It\'s amazing how one can get so comfortable looking out the wrong end of a telescope.
A few days ago I posted an entry stating basically that I thought the weight assignments for the Triple Crown Races were inherently unfair. Suggested, as I have for years, that horses should be subjected to a two pound impost for every leg of the Crown they skip. I might have used the word penalized. But my point wasn\'t that these runners should be penalized for skipping races in the same way a jaywalker is fined for violating the law; rather it was that the cumulative enervation experienced by the horses who have already run two legs under 126 makes the onus of the weight they are carrying in the Belmont more equivalent to 130. And, therefore, forcing fresh horses to carry more weight would actually level the playing field.
But I knew my argument was at best theoretical, that the idea of a three year old carrying an actual 130 over a mile and a half was not only a no go, but irresponsible. And then it dawned upon me, why not reward horses for running in prior legs of the Triple Crown by reducing their weight assignments by two pounds for the next leg they enter? And in fact, if you aren\'t going to increase the spacing between the races, this seems the easiest way to somewhat reduce the wear and tear the road to the Triple Crown puts on its participants.
To those of you who think that weight doesn\'t matter, my answer would be then it doesn\'t matter if they reduce it. To those who would argue that such a change would cheapen the traditions of the Triple Crown by making the accomplishment easier, I can only use the tradition of not allowing football players to drink water during the August two-a-days as an analogy. The problem is not that the present day Triple Crown format is too hard for the horses, it\'s that it\'s too hard on the horses. Ultimately, the cost is too great. Probably not drinking liquids during the heat in August did toughen up a lot of players, but when a few died the cost of sustaining the tradition became too great.
At some point something has to give. And as a relatively painless first step I would suggest rewarding starters in previous legs of the Triple Crown series a weight reduction in the subsequent legs they enter. Think of it as, kind of like, a weight rebate. What does racing have to lose by experimenting with such a concept for a few years? Maybe more horses run in all three legs; maybe more horses win the Triple Crown. Maybe more horses survive the ordeal intact.