Summer In Giza wins at Colonial Downs Virginia! Thoroughbred Race Horse [04:04]
Summer In Giza WINS on final day at Colonial Downs forJessica McKinney and Crocker Racing Stable and Jockey Eric Camacho making it his 5th win of the night!
On the Job: Palm Meadows Clocker [01:30]
Bryan Walls, a clocker at Palm Meadows Training Center in South Florida, takes the viewer through a day in the life of a clocker at a training center that stables many of the best racehorses in the country.
Champ Kart Onboard 2/1/13 - Atlantic City / Heat Race [02:40]
Onboard footage of the Heat Race from the Boardwalk Hall at the Trump Plaza in New Jersey. This weekend is the final of 3 races for the Fatheadz Eyewear Indoor Karting Series. After I qualified 26th out of the 53 karts that entered this prestigious event, I had to race in one of the two Heat Races. I raced in the second Heat Race. I started 5th behind Glen in the #191 kart and had a good start. The kart at times would slide around and I would have a hard time keeping the momentum in the kart. The surface of the track was very unstable. It seemed like once the TQ's had completed their race(s), they would suck up all of the laid down rubber off the surface. The tires were also an issue. The sliding around was from the combination of the tire set and surface of the track. I had a great battle with the #17 kart for 4th place until a caution came out. On the restart, TJ in the #13 kart was having a hard time getting back down into the racing line. I was able to overtake TJ in the #13 kart and go after the #17 kart, but the #17 kart kwpt hopping in the turns, which forced me to go wide and that allowed TJ to get past me. In the end, I finished 5th. This was not good enough to get into the Feature Racem so I had to compete in one of the two Consi Races the next day. The weekend for me was over when I crashed in the Consi Race. I did not make the Feature Race. It didn't matter if we made the Feature Race, or not. What mattered is that we had a great time going down to Atlantic ...
GoPro HD: Dunstable Motocross Track [01:49]
a lap of dunstable,track was bumpy but sweet
1989 Alabama Stakes [03:38]
For those hard-to-please critics who had been complaining that Open Mind is a brilliant horse with a bland style, the 3-year-old filly responded with a gritty performance on a rainy day at Saratoga. At the top of the stretch of the $232400 Alabama Stakes, Open Mind's chances appeared to be as gloomy as the day itself. She was ahead of only one horse, stablemate Lea Lucinda. She trailed the front-running Dearly Loved by more than five lengths and was running in the middle of the track, where the muddy surface had the consistency of butterscotch pudding. Open Mind had gone into Saturday's 109th Alabama with a nine-race winning streak dating to last November, but now, at 1-5 odds, she looked hopelessly beaten. Her critics were ready to add Open Mind's name to the list of fallen Saratoga favorites, which includes Man o' War, Gallant Fox and Secretariat. Before a crowd of 30309, Open Mind chose not to become a part of that gallery. "Of all the fillies I've ridden," Angel Cordero would say later, "I've never been on one who tries as hard as this filly. If she were a person, she'd want to work seven days a week." Cordero went to his whip 16 times--seven times from the right and nine from the left--and it took that 16th whack to get owner Gene Klein's filly to the wire, a neck before Dearly Loved. Open Mind might win 10 more races in a row, if she is allowed to stay on the track long enough, but no victory will come any harder than Saturday's. Jean Cruguet was aboard Dearly Loved ...
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