Zsuszanna04........Ya Baby!!!!

  • Alcaponee
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Re: Re: Zsuszanna04........Ya Baby!!!!

13 years 9 months ago
#153250
Well done Zsuz - Good to have a breath of fresh air and not the same old dominating every aspect of racing.

Hibs - Any chance we could have the winning article pasted on this forum?

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  • magiclips
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Re: Re: Zsuszanna04........Ya Baby!!!!

13 years 9 months ago
#153264
Well done......viva le Sporting Post!(:D

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  • wonbyamile
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Re: Re: Zsuszanna04........Ya Baby!!!!

13 years 9 months ago
#153265
congrats zsuszsanna.....awesome achievement in a male dominated industry!.....(tu)

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  • Bob Brogan
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Re: Re: Zsuszanna04........Ya Baby!!!!

13 years 9 months ago
#153318
Please read below the 2 articles submitted for the competition by Robyn Louw



LEAVING ON A JET PLANE (1)





‘In the end, no matter how astonishing their numbers, great horses were remembered for something more …. It was a feeling that they gave you, a belief in something bigger than yourself. They were a reminder – if only for an instant – that some bright, wordless magic still existed in the world’ – Jane Schwartz / Ruffian





As we are all too aware, South African racing is conducted to a rather discordant soundtrack these days and there seems to be as much jockeying going on in the boardrooms as there does on the course! While the machinations of administration are fun and fascinating, I would like to put all that aside for today and just indulge myself in the sheer joy and beauty of the Thoroughbred.



I may not know a great deal about many things, but I am exceptionally blessed to have some wonderful friends. Through someone who is fast approaching the heady heights at the top of my Christmas card list, I was invited to Kenilworth on Saturday morning to watch the current inhabitants of the quarantine station take their morning stroll.



It was one of those perfect Cape Town mornings. Warm, but not yet hot, with the most beautiful duck egg blue sky. In a little clearing in the middle of the course the group of horses was out walking, stretching their legs in the morning sunshine.



To the casual observer, it might have looked like just an ordinary group of horses, in ordinary tack being ridden by ordinary grooms. However, the close proximity to the Kenilworth quarantine station lent an air of gravity to the scene. We kept a respectful distance in order to observe the quarantine regulations, but out of the group certain faces and outlines started looking familiar and my pulse quickened.



I have never been one to be too impressed by fame or celebrity and not being a star gazer have never given much thought to words like ‘presence’ or ‘star quality’, dismissing them as so much tabloid nonsense. Until, that is, the day I passed Bill Clinton on a street in London. Working in the heart of the tourist capital, I was pretty used to crowds, so the unusual throng of people proved an annoyance rather than a curiosity. When I finally looked around to see what the source of all the commotion was, my eyes were involuntarily drawn to a distinguished, silver-haired gentleman quietly making his way through the middle of the crowd. There was no fanfare and no fuss - he was simply a man walking in a perfectly ordinary manner up a perfectly ordinary street, but I can only describe his presence, even from 20 feet away, as magnetic.



I get a kick out of being around pretty much any horse, but the combined star qualities of the horses on show was heady to say the least. Apart from their exciting and impressive statistics, I was particularly impressed by what superb physical specimens they all were. And their demeanor carried just that little bit more grace, more self-assurance, more je ne sais quoi to elevate and set them apart from the ordinary.



I picked out River Jetez, so like her famous brother; the impossibly beautiful Ancestral Fore; the broad forehead of Bold Silvano and the distinctive irregular markings which could only belong to Orbison. Noble Heir, who I am told is the staff favourite, picked her way delicately, placing each foot carefully and deliberately.



With such a stellar line-up, it is hard to choose just one (and my apologies to the other horses as every single one is fabulous and deserves a mention in their own right), but as the Quality Street catchphrase goes, everyone has a favourite favourite. And sure enough, there he was. The bright bay with the little star. Not the biggest of the bunch, but all business. JJ The Jet Plane.



From my vantage point on the sidelines, he was a touch smaller than I expected, but strong and surprisingly heavy-set. The term pugilist unexpectedly sprang to mind. And there’s no question he’s a fighter. From humble beginnings, he has fought his way to where he is today. After a successful juvenile career in South Africa, international challenges beckoned. Denied access to Hong Kong due to draconian import regulations, he redirected his energies, earning accolades in Dubai and England before returning home for two more Grade 1 victories. He moves energetically and with intent, his eye is bright and you know he is not missing a trick. The term ‘the look of eagles’ is often used to describe particularly noble specimens and JJ has it. The eagle is looking toward the Cathay Pacific Sprint in Hong Kong on 12 December. And this time he won’t be denied.



