Started by Dave in TJ Mex, November 02, 2013, 05:51:31 PM
Previous topic - Next topicQuote from: FT-TBC-TRF on November 14, 2013, 06:14:11 AM
......against sub par competition.
Quote from: Man o Taz on November 15, 2013, 07:16:28 AMQuote from: Kennedy on November 13, 2013, 10:47:56 AMQuote from: Man o Taz on November 13, 2013, 08:14:03 AM
And in 2012 he participated in the Dubai World Cup (12), in 2011 he also participated in the Charles Town Classic (2), and the Lone Star Park Handicap (3), and in 2010 he was in two maiden races placing (2,1) at Gulfstream Park, the Florida Derby (7), Churchill Downs for the Cliff's Edge Derby Trial (5), the Lone Star Park Derby (1), and the Belmont Stakes (4). So to add to your point - he has traveled outside of California quite a bit.
Examining this resume, 40% of his races have been run outside the state of California.
But in the early part of his career he clearly wasn't the horse he is today. He has improved significantly over what he was as a 3yo. So it is difficult to compare his early races. One might actually say that he did not become a really good horse until he started running in Cal on a regular basis.
True.
When do you measure that he got good?
When he won his first stakes race?
The Lone Star Derby...G3...that would give him 7 out of 24 outside of CA or 29% of his races.
When he won his first G1 race?
That would be March 2011 - his second career race in California - so let's eliminate the seven races in before that...
23% of his races - 5 out of 21 occurred outside of CA. 1.66 a year...out of an average of 7 races per year.
That's better than a lot of California-based horses.
Quote from: Man o Taz on November 15, 2013, 07:16:28 AMQuote from: Kennedy on November 13, 2013, 10:47:56 AMQuote from: Man o Taz on November 13, 2013, 08:14:03 AM
And in 2012 he participated in the Dubai World Cup (12), in 2011 he also participated in the Charles Town Classic (2), and the Lone Star Park Handicap (3), and in 2010 he was in two maiden races placing (2,1) at Gulfstream Park, the Florida Derby (7), Churchill Downs for the Cliff's Edge Derby Trial (5), the Lone Star Park Derby (1), and the Belmont Stakes (4). So to add to your point - he has traveled outside of California quite a bit.
Examining this resume, 40% of his races have been run outside the state of California.
But in the early part of his career he clearly wasn't the horse he is today. He has improved significantly over what he was as a 3yo. So it is difficult to compare his early races. One might actually say that he did not become a really good horse until he started running in Cal on a regular basis.
True.
When do you measure that he got good?
When he won his first stakes race?
The Lone Star Derby...G3...that would give him 7 out of 24 outside of CA or 29% of his races.
When he won his first G1 race?
That would be March 2011 - his second race career race in California - so let's eliminate the seven races in before that...
23% of his races - 5 out of 21 occurred outside of CA. 1.66 a year...out of an average of 7 races per year.
That's better than a lot of California-based horses.
Quote from: Man o Taz on November 15, 2013, 07:39:25 AMQuote from: FT-TBC-TRF on November 14, 2013, 06:14:11 AM
......against sub par competition.
What do you base that on? Two BC Classic races? So he does not run well at the end of the year at the age of 5 and 6. The notion that he always fades against top competition has been disproven.
In 2011 he left California three times...he did not win but finished in the money in all of those races besting the following:
Acclamation
Awesome Gem
Flat Out
Gone Astray
Havre De Grace
Headache
Icebox
Inherit The Gold
Prayer for Relief
Rattlesnake Bridge
Rule
Ruler on Ice
So You Think
Stay Thirsty
Tackleberry
Tizway
To Honor and Serve
Uncle Mo
In 2012, he did what only one other American G1 winning horse did that year and went to the Dubai World Cup. True - he did not perform well - but he has never ducked competition.
In 2013 he bested the following horses in his travels:
Ron The Greek in the Santa Anita Handicap and the Charles Town Classic also defeating the previous year's winner Caixa Eletronica.
Remember in the SAH RTG was coming off his career high BSF so he was in good form and GOD dispatched him with ease.
And guess what - the runner up to Game On Dude in those races was among the inferior competition that Game On Dude had been accused of facing earlier that year in Clubhouse Ride who also bested RTG and CE.
Quote from: Kennedy on November 18, 2013, 07:21:22 PM
I also think that his losses in the last two Classics were not a case of a false jade getting exposed. I actually think he just isn't as good at 10f and for whatever reason he also didn't run his best race. I'm a bit wary of Baffert horses in the BC in races other than the Sprint and Juvenile events. Game on Dude's failures are far from the first he's had.
