Slim
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Point Blank: Did JP McManus Stop a Gold Cup Winner?
Racing insiders are forever asking the same questions.
Couldnt agree more. If that’s Nicky Henderson and De Boinville, they’d be called cowards, and be hung drawn and quartered. And have the worlds media all over them.It's just bad optics for a Gold Cup winner. When you look at the scrutiny that Nicky Henderson got over Constitution Hill yet today that's just considered par for the course.
Couldnt agree more. If that’s Nicky Henderson and De Boinville, they’d be called cowards, and be hung drawn and quartered. And have the worlds media all over them.
Tbf, some people are correctly calling it out for what it is, but f%*& all will happen. Just accept it, then laud the crooked bastards with praise in March when it wins on snaff again.
I’ll throw this one in for consideration:
Full Result 3.00 Haydock | 23 November 2013 | Racing Post
Full Race Result from the 3.00 at Haydock on 23rd November 2013.www.racingpost.com
Henderson GC winner, trailed in by 40 lengths in a Betfair Chase. Wins his next race in Ireland - the Savills.
Stewards not asking why the improved performance at Leopardstown, and no recriminations.
I get what you're saying and I get where you're coming from, for sure.I’m not disagreeing with your betting approach. My piece isn’t about punter responsibility or integrity breaches.
It’s about optics. A reigning Gold Cup winner drifting heavily and then running non-competitively is visually damaging at the top of the sport, regardless of intent or targeting. Markets don’t need to be right to matter – they only need to align.
You say you knew in advance who owned, trained and rode the horse and adjusted accordingly. That’s sensible as a punter, but it’s also the issue. When people factor expectation management into whether a Gold Cup winner is “the day” or not, the sport has a problem.
You can be right as a punter and racing can still be wrong in how it presents itself.
The idea that people who backed it only have themselves to blame is missing the point entirely.
Someone knew he was having an off day in advance.
The fact it was 10+ on the exchanges is the issue. It stinks.
The horse could just have been lifeless but when it's a Gold Cup winner you need better communication of why the run was so bad, that's my point.
I didn't catch the build up so wasn't aware of the big drift. 5/1 in the morning was bad enough (didn't stop me backing it) so 9/1 would have been alarming (but might still not have stopped me).
I missed the first few fences but watched in a mixture of disappointment and disbelief at how the horse ran and jumped (very stickily).
People on here who are closer to the sport will maybe know but I can't tell for myself. Is it normal practice for a jockey to make a point of presenting a horse wrongly at a fence to make sure it loses momentum?
I did mutter to myself around halfway, "It isn't off here," but then it did close up at the end of the back straight, seemingly without being asked a question but was already going backwards again as they started the turn for home.
I've been slagged on here for suggesting that sometimes horses aren't trying in Group/Grade 1s but the flip side of that coin today was that I Am Maximus appeared to be off for its life. They had won the race a few years back (if not this then the DRF race) with Edwolf, a 100/1 shot that morning so are they 'the types' who not only make money laying their best horse but also backing their longshot?
I suppose only insiders will ever know.
Stewards should have the power to raise a non-trier 10lbs as a penalty, as well as ban it for 40 days. It might at least just make them cleverer about the optics.
If you had seen the first 3 or 4 you would have known it was over.I didn't catch the build up so wasn't aware of the big drift. 5/1 in the morning was bad enough (didn't stop me backing it) so 9/1 would have been alarming (but might still not have stopped me).
I missed the first few fences but watched in a mixture of disappointment and disbelief at how the horse ran and jumped (very stickily).
If you had seen the first 3 or 4 you would have known it was over.