SARATOGA SPRINGS, NY, March 19, 2010--In the aftermath of last weekend’s preps for the ballyhooed Apple Blossom Invitational--Zenyatta’s amazingly athletic, Colin-like performance in the Santa Margarita, and Rachel Alexandra’s disappointing effort in the Fair Grounds Ladies--emerged much of the same vitriol that surfaced during the run-up to the 2009 Horse of the Year vote.
If that notion is truly the case, then include me out. Once again, the discussion of these two great females continues to devolve into an extension of the East vs. West diatribe so prevalent virtually everyone on the Internet late last year.
It just wasn’t possible, from within and without the industry, to celebrate both fillies. Every time their names were mentioned in the same sentence, a health care debate broke out.
Speaking personally, my intention is to continue reporting and commenting on events involving these brilliant females as they develop this season but unwilling to engage in any more back and forth relative to provincial bias. Hopefully by year’s end, the matter will be settled definitively between the rails.
This fit of pique, even before last Saturday’s results had a chance to sink in, was brought on by an e-mail blast I received from a Southern California-based clocker whom I very much respect. In part, these were his words:
“…Jess Jackson was basking in his glory in what seemed an east coast united effort to bring the Horse of the Year crown to Rachel in January, and Jackson even took some shots at the level of competition from the 2008 & 2009 Breeders Cup Classic.
“…Guess what 'Cabernet Jess', neither of your best horses, Curlin nor Rachel Alexandra, would beat Zenyatta. That's right, Curlin would never beat Zenyatta, and Rachel will never get the chance because Jess is taking his ball and going home.
“…Zenyatta is the better horse, hands down, and if the media stopped judging horses because of the surfaces they raced over, or by how far they won, and concentrated on achievement, I am confident we would have had a much closer race for Horse of the Year.
“…The East Coast media is very much like a Republican congress, voting by affiliation rather than common sense or practicality. There is no more 'doing what is right' but follow your congregation. Amen…”
I’m not sure what upset me most: The fact that I’m automatically supposed to agree with my East Coast-based brethren because they hunker down in the same part of the country as me or being likened to a Republican member of Congress?
Let me state, for the final time, my thoughts on all this, then and now. I voted Rachel Alexandra Horse of the Year because she proved invincible in a much longer, more challenging campaign, beating males thrice, including her elders. There is no disparagement of Zenyatta in that.
I also voted for John Shirreffs for Eclipse Trainer of the Year because of his flawless handling of a flawless mare, getting her to peak on the day when the whole world watched her make history, all while under the pressure of trying to manage an undefeated career. There’s no disparagement of Steve Asmussen in that.
Why does this have to be an either-or situation? Why does a positive opinion of one represent a negative opinion of the other? Maybe because even the keepers of the Eclipse flame, myopically failing to recognize the uniqueness of the 2009 Horse of the Year question, ruled that it must be one, and not the other.
Fast-forwarding back to last Saturday, I thought that Zenyatta’s performance, winning the Santa Margarita in her six-year-old debut under highweight of 127 pounds, was, in its way, more impressive than her historical Classic victory.
Horses of her size and with running style should not have their forward momentum slowed at such a critical juncture. Horses her size are not supposed to be that nimble. Horses her size are not supposed to be bent in half before snaking their way through rivals, no matter how comparably inferior.
And, finally, after all that, accelerating into full stride to take the lead in the shadow of the wire, horses are not supposed to flick their ears forward immediately, as if, yes, there was more where that came from. Stated more simply, Zenyatta’s Santa Margarita belongs in a time capsule.
Not so the performance of 2009 Horse of the Year Rachel Alexandra, who had her own challenges to overcome but couldn’t, finishing second without an excuse. But there were reasons for her un-Rachel-like performance. A six-month layup, longer than routine for horses in the recycling stage, is one.
There were others, such as the weather related on-again, off-again training schedule. And of possibly greater consequence, the changes in she displayed that sometimes portend physical or mental issues that have yet to surface.
Let’s remember that Rachel Alexandra was gutted by older males in the final race of an eight-month long campaign. Two speedsters that challenged her early and often were beaten by double-digit margins, finishing about 20 lengths back.
Then, when late-rally Macho Again--talented enough to win the Stephen Foster earlier in the season, a race that has emerged as one of America’s most prestigious Grade 1 tests--made his run, a three-year-old filly found more, beating him back after it appeared if just for an instant that she was beaten.
The 2009 Woodward Stakes was just as responsible for her New Orleans Ladies defeat as was the lack of conditioning and sufficient mental preparation. It wasn’t that she had only seven recorded workouts to get ready for her return from a lengthy absence. The problem was she didn’t do it the right way.
When measured by the eye and against the clock, her workouts were very un-Rachel. All through her three-year-old season, she worked quickly when asked but was never a run-off. But she showed signs of that this spring.
Even an 80 percent, Rachel Alexandra should have beaten Zardana. Her rider was told to reserve something for next time. To do so, Calvin Borel had his feet firmly in the dashboard, her head obviously under maximum restraint.
Clearly, principal owner Jess Jackson and Steve Asmussen have made the right decision backing out of the Apple Blossom. Given the circumstances, she never would have beaten the behemoth mare from California.
But that’s not the point. The point is that it wouldn’t be the right thing to do. Her connections don’t know where they’re at because off that race they cannot know where she is with herself.
The transition from three to four-year-old can be as puzzling as that of two to three-year-old. Not only might Rachel Alexandra not be better and stronger at four, she might not be as good as she was at three given the most ambitious campaign ever waged by a latter day sophomore filly.
So the only choice the camp had is to do what they did; not point for a specific race, allowing the filly to come to top form on her timetable, not their’s. It truly would be folly to do it any other way. Even Zenyatta’s camp acknowledged that.
And how many times will the two great fillies meet in 2010? The best guess is more than once. But it’s still possible, of course, that she’ll never race again. To think not is to evaluate the situation with blinkers on.
“I think I read Zenyatta's lips after the race when she heard Rachel got beat,” the e-mail concluded. “I think she was singing 'don't stand, don't stand so close to me'. I wonder if she was referring to Rachel.”
I know it’s probably a coincidence, but I think I saw the same thing, as Rachel Alexandra galloped back to be unsaddled after her defeat: “Time is on my side, yes it is.” Let the games begin.
