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I've always assumed each horse is different, by that I mean some may need a gallop down to the start to warm them up, whereas others would require a slow walk to ensure they don't get too hot or knackered. Also have always assumed, rightly or wrongly, that the trainer & jockey discuss this pre race and decide on which method of approaching the start to go with depending on the horse at hand.
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We can injure ourselves by exerting when we're cold. Pull muscles and all sorts.
I assume that applies to horses as well. |
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yes Crippen certainly so
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And to add to Crippen's point, horses can't warm up and stretch like humans can so the jog down to the start is more important for them than it would be in a human race.
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Yep, and that's all fair enough but at some courses it appears that the 'warm up' looks relatively short but in others it looks a fair way! And as we have races that are won regularly by less than a length this warm-up distance surely must have some effect?
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would need someone involved with horses to answer you there as my knowledge is limited on the matter
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That's why people watch horses going to post to see if some are too keen and will take a bit out of themselves. Coasting down to post wouldn't take anything of a horse any more than the warm up in tennis would knacker a top pro (im0
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Or a boxer on the pads in the dressing room pre-fight.
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Maybe. But with a horse who barely gets 12f would we back it knowing that in today's race it's a 1 mile jog to the starting post as opposed to all its other 12f wins where it's only been a couple of furlongs or less?
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depends on how fast it goes to post, if it sprints there then maybe it won't give its true running, but if it's just a light canter than it's unlikely to take anything out of the horse
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If they go to post in a controlled manner it makes no difference at all.
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Fair enough, I'll go with the consensus on this one. Cheers.
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Cesarewich, straight 2 1/4 miles
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