NASCAR Fan Dies After Fulfilling Dream [02:51]
Terminal NASCAR fan fulfills dream of going to the Daytona 500, then passes away in infield Three days, maybe a week. Three weeks ago, that's how much time doctors gave Mitch Zannette to live. Three days, maybe a week. What can you do in that time? How do you say goodbye to everyone and everything you've ever known? How do you close off a lifetime? Three days, maybe a week. If you know what you want out of life, it's enough time to write your own last chapter. So last week, Mitch Zannette checked himself out of hospice and headed to Florida to see the Daytona 500. He made it to the track. Went to the beach. Met Miss Sprint Cup. Drank some beers. And on Thursday, three days before the race, he died in the infield at Daytona International Speedway. He was 50.
Crow out for opener - ABC Grandstand Sport [00:42]
Adelaide Crows defender Brodie Smith will miss the start of the AFL premiership season due to a broken collarbone.
Rowdie Adams &No Money Down Rocking Horse 2 Advanced February 2013 [11:26]
footage provided by RNSVIDEOMEDIA .COM
Grand National Fences To Be Made Safer. [02:11]
Fences at this year's Grand National are being made safer in the biggest change in the history of the race. They are among a number of measures aimed at dealing with accusations of animal cruelty after eight horses died in the last decade. Last year the joint favourite and Cheltenham Gold Cup winner Synchronised had to be put down after falling at fence six of the Grand National - the infamous Becher's Brook - and continuing riderless until suffering leg fractures. The death, along with that of outsider According to Pete, who was brought down at the same fence on the second circuit, led to calls from animal welfare groups for the Grand National to be banned. The new fences are still covered in spruce but wooden posts have been replaced by a softer material known as "plastic birch". Aintree racecourse manager Andrew Tulloch described the birch as "horse friendly", telling Sky News "safety at Aintree is always our top priority for riders and horses and it's something we do not stand still on". He said the changes should make the Grand National safer but not any easier, insisting the fences will remain the same height. "The outward appearance of these fences will remain the same. "The big change here is that traditionally where they had a timber frame to them that timber frame has been replaced by a plastic, more forgiving, birch and on top of that birch there's a minimum of fourteen, maybe even sixteen inches of spruce and the spruce is what the horses can knock off," he ...
My Mea and I Running NBHA Etc. & me on Jolenes horse Blondie. [20:55]
My Mea (Qualita Creek) and Me as well as my Friends horse (I was able to get on when Mea was not able to run). Shows our progression, some of my back steps, where I need improvements regarding my riding (always shoot to be the best you can be! we never stop learning.. especially for our partner/our Horse). Really this was just a fun memory video I did for myself... cant wait for this years runs to see where we are this season.. I love my Mea!
1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 ...191