17 Mar 2010 at 08:13 pm | #
THANK YOU SO MUCH FOR THIS!!!!
My sentiments exactly!!
I think the dispute is only between a few very belligerent people. I think MOST Rachel fans and MOST Zenyatta fans are sporting and civil. At least that is what I’d like to believe. But we will find out I’m wrong if a riot breaks out at the Breeder’s cup (or sooner) if and when they meet.
Only time will tell what will become of Rachel. Although, yes, I would like Rachel to be as good or better than her 3 year old season, but horse racing is so unpredictable. And humans have never been able to read horses’ minds.
17 Mar 2010 at 09:35 pm | #
Good article. As long as both horses are racing, I think it will only get worse. If they actually meet, I’m staying off the internet well before and after and listening to nobody but the track announcer, to preserve my enjoyment level.
Both horses seem to have attracted gangs of fans who don’t seem to know much about horse racing (to put it mildly) and whom I think just enjoy supporting a side and spewing vitriol at the other… horse, soccer team, whatever’s handy. . But you’re right; there are people who should know better who are sinking to the same level.
17 Mar 2010 at 11:54 pm | #
John, I couldn’t agree more. The Civil War style debate is nauseating. It seems that if I write a positive sentence about Zenyatta, the Rachel fans show up to bash/attack/acccuse me of some heinous crime. If I utter a positive word about Rachel, nearly all of SoCal shows up declare me a warlock and call for my head on plate.
The whole thing is just so...childish. And stupid.
I’ve heard some say that the sport isn’t big enough for 2 stars. I disagree strongly with that. We’ve gone through an era without any real noteworthy history. Rachel and Zenyatta are as important as they come to our game - and we need them both.
I must also point out that, as a huge Curlin fan, the continued gratuitous bashing he receives, just for being associated with team Rachel, is entirely unfortunate.
To the “Curlin would never beat Zenyatta” crowd - I suppose they forget that a year like 2007 ever happened.
Keep fighting the good fight - and demanding class from all - but sadly this is most likely to fall upon deaf ears from the masses.
It’s like they WANT to hate...and think they have some divinely inspired right to hate.
I’ll finish with this, the schadenfreude on display last week (I have to thank one of my readers for that term, as it would’ve saved me about 1600 words of description if i had thought to use it myself) when Rachel lost was an unfortunate blow to the sport’s psyche. It exposed a significant portion of our fanbase as immature and utterly classless.
And of course, anyone looking to make political digs (god these people are miserable) along with their territorial divisions should probably look long and hard in the mirror beforehand and remind themselves that they and their constituents are responsible for giving us Nancy Pelosi (and the Governator).
The saving grace in all of this?
The silent majority.
The folks who aren’t screaming hate-filled comments from the rooftops and who understand why both fillies deserve respect and praise.
We may not appear as strong in numbers in online chats and during sensationalized reporting features, but we do exist.
You just have to weed through all of the shouting and screaming to hear us.
18 Mar 2010 at 12:38 am | #
We don’t hate Rachel or her connections. We do feel we were robbed because of the eastern bias. Imagine if the situation were reversed and Zenyatta skipped the BC and still got horse of the year.
Jess Jackson never had any intention of racing against Zenyatta. He ducked her in the BC Classic, he’s ducking her in the Apple Blossom. Since when do you pull out of a race 3 hours after the prep, with three weeks left before they had to decide.
I hope Zenyatta follows this horse (Rachel) all over the country until she finally destroys her any doubts you people have about who is best.
18 Mar 2010 at 02:43 am | #
Hi Mr. Pricci,
Thanks! Your piece captures, quite well, the unnecessary rancor that has emerged. They are both magnificent race horses, and the owners, flawed though they may be (who isn’t?) have been gracious in extending their campaigns. I think we must simply ignore the folks who rant about East/West coast biases. Just too stale to even rebut.
On another vein, I have spent the last several days at Gulfstream, and to my surprise, have enjoyed the racing environment. Even though the Village swallows up the track’s presence, and the grandstand does not really exist, the week end buzz was palpable. People of all ages, stripes, and interests were enjoying the sun, food, and racing. Once they figure out how to extend betting on the horses to the surrounding restaurants, perhaps it will raise handle (Oddly, on St. Paddy’s day, I was in the Irish Pub adjoining the track, and they not have HRTV--because DirecTV does not carry it, nor was it possible to bet there. Similar to the track, they should have roving mutual clerks. I would think this was be the synergy that articulating shopping, dining, and casinos could bring to racing!
eric s.
18 Mar 2010 at 04:13 am | #
I’m involved with horse racing and know ALL the connections in BOTH camps. I think what the public has made this into is a shame. These are two of THE BEST female racehorses-EVER-hands down. And we are all extremely lucky to be around at the same time they are. If you are a true fan of horses and horse racing-you must realize these horses neither know or care about what we think. They are doing what they do best. It’s a sign of human nature, sadly, that people have made this in to some kind of ugly warfare. ENJOY these horses, we all know thoroughbred careers are short. Stop the b/s. We need FANS, we don’t need to spread ugliness and run more people away from this hurting sport or discourage would be fans. Grow the hell up, and stop being haters. Go to the track and enjoy the incredible talent BOTH mares show us every time they hit the track. GET ALONG, PEOPLE!!! 2009 Awards have all been handed out-now we’re on to 2010. May both horses have a safe and prosperous year! I’m a fan of BOTH!!! If you know horse talent-you all would be as well.
18 Mar 2010 at 04:13 am | #
As a racing fan and supporter in a state where racing has all but become a something from a bygone era, I am excited about the attention the racing world has gained from these great mares. People are being drawn to the tracks just to get a glimpse of the first ladies of racing. I must admit, I was making the trip to Hot Springs in hopes of getting a standing room only or infield spot just to bare witness to what was to be a historic event. I am an east coast Zenyatta fan. What can I say, watching her come from behind, closing style of running makes my heart pound. However, I truly think RA is amazing as well and enjoy seeing her battle in the stretch and pull away from the field. I would rather see them never meet than have one rush to a race only to suffer a catastrophic breakdown. I was only 2 when Ruffian lost her only race, but I have seen the footage and it is heartbreaking. After the breakdown of Eight Belles, I don’t think the racing industry would recover if one of these great ladies were to suffer the same fate. Ease up people and let these ladies continue to thrill us. Hopefully, if the stars allign and the mares say it’s time, they will meet at the Classic.
