I still think that a PGA Pro makes 20 starts a year easy and upwards of 30 or more. For most Nafzger and Pletcher steeds that is more than a Career.
Phil Mick is apparently a bit gimpy, but with the U.S. Open the equivalent of the Belmont Stakes in difficulty and ordeal do you think Phil Mick or any other golfer on the tour would skip that event willingly?
Street Sense is a competive horse and he would run in the Belmont it was up to him. But its not. Men like Nafzger, Tafel and Maktoum control his future now and that doesn\'t bode well for the horse etching himself into the history books. Tafel has stated that he\'s retired horses in the past rather than continue to race them and have them lose commercial allure due to losses. If they don\'t have the courage to allow Street Sense the opportunity to earn greatness, why delay in the retirement at all?
In Golf, a player can\'t be considered Great unless he has a U.S. Open trophy on his mantel. Jack Nicklaus has 1962, 1967, 1972 and 1980. Arnold Palmer won in 1960 and lost 18 hole playoffs in 1962, 1963 and 1966. Both were great and even though they lost some heartbreakers along the way, they were there for the toughest test. How diminished they would be if they did not strive to define themselves as the best of their Generation by competing and winning their version of the Belmont Stakes.
The Belmont Stakes itself is still the ultimate test of a Champion. It will remain as much of a defining event Saturday. Tafel and Nafzger can duck greatness. That is their prerogative, however the winner of the Belmont Stakes will have the inside edge upon being Champion and will have exhibited something the connections of Street Sense know little about:
“The credit belongs to the man who is actually in the arena; whose face is marred by sweat and blood; who strives valiantly; who errs and comes short again and again because there is no effort without error and shortcoming; who knows the great enthusiasms, the great devotion, spends himself in a worthy cause; who at best knows in the end the triumph of high achievement; and who at worst, if he fails, at least fails while daring greatly, so that his place shall never be with those cold and timid souls who have never tasted victory or defeat.”
Substitute \"horse\" for \"man\" in the above and it works as well. The horse is willing. The men are not.
richiebee Wrote:
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> FI:
>
> Hate to disagree but think HS is a tired animal
> and the value in a Belmont
> which could have very little value is to toss HS
> out of the exacta.
>
> US Open...The way Tiger is campaigning himself
> is kind of like the way top
> drawer horses tend to run these days in that Tiger
> seems to be picking his spots
> and skipping more and more PGA events. Soon he
> will only be playing in the
> majors plus the tournaments sponsored by entities
> (Buick ie) which sponsor
> Tiger.
>
> I have always said it will get to the point
> where Tiger affiliates himself
> with one major TV network and will play
> exclusively in events carried by that
> network (plus Majors).
>
> Another Tiger/thoroughbred tie in is that Tiger
> now seems to be a speed horse,
> much tougher when on an easy lead, not much of a
> factor when falling 5-6
> strokes back in the early rounds.
>
> Bottom line as I see it... None of the big guns
> at the top of their game now-
> Tiger, Vijay, Ernie Els, a gimpy Phil Mick, slow
> playing Sergio Garcia, it adds
> up to lots of PGA parity, especially with some of
> the top guns
> taking lots of time between races so to speak.
> Irregardless, Oakmont should be
> much more fascinating than Belmont.