Chris McCarron: What a Drag

Started by prist, June 26, 2023, 08:42:30 AM

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prist

Chris McCarron not a fan of European jockeys riding high in the saddle.

\"Where the heck that\'s coming from?\" he asks. \"Laziness. It\'s more strenuous to get down and stay down for a long period. Harder on your legs, quads, hamstrings. These guys that get way up off a horses back have no idea how much drag they\'re increasing.\"

Article goes on to mention the new silks that came out back in the 80\'s.

[McCarron remembers when the new aerodynamic silks were sent to NYU for analysis. The lab computed a gain, over a mile, of around 15 feet]

Generating accurate speed figures can be a complex endeavor. Good luck, TGJB.

www.thoroughbreddailynews.com

prist

The silks may be aerodynamic these days, but what about the skull cap that goes on the helmet? The European jockeys have the brim/bill standing straight up. It\'s a cool look, but it doesn\'t seem that aerodynamic to me.

Roman

I am trying to quantify the effects of wind on horses that run covered up in turf races. Have been using a wind app, that records the wind speeds & direction every few minutes. Convinced that there is an aerodynamic advantage that can be calculated into a figure.

onward800

I remember those tight fitting aerodynamic silks. It seems they were somewhat popular and used by a handful of trainers and owners for less than a year. If they were good for a 15 ft advantage why didn\'t they get widely adopted?

onward800

It might have been more of an owner request than a trainer decision  but I recall Pletcher and Lucas using them. But then my recollection is not too reliable.

shanahan

It\'s so different today
I hear every jockey say
what a drag it is wearing pants

I hear every trainer say
wear the pants and take the rail
what a drag it is if you spill

hey, it\'s a Tuesday - and it\'s raining...feel free to add another verse.