18 Mar 2010 at 04:14 am | #
I’m from the middle of the country - no coast bias. I admire and appreciate both Zenyatta & Rachel. Both have achieved record breaking accomplishments and both have attracted a lot of attention from the general public. But I have to confess I love Zenyatta and I agree with you when you say this doesn’t have to be either/or. No bashing Rachel from me. We have been so blessed last year with the two of them and hopefully will be again this year, along with the addition of Bambera.
18 Mar 2010 at 04:31 am | #
Reason from lovers of the horse. Bravo all!
And Eric, you’re right: Just have to ignore this provincial bias thing. These days in America, there’s enough ugliness to go around already.
Racing needs only one thing from everyone now: Solidarity.
JP
18 Mar 2010 at 04:33 am | #
Lisa
Obviously you never saw Ruffian. She never lost. She was never headed in any race at any time. They never used the stick on her. Rachel is light years away from her. Zenyatta might come close to her, but in a very different way.
18 Mar 2010 at 05:05 am | #
JRP - you said “Bravo all!” You can’t have read Greg Michaels’ comments. Having said he doesn’t “hate Rachel or her connections” he proceeds to disparage both.
Yes, Ruffian was great, maybe the greatest filly ever. But she never beat the boys and she wasn’t strong. And take another look at the Sorority Stakes - Velasquez went to the whip that day.
I love both Rachel and Zenyatta. I hope Rachel comes back, but if not - she’s done enough already. I’m looking forward to Arkansas next month - can’t wait to finally see Zenyatta in person!
18 Mar 2010 at 05:09 am | #
JP,
You state as follows: “he transition from three to four-year-old can be as puzzling as that of two to three-year-old. Not only might Rachel Alexandra not be better and stronger at four, she might not be as good as she was at three given the most ambitious campaign ever waged by a latter day sophomore filly.”
This expresses my sentiments exactly. the filly was not ready for this race. They tried to rush her and I, unlike some believe they did want to run. But for whatever reason, she was not in the top form she needed to be. But I happen top believe deeply in the 3 to 4 year old growing pains, especially when it comes to fillies! Her connections did the right thing by their horse. hopefully she will round into shape and we will have our confrontation. but for now, all should be happy, especially in this day of sensationalizing things, that for onec, someone, in the end out the horse before the big money!
18 Mar 2010 at 05:11 am | #
Here is an example of why there is a classless debate. People don’t read or get the facts straight. They just react. Lisa didn’t post about Ruffian, I did. I did not compare Ruffian’s ability to neither RA or Zenyatta. However, the reason I brought her name up is because the fans wanted to know who was better, Ruffian or Foolish Pleasure. A match race was set leading to a tragic breakdown costing us one of racing’s legends. I don’t want to see history repeated. I think the RA camp is doing the right thing. If the mares meet that would be awesome, but if they don’t, they are both great in their own rights and deserve their place in history. BTW, Ruffian’s official record is 11 starts, 10 wins. Yes, she officially lost the race she gave her life for.
18 Mar 2010 at 05:14 am | #
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18 Mar 2010 at 05:37 am | #
Great article, best I’ve seen on the subject.
Truth is, however, there has been a bias against west coast racing since Seabiscuit, and Rachel’s connections are wheeler-dealers who over-ran Rachel last year in order to walk away with the Eclipse awards. Yes, Zen’s connections were very conservative with her. If you had a huge, great horse like her and loved her as they do, you would want to protect her soundness above anything else. I love both horses, both are great, and I would just as soon they not meet. That, frankly, would be too nerve-wracking.
I’m one of the ones who thinks Rachel will be retired in the next month or two. She remembers the Woodward and all that switching.
18 Mar 2010 at 06:21 am | #
Noelle, was just trying to be nice in what I hope is a new era of reconciliation. (Semi-LOL.
JP
18 Mar 2010 at 06:33 am | #
John ....very fair analysis. Allow me to add to your essay. Rachel’s campaign (esp the Woodward which had me trembling in disbelief of what I saw)was ABSOLUTELY worthy of HOY. But after that is when the wheels started to fall off probably allbeit unwittingly....back to that in a minute. Zenyatta’s campaign, save for the Classic, was quite conservative and close to the vest. A mistake they realized which prompted the start in the Classic. I don’t put much stock in the surface debate (Zen has bebunked that in the ‘08 AB)or the JJ bashing which seems to be at the root of the trash talk. He’s just a controversial guy who makes provocative statements. After Labor Day Rachel began her “r&r;” in a round pen at Saratoga where she would spend much of her time lying down fast asleep. This is fine to a point but thats ALL she could do in that environment. No stretching her legs, kicking her heels and feeling the wind under her tail, no free grazing and rolling in the grass or mud all necessary protocols to refresch a horse mentally and physically. After Saratoga it was off to CD for a while then on to FG and the resumption of training. Her race Sat was actually not bad for 80-85% readiness- decent Beyer, similiar time to FG ‘09-but rather she had NO RESPONSE to Zardana (a one time G2 winner). She fought according to Borel but the spark just wasn’t there. Fillies can sour very easily and this may be an indication that Rachel has had enough. Her training procedures in the next few weeks will shed more light on this but don’t be surprised if we’ve just seen her last race. Zen, on the other hand, is very happy and reveling in her work. A tale of two mares headed in opposite directions.
18 Mar 2010 at 06:48 am | #
Jack, I totally agree. Mares are very emotional and have fragile egos. RA is a prime example. Just look at her post parade behaviors. She is a handful and has always been aggressive. However, if she is handled carefully, is let to have fun racing again and doesn’t get too frustrated they should be able to bring her back. Again, I think giving her the time she needs in stead of fitting her into their timeline is the better course of action for her. Afterall, she’s been campaigned since she was a 2yo and needed a well deserved break. If she doesn’t improve or show the interest, then she should be retired sound to go on to produce future champions.
