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Why I hate Smarty Jones...

SaltBoy

Diamond Member
NO CLIFF NOTES -- just READ the darn thing. You'll be glad you did! 🙂

From Sports Illustrated's Life of Reilly (Rick Reilly)

I've seen pampered, spoiled and coddled athletes before, but the ones I got stuck covering last week make me want to hurl.

Nobody ever tells them no. They get more strokes than an ICU. Everything has to be perfect or they go triple Liza.

No, not the Lakers. Not the Yankees. Not even the Williams sisters.

A group of athletes much worse. Thoroughbred racehorses.

At last Saturday's Kentucky Derby a horse named Smarty Jones made $5.9 million for 124 seconds of work. Then he went back to his Churchill Downs stall and got more hands laid on him than a $10 stripper: a warm soap-and-water sponge bath, a massage and a nice helping of hot mash, all of it from grooms who generally live in backstretch hovels with hot-and-cold-running cockroaches.

Across the way, in Barn 17, the colt Tapit had spent Derby week eating organic carrots (sliced with a restaurant-grade veggie chopper), breathing purified air and munching sod trucked in from his home farm in Maryland. He slurped Guinness beer and farm-fresh raw eggs. (Good grass and beer, followed by eggs? Sounds like breakfast at Hunter S. Thompson's house.) He finished ninth.

How's this for a sweet gig? Six, seven naps a day. Winters off. Seven or eight races a year. No wonder the jockeys wanted to strike this Derby. Compared to the horses, they're Malaysian shoe stitchers.

Put it this way: How would you like to retire at four (about 24 in people years) to a life of having sex with the most fit females in the country, three times a day? From February to June, that's all you'd do. Then you'd take July off (phew!), and if you're good, maybe fly to Australia and start again with the sheilas down there until Christmas. Nobody this side of Wilt turns that down.

And you don't even have to mess around with foreplay! A teasing stallion takes care of that. He gets things heated up, as it were, and when the mood is right, you waltz in like Elvis and bada-bing! Nice work if you can get it.

One time the late Dayton Daily News columnist Si Burick was watching Secretariat pull away to another easy win. "Jeez, I hate Secretariat," he grumbled. "He's good-looking, still has all his hair, and his whole sex life is in front of him."

With all that, you'd think the beasts would be happier than Ted Kennedy trapped in the Sara Lee factory, right? Wrong.

"Be 15 minutes late with their meal, and by God, they let you know," says Roland Nixon, who heads up the crew that works on Derby entrant Friends Lake (finished 15th). "They'll kick the walls, whinny, scratch the ground. Or if they smell the littlest thing wrong in their feed, they'll cause a ruckus. Oh, yeah, they're spoiled."

The track has a lip-reader, Barb Borden, whose job is to read the I.D. number tattooed inside the upper lip of each thoroughbred before every race. The way they stomp and jump when she comes near them, you'd think Borden was trying to drag them to the glue factory. "I get bit at least once a week," she says.

And you thought Neon Deion was vain? Even the rear ends on these beasts get the Hollywood treatment. Some get their butts combed in lovely designs. Others get their manes elaborately braided. Their inner thighs are coated in cream to keep them from chafing. You think anybody ever did that for John Kruk?

They have the best in critter comforts. They get acupuncture treatments and chiropractic work, and sleep with magnetized blankets. They fly in roomy, specially designed stalls in customized 727s. Remember how much room you had on your last flight, stuck between two BEFORE Subway sandwich models?

Some get their favorite bottled water flown in. Others have music in their stalls. (Friends Lake prefers the Beach Boys.) Plus, unlike many Americans, they get to choose whom they sleep with, even if it's a dog or a goat or a Shetland pony. Imperialism (third in the Derby) is so spoiled that his 21-year-old trainer, Kristin Mulhall, sleeps in the stall with him. Now, I ask you, what chance does her boyfriend have?

With everybody treating these horses like the King of Siam, you figure they'll run through a wall for their trainer, right? Please.

Last Friday supertrainer Bob Baffert discovered a tiny bump, smaller than a dime, on the leg of his Derby entrant, Wimbledon. The vets said it was a knot on the tendon, so Baffert pulled the horse from the Derby and will rest him for the next -- get this -- 90 days. Biggest race in the world, and a bump scratches him. Los Angeles Rams defensive end Jack Youngblood played in a Super Bowl with a broken leg!

And even when you get them to the starting gate, nothing says they'll go in. "They all think they're the biggest horse in the race," says Churchill Downs official starter Roger Nagle. "Hell, it's no wonder. These trainers never make 'em do anything they don't want to do. You pull on Smarty Jones and he just backs up!"

Of course, once he was in the gate last Saturday, Smarty Jones didn't back up. He ran his perfect record to seven for seven. In fact, he'll probably go on to win the Triple Crown, make more money than ExxonMobil, retire immediately and wait for the preheated babes to start showing up.

Jeez, I hate Smarty Jones.
 
Geez, I chose the wrong career path. Fvck law enforcement, I need to learn how to be a racehorse!
 
Except for racehorses, a career-ending injury sends them to the dog food factory instead of the broadcaster's booth as crappy commentators 😀
 
that's a nice life...but as a racehorse, you'd forfeit any chance of ever using a computer and the thrill of hearing "HEAD SHOT!!"
 
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