Quote from: Kennedy on November 19, 2013, 06:40:24 AM
I think that a lot of the Game On Dude discussion can be encapsulated with one question.
Based on everything we know, don't know and are guessing about Game on Dude will he win the Clark?
Quote from: Dave in TJ Mex on November 18, 2013, 07:56:53 PM
Man O'Taz does an admirable job of making the best case possible for GOD.
His accomplishments, as referenced above, make it all the more baffling that in three of the four most important races of his life --- the last two BCC and the Dubai World Cup --- he was nowhere close to being competitive.
That's what so troubling to me. In those "big" races, he just plain quit.
Quote from: peeptoad on November 19, 2013, 09:47:30 AM
Thanks for the pps Kennedy. After looking at them briefly the only concrete factor that I can come up with regarding GoD's dismal BC performance(s) is the relationship between the early fractions in the race and the distance. The only time he has been able to win when the opening half mile is under :47 is at 9F or under (though he almost won the 2012 Pac Classic, Dullahan passed him pretty easily suggesting that his late pace in that race was probably not as good as it appeared). With the exception of the 2011 Big Cap going :46 and change early, all of his 10F races in which he won had an opening half of over :46 (most were :47-:49 range). He did win that 2011 Big Cap, but he won by a diminishing nose to far lesser horse (Setsuko). I think a person can reasonably toss both Dubai excursions since many NA horses do not do well over there. The only logical assumption I can make (and a logical assumption seems almost like an oxymoron) is that he needs slightly slower fractions early at anything over 9F.
The other interesting thing looking at races earlier in his career is that he was often not on the lead early. He seems to be a definitely frontrunner now, but was not always that way, so maybe something else is going on...
Quote from: Man o Taz on November 07, 2013, 11:26:46 AMQuote from: Islandgirl45 on November 05, 2013, 09:10:00 AM
I read one article in which Baffert said he knew GoD was in trouble when they were going too fast on the backstretch, yet isn't GoD's signature a high cruising speed?
It seems as if he just doesn't like to be challenged by another horse, and he folds if that happens.
Yes. I thought this was strange.
If you look at the fractions he has one with before where he has been on the lead - these fractions did not appear too quick.
I used to think that Game On Dude was challenged if the splits were faster than 24 second furlongs, but his Santa Anita Derby this year and his 2011 one suggest that's false.
Here are his splits from past Santa Anita Handicaps he won and this year's BC Classic.
2011 - Final time - 1:59.47
22.95, 46.73, 1;10.73, 1:34.80
2013 Final Time - 2:00.14
23.64, 47.19 (in front by 2 1/2 lengths after a half-mile), 1:10.97, 1:35.24
2013 BC Classic Final Time - 2:00.72
23.39, 46.36, 1:10.23, 1:34.84
This year's Classic was a touch faster than those other efforts where he won the races. But the final time was a half to a full second more. And he was not on the lead.
I still think the notion of getting the horse to rate in training screwed up his effort.
This and Mr. Baffert indicating that he needed a clear view and Mr. Smith had him behind horses.
Quote from: Man o Taz on November 19, 2013, 12:07:22 PMQuote from: peeptoad on November 19, 2013, 09:47:30 AM
Thanks for the pps Kennedy. After looking at them briefly the only concrete factor that I can come up with regarding GoD's dismal BC performance(s) is the relationship between the early fractions in the race and the distance. The only time he has been able to win when the opening half mile is under :47 is at 9F or under (though he almost won the 2012 Pac Classic, Dullahan passed him pretty easily suggesting that his late pace in that race was probably not as good as it appeared). With the exception of the 2011 Big Cap going :46 and change early, all of his 10F races in which he won had an opening half of over :46 (most were :47-:49 range). He did win that 2011 Big Cap, but he won by a diminishing nose to far lesser horse (Setsuko). I think a person can reasonably toss both Dubai excursions since many NA horses do not do well over there. The only logical assumption I can make (and a logical assumption seems almost like an oxymoron) is that he needs slightly slower fractions early at anything over 9F.
The other interesting thing looking at races earlier in his career is that he was often not on the lead early. He seems to be a definitely frontrunner now, but was not always that way, so maybe something else is going on...
I discussed this earlier in the thread.
I think you need to differentiate from instances when he was on the lead and just off the lead, don't you?
In the 2013 BC Classic, he was off the lead so can you really attribute the 46.36 time for the first half to him? I thought he was a length or two off the lead in the first half mile which would place his time around 47 wouldn't it? And if that is indeed the case, then this time is consistent with winning efforts he has had in the recent and distant past at 10 furlongs at Santa Anita. The only difference would be what I have suggested before - he was not on the lead. And this was Mr. Bailey's point.