18 Mar 2010 at 07:52 am | #
I very much admire both fillies for their talents and do not disparage either. However, I think that there are basically 3 reasons for a lot of the nastiness of the discussion. First, with great horses like these, people make emotional attachments similar to rooting for a favorite football or baseball team. Once they’ve done that, it’s human nature to defend that horse (or team) against all others (even if it’s unjustified). And it’s also human nature to root against your favorite’s competitors. Second, people make snap judgments about the horse’s connections. If they decide that they don’t like the connections, they will downplay anything that the horse does. Third, the HOTY voting is, within some parameters, very subjective. In football, the team that wins the Super Bowl is hailed as the champion. In horse racing, the horse that gets the most votes from a small group of people is hailed as the champion. It’s a system that is very prone to being viewed as unfair and unjust if it is not your favority horse that is voted the winner.
18 Mar 2010 at 07:53 am | #
Attitudes like Greg Michaels’ are the whole problem. I’m SO SICK of fans spewing crap at each other, and of columnists who post contentious writings that encourage them (and gain hits). Thank you Mr. Pricci for posting some sense.
I’m on the west coast and Rachel has me heart and soul. However, I very much admire Zenyatta and her accomplishments. While Rachel has an edge with me, I can’t tell you how much I enjoy watching Zenyatta’s antics and of course her races. I’d never, ever disparage her. I don’t understand why it’s so hard for a lot of vocal people to enjoy both phenomenal horses. I wonder how many new people it turns off.
18 Mar 2010 at 08:00 am | #
I think you’re missing the point of greatness. Yes, Rachel won some of her races, yes, against males. However, as you readily admit, it may have taken everything out of her to do so. On the other hand, Zenyatta beat better males, and more of them, and she is better today than she was last year when she beat them. In sports, it’s the best that can make competing look easy, a la Michael Jordan in basketball, Albert Pujols in baseball, Peyton Manning in football, even against the best competition. While Rachel was whipped more than 20 times in beating the older males, Zenyatta is not asked for her best in beating her competition. Therefore, while they are both GREAT race horses, Zenyatta does it easier and continues to thrive and improve while Rachel is struggling to improve. Therefore, as great as both are, Zenyatta is the better athlete and competitor, and would have won a head-to-head battle last year and anytime they might race together. It’s the subtlties that make the difference, and Zenyatta is the better race horse. She deserved HOY last year for these reasons.
18 Mar 2010 at 08:18 am | #
George,
Your analogy falls apart when you consider that “the best” are not simply handed a trophy every year. The athletes you listed did not win their respective championships every year despite being “the best” in their sport. At some point they have to go out there and *earn* it.
Rachel did more to earn it last year than Zenyatta did, and the voting reflected that.
18 Mar 2010 at 08:49 am | #
I made the mistake of “hating” Affirmed back in the day. Alydar was my favorite horse, so I would get into vicious arguments with Affirmed fans. At the time I could not watch Affirmed win a race without getting pissed off. I cheered for him to lose every time he ran. Basically I acted like the most rabid Rachel and Zenyatta fans of today.
It took me about 10 years to regret it. 10 years of not seeing another horse as great as Affirmed. Now I watch old videos of Affirmed’s Triple Crown wins with joy that he managed to get it done despite having such a worthy opponent, instead of being pissed off that he was beating my favorite.
The moral of my story is to enjoy both horses now while you can. If you hate one or the other I guarantee you will eventually regret it. Both of these mares are once in a lifetime, or at least once in many decades. We’re blessed to have them both, just as I now realize we were blessed to have both Affirmed and Alydar.
18 Mar 2010 at 08:51 am | #
The best horse won both races saturday. If Jackson loses to Zardana, how is he going to beat Zenyatta?
18 Mar 2010 at 08:58 am | #
Secretariat lost to Onion and Prove Out - a couple of others, too, whose names I can’t remember. Did those losses mean he wasn’t arguably the best there ever was or that he couldn’t have beaten a superior stablemate of either horse when he was on his game?
18 Mar 2010 at 10:13 am | #
I’m not a huge horseracing fan but I do love both horses. I was cheering for Rachel to win The Preakness last year and was amazed when Zenyatta won the Breeders Cup. I do find it comical how people are saying that Rachel is spent and should be retired. It was a lack of fitness, nothing more. Basically you saw an overeager out of shape horse get barely beat which shows me she still has a lot of fire in her belly and wants to run. If she wasn’t trying (Calvin was fighting her on the backstretch) I would think otherwise but she ran with a lot of heart. When Rachel returns, I’m betting we’ll see the Rachel of old (maybe even better). Now stop the pointless bickering and enjoy both horses. Do you think they give a flip if they win HOTY?
18 Mar 2010 at 10:17 am | #
No. The people that get to go free and get the best seats don’t know anything about voting on the best horse. I know Zenyatta has never been beaten. It looks like Favorite Trick and Secretariat all over again. Horrible sports writers.
Buddy
18 Mar 2010 at 10:22 am | #
to me, zenyatta has been the best horse i’ve witnessed in 25 years of racing. the only dislike i have towards rachel is my distaste for her jagoff owner. rachel is a wonderful horse in her own right.
18 Mar 2010 at 10:27 am | #
JOHN;
Enough is Enough! This Zenyatta/Rachel nonsense is the horse racing equivalent of Nero fiddling while Rome was burning!
New York racing is at the precipice of annihilation. There can never be enough marches on Albany or protests in Saratoga to suit me. The morons in Albany have completely abdicated their constitutional obligations. We must vote out each and every one of our assembly members as well as their senate colleagues.
The following are the immediate steps that MUST be taken to ensure the survival of New York racing this year: 1) Immediate closure of NYC-OTB; 2) Allowing NYRA to conduct off-track wagering in the City; 3)merger of all remaining regional OTBs and a real working joint-venture with NYRA to enhance off-track wagering throughout the state; 4) an expedited AQU racino process with the Lottery choosing the most economically feasible bid form the previously submitted bids-within the next 30 days; the chosen party would then have 30 days to deposit the up-front payment with the state-failure to do so would result in a forfeiture and an offer to the next best bidder to put up the money in 30 days or also risk forfeiture, etc; 5) an immediate reduction to 4 ( or even 3) days per week to compete with Monmouth; 6) an immediate reduction in all pari-mutuel taxes to enhance handle; 7) a severe reduction in the year-round schedule, to wit, ending winter racing in January & February.
I hope that these suggestions are just a start. Usually staring death in the face makes one stronger. The fans of New York racing can only hope that our current near-death expwerience will prove the truth of that long-held belief.