It is an arduous journey. This group has already completed their compulsory quarantine period at Kenilworth. They will fly out on Thursday evening and after a quick refueling stop in Libya, will touch down at Stansted on Friday morning. Those bound for even more exotic shores will need to serve an additional 30 days in England before being eligible for further passage.



JJ will ship to Hong Kong in late November, whilst Bold Silvano, Irish Flame, River Jetez, Orbison, et al are aiming for the 2011 Dubai International Racing Carnival which kicks off on 13 January. Afterwards, Patrick Shaw’s Lizarre is heading to Singapore and Clearly Silver (owned by the MD of the Shanghai Jockey Club) is bound for Hong Kong.



With the World Cup becoming a distant memory and our new-found patriotism ebbing away with the last of the tickertape, seeing this magnificent collection of homebred talent made me feel very proudly South African again.



It is amazing to think that this elite assembly has been bred and produced on South African soil and to see them heading off to far flung corners of the globe to fly the flag (and hopefully bloody some noses) is incredibly exciting and inspirational. As a product, the South African race horse is an absolute credit to our local breeding and racing industry and one of which we can and should be very proud. With representatives in the USA, England, UAE, Hong Kong and Singapore, we are slowly, but steadily increasing our equine presence abroad and every individual increases the awareness and interest in our local market. I am sure I am not alone in wishing them all safe and prosperous journeys and hopefully a triumphant return home at the end of their exploits.



But getting back to my morning jaunt. I still cannot believe that the very cream of the South African racing crop are all assembled in one place and that I have been privileged enough to see them. I have to pinch myself to make sure it’s real and scarcely want to breathe out in case they all suddenly disappear. Which, sadly, they do all too soon. Striding off back to their stables at the quarantine station.



John Glasworthy said ‘I am still under the impression that there is nothing alive quite so beautiful as a Thoroughbred horse’. And a beautiful Thoroughbred really is a feast not only for the eyes - it somehow does you good on the inside too.



Well, if a horse can be judged on its greatness by the feeling it gives you inside, then all I can say is that our horses make you feel good. Very good indeed !!





Leaving On A Jet Plane was published in the 19 October 2010 edition of the Sporting Post as well as on-line at www.sportingpost.co.za/2010/10/25/racing...et-plane-robyn-louw/



A HIDING TO NOTHING ? (2)



“The greatness of a nation, and its moral progress can be judged by the way its animals are treated” – Mohandas Gandhi

The idea of hitting something to make it go faster is usually met with incredulity by non-racing folk (as is the idea of weighting down superior athletes. Imagine telling Usain Bolt to carry a lead pack! But that’s an argument for another time).

Whips remain the number one selling piece of equipment in tack shops. Sadly, whip use is stated as one of the biggest turn-offs to prospective new race goers as it is perceived that horses are beaten across the finish line. When one considers statements like the one from champion jockey Willy Carson in 1996 when he commented on his second placed ride on Alhaarth at Newmarket that ‘I gave him six cracks, and I wouldn’t like to lie down on that side tonight’, well, one can sort of see why.

While there are numerous arguments for whip use (mainly based on safety grounds), there is really very little scientific basis for this argument.

The RSPCA (Australia) recently commissioned a report into the use of the whip on race horses and how it affects their performance. The study was undertaken by two learned gentlemen of the Faculty of Veterinary Science at the University of Sydney – Associate Professor David Evans (BVSc, PhD) and Dr Paul McGreevy (BVSc, PhD, MRCVS, MACVS (Animal Welfare), Cert CABC, Grad Cert Higher Ed. RCVS Recognised Specialist in Veterinary Behavioural Medicine). The study was peer-reviewed and published in the Public Library of Science and I think their findings are really quite interesting.

To understand how it works in practice, it’s worth taking a closer look at the scientific definitions and explanations of learning theory and how we apply them to horses.

The Science Bit

There are two methods of teaching (or conditioning) a behavior – Classical conditioning and Operant conditioning and both of them work by way of association.

Classical conditioning (a phrase coined by Ivan Pavlov) is a learning process based on associations between a stimulus and a response. It starts with an environmental (or unconditioned) stimulus and a naturally occurring (also unconditioned) response (eg the smell of a steak on the braai making you feel hungry). Once the response to the stimulus is well established, one can add in a conditioned stimulus (eg ringing a bell at the same time as the meat goes on the fire) so that you can now trigger the unconditioned response with a conditioned trigger. Feeling hungry (unconditioned response) at the sound of the bell (conditioned stimulus) thus becomes a conditioned response. This can also be used in reverse. If you stop pairing the conditioned stimulus with the unconditioned response (ie stop ringing the bell at the same time as cooking the meat), the response will eventually cease (or be extinguished).

