Some of my favorites...
Friday, May 22, 2015
It is Memorial Day weekend - time to forget, forgive, and then love and live
.
I do not know about you but I really need a break from reality, at least for a weekend. What better way to change your outlook than by focusing on the sacrifices by so many members of our armed forces, dating back to George Washington and his ragtag Continental Army.
We all know people who have served, or we are beneficiaries of the service by others who gave us freedom, hope, equality and justice. I suppose if one were realistic, they would say we honor those who sacrificed for others, yet wonder about those who ignore the sacrifices and do things that are not in the public interest.
When I was young I lived to have the opportunity to defend freedom. My career in both sports and education were preparation for joining the military. Even as I was playing basketball at the University of Arizona I was immersed in an intensive Reserve Officer Training Program to prepare me for the inevitable service during the Vietnam war.
However, Divine Providence has other ideas for us on occasion so at the moment I volunteered for the draft armed only with exceptional ratings in ROTC, they discovered my body had been permanently damaged from 15 years of intensive sports achievement.
Rather than military service, I was confined to public service and spent much of the next three decades working in government and politics at all levels from local, to state, to national offices. It was a far cry from my dream but at least a way to make sure we could enjoy the opportunities given to us by our patriotic and dedicated military.
So this weekend, as I do every year, I will honor our fallen heroes. I will honor those who have not fallen but gave up their lives for us through injury and stress and will never be able to lead a normal life. I will honor the families of those heroes whose lives were changed forever by wars halfway around the world.
Here is a song I wrote to honor those heroes. It is performed by my band, Nashville Bound. I hope you take the time to listen to it. The name of the song is "No One's Left Keeping Score." Click on the link below to hear it.
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We all know people who have served, or we are beneficiaries of the service by others who gave us freedom, hope, equality and justice. I suppose if one were realistic, they would say we honor those who sacrificed for others, yet wonder about those who ignore the sacrifices and do things that are not in the public interest.
When I was young I lived to have the opportunity to defend freedom. My career in both sports and education were preparation for joining the military. Even as I was playing basketball at the University of Arizona I was immersed in an intensive Reserve Officer Training Program to prepare me for the inevitable service during the Vietnam war.
However, Divine Providence has other ideas for us on occasion so at the moment I volunteered for the draft armed only with exceptional ratings in ROTC, they discovered my body had been permanently damaged from 15 years of intensive sports achievement.
Rather than military service, I was confined to public service and spent much of the next three decades working in government and politics at all levels from local, to state, to national offices. It was a far cry from my dream but at least a way to make sure we could enjoy the opportunities given to us by our patriotic and dedicated military.
So this weekend, as I do every year, I will honor our fallen heroes. I will honor those who have not fallen but gave up their lives for us through injury and stress and will never be able to lead a normal life. I will honor the families of those heroes whose lives were changed forever by wars halfway around the world.
Here is a song I wrote to honor those heroes. It is performed by my band, Nashville Bound. I hope you take the time to listen to it. The name of the song is "No One's Left Keeping Score." Click on the link below to hear it.
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Sunday, May 17, 2015
CPT Twit - Peeking at Preakness Infield - Oh yes, American Pharaoh goes for triple crown next
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In yet another CPT Twit for those with no time or interest in reading Tweets, here is a view of the crazy infield at Maryland's Pimlico Track where American Pharaoh picked up the second leg of the triple crown by easily winning the Preakness stakes in an off track. Here is what you missed.
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In yet another CPT Twit for those with no time or interest in reading Tweets, here is a view of the crazy infield at Maryland's Pimlico Track where American Pharaoh picked up the second leg of the triple crown by easily winning the Preakness stakes in an off track. Here is what you missed.
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Friday, May 15, 2015
Will American Pharoah win in spite of the whipping - I think not
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In the aftermath of the Kentucky Derby while the media was first celebrating the gallant win by American Pharoah and the exciting race for the finish line, did anyone else notice the excessive whipping that took place down the stretch run?