18 Mar 2010 at 11:03 am | #
You are a fine one to talk Pricci!! So many slaps at Zenyatta I lost count a year ago. NOW you want us all to get along? Too late. Way too late. Jess made it impossible with Curlin and RA both. Remember just two weeks or so ago, Zardana was just being run to ‘check them out’ according to Jess-no actually she was being run to try to WIN and she did, so now Jess won’t play. Jess blames anything and everything whenever he loses. Done with it. I believe you spoke for the Moss’s when you said ‘let’s be clear the only reason Z was in Classic was to try for HOY"-really? the ONLY reason-they told you that did they? Sorry bud, you blew it a long time ago and we haven’t forgotten. Hats off to your hypocrisy and to the clocker who wrote you--while a little too zealous he was closer to the truth than you are. And did he give you permission to print it? Wonder.
18 Mar 2010 at 11:27 am | #
Pete, no I didn’t give permission, but it’s OK, my work and writings are for all to read andI respect Pricci also...it’s all good!
Plese stop calling me a clocker, I am an author (I did write a book), owner, breeder, handicapper and horse lover...so let me get that out in the open.
For all of you that seem to be gripping because of the debate and back and forth banter....relax. What is it with this society wanting to detour or stymie passion? This is a passionate topic and people are jumping in with both feet, and that includes me. Enjoy it, have fun with it, I did and I tried to bring that out in my blog on the Zenyatta/Shirreffs/Zardana stomping the camp fire out of the Jess Jackson/Rachel campground this past weekend.
One final thing....skeptics have also tried to beat Zenyatta for the last ten starts. It amazes me they never learn: “the pace is going to hurt today, there is none’’, or ‘’she just never runs fast numbers’’, and ‘’she is a year older and maybe losing a step.’’ All the excuses and distorted handicapping ideas seem to apply when she runs. The best line I ever heard about Zenyatta was after the Breeders Cup Classic when a handicapper stated on a radio show “There is no value betting on a horse like that at 5-2.’’ ‘A horse like that’, meaning Zenyatta, well, how many horses are out there like Zenyatta? and the 5/2 on the Breeders Cup Classic win capped off a pick 4 that paid over $780.00.
If you thought she was no value at 1-9 in the Santa Margarita about the pick 4 paying over $1200.00. We hit on our Racingwithbruno.com handicapping service for our clients on a $42.00 ticket.
From a handicapping angle she has been good value, if you know out to use it....
18 Mar 2010 at 11:36 am | #
It seems those who want to get along are the east coast guys who gave the eclipse to Rachel back in August. Sure we can get along. Honestly this goes back a long time. East coast bias has always been around. Before the synthetic tracks all we heard was the California tracks are “too fast” or “too hard”. Nothing new. Zenyatta is a horse for the ages and could go down as the best ever by the time she’s done. Rachel is great too. Too bad her owner is such a blowhard. The Moss’s just ran their campaign and will run it again this year. Anybody who wants to try to beat Zenyatta knows where to find her.
18 Mar 2010 at 11:45 am | #
Bruno, you think name-calling and disrespect are “passion”? Then you’re a huge part of the problem for not seeing the disgust this is creating with the silent majority.
18 Mar 2010 at 12:12 pm | #
I feel some of this vitriol could have been avoided with a co-horse of the year. There is a great deal of puffery (love that word) on the blogs. Thankfully, the horses don’t know and don’t care. Love them both, though I feel Zenyatta has the “bigger” personality. It will be exciting to watch Zen race in Oaklawn. Hope Bambera and Zardana are there too.
18 Mar 2010 at 12:16 pm | #
IMO Rachel earned HOTY 2009 via races ran in 2009. It was not Horse of the Decade or Century.
And I also felt that the seperation between Z and R was very very small. I am a fan of both and would have grudgingly accepted if Z had been chosen. That is how close I felt for each in 2009.
This heated argument over who is best/better can never be proven. They are not the same age. Each seems to have distance preferences and opposite styles. Their camps have different goals/methods.
And these are living breathing animals. On any one day, many factors could contribute to a win or loss. I feel that Z would dominate at any distance over 1 1/16 miles. R has the edge at 1 mile or less. A fairly even match over 1 mile and less than 1 1/8 miles.
I followed R’s works this year and she never demonstrated race shape. Her camp commented in the media that she was not 100%. Not excuses, just facts. I would not want to see them race until both are sharp and at a distance where both can shine.
And I would hope for a dead heat. My biggest joy after watching R’s race was watching the tote distribute the $828,000 in win wagers on R as it was given to the 9-1 2nd fav. Lol. There is no such thing as a sure thing. Racing contiues to teach that lesson day after day.
Congrats to Z who was nearly beaten by traffic. Her fantastic closing talent allowed her to negotiate the trouble and explode to another win.
It is a joy to watch both.
May they both live and race long and healthy.
18 Mar 2010 at 12:56 pm | #
Bruno
Thanks for info. Did I read it wrong or did Pricci describe you as a “Southern Calif based clocker”. Or are you asking him to quit calling you a clocker? Was going by his description.Had no other info. Will look for your blog. Rachel Alexandra is great. I have seen nothing like Zenyatta-ever. A show unto herself.
18 Mar 2010 at 01:03 pm | #
Bruno, thanks for checking in. And I don’t even mind the commercial--although I did not give my permission (smiley face here!)
And as far as your resume is concerned, I describe you to those not in the know as one of the most respected clockers ever, in terms of opinion and veracity.
Further, I think I’m a fairly talented guy when it comes to the racing business. When asked, I also always have said there are two jobs I don’t think I would do very well: clocking and race calling. So to me, it’s a compliment.
Paul, please give me and everyone else a break. We need to actually talk horses some time and I’ve beaten the NY situation to death. In fact, I beat the drum again tomorrow. And as you can see, HRI readers never seem to tire of this discussion.
As far as your seven steps are concerned, I have some observations and questions. There are many 9-5 employees at NYC-OTB. they should join the unemployment ranks along with (conservatively) 12 perecent of the rest of the country? All one needs to do is fire a bunch of superfluous NYC-OTB vice-presidents and take back all those company cars--or give them Toyotas.
What makes the NYRA qualified to take over the OTB system? Because they did such a good job running their own business? Yes, OTBs should be part of the racing process in NYS. I just don’t know who might be best qualified to handle this new entity.