Operant conditioning (developed by the work of B F Skinner) is “active behavior that operates upon the environment to generate consequences” and is based on a system of reward and punishment. It is probably best illustrated with lab experiments where rats learn to press buttons for a food reward (or avoid other buttons to avoid an electric shock). It is operant conditioning that helps us acquire the range of learned behaviors we employ each and every day (for example, we know that if we put our bank card into the cash machine and punch in numbers in a certain order, we will receive cash). It is generally operant conditioning that we apply with horses.

Ok, I know this is getting a little complicated, but bear with me.

To teach a behavior, we use reinforcers (rewards) to increase a behavior or punishment to decrease the occurrence of a behavior. These tools can either be used positively (as in the mathematical version, where you add more), or negatively, where you take something away. So a positive reward would be creating a pleasant consequence to a behavior (ie patting or giving a horse a treat for producing a desired response) and a negative reward would be removing an unpleasant stimulus or consequence (eg. You stop kicking your horse with your legs or hitting it with your whip once it goes forward).

In the same fashion you also have positive and negative punishment. Positive punishment would be adding an unpleasant consequence to a behavior (ie hitting a horse when it misbehaves) in order to discourage that behavior in future. Negative punishment would be to remove something pleasant in response to a behavior (ie taking away a child’s toy if they misbehave).

How It Works

The study above reflects that whips are most frequently employed towards the end of a race.

Fatigue is a metabolic consequence of maximal exercise and caused by an accumulation of adenosinetriphosphate (ATP) and inorganic phosphates in muscles. Studies show that equine muscle fatigue ensues after approximately 800m of galloping at maximal velocity.

It follows that the general trend is to hit horses in the final stages of a race when they are starting to fatigue. Therefore hitting horses in the final stages of a race as they are trying to accelerate (or when they can no longer accelerate due to fatigue), is in fact counter-productive because the horse is effectively being punished for trying to accelerate. It follows that every time a horse runs and learns that it will be hit in the latter part of the race, it is gradually being discouraged to go any faster.

The study showed that horses achieved highest speeds when there was no whip use (this was usually in the first half of the race though). The study also showed that horses that were advantageously positioned by the 400m mark were most likely to finish in the first 3. Or to quote Dr Evans – “What we found was that whipping did not affect the probability of whether or not a horse finished a race in the first three placings. How a horse ran in the first part of a race, when it wasn’t being whipped, was the most critical factor in racing success.

In a separate study by Deuel and Lawrence on Quarter horses in 1987, they used high-speed cinematography to investigate gait characteristics whilst “urging” horses during gallops at 12.6 m/s. The experiment was based on the rider “goading the horse with a riding crop” on the leading shoulder at a frequency of once per stride. Their results seemed to indicate that while urging had no detectable effect on the average velocity (ie the speed), it did cause a significant increase in stride frequency and a decrease in stride length.

And an Animal Aid study done in 2003, showed that the more often horses were whipped, the less chance they had of winning their races. In the final stages of a race, where whips are usually employed most often, it was found that they jockeys who used it the least, won the most frequently.

This does seem to be bourne out by comments from some fairly high profile jockeys. In 2006 Edgar Prado never touched Barbaro with his whip and never asked him to do anything more than was necessary. Prado said, “If he’s running real hard, why should he be punished?”

South African Douglas Whyte, Hong Kong’s leading rider and 10-time Champion Jockey is quoted as saying “I still believe I can get more out of a horse by encouraging them rather than punishing them. My job is to win the horse’s confidence and to get them to run to their best for me.”

I think it is also illustrated fairly clearly in good ‘hands and heels’ rides (such as JJ The Jet Plane’s recent Dubai win) where a horse is simply placed well early on and ridden skillfully all the way to the wire.

From a personal point of view, I can vouch that one of the hardest lessons to learn in competitive riding is that one often has to do less, sit more quietly, interfere less, in order to allow the horse to produce better results.

Whip specs

Although whips are still widely used we have fortunately come a long way since Mr Carson’s 1996 statement. The International Federation of Horseracing Authorities has published Minimum Standard Guidelines on Use Of The Whip which has been agreed to by a host of racing countries, including South Africa and there are now specific and formal rules governing the use of the whip to ensure that it is used for “safety, correction and encouragement only”. There are also strict rules as to accepted whip specifications and there has been a world-wide move towards a kinder, shock-absorbing design. In South Africa, the ProCush whip became the only crop approved for racing in South Africa in April 2009. I have tested these babies on myself and can vouch that they really are a lot more gentle than the versions I grew up with ! Some organizations have gone even further and the Norwegian Jockey Club has banned whips in all races other than qualifying races, two-year old races and in hurdle races. And in the cases where whips are allowed, the rules state that jockeys need to keep both hands on the reins for the duration of the race.