As the following stories tell us, stories that broke only long after the Run for the Roses, the extreme whipping by jockey Victor Espinoza was so bad it triggered an investigation by stewards at the track. American Pharoah seemed distracted during the race and was rewarded by 32 whip lashes down the stretch.
Why did Espinoza whip the horse 32 times when the closest horses were hit only one-third as many times? It was not the first time his actions have gotten him in trouble. However, in the end the fact bettors were rewarded for the whipping just shows rules to protect horses are enforced only when the result is what the track wanted.
Back in 1972 jockey Ron Turcotte rode the mighty Secretariat for the first time and whipped him during the workout. Back at the barn Secretariat responded by biting the jockey. That was all Penny Chenery, legendary owner, needed to see. She immediately banned the use of a whip on her horse and he went on to become the greatest triple crown and thoroughbred champion in history, with NO whips.
There is nothing 32 lashes does but take the spirit out of a horse so I suspect American Pharaoh will not win the Preakness but finish third, perhaps in retaliation for the excessive whipping in the Derby. It is worth noting American Pharoah was not touched by a whip his two previous victories.
My order of finish for the Preakness is 1. Dortmund, 2. Firing Line, and 3. American Pharoah.
Here is what other said about this controversy.
Yahoo News
BALTIMORE —
Is Victor Espinoza the new whipping boy for animal rights activists?
The jockey who rode American Pharoah to victory in the Kentucky Derby tattooed the winner somewhere between 29 to 33 times with his whip in the race – a very high number. By my estimation, the horses American Pharoah passed in the stretch, Firing Line and Dortmund, were whipped nine and 11 times, respectively, by jockeys Gary Stevens and Martin Garcia. Six years ago, jockey Calvin Borel was criticized in some quarters for whipping super filly Rachel Alexandra about 20 times in the Woodward Stakes.
So 30 or more pops of the crop stand out. Especially in theKentucky Derby .
That led to some backlash from those who believe Espinoza's whip use was excessive, and that in turn led to defense of the jockey from some members of the racing community. In the current climate, vigorously whipping a horse in the only race many Americans watch all year is bound to create criticism.
But what appears abusive to the eye may be deceiving. Lighter, more padded whips are all about sound and fury that might signify very little in terms of serious pain inflicted on horses.
Either way, it's a talking point as Espinoza and American Pharoah prepare for the Preakness here Saturday.
TheKentucky
racing stewards reviewed Espinoza's ride and ruled that his whip use did not
violate state regulations. No disciplinary action was taken. Chief steward
Barbara Borden told the Lexington Herald-Leader this week that none of the 12
state veterinarians at the track found any welts on American Pharoah after the
race.
The colt's trainer, Bob Baffert, also downplayed the whip use when I asked him last week.
"The whips they use now, they're so light and … [Espinoza] was just keeping him busy, because I think the horse was not responding when he turned for home," Baffert said. "… He was flogging him and hitting him, but he hits him on the saddle towel. He doesn't really hit that hard, so he was just keeping him busy."
Fact is, Espinoza's whip use is keeping the racing stewards busy lately. Last week stewards at Santa Anita Park inSouthern
California fined him $300 for his April 4 ride on Stellar Wind in
the Santa Anita Oaks. (Why it took more than a month to fine Espinoza for that
ride is another story. The timing is oddly coincidental to Churchill's review
of the Derby .)
Stewards cited Espinoza for whip use "causing a break in the skin" on Stellar Wind while riding her to victory. The filly's trainer, John Sadler, told BloodHorse.com, "I don't remember any break on any skin on the horse. This is the first I've heard of it and I don't remember noticing any marks on the horse then."
If Espinoza indeed broke the skin on Stellar Wind, it runs counter to the primary claim made about the whips that were introduced in much ofNorth America in 2009: that they're too light and too
padded to actually hurt a horse. Jockeys say the modern whips are more
noisemaker than punishment tool, making a louder pop but a lighter impact than
the older, heavy whips.