Yes, NYRA should go to a 4-day race week almost immediately. The rest is pretty much the makeup of Friday’s column.
And, I wasn’t joking. No more back and forth from me on the RA-Z debate, just timely commentary and opinion on each. I enjoy watching both run--a lot. There are plenty of other betting opportunities out there every day.
So, as Hyman said: Enjoy.
JP
18 Mar 2010 at 01:14 pm | #
I just wanted to set the record straight about not being just a clocker. We have a habit of categorizing people and placing them in a box, and I was a handicapper, and horse owner before started clocking, and I have carried that into breeding and writing a book. Pricci has been great at talking about the issues and topics whether you agree or not. He gives all a forum, and you can state your opinion.
Just like the guy that accused me of name-calling:
“Bruno, you think name-calling and disrespect are “passion”? Then you’re a huge part of the problem for not seeing the disgust this is creating with the silent majority. “ MED.
name calling and disrespect....Come on MED. YOU are part of the problem by being part of the ‘silent ‘ majority and for the lack of expression. Where am I disrespecting Jess by saying Cabernet Jess? He does make wine....
If some of the silent majority actually had the gull to stand up and be heard, read and write what they feel without having to be sent to sensitivity training (which is the most ridiculous thing I have ever heard - punishment due to others lack of backbone)we would actually get something accomplished.
As far as the NYRA, well, California isn’t any better. They have successfully chased all the horses out of this state.
Like bugs bunny used to say” What a maroon!” Sorry MED here I am disrespecting and calling names....Sensitivity class here I come.
18 Mar 2010 at 01:47 pm | #
Thank you thank you thank you! You said it perfectly. I wish everyone could read this blog. These are horses, magnificent horses, two of the best in recent history. They’ve each made her own way. And they should be lauded for that.
I agree that Jess Jackson and Steve Asmussen need to reconnoiter and let the filly tell them when she’s ready. I was surprised to see her obvious discomfort, the way her head moved, and Calvin’s feet on the dashboard. It used to be effortless. She used to have fun.
Zenyatta’s having the time of her life out there, and I hope and pray, with the right management, that Rachel gets her groove back.
Then, their meeting would be spectacular!
18 Mar 2010 at 03:17 pm | #
John Pricci, you are among the select few horseracing experts that are truly fair.
You seem to have a special affection for the industry that seems to die a little each day, and it breaks your heart to see it happen.
You are very much appreciated for that.
However, much like the American Revolution and the Civil War, your taking sides for Rachel Alexandra for HOY carries consequences.
You, as well as others whom voted RA for HOY, are now realizing that maybe, possibly maybe, you made a mistake.
I believe, that over the weekend, I gather that there were a couple of voters for Rachel Alexandra that would reverse their vote in a instant.
I, a New York native, believed that Zenyatta is should not only have been HOY, but Horse of the Decade.
We Zenyatta fans shall never forget that she was denied this honor.
It took 131 elitist members from the media, the east coast in specific, to deny Zenyatta her rightly place in history.
We had it up to here with the east coast bias, snobbery, and elitism.
Now that the truth is finally coming out - all I hear from the RA side is “can we all get along?’
Yes, we can. But as the saying goes - “we can forgive, but we cannot forget”.
John Pricci, if we only had you on our side.
18 Mar 2010 at 03:19 pm | #
great article!i love them both and all this bickering undermines the ‘’greatness’’ we are having the honor to witness.it seems to be a culture of us against them in all things today.can’t we all just sit back and enjoy the history we are witnessing?
18 Mar 2010 at 04:52 pm | #
I love that an anti-bickering piece generated much bickering. Brilliant!
And Bruno, call yourself whatever you want. Your “clocking” got me the late Pick 4 on BC Friday.
As far as NYC OTB goes, put the machines in bars and make a few nice places to bet and eat like the OTW’s in NJ. Maybe keep a few stores but for God’s sake keep them away from people’s homes. How much administration does that need? Let the NYRA administration handle the bet settlement process and have one central clearinghouse for all the NY State OTBs. How hard is this really?
18 Mar 2010 at 05:26 pm | #
Spot on, sir. The irony in this situation is that the promotion of these two horses to the general public (whether as a match-up or as spectacular individuals) would be great for the sport, to reach industry outsiders. Sadly it seems like industry insiders are more interested in bickering with each other than taking the word to the streets, and what does it get us? The horses will meet up or not; someone will win and lose, or neither will. It’s great to express your feelings, but getting belligerent about them won’t change the possible outcomes. The debate was interesting and relevant five months ago, but it’s time-and I don’t think it matters who points this out, or what occupational references they make along the way-to calm down.
18 Mar 2010 at 07:15 pm | #
Oh come on. The bickering is part of the fun. Yes, it can get too heated and personal at times, but I find heated arguing preferable to overly-sensitive fusspots politely discussing the topic in hushed tones over a cup of tea.
Can you imagine football, baseball, basketball, or any other sports fans whining because there’s too much bickering about who is the best in their favorite sport? And I’ll bet you wonder why racing is seen as an old fogey’s sport.
18 Mar 2010 at 07:18 pm | #
John,
I always enjoy your articles even when I strongly disagree with you. In this case I’d say your premise is dead wrong. The rivalry between Zenyatta and Rachel Alexandra, including the heated debates among fans, is absolutely the best thing to happen to horse racing in at least a decade. The more the merrier and the hotter it gets the better for racing. All sports thrive on heated, passionate rivalries.
Do you think the rivalry between Seabiscuit and War Admiral fans was any more civil or less heated? Was it good for racing? Absolutely!
Is the rivalry between Red Sox and Yankees fans or Giants and Dodger fans any more civil? Heck no. Is it good for baseball? Absolutely?
It’s all part of the fun. Some of you are just too thin skinned.
18 Mar 2010 at 07:54 pm | #
Thanks very much, John, for your thoughtful and balanced piece on two of the greatest horses we’ll ever see. It’s unfortunate, as you suggest, that the Horse-of-the-Year award couldn’t have been shared under the very unusual circumstances that prevailed last year. The winner-take-all nature of the Eclipse award fostered a partisanship that sometimes, unfortunately, took the form of building up one horse only by tearing down the other. Yet each horse was great last year in her own inimitable way, and each—like Secretariat and Ruffian—established a new but also an incommensurable paradigm. To the extent that there was, through the Eclipse award, only one winner, the victory may have come at a high price. If Rachel won the award last year through, as I suspect, a longer and tougher campaign that left her worse for the wear this year, her victory was short-lived. If Zenyatta “lost” last year because she was more conservatively managed, that loss on paper was redeemed in good measure by her trainer’s Eclipse award and by her own even greater (if possible) strength and dominance this year. So in a sense this may all have balanced out already for these two champions who took such different routes to the greatness they share.