In Conclusion

A vociferous anti-whip campaigner is Californian horse whisperer, Monty Roberts. “A whip has no place in horsemanship at all,” argues Roberts. “It’s medieval for horses.” He also points out that a horse that wants to win, that has that competitive spirit and natural “will to win” is always going to be a far better racing prospect than the one that has to be beaten for half of the race.

Monty Roberts says that ‘As racehorse people, we often say we are giving the horse a chance to do what he loves best, run. I believe that is a true statement, but if it is what he loves best, why do we have to whip him to do it? We do not.’

A Hiding To Nothing was published in the 15 March 2011 edition of the SP as well as on-line at www.sportingpost.co.za/2011/03/15/racing...o-nothing-robyn-louw

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  • Ships Gossip
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Re: Re: Zsuszanna04........Ya Baby!!!!

13 years 9 months ago
#153328
Congrats Zsuszanna on your Award, very well done:)-D

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  • Mac
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Re: Re: Zsuszanna04........Ya Baby!!!!

13 years 9 months ago
#153431
We take our hats off to you....

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  • Alcaponee
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Re: Re: Zsuszanna04........Ya Baby!!!!

13 years 9 months ago
#153439
Thanks Hibs - Great stuff Zsuz! Well done with both entries.

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  • Bob Brogan
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Re: Re: Zsuszanna04........Ya Baby!!!!

13 years 9 months ago
#153440
Al it was pretty funny neither Me or Dave contacted anyone for the articles,racing south Africa sent them.Shows someone reads the forum

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  • Alcaponee
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Re: Re: Zsuszanna04........Ya Baby!!!!

13 years 9 months ago
#153472
Good one - Thanks Racing South Africa.

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  • Bob Brogan
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Re: Re: Zsuszanna04........Ya Baby!!!!

13 years 8 months ago
#159027
Molly responds on sporting post


Media man, Jimmy Lithgow, clearly choked on his cornflakes while reading my column of two weeks ago which dealt with the Equus awards. In a lengthy e-mail to the Sporting Post, he berates me for criticising the decision of the press award judges and then embarks on a general Mollett-bashing piece. Well, Yorkshire folk don’t take things lying down so here’s my response:

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1. I’m delighted that Jimmy Lithgow is an avid reader of my weekly Racing Express column. He’ll be happy to learn I’ve just signed another 12 months contract.

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2. I make no apologies for my view on the Equus awards – after 40 years as a journo I believe I’m entitled to voice my opinion. Jimmy Lithgow says he fancied Robyn Louw to win which is amazing as few people in Gauteng have even heard of the Cape-based scribe. Nevertheless, I congratulated her on the night and she seems a pleasant lady.

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3. If Jimmy Lithgow fancied the double of Miss Louw and his son, Aidan, I expect he could have got around 5000-1. For me, the writers category looked between Nicci Garner, Jack Milner and Lance Benson.

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4. Jimmy Lithgow rambles on about the rules of the media awards which stated: “Loyal support and positive contribution or coverage of the sport during the South African Horse-Racing season is essential.” Benson queried this criteria in his column and rightly so. Overseas press awards are given for “scoops” or “exclusives” – stories that have made the reader sit up and take notice - and not for towing the line. Begs the question whether the judges reached their decision on articles which said everything in the racing garden is rosy – which it isn’t!

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5. But what really got my blood boiling from Jimmy Lithgow’s e-mail was this. “Thank goodness the judges were persons of complete integrity, without any agenda, or we might have seen the awards being handed out like wristwatches, for long service, as was clearly the case when Mr Mollett’s R30000 worth of air travel was doled out two years ago.” Obviously sour grapes from Mr Lithgow for not being in the running for that 2009 award, but also a considerable insult to the late Brian Roux who realised that the media should be recognised as a vital cog in racing.

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6. Apparently, Jimmy Lithgow is a theatre fundi. I suggest he checks out the Joburg circuit to see if “Julius Caesar” is showing. He’ll enjoy it. Lots of stabbing.

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Via email – David Mollett

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  • gregbucks
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Re: Re: Zsuszanna04........Ya Baby!!!!

13 years 8 months ago
#159028
OMG... Move on!!!

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  • Bob Brogan
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Re: Re: Zsuszanna04........Ya Baby!!!!

13 years 8 months ago
#159030
Boos from the terraces

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