Racehorse Breeding TheoriesThe Russell Meerdink Company Ltd., 2004 - 325 pages "Here, in one volume, is a wide and varied assessment of the major breeding systems or theories, as well as the history and background of each. The writers give the reader all the necessary information they need to implement the theory and make it part of a breeding program. They also verify the relative scientific validity of the theories and various approaches to breeding" -- publisher website (April 2007). |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 38
Page 43
... nick was the thing, and unwittingly stumbled upon success.” A reader who didn't know his man could mistake the situation and come away believing that the same-age theory held some water, but Estes finished this pedigree point with a ...
... nick was the thing, and unwittingly stumbled upon success.” A reader who didn't know his man could mistake the situation and come away believing that the same-age theory held some water, but Estes finished this pedigree point with a ...
Page 50
... nick was between Fair Play and Rock Sand mares, and I must say it worked to a fare you well. But one does not need the doctrine of affinities to explain the success of the Nursery Stud. The best mares owned by Major Belmont were Rock ...
... nick was between Fair Play and Rock Sand mares, and I must say it worked to a fare you well. But one does not need the doctrine of affinities to explain the success of the Nursery Stud. The best mares owned by Major Belmont were Rock ...
Page 51
... nick again. Well, there it is, if you want it. But as far as I am concerned, it seems to me that the repeated combinations of the same bloodlines in the pedigrees of good horses fall out in accordance with the mathematical expectancy ...
... nick again. Well, there it is, if you want it. But as far as I am concerned, it seems to me that the repeated combinations of the same bloodlines in the pedigrees of good horses fall out in accordance with the mathematical expectancy ...
Page 52
... nick was trotted out , it never held up , and Estes never believed in something that could not be proven and proven again in study after study . The same historical fault could be noted in all the most prominent theories , especially ...
... nick was trotted out , it never held up , and Estes never believed in something that could not be proven and proven again in study after study . The same historical fault could be noted in all the most prominent theories , especially ...
Page 56
... nick of bloodlines, and it seems altogether unreasonable to account for it on the grounds that Ingrid was a good race mare.”16 Although Dit was a very useful racer, the best horse Piatt ever bred was a yearling in 1940. His name was ...
... nick of bloodlines, and it seems altogether unreasonable to account for it on the grounds that Ingrid was a good race mare.”16 Although Dit was a very useful racer, the best horse Piatt ever bred was a yearling in 1940. His name was ...
Contents
5 | |
7 | |
11 | |
19 | |
21 | |
35 | |
41 | |
Federico Tesios work as a breeder and trainer | 75 |
Pedigrees and Statistics | 173 |
Birth Rank and Success | 187 |
A Pedigree Classification Technique | 191 |
Female Family Inbreeding | 237 |
The X Factor Theory | 251 |
Bruce Lowe and the Numerology of Pedigrees | 273 |
Quantification of Racing Performance in the Research of Harry Laughlin | 293 |
Evaluating Breeding Theories Looking for the Real Patterns Underpinning Tesios Greatness | 307 |
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Common terms and phrases
A.P. Indy affinity American analysis ancestors average CD Bimelech biomechanics Blood-Horse bloodlines bloodstock BLUP Blushing Groom Bold Ruler bred breeders broodmare broodmare sire Buckpasser champion chefs-de-race classic winners colt cross daughters Derby winner distance Dosage figures dual qualifiers earnings Eclipse evaluating factors Fappiano female family inbreeding filly foals furlongs genes genetic Glencoe Grade Hail to Reason heart score horse’s horses inbred inbreeding individuals La Troienne large heart Laughlin Leger male line mares mating measure Nasrullah Native Dancer Nearco nick Nijinsky Nijinsky II Northern Dancer offspring pattern pedigree percent stakes winners performance Phalaris population prepotence Princequillo produced progeny Prospector racehorse racing ability racing capacity racing class runners Seattle Slew Secretariat sire and dam sire line sire’s speed stallions starters statistics Storm Cat stride success Table Teddy Tesio Thoroughbred traits Triple Crown Varola Vuillier War Admiral yearlings
Popular passages
Page 294 - notwithstanding those limitations, to obtain by careful selection a permanent breed of dogs or horses gifted with peculiar powers of running, or of doing any thing else, so it would be quite practicable to produce a highly gifted race of men by judicious marriages during several consecutive generations.
Page 294 - Until recent years but little consideration has been given to the science of eugenics, that is the science of the improvement of the human race by better breeding.
Page 295 - ... But I must tell you of recent events here. As the enclosed printed matter will show in some detail, there has been started here a Record Office in Eugenics; so you see the seed sown by you is still sprouting in distant countries. And there is great interest in Eugenics in America, I can assure you. We have a plot of ground of 80 acres, near New York City, and a house with a fireproof addition for our records. We have a Superintendent, a stenographer and two helpers, besides six trained field-workers....
Page 5 - In practice, science is the observation, identification, description, experimental investigation, and theoretical explanation of natural phenomena.
Page 26 - the greatest star may be cheered for a home run today and then, on the very next day, be booed if he strikes out." He paused, then said in a strong, clear voice, "That's the way it is, and that's the way it should be. Freedom of speech"— and he pointed to the flag flying overhead— "is guaranteed by that emblem up there.
Page 51 - ... where the money is really going, and it seems to us that the money in this particular instance, especially, should be saved. If you want this money for some other place, why not tell us so and let us consider the merits of the matter? Mr. BENNETT. That is what we have attempted to do. Mr. CANNON. As far as I am concerned, it seems to me that the committee would do well if we just saved this money. Mr. TABER. I think the chairman is correct. Mr.
Page 125 - A baseball player's batting average is found by dividing the number of hits by the number of times at bat.
Page 294 - The publication of Charles Darwin's The Origin of the Species in 1859...