Patuxet wrote:Risen Star's heart size was discussed in the Sorry...another X factor question thread.
I guess this is the topic and these were the quotes:
http://www.pedigreequery.com/forum/view ... d24e3ed98f
xfactor fan expressed:
I asked to see at Risen Star one last time before he was buried. Maybe it was a strange or morbid request but I just wanted to have a look. His heart – and I couldn’t tell you what it weighed or how it compared in size to other equine hearts – was massive; the engine that powered Risen Star was as big as a soccer ball. Now, every time I watch a replay of the 1988 Belmont, in my mind I see this perfect engine driving him home.
Here's the quote from the very nice piece by Frances J. Karon.
Yes, an experienced observer, but admits that "I couldn’t tell you what it weighed or how it compared in size to other equine hearts"
I'm willing to believe that Risen Star had a large heart. But I'd be a lot happier if someone had weighed the heart , or the vet doing the necropsy had given an estimate, both of the size and the state of health.
My point is not if Risen Star had a large heart or not, but that this issue is only going to be solved by the application of good science.
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Then Patuxet expressed:
Like you "I'm willing to believe that Risen Star had a large heart."
Absent the science that proves otherwise, I just find it difficult to believe that his sire, Secretariat, would have had absolutely nothing to do with it.
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xfactor fan expressed:
One of the questions asked earlier in this thread is why the large heart hasn't been bred for.
The discussion about Risen Star is a perfect example of the problem. Large heart stallion sires large heart son. Must be related. Must come down from the top side of the pedigree.
Folks don't even want to consider it might come from the bottom side, or be related to mtDNA interacting with DNA on the chromosomes, or pseudo-sex linked. Or something that won't be discovered for another decade.
IF it is sex linked, then you can breed to a large heart stallion, and unless the females carry the large heart, you aren't going to get large heart colts. And if the large heart contributes to the racing success of the stallion, then the normal heart size colts will not approach the quality of the sire.
But no one in the breeding game is going to admit that their champion racehorse stud is going to be a dud. There is way to much money involved. I'm not suggesting there is a conspiracy--just that there are economic factors in play that don't want to look at the science.
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