Extreme Sports 2013 - Экстремальные виды спорта 2013 [01:50]
Вот что значит жить на полную!!! о такой жизни мечтает каждый!!! That's what it means to live a full!!! of such a life everyone dreams!!!
Horse and Rider Newmarket [02:25]
"A horse is the projection of peoples' dreams about themselves--strong, powerful, beautiful--and it has the capability of giving us escape from our mundane existence." - Pam Brown
Her Heart Is A Rodeo! [04:46]
My version for Christina and the long hard road that she has had and for the special horses that have gotten her there! Dolly, Cash, Martha, Moolah. Each one of them is a part of who she is! We all have dreams and those dreams drive us....our horses teach us and help mold us!
Breeders' Cup or Bust presented by Daily Racing Form: From Humble Beginnings in New Mexico [04:04]
With one victory at this week's World Championships at Santa Anita Park in California, Hall of Fame jockey Mike Smith will become the Breeders' Cup's all-time winningest rider. So as the Breeders 'Cup or Bust team ambled into New Mexico, it seemed appropriate to make a special stop to visit the small town where Smith began his dreams of greatness. As Ray, Brad, and Scott continue their journey in support of Breeders' Cup Charities, you won't want to miss this enjoyable and touching look at how one of horse racing's most well-known and successful riders got his start.
2003 Kentucky Derby: Full Broadcast [01:05:32]
There on the track was Empire Maker, the impeccably bred favorite with a tender foot, a cocky trainer from Brooklyn and a plurality of the public's money on his back. There was Atswhatimtalknbout, the Hollywood horse, partly owned by movie royalty, and there, too, was Indian Express, the rhythm-and-bluegrass colt whose owner was a legendary record producer in the 1950's. But for the two minutes that count the most on the first Saturday in May, the real star was a New York-bred gelding named Funny Cide, who was sent off at the ''yeah, right'' odds of better than 12-1 and romped off with a victory of a length and three-quarters in the 129th running of the Kentucky Derby. But forget for a moment Funny Cide's glitzier and supposedly more formidable competition. By any standard, this was an improbable victory. A New York-bred had never won the Derby, and the last time a gelding won was in 1929, when Clyde Van Dusen posted a two-length victory. The public was caught unawares, and six buddies from Sackets Harbor, NY, who own Funny Cide and run under the banner of Sackatoga Stable with four other partners were stunned by their good fortune. ''We are a three-horse stable,'' said Jackson Knowlton, one of the owners who bought the gelding for $75000 in a private sale. ''We are the little guys in the game. Everyone who dreams in this game, who owns two or five horses, look at what you can accomplish. Little did we know.'' Maybe it should not have been a surprise that a group of ...