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Book Report

As Ray Dalio says at the beginning of Principles, he’s not a writer. That’s true. Slow going through this one but it’s deserved. 

I like this one. 

And it reminded me that when faced with the choice between two things you need that are seemingly at odds, go slowly to figure out how you can have as much of both as possible. There is almost always a good path that you just haven’t figured out yet, so look for it until you find it rather than settle for the choice that is then apparent to you. 

Something to keep in mind when trying to make a tough decision. 

Next Stage

Outrage and anger now giving way to pity and redemption in the sad, sordid Gordon Elliott saga, playing out on Twitter and other mediums.

Perhaps, that’s good, the ability to forgive and forget. Perhaps. I’m going to have a hard time doing either. 

And, yes, we’ve all made mistakes. This was a big one by Elliott and his cronies. And, yes, when you’re a leader of a sport, you are judged publicicly, and perhaps, more severely. That’s part of the job. 

If Thoroughbred racing here is any guide, then, Elliott will be suspended for some period, a fine will be levied, the horses still in his care will transfer into someone else’s name, they’ll continue to run and win, Elliott will lay low for a while and at some point, it will all be gently swept under the rug as he returns to his helm and life will go on as normal. That’s what happens here. Time will tell what happens there. 

Regrouping

Regrouping after a disruptive Monday.

“Ban Him” blowing up TIHR. Not sure if that’s good or bad. Actually, I am sure, bad. All bad. Gordon Elliott coming out with another apology on Racing Post. Too little, too late. Another video coming out of amateur rider Rob James. More bad. 

I needed to write something more enjoyable, landed on Thistlecrack’s epic jump of a few years back. That helped. 

Chuck Simon and I talked racing on Going in Circles. One hour, 33 minutes later, we ended but were far from finished. 

If you missed the latest segment of In the Room, listen here to Florent Geroux. 

Going for a run. Or a walk. Or a bike ride. Or a catch with Miles. 

Ban Him

Disturbing news from Europe as a photo of leading National Hunt trainer Gordon Elliott sitting on a dead horse while on the phone, smirking, flashing two fingers, like a peace sign, or perhaps, victory, has circulated on social media. 

Yeah, there’s a sentence I never thought I would type. I’ve seen the photo, it’s as ugly, barbaric, abhorrent, disgusting as you would expect. And, no, it’s not photoshopped. And, no, it’s not excusable. And, no, I’m not surprised. 

Elliott’s boorish behavior has been on display at Far Hills, Saratoga, Iroquois. I interviewed him after winning our biggest race and he suffered through two questions and said, “We done?” Then he went and caroused with his friends, his owners, his enablers. It was disrespectful to the sport. Joe tried to interview him at Saratoga and it was worse.

His enablers have enabled this. His sycophants have condoned this. Win and behavior is excused. Win and a lack of respect, decency, is construed as idiosyncratic, a style, a personality. Win and people laugh at your jokes. Win and everything is forgiven. We see it here every day, in racing, in sports, in politics, in life.

Elliott offered a statement – a pitiful, pathetic attempt at shifting blame and skirting the responsibility. Like it was a lapse in judgement, a momentary mistake. 

The Racing Post published the statement.

“I would like to address the speculation and rumours that have been rife since an old photo of me began circulating on social media yesterday afternoon. 

“Firstly, I apologise profoundly for any offence that this photo has caused and can categorically state that the welfare of each and every horse under my care is paramount and has been central to the success that we have enjoyed here at Cullentra. 

“The photo in question was taken some time ago and occurred after a horse had died of an apparent heart attack on the gallops. I appreciate that an initial viewing of this photo suggests it is a callous and staged photo but nothing could be further from the truth.

“At what was a sad time, which it is when any horse under my care passes away, my initial reaction was to get the body removed from where it was positioned. 

“I was standing over the horse waiting to help with the removal of the body, in the course of which, to my memory I received a call and, without thinking, I sat down to take it. Hearing a shout from one of my team, I gestured to wait until I was finished.

“Such background information may seem trivial at this time and will not allay the concerns of many people both within and outside the world of horse racing.

“However, I feel it is important to provide people with some context surrounding this photo. To the racing community, to anyone who has worked with and loves horses and to anyone offended by this image I cannot apologise enough.

“Horse welfare and the care and attention to detail involved is absolutely at the core of everything we do here and both myself and all of my team pride ourselves on those standards.

“Again I apologise for any offence caused and ask people to consider this statement as opposed to the various falsehoods and misinformation being circulated on social media.

“At this time I would like to stress that I continue to extend my full cooperation with the ongoing IHRB investigation.”

Pitiful and pathetic, right? And a lot of other words.

But, what’s next? Will he lose his license? Will he be banned? Will his enablers be punished, penalized? Remember, someone took the photo. Took the deplorable photo and found it funny then and would still think it’s funny now, except for those damn ramifications. 

The thief is sorry he got caught, not that he stole. 

Ramifications?

Gigginstown House Stud’s Michael and Eddie O’Leary, one of Elliott’s biggest owners, offered their own statement, again, released by The Racing Post. 

It reads, in part:

“Eddie and I were deeply disappointed by the unacceptable photo which appeared on social media over the weekend. The care and welfare of all our animals comes first with all our trainers.”

In the same statement, Gigginstown said they will continue to support Elliott. So, the photo of a man sitting on a dead horse is unacceptable. But the man is acceptable. 

Deplorable. 

The Saturday Special for February 13

Nothing like a Saturday. The 3-year-old picture begins to take shape at Fair Grounds. Laurel Park offers stellar winter action. Gulfstream Park, Santa Anita and everywhere in between – there is something for everyone. 

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Rain Delay Sunday

ULLL Majors & AAA Assessment Postponed Rain Date Cancelled. The weekend is officially a rain out. That time of year.  Saturday, February 27, 2021. The race sheet needs two columns for all the races worth watching. Lingfield at 7:55 to Sam Houston at 9:42. The Fountain of Youth to the Southwest. The Grade 2 Juvenile … Read more