"You have to hit them six times to one time with the old crop," Borel told the Herald-Leader. "That's what it amounts to, because they really don't feel it. … It probably looks worse. With the regular whip, you get their attention when you hit them one time. But this one, you have to keep their attention."
Yet even if the more modern whips are simply doling out love taps, there is a limit. And a new limit will be imposed inCalifornia on July 1.
Under those new rules, a jockey cannot whip a horse more than three times in succession without then pausing and allowing the animal to respond. Espinoza's ride on American Pharoah would likely result in a fine, if not a suspension, had it occurred inCalifornia
two months from now.
And if he were riding inEurope , Espinoza
likely would have been outright vilified. France penalizes
jockeys who whip a horse more than eight times in a race, and England calls
for a steward's review if a rider hits a horse more than eight times.
But here is the existential debate: if the difference between winning the Kentucky Derby or finishing third aboard the favorite is a couple dozen cracks of the whip, which do you choose?
A whole lot of jockeys would rather wear out their whipping arm and risk the consequences afterward. This is a $2 million race, with immortality and a lot of money going to the winner.
And, truth be told, a lot of money going to the bettors. Jockeys are carrying the betting interests of the fans with them on the track, and any suspicion that a rider isn't doing all he can to get his horse home in first will be met with severe criticism by fans with a financial stake in the outcome.
"It's a fine line," Meyocks said. "We're in the gambling business. … You're coming down to the wire; it's important for people betting on the races, plus the owners, trainers and jocks."
One thing the Jockeys Guild will never agree to: an outright ban of the whip. Tiny riders need to have them as a means for controlling large animals moving at high rates of speed. The job already is dangerous enough.
"We have 60 permanently disabled jockeys," Meyocks said. "We could have 160 in a year [if whips are banned]."
Whether you vilify Victor Espinoza's Kentucky Derby ride or defend it, this much is clear: all eyes inBaltimore
will be on the jockey's right arm, and how many times he brings his riding crop
down on the flank of American Pharoah on Saturday in the Preakness.
Bloomberg Business News
American Pharoah Whipped 32 Times in Victory
In his first two races this year, American Pharoah hadn’t felt
the sting of the jockey’s whip a single time. In the Kentucky Derby, he was cracked some 32 times.
Those numbers, perhaps more than any other statistic, underscore how hard the big horse had to work to captureAmerica ’s most-prestigious race on
Saturday. This was not the walkover that some racing touts -- myself included
-- had seen as a real possibility. Instead, Pharoah gutted out a grueling, one-length victory that appeared to take a lot out of him.
There were signs early that it wouldn’t be easy.
The horse never really looked comfortable at any point in the race. When the field came off the first turn and entered the backstretch, jockey Victor Espinoza was already pecking at Pharoah to keep up. If you had given me the opportunity to cancel my bet on him right then, I just may have taken it. The front-runners were setting a dawdling pace that Pharoah normally would have matched without the slightest of effort.
Fast forward to the midpoint of the second turn, and Espinoza was already urging him vigorously to go after the two leaders. Seconds later, before they had even straightened out for the home stretch, Espinoza cocked the whip in his right hand and raised it up high.
This was the first time that the jockey had ever felt Pharoah struggling to pull away from his rivals. It clearly made him nervous (he said as much in the immediate aftermath of the race). He responded by flailing away time and time again as his colt slowly edged past Firing Line andDortmund , the second- and
third-place finishers.
Triple Crown?
Thirty-two cracks of the whip are a lot.
Beyond being aesthetically unpleasing to watch, so many blows can take a lot out of a horse, each one acting as a forceful prodding to try harder. And at some point, they stop being effective. Stronger-finishing jockeys, like Joel Rosario, who rode fourth-place finisher Frosted, rely much less on the stick to drive their horses to the finish line.Rosario
hit Frosted only four times as he surged toward the leaders late in the Derby .
Sunday morning reports out ofKentucky indicated that the winner came out
of the race looking a few pounds lighter. Perhaps he’ll recover in time to
capture the Preakness Stakes in two weeks. But would he then be up for winning
again just three weeks later in the Belmont Stakes to become the first Triple Crown champion
since 1978?
