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Magnificent 7
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Because Towcester was cancelled due to their ongoing issues.
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Because it is the number that ensures there is a race every 5 minutes until 6pm.
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Absolutely impossible to do the form for all these meetings today, suggest you pick 1 or 2 meetings and concentrate on them or you'll go dulally, was bad enough yesterday!
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Yes 1 or 2 meetings to concentrate on is more than enough for me.
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I hardly bother with Saturday afternoons now. As kevo says 1 or 2 meetings is quite sufficient for me.
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So concentrate on 2 meetings and don't look at the rest.
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I've csanned through all the meetings for any horses on my tracker and have only found one and Sir Hugh has kn@ckered the price of that one, also the ground is soft, unknown, so won't worry. Think i'll concentrate on Thirsk tonight. got to watch the villa match anyway.
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the game is run for facetimers, a perfect senario
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sageform 11 May 19 11:28
So concentrate on 2 meetings and don't look at the rest. Easier said than done for me Ramruma. With races going off every 5 minutes I soon get distracted. |
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Wait 'till CHESTER increase their May FESTIVAL to 4 days - a la Cheltenham
...Then there would be 8 meetings today. |
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I only really look at the maiden, novice and conditions/group races so I don't mind which meeting they are from.
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i've just been done on the line by a 125/1 shot, that's me done, bye.
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It has no bearing on future results.
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430.85 shot even.
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Magnificent 7
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horst bucholz
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Do you tell your family what you do on here Rico ?
I sit there all day dredging Fred's up from 7 years ago. Sometimes 15 .... it's soooo fooking hilarious pmsl pmsl pmsl. Has Uncle Stephen been to a psychiatrist ? |
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menni thymes ulk...
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fred's what?
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dineage.
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If you add up all the time that takes you.
Probably works out about a fortnight a year. Just to do that. Which was clever first time. But after 3,298 goes it loses much of its elan. |
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chutzpah.
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It's utter ridiculous. There ought to be no horseracing on a monday. But, the bookies rule horseracing UK. Whatever they say, go.
I fully back the decision of Ascot to go it alone. |
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scabs?
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can never have 2 meny meets
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In the past week alone there were 301 horse races run at 44 separate race meetings in Ireland and the UK.
The action comes thick and fast this time of the year. Thousands of horses and jockeys on the move, travelling the length and breadth of these islands to entertain us by competing in races broadcast and streamed live on various platforms to maximise betting turnover. The horse racing industry is a well-oiled machine. Aside from the odd hiccup, such as the track issues at Chester on Thursday, the racing runs like clockwork, race after race, day after day. There is barely time to take a breath during these peak periods and it is only in exceptional circumstances that we are forced to stop and think about the dangers the competitors face in order to entertain us. Every so often a rider gets badly injured or worse and time stands still for a brief while, before the wheels turn again and everything resumes as normal. Injuries and fatalities to the horses are rarely mainstream news and even within the sport’s associated media outlets they seldom receive much focus. The good news is that while the public may be unaware and often unconcerned about the welfare of the jockeys and horses, the industry itself takes these risks seriously and is constantly working away in the background trying to improve the safety of all participants. Besides the obligatory medical staff and two ambulances in attendance at every race meeting and the various improvements that have been made to rider’s safety equipment and track layouts, there is a cohort of people connected to the industry that are constantly researching and innovating to improve the safety of all the participants. Last week Dublin City University (DCU) and the Irish Horseracing Regulatory Board (IHRB) published their findings after analysing the results of every fall in races in Ireland between 2016 and 2024 (including point-to-points). The IHRB medical staff collate data every time a jockey falls. This information relating to the types of injuries sustained by riders is vital in determining if current safety measures are adequate and analysis of this data can help pinpoint areas where further improvements are required. The recently published data shows that injury rates have fallen for professional jockeys on both the Flat and over jumps over the course of the nine years of data studied. Almost certainly as a direct result of additional safety measures introduced by IHRB. On the equine front the IHRB are constantly assessing injury statistics for horses and have come up with a shortlist of the types of runners with a higher risk of injury, such as horses aged 7 and over on the Flat and 10 and older over jumps or horses that have raced within the last seven days or haven’t raced in the last year. All these categories are now included in the raceday veterinary inspection programme. Elsewhere, a French company named Arioneo has developed a new ECG device that is designed to highlight abnormalities in a horse’s heart rate, in real time during exercise or racing. Exercise-associated sudden death in horses is estimated to account for between 20% - 25% of all fatalities, but is possibly being under-reported as it is rarely identifiable after death. This device has been tested during Barrier Trials run by the Hong Kong Jockey Club and the system successfully captured interpretable ECG signals at maximum speed and documented rhythm abnormalities occurring during peak effort. Early indications are that using this type of technology can potentially identify horses at risk of cardiac arrest and the British Horseracing Authority is currently using the system within ongoing work around cardiac monitoring and screening in racing environments. As this type of technology is further developed we may eventually reach a point where a rider will receive signals in real time if their mount is in distress. Although all this work is carried out behind the scenes and while most of it goes unnoticed by the racing public, it is important to keep in mind that the risks associated with the sport are never simply taken for granted. https://www.irishracing.com/blogs/the-dangers-associated-with-horse-racing-are-not-taken-for-granted/264560 |