19 Mar 2010 at 02:25 am | #
Dude, you are a fool!
“"” I’m automatically supposed to agree with my East Coast-based brethren"""
This is the exact brain-dead thinking which permanently altered racing history and served as still another death knell for horse racing in North America.
Had you done any significant research at all you would have concluded, as did all others who did similar amounts of research, that Rachel Alexandra’s series of 2009 stunts was in no way worthy of the Horse of the Year title.
As should have been expected, Rachel Alexandra’s dull performance last week exposed her entire 2009 campaign for how truly weak it was!
This was a third string waterboy from California that stuck it to this supposedly worthy Horse of the Year.
“The 2009 Woodward Stakes” was no more than the weak cousin of its former self. It was run more than six months ago and the whole field therein has combined for a single win since the race (a 5-horse allowance at 1-to-2 odds - the same price that Rachel Alexandra was on the board in that Woodward).
Rachel Alexandra fans had their asses handed to them last week, and had they done appropriate research (instead of ‘agreeing with their brethren’) they would have had plenty of reason to anticipate same.
Now retire this topic (and Rachel Alexandra too) before you make yourself look even more absurd!
Zenyatta will blow Rachel Alexandra’s doors off and everyone knows it.
19 Mar 2010 at 04:10 am | #
First off, I believe Rachel lost her heart @ Stga. being fully extended, do you recall the D. Wayne Lucas filly, WINNING COLORS, I rest my case.
Hopefully she will be retired before she becomes another Winning Colors. Long live ZENYATTA, she’s hands down the better of the two !
19 Mar 2010 at 04:16 am | #
No Way Larry and all you who think that to praise Zenyatta you have to trash Rachel -
Please explain exactly how Zenyatta was supposed to have earned 2009 HOY off one single race? Zenyatta ran one big race in 2009. It was a great race, but it was only one race.
Rachel’s Woodward was not her only major win in 2009. She beat some very good horses in the Preakness and the Haskell. She won the Oaks by 20+ lengths. She ran in the slop on Oaks day, while Zenyatta’s connections decided to bypass the Distaff because of the weather.
Zenyatta is a great, great horse - a superhorse. But for whatever reason, her connections decided not to wage an HOY campaign in 2009. They chose to be very conservative with their great horse and that conservatism cost her in the Eclipse voting. It had nothing to do with east/west bias.
And the fact that she won last week while Rachel lost has nothing to do with what either accomplished in 2009. It’s a new year.
19 Mar 2010 at 05:42 am | #
While the award for HOY 2009 is in the books and nothing will ever change the fact that RA won the balloting, what horse was truly greater and which will better stand the test of time is still up for debate; therefore, the debate continues (as it should) and events subsequent to last season matter. “How Green Was My Valley” beat out “Citizen Kane” for the Academy Award in 1941 but the latter is today considered the far superior film, perhaps the best of all-time. I think someday we’ll look back on the 2009 HOY vote much the same way. And we’ll wonder what factors and biases led to the mistake.
19 Mar 2010 at 09:02 am | #
Now where is the fun in getting along? I don’t see Red Sox fans complaining that Yankee fans hate their team. I see nothing wrong with sticking hard by your team’s side and standing up for them.
19 Mar 2010 at 09:34 am | #
THANK YOU!
HEAR! HEAR!
They are BOTH amazing mares and deserve our cheers. How often will we get the chance to see such calibre mares in the same time frame like this? They are both special to me and I will root for each no matter if one is East and one is West. Of if one is Sherrifs and one is Asmussen? WHO CARES!
Enjoy them both for what they have brought to the sport in their own, individual, but amazing aways.
19 Mar 2010 at 03:59 pm | #
Jess Jackson is the worst thing to happen to racing in a long time. He thinks he is doing us a favor by buying Rach and then running her in the Preakness, after what everyone thought was a fraud wins the Derby? Clearly that was going to be a walkover and she won like she should, and I think that MTBird proved his Derby by running a game second.
However, since then, Jess has taken the easy way. Running against older males (clearly a much of sprinters, except Macho Again who was too far back early) and then skipping the BC because of the surface? We all would have been better off if the original owner/trainer was still calling the shots. They would have ran her in the BC and would have been running her in the Apple. Rachel ran a very game race off a layoff. Why would anyone think that she might be better off that effort? Waaay back to third. And the time? OF COURSE it was going to be slow - 5 horse races always are. Why run faster than you need to?
So, without being explicit, the best thing would be for someone else to take over ownership of Rachel. And since he’s not selling, and you can’t steal her, there’s only one option. Perhaps he could go and chat with a REAL sportsman, Allen Paulson soon...he ran Azeri for 3 wins in the Apple Blossom, and never backed down with Cigar. And there are others that he had too.
20 Mar 2010 at 05:36 am | #
Jess Jackson:
THE BIGGEST ####### ##### IN HORSE RACING!
Attn John Pricci:
Write about this ####. Tell us how much of a ##### this #### is.
It’s time to come out and “expose” this ####.
If the universe is not aligned, this #### will duck his opposition.
20 Mar 2010 at 05:40 am | #
Secretariat:
Right on!
20 Mar 2010 at 05:54 am | #
Secretariat,
Jess Jackson truly believes in the following:
“If the odds are not in his favor, he will not run her”
The sheets gave her performance a “minus one” in the “New Orleans Ladies”. A spectacular race.
I am starting to hear on the Fairgrounds backstrech that Rachel Alexnadra will be retired and an announcement will be made within the next 6 weeks.
20 Mar 2010 at 06:55 am | #
Hello Secretariat,
Jess picks his spots and only runs Rachel where she has a high probability of winning.
Every horse that came out of the 2009 Woodward Stakes did not win their next start.
In fact, there has only been one winner that has come from the 2009 Woodward Stakes (Cool Coal Man - Gulfstream Park allowance race).
Horses in the 2009 Woodward Stakes have a combined record of 1 for 15 since that race was run.