I doubt it.
As the tightDerby
finish proved, this is a talented crop of three-year-old horses. And some of
them -- perhaps Frosted, perhaps sixth-place finisher Materiality -- will
bypass the Preakness and await Pharoah at Belmont Park .
There, going the marathon distance of 1 1/2 miles, the effects of those 32 cracks just may catch up to him.
(David Papadopoulos, managing editor for theAmericas
editing hub at Bloomberg News, has been following thoroughbred racing for more
than two decades and was runner-up in 2008 Eclipse Award voting for feature
writing on the sport.)
,
In the aftermath of the Kentucky Derby while the media was first celebrating the gallant win by American Pharoah and the exciting race for the finish line, did anyone else notice the excessive whipping that took place down the stretch run?
As the following stories tell us, stories that broke only long after the Run for the Roses, the extreme whipping by jockey Victor Espinoza was so bad it triggered an investigation by stewards at the track. American Pharoah seemed distracted during the race and was rewarded by 32 whip lashes down the stretch.
Why did Espinoza whip the horse 32 times when the closest horses were hit only one-third as many times? It was not the first time his actions have gotten him in trouble. However, in the end the fact bettors were rewarded for the whipping just shows rules to protect horses are enforced only when the result is what the track wanted.
Back in 1972 jockey Ron Turcotte rode the mighty Secretariat for the first time and whipped him during the workout. Back at the barn Secretariat responded by biting the jockey. That was all Penny Chenery, legendary owner, needed to see. She immediately banned the use of a whip on her horse and he went on to become the greatest triple crown and thoroughbred champion in history, with NO whips.
There is nothing 32 lashes does but take the spirit out of a horse so I suspect American Pharaoh will not win the Preakness but finish third, perhaps in retaliation for the excessive whipping in the Derby. It is worth noting American Pharoah was not touched by a whip his two previous victories.
My order of finish for the Preakness is 1. Dortmund, 2. Firing Line, and 3. American Pharoah.
Here is what other said about this controversy.
Yahoo News
Great debate: Did Victor Espinoza whip American Pharoah too many times?
By Pat Forde
May 14, 2015 3:24 PM Yahoo Sports
The jockey who rode American Pharoah to victory in the Kentucky Derby tattooed the winner somewhere between 29 to 33 times with his whip in the race – a very high number. By my estimation, the horses American Pharoah passed in the stretch, Firing Line and Dortmund, were whipped nine and 11 times, respectively, by jockeys Gary Stevens and Martin Garcia. Six years ago, jockey Calvin Borel was criticized in some quarters for whipping super filly Rachel Alexandra about 20 times in the Woodward Stakes.
So 30 or more pops of the crop stand out. Especially in the
That led to some backlash from those who believe Espinoza's whip use was excessive, and that in turn led to defense of the jockey from some members of the racing community. In the current climate, vigorously whipping a horse in the only race many Americans watch all year is bound to create criticism.
Victor Espinoza, left, rides American Pharoah to victory in the
Kentucky Derby. (AP)
Enough people already think the sport is sanctioned animal
cruelty, especially after the fatal breakdowns of Barbaro in the 2006 Preakness
and Eight Belles in the 2008 Derby .
The industry is concerned enough that it has moved to officially phase out the
term "whip" and replace it with "riding crop." Given public
perception of the sport, Espinoza's ride would qualify as bad optics.
But what appears abusive to the eye may be deceiving. Lighter, more padded whips are all about sound and fury that might signify very little in terms of serious pain inflicted on horses.
Either way, it's a talking point as Espinoza and American Pharoah prepare for the Preakness here Saturday.
The
The colt's trainer, Bob Baffert, also downplayed the whip use when I asked him last week.
"The whips they use now, they're so light and … [Espinoza] was just keeping him busy, because I think the horse was not responding when he turned for home," Baffert said. "… He was flogging him and hitting him, but he hits him on the saddle towel. He doesn't really hit that hard, so he was just keeping him busy."
