J.Moreira sets new Hong Kong record with 8 winners in one day

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  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 8 มี.ค. 2017
  • Watch the 8 single races here / @trendingvideo
    Super Jockey the Magic Man Record !!
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ความคิดเห็น • 13

  • @TrendingVideo
    @TrendingVideo  7 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Watch the 8 single races here th-cam.com/channels/nInajtSjD0XAmmpFXgq-ZQ.html

  • @edvaldovalsique4860
    @edvaldovalsique4860 4 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    João Moreira fantastic jockey! From Brazil! 💚💛

  • @choudaryansar2649
    @choudaryansar2649 6 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    J.moreira is great JOCKEY.

  • @TrendingVideo
    @TrendingVideo  7 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    How great was it to see rival jockey Karis Teetan
    produce a champagne dousing for Joao Moreira after his eighth winner on
    Sunday, not just as a piece of sportsmanship but as a type of
    recognition of what the Magic Man does for racing as a sport?
    Think Lionel Messi, think Tiger Woods at his
    peak, think Roger Federer or Usain Bolt. The kind of performers who give
    their entire sport a lift when they do something incredible, and they
    do it often enough that even the anticipationgives their game a glow.
    For racing, Moreira is the nearest thing the sport has had to Frankie Dettori since, well, Frankie Dettori.Even if Frankie hasn’t finished yet, he’s
    probably happy to hand overthe baton for putting a likeable and
    exceptional face on racing after carrying it for 20 years.
    You can argue until you’re a deep shade of
    purple about who is the world’s best jockey in the saddle, but Ryan
    Moore is never going to be the face of unbridled joy, while Moreira
    makes Old King Cole look a curmudgeon.
    He is a positive and charismatic individual
    as well as a great jockey, somethingyou cannot say about many great
    jockeys - not a design fault in them as much as an unusual feature of
    Moreira.And all jockeys, everyone in racing, gets some reflected glory and positive enhancement from someone like Moreira.
    In the wake of his swashbuckling deeds on Sunday,
    we asked the obligatory “what makes Joao so
    good” question of a handful of trainers, but it’s pi to a billion
    places. Searching for the secret to Joao Moreira, that’s where you end
    up. Pretty much the answer we got from John Size, now that we think
    about it.
    Why is the Magic Man so good? And any detractors, he is that good.
    When Douglas Whyte won a century of races in a
    season for the first time and streeted the next best, we thought that
    was dominance. There were 700 races in that season; there will be about
    130 or so more this season and everyone is looking at Moreiragiving 200
    wins a nudge - yes, winning a century plus most of the races added in
    the past 13 years.
    Well, Moreira’s balance is fantastic but all
    jockeys of a decent standard have good balance or they’d fall off all
    the time.
    Derek Leung Ka-chun showed off some pretty
    good balance on a horse in Auckland on Saturday that was trying to get
    rid of him and couldn’t. Balance is integral to the job, but will only
    get you part of the way there.
    Joao Moreira makes it win number seven on
    Mighty Maverick.
    Moreirais light so he gets a lot of rides and has a wide choice but he
    isn’t
    the only light jockey around. Light just gets you in the cast, it can’t
    read your lines.
    His hands. People who might not pay much
    attention to racing or races and read about a jockey’s wonderful hands
    might wonder if it’s about the size or shape or texture, and whether
    there’s a hand-modelling career awaiting when riding is finished.
    But hands are all about the voice. Hands are
    the communication device between the jockey and his horse. Some hands
    are seductive and coaxing, like a Barry White song, while others are
    like pumping out screeching death metal.
    And “smooth” rides along with the good hands -
    it’s like the difference between that taxi you hailedand the driver was
    on the accelerator or the brake the whole way, but at no stage left
    both of them untouched.
    Compare him with the driver who just went
    along at a good even, Goldilocks speed, neither too fast nor too slow,
    as either can be a problem. Smooth means rhythm, smooth means horses can
    breathe, which helps.
    But there are other jockeys, a few anyway, who
    manage that.
    Joao Moreira is liked by all - especially Hong
    Kong’s owners.
    One of the keys to Moreira, we think, is that
    he is so often keeping a horse’s attention in running, moving his
    hands, doing this and that, and just keeping them aware that something’s
    going on.
    The vast majority of even good standard
    jockeys are passengers, who jump, position, then sit there, along for
    the ride and letting the horse doze off until they come to the straight.
    Particularly with lesser horses, and also
    some better ones, keeping them focused on being in a race can be the
    difference between winning and losing. It’s a fine line between getting
    them to relax and still keeping them awake.
    And this goes along with Moreira changing
    their lead legs during races to even out the fatigue. When a top jockey
    himself, Michael Rodd, talked about Moreira’s talent at this on
    Australian radio a couple of years back, it caught fire.
    Yes, one of the parts of being a jockey that
    punters and fans don’t even think about is horses changing leads. To
    jockeys, it’s an everyday part of their trade but a refined skill in the
    very best.
    And there’s his feel for speed, for how fast
    they are going, and only the best jockeys really show off this quality
    on a regular basis.
    Joao Moreira produces another masterful display
    on Prawn Baba and shouts it out loud.
    Moreira produced one example of what not to do last season, on Love
    Shock, but it lines up against hundreds of examples on the other side of the
    ledger.
    And Win Number Eight on Sunday was just that.
    As the leaders hurtled through the early splits, Moreira sat back off
    them on a horse expected to be near the lead, albeit a horse who
    probably couldn’t have been up there if he had thrown a kitchen sink at
    it, considering how fast they were going.
    But then he did the thing that not many do,
    and that Moreira does regularly - he produced his tactics by the pace of
    the race, not the geography of the track.
    Another jockey might also have thought the
    leaders were going too fast, and stayed back where they were, knowing
    the leaders would weaken in the home straight.
    by Alan Aitken www.scmp.com

  • @theinvisibleman9410
    @theinvisibleman9410 6 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    All about timing

  • @hmonghealtheducation949
    @hmonghealtheducation949 6 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Hi 504

  • @GyariSan1
    @GyariSan1 6 ปีที่แล้ว +6

    Great humble Jockey, way better than trash Dettori who can only win with super horses

    • @gilbertmateo3409
      @gilbertmateo3409 6 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      High profile jockeys the likes of Ryan Moore, Dettori, Mike Smith, to name a few will not risk their professions for non graded races. And they're winning long shots, too on Grade 1 races.

  • @TrendingVideo
    @TrendingVideo  7 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    www.cricfree.sc/update/ukrace.php
    www.cricfree.sc/update/atraces.php

    • @gongrugsat1862
      @gongrugsat1862 6 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Trending Video สวัสดี