Jess Jackson and Steve Asmussen (both knew) what they were running against in the 2009 Woodward Stakes.
This is why they are ducking Zenyatta. If they both know Rachel cannot beat Zenyatta, then why give Zenyatta 2.5 million of the purse and have her “start to threaten” Curlin’s All-Time North American earnings.
20 Mar 2010 at 03:18 pm | #
John,
I thought that some of these comments were going to be filtered out.
Passion is ok, but can we refrain from the vulgarity, please!
20 Mar 2010 at 03:35 pm | #
Jess Jackson quotes:
2010 Campaign:
“It’s going to be fun running this filly again. We’re going to see if she can beat herself.”
No Jess. A west coast mare (from one of those California “plastic” tracks) looked Rachel “in the eye” from the quarter pole to the wire.
Apple Blossom:
“I’d really like to have more than just nominal competition in the race,” Jackson said. “Assuming it’s a fair race, I don’t expect Rachel to have any trouble, but at the same time, regardless of whether they’re superstars or not, it embellishes the track’s reputation and Rachel’s reputation to have the best possible competition.”
Jess, you got what you asked for. John Shirreffs answered his call with the G.2 winner Zardana for “the best possible competition” in the New Orleans Ladies Classic. I suppose Jackson meant the best possible competition the Fair Grounds could offer (not an out of state “third-string” mare from the Shirreffs’ barn).
Synthetic:
“Rachel already has completed a brilliant, long campaign...these false (synthetic) tracks create potential for injury, a risk I am not willing to take with Rachel.”
It seems that even with a less-than-brilliant short 2010 campaign, even dirt tracks (Oaklawn Park) can create a risk that Jackson is not willing to take with Rachel…or could it be the mere presence of the imposing and immortal Zenyatta?
Health:
“The health of the horse is more important than running in a big race.”
So, I guess Jackson meant that if Rachel came out of her prep race healthy, it is important to avoid running in the Apple Blossom (AKA: “big race").
April 9, 2010:
“We are delighted that the race is on for April 9 and want to especially thank Charles Cella and Oaklawn for moving the date.”
Thanks for nothing, Jess Jackson. Take your “healthy” 2009 Joke of the Year and disappear, cowboy!
20 Mar 2010 at 03:45 pm | #
Secretariat,
If you are not already a fan of Zenyatta’s, please stay away.
Your’re giving the rest of us a bad name.
Please take your hate-filled, potty-mouthed garbage back to the Daily Kos where it belongs.
See, John, we can police our own.
20 Mar 2010 at 04:09 pm | #
It would appear from comments made in the last few days that the answer to your title question is ‘No’.
That’s too bad.
20 Mar 2010 at 04:17 pm | #
John Pricci:
Do you remember the matchup between the aged mare (Bayakoa) and the filly (Go For Wand)?
Go For Wand had enough of the west coast mare (Bayakoa) after some punishing fractions at Belmont Park. Go For Wand caved in past the sixteenth pole and wanted no more of the brilliant aged mare (Bayakoa).
Rachel Alexandra (filly) is going down this same path. Does she want Zenyatta to “absolutely” C-R-U-S-H her? Hopefully, she doesn’t break down like Go For Wand did.
Bayakoa/Go For Wand (1990 Breeders Cup Distaff):
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=w7JBsb00Lbs
20 Mar 2010 at 04:18 pm | #
Secretartiat - we don’t want your kind.
Sincerely,
Zenyatta Fans Worldwide
20 Mar 2010 at 04:24 pm | #
Jess Jackson:
THE BIGGEST ####### ##### IN HORSE RACING!
Attn John Pricci:
Write about this ####. Tell us how much of a ##### this #### is.
It’s time to come out and “expose” this ####.
If the universe is not aligned, this #### will duck his opposition.
20 Mar 2010 at 04:32 pm | #
wow..this has become ugly!secretariat you are making a mockery of the greatest horse that has ever stepped on the track!i don’t think Big Red would approve using his name to make your comments!
20 Mar 2010 at 04:36 pm | #
Secretariat,
You speak for all of us. Jess Jackson is a borderline narcissist.
His feelings come first. Oaklawn and the racing fans come second.
It’s all about him and if things don’t go his way, he’ll make it miserable for all others.
Here’s an example of a narcissistic individual:
Jess Jackson tries to setup a three-race series with the president of the NYRA..........and doesn’t include the other party (Jerry and Ann Moss).
Jess Jackson isn’t worth the power to blow up.
Sincerely,
Shawn
20 Mar 2010 at 04:37 pm | #
Right, it would appear as though we cannot get along. Those of us with kids (not going where u think...) are going to have gto explain to them why we allowed Zen and Rach not to race each other. My answer is going to be because Jess Jackson was not a sportsman, and a bald faced liar. Rach was truly a great horse, but proof that a human can really mess up a good thing. I will explain how the management of Zen was somewhat questionable too in that she rarely went looking for competition until she had too. Also, let us not forget she was at CD Derby Day but was scratched due to an off track - talk about a questionable human call.
I am a fan of both, as MOST of us are. How ever I hold Jess Jackson squarely responsible for preventing the meeting from happening. And I also hold Steve Asmussen accountable for not speaking out and telling it like it is - that Rach is fine and that she should have run in the Apple. He needs to grow a pair and put the game ahead of the $. He has enough owners and horses that he can do the right thing and call that ####### out. You gotta figure that by now he has had enough of the bullshit too. Deep down he and Blasi have to be going crazy for a shot at Zen and yet ####### continues to get in the way.
I support that tone of the guy who demanded that someone in the media call out ####### for the fraud he is. And the guy who used #######’s own words to show the lies. Here is a clown who shows up one day, with a boatload of cash and starts buying his way into the winner circle. Let’s not forget he bought Curlin off the track too.
If you hated the cursing, you might hate this too - best thing for racing is if ####### drops dead of a heart attack. Think about it. (Not that I am wishing for that, I am just saying… We can get along, this is ALL about Jackson now and IT IS VERY PERSONAL. Rach fans want a shot at Zen, and ####### is now the common enemy for both camps)
Secretariat is certainly with me, and I support his comments, passion and method. This is for RACHEL fans, not Zen fans, although like I said, I am for both as most of us are. The Zen World fan club can stay out of this.
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