Cal-Bred Teddy's Promise wins the Kalookan Queen Stakes [01:50]
Cal-Bred Teddy's Promise wins the Kalookan Queen Stakes
Ron's Horse Riding Part 2 [01:35]
This video is late sorry guys i just got BLops 2 and the video is late because my computer broke more videos on the way i promise
Race tipping: Racing Post Hurdle, 2.50 Cheltenham, Sunday [00:36]
The Racing Post sponsors the biggest race on Sunday's card. It's often won by a horse full of promise and Dave Orton believes the same will happen on Sunday
1994 Breeders' Cup Classic + Post Race [10:15]
The Breeders' Cup horse that arrived last at Churchill Downs ran first Saturday as Concern beat Tabasco Cat by a neck in the $3-million Classic, ending on a high note a long year of unfulfilled promise for the 3-year-old colt from Maryland. Trainer Dick Small's style is to ship a horse to a race at a late hour, and by van instead of plane. He made no exception with Concern, even though the late-running son of Broad Brush was appearing in the most important stake of his 21-race career. A 10 1/2-hour trip brought Concern and the trainer to Kentucky at 3 am Friday, long after all the other Breeders' Cup horses had settled in and been tested during workouts over the Churchill Downs track. Concern did all of his Breeders' Cup preparations at Pimlico, where he worked a mile on Monday. "I find that most horses do better in their own surroundings," Small said. "It's better not to disrupt their daily rhythms." Small played it even closer to the vest when Concern ran in the Travers in August. For that race, the horse was driven to Upstate New York and arrived at 4 am on the day of the race, about 13 hours before post time. He lost by a neck to Holy Bull, the probable horse of the year who didn't run in the Breeders' Cup. Being beaten by necks and running second and third have been Concern's style, a rut that ended in time for his owner-breeder, Robert Meyerhoff, to collect a purse of $1.56 million, more than half a million dollars more than his colt had earned from all his previous ...
Race tipping: Ladbrokes St Leger [04:13]
The St Leger is the final British Classic of the Flat racing season and it promises to be the most exciting. Having won the 2000 Guineas and the Derby, Camelot is bidding to become the first winner of the 'Triple Crown' since 1970. But can he do it and where does the value lie? Bruce Jackson examines the evidence