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Greene County, Indiana ~ Wednesday, July 9, 2008
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Give me $2 on Pyro!
Posted Friday, May 2, 2008, at 11:43 AM<< Previous | Read comments | Respond | Email link | Next >>
Tomorrow marks the 134th running of The Kentucky Derby, the first leg of the Triple Crown of Thoroughbred Racing.
All of the stories of the trainers, the jockeys, and the owners are fascinating. Many have overcome great odds to get where they are today, even though they may be quite successful now. The animals have stories, too, although sometimes sad ones. You'll remember the horse, Barbaro, captured national attention and the hearts of many after shattering his leg just days after his 2006 win at The Derby, an injury that eventually led to his death.
Every year at this time, this also comes to mind:
It perplexes me why there is so little talk about "The Run for the Roses" in this area, but we all seem to dwell on the Indy 500 race, a race that is intentionally blacked out on Hoosiers' TVs. (Put an Indy racecar on our state's quarter, but block the general public from watching it. Thanks, Tony!)
The Derby just has more charm and is steeped in many traditions from odd horse names to a parade of huge, brightly-colored hats -- and don't forget the mint juleps and burgoo. The two week festival that surrounds "the greatest two minutes in sports" generates millions of dollars every year for Kentucky, as well as southern Indiana.
To learn more, visit the official Kentucky Derby website: http://www.kentuckyderby.com/2008/home
And one more thing… at 6 to 1 odds, good luck Pyro! Comments Showing comments in chronological order [Show most recent comments first] |
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I have my jellybeans on Visionaire and Denis of Cork. One of these days I will make the trek to Churchill Downs. The Derby has always captured my attention. Much more so than the 500. I guess that probably stems from the blackouts. Good blog Chris.
meh, horses.
I say we take the horses out and race the jockeys. I'd watch that!
Better yet, have the horses ride the jockeys.
RUNNER UP DIES ON TRACK
http://sports.aol.com/story/_a/big-brown-wins-trag...
This REALLY is not an honorable sport to glorify, despite the pomp and circumstance surrounding these races.
People may want to educate themselves on what 'training' for horse racing involves, altough many people would rather not know, it's pretty horrific.
"This horse showed you his heart," winning jockey Kent Desormeaux said, "and Eight Belles showed you her life for our enjoyment today. I'm deeply sympathetic to that team for their loss."
"showed you her life for your entertainment", interesting words. I hope the glittering crowd was greatly 'entertained' and a little thing like this did not ruin their day out at the races.
http://www.associatedcontent.com/article/359616/th...
Yes, I was saddened to see Eight Belles was injured and ultimately euthanized. I still am saddened to think about the situation. That is life though. It happens. I am not going to join PETA though. Those people are crazy.
I'm not supporting Peta either, I"m supporting kindness and against unnecessary suffering for the sake of 'entertainment'. It's not really 'just life' though, in "just life" horses generally don't run themselves to death or run so long on young bones that their legs snap. THat is man's doing, once again for the sake of entertaiment, pride, and greed.
It's a 'heart thing'. Many, many, many horses are destroyed in racing every year, it's not that different from dog racing where they find mass burial pits of dogs shot in the head, the final resting place for any 'non winners'.
Not everyone who opposes cruelty is a Peta supporter. Some of us are just compassionate towards animals who are suffering unnecessarily.