Fact is, Espinoza's whip use is keeping the racing stewards busy lately. Last week stewards at Santa Anita Park in
Stewards cited Espinoza for whip use "causing a break in the skin" on Stellar Wind while riding her to victory. The filly's trainer, John Sadler, told BloodHorse.com, "I don't remember any break on any skin on the horse. This is the first I've heard of it and I don't remember noticing any marks on the horse then."
If Espinoza indeed broke the skin on Stellar Wind, it runs counter to the primary claim made about the whips that were introduced in much of
"Since
Eight Belles, we worked with the industry on changing to the popper," said
Jockeys Guild national manager Terry Meyocks. "It makes more of a noise
than anything."
"You have to hit them six times to one time with the old crop," Borel told the Herald-Leader. "That's what it amounts to, because they really don't feel it. … It probably looks worse. With the regular whip, you get their attention when you hit them one time. But this one, you have to keep their attention."
Yet even if the more modern whips are simply doling out love taps, there is a limit. And a new limit will be imposed in
Under those new rules, a jockey cannot whip a horse more than three times in succession without then pausing and allowing the animal to respond. Espinoza's ride on American Pharoah would likely result in a fine, if not a suspension, had it occurred in
And if he were riding in
But here is the existential debate: if the difference between winning the Kentucky Derby or finishing third aboard the favorite is a couple dozen cracks of the whip, which do you choose?
A whole lot of jockeys would rather wear out their whipping arm and risk the consequences afterward. This is a $2 million race, with immortality and a lot of money going to the winner.
And, truth be told, a lot of money going to the bettors. Jockeys are carrying the betting interests of the fans with them on the track, and any suspicion that a rider isn't doing all he can to get his horse home in first will be met with severe criticism by fans with a financial stake in the outcome.
"It's a fine line," Meyocks said. "We're in the gambling business. … You're coming down to the wire; it's important for people betting on the races, plus the owners, trainers and jocks."
One thing the Jockeys Guild will never agree to: an outright ban of the whip. Tiny riders need to have them as a means for controlling large animals moving at high rates of speed. The job already is dangerous enough.
"We have 60 permanently disabled jockeys," Meyocks said. "We could have 160 in a year [if whips are banned]."
Whether you vilify Victor Espinoza's Kentucky Derby ride or defend it, this much is clear: all eyes in
Bloomberg Business News
American Pharoah Whipped 32 Times in Victory
Those numbers, perhaps more than any other statistic, underscore how hard the big horse had to work to capture
There were signs early that it wouldn’t be easy.
The horse never really looked comfortable at any point in the race. When the field came off the first turn and entered the backstretch, jockey Victor Espinoza was already pecking at Pharoah to keep up. If you had given me the opportunity to cancel my bet on him right then, I just may have taken it. The front-runners were setting a dawdling pace that Pharoah normally would have matched without the slightest of effort.
Fast forward to the midpoint of the second turn, and Espinoza was already urging him vigorously to go after the two leaders. Seconds later, before they had even straightened out for the home stretch, Espinoza cocked the whip in his right hand and raised it up high.
This was the first time that the jockey had ever felt Pharoah struggling to pull away from his rivals. It clearly made him nervous (he said as much in the immediate aftermath of the race). He responded by flailing away time and time again as his colt slowly edged past Firing Line and
Triple Crown?
Thirty-two cracks of the whip are a lot.
Beyond being aesthetically unpleasing to watch, so many blows can take a lot out of a horse, each one acting as a forceful prodding to try harder. And at some point, they stop being effective. Stronger-finishing jockeys, like Joel Rosario, who rode fourth-place finisher Frosted, rely much less on the stick to drive their horses to the finish line.
Sunday morning reports out of
I doubt it.
As the tight
There, going the marathon distance of 1 1/2 miles, the effects of those 32 cracks just may catch up to him.
(David Papadopoulos, managing editor for the
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