 'obstacles' and agree with the poster who said that 'receiving on-going veterinary treatment' might have been more sensitive and a lot closer to the truth.
I think the link posted by fburton is interesting in its take on racing. Luca Cumani does indeed say that racing harnesses the flight instinct of the horse. As he points out, why would a horse push himself through the pain barrier? He says that the jockey is 'agitating' the horse, and the horse that runs the fastest survives - or not, in the case of these horses that have died. In the herd, one gets frightened and runs, and then everyone else runs. As commented in the clip, racing has harnessed fear and turned it into a multi million pound industry. I think there is a lot of truth in this view - certainly I see no reason why LC would say these things to camera unless he believed them to be true - and I'm sure he knows a hell of a lot about horses!!
It's obvious that these kinds of events won't be banned. It's also obvious that the people who know and care for these horses will be deeply upset at their loss. The guy who owned the flappers I rode cried like a kid when his favourite pony died in an unforseeable and tragic accident. I think that if anything can be done to make the sport safer in any way, than that can only be a good thing. No one wants their horse to die in a race. No one wants to have ridden a horse to his death. I am disappointed to read some posts on this forum that seem to belittle the loss of these horses - there is always a lesson to be learned from these events ... I don't think that expressing the view that it is not really such a big deal is very constructive.
apologies if this has already been posted
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/art...sands--end-dog-food-French-dinner-plates.html
sensationalist reporting definitely I think, given the timing, but nevertheless there is truth in here somewhere and sadly gives more fuel to the fire that horses are viewed as a commodity by the racing 'industry', to be chewed up and spat out when superfluous to requirements.
The DM has also printed some pictures which personally I find pretty horrific. In fact, some of them are so graphic that I am surprised they have been printed, given the fact that they show a jockey being apparently crushed as well as the fate of a now dead horse in pretty clear detail. However, I think it is important that these pictures are shown because only when people see what really goes on in these situations can they make an informed judgement as to whether it is acceptable or not.
RIP brave horses that lost their lives today. I hope no other horse (or human) has suffered serious injuries as a result of today's events.
I think that if anything can be done to make the sport safer in any way, than that can only be a good thing. No one wants their horse to die in a race. No one wants to have ridden a horse to his death. I am disappointed to read some posts on this forum that seem to belittle the loss of these horses - there is always a lesson to be learned from these events ... I don't think that expressing the view that it is not really such a big deal is very constructive.
The main factor that I think led to the fatalities was the fast ground. I hate to watch this race run on fast ground. Apparently - I could be wrong mind - I have heard the powers that be did not water. If so then I think it wrong - that track could definitely have done with a bit of water in my opinion. Hasn't the Grand National moved forward a week? Maybe that is a factor in the state of the ground too.
Apart from the fatalities there were a lot of horses finishing very dehydrated which was another way the waeather influences the race. However no one likes to see horses slogging through bottomless ground and finishing (or not finishing) exhausted, as they did in Red Mrauders year.
Also I would prefer to see the field capped at 30. I don't think it should be banned or the fences made easier AGAIN, it is a unique spectacle and part of our racing heritage but I firmly believe that it is not a race that should be run on fast ground.
Apologies if I am repeating others but no time to read 25 pages.
That says nothing about the figures for horse injuries, or falls for them.
Whatever they do, there are still equine fatalities.
My sentiment in a nutshell.Agree with this. I don't want to see the National banned, but I don't think that these deaths should be shrugged off as part and parcel of racing either. We need to find out exactly what were the factors that resulted in this horses falling and dying and use that knowledge to try and improve the race in future.