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Post by BVADMIN on Jan 25, 2023 15:13:25 GMT
CRAYFORD GREYHOUND STADIUM
I've seen a lot of crazy things at Greyhound tracks over the last 50 years But this beats the lot.
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Post by BVADMIN on Jan 25, 2023 22:42:09 GMT
TAKEN FROM THE RACING POST THURSDAY 26-1-23.
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Post by BVADMIN on Jan 27, 2023 23:09:20 GMT
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Post by BVADMIN on Jan 27, 2023 23:19:07 GMT
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Post by BVADMIN on Feb 1, 2023 1:31:17 GMT
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Post by BVADMIN on Feb 1, 2023 22:20:58 GMT
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Post by SALFORD GIRL on Feb 2, 2023 19:32:54 GMT
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Post by BVADMIN on Feb 2, 2023 22:37:52 GMT
Greyhound Trader pleased by Oxford sale success
Press release
The second Greyhound Trader sale of the year took place on Wednesday at Oxford and over Β£68,000 was exchanged into the hands of the vendors.
Fastest performance of the day came from Moanteen Sugar, who clocked an impressive 27.35se for the 450m trip. Sugar, a July 21 Droopys Sydney pup, made Β£8,600 on the bench and will join the kennels of Suffolk Downs trainer Eric Cantillon.
Just behind on the clock in 27.37sec was Gifted Ruler who fetched Β£6,200. A son of Belles Direction and Jaytee Osprey, he could well become an Oxford regular having been bought for the kennels of Welsh trainer Rob Short.
Other notable sales on the day included the rails-mad Time To Explode (Β£4,000), 28.70sec Waterford performer Swithins Teejay (Β£3,800) and 28.56sec at Cork Lincoln County (Β£3600).
43 of the 44 lots on the day were sold (98 per cent) at an average price of Β£1,588.
The next Greyhound Trader sale will be held at Henlow on Wednesday 22nd February before the well-anticipated Towcester 'Pre-Derby' Sale takes place on Wednesday 8th March.
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Post by SALFORD GIRL on Feb 3, 2023 6:51:14 GMT
By Mr Neil Clark In praise of greyhound racing From the SPECTATOR magazine issue: 04 February 2023......Hackney Greyhound Stadium, 14 February 1989 (photo by Mark Leech/Offside/Getty Images) I feel strangely and disproportionately elated when Number 2 dog, Ballyblack Bess, powers home strongly to win the 20.03 race. Itβs a Monday evening in January in the greyhound stadium in Blackbird Leys, Oxford. I only won Β£9 but Iβm pleased I came because an evening at the dogs is still great old-fashioned fun. The punters love it, as do the dogs, so itβs devastating that the RSPCA has demanded it be banned. Theyβve teamed up with two other leading charities, the Dogs Trust and the Blue Cross, to request that itβs phased out over a five-year period.
But the RSPCA is β excuse the pun β barking up the wrong tree. The main objection to the sport was always about what happened to the dogs once their racing careers were over. But in 2020 a new Greyhound Retirement Scheme was introduced by the sportβs governing body, the Greyhound Board of Great Britain, whereby owners and the Board contribute Β£200 each to a bond which assists with homing costs. Contrary to the claims, there is a life after racing for these magnificent athletes and most of them are well looked after. In Oxford, retired greyhounds, looking very handsome in their smart jackets, are taken round the bars and restaurants to meet the public.
Another complaint was about racetrack safety. But national track fatalities have, according to industry figures, halved between 2018 and 2021 (from 0.06 per cent to 0.03 per cent). Iβve been racing five times since September and, having seen the best part of 50 races and 300-odd dogs competing, I can recall seeing only one greyhound limping after a race. Even when there are injuries, vets are always in attendance.
If the abolitionists do get their way, an important part of our sporting and cultural heritage will be lost. In its heyday in the mid-20th century, greyhound racing was second only to football in popularity, followed by the upper and working classes alike. In the immediate postwar era attendances were roughly 70 million a year. There were more than 200 licensed dog tracks in Britain and 25 in London alone. βGoing to the dogsβ for an evening of exciting action and a slap-up meal was the night out.
Some would say greyhound racing is now a niche pastime, with no terrestrial TV coverage, but itβs a credit to the dogs that despite everything it remains the countryβs sixth most popular sport. One of its major advantages is that you can stand right up close to the action, as you used to do in football stadiums before all-seaters took over. No matter how many races I see, I always marvel at the speed of the dogs as the traps open and they tear after the electric hare. The dogs love racing; it is what they are bred to do, and those who call the sport βcruelβ really ought to attend a few meetings.
None of this does much to silence the critics. The situation in Wales and Scotland is particularly worrying. In the Principality there is only one remaining track, the Valley Stadium in Ystrad Mynach, and in December the Seneddβs petition committee called for the sportβs gradual abolition. In Scotland it received a three-month reprieve in November, pending the completion of a report of the Scottish Animal Welfare Commission, but the only licensed venue, Shawfield in South Lanarkshire, remains closed after the 2020 lockdown and is in a sorry, dilapidated state.
Itβs easy for activists to insist that greyhound racingβs days are numbered, but what happened in Oxford is instructive. The stadium shut down in 2012 after 73 years and the site was earmarked for housing. Promoter and enthusiast Kevin Boothby wanted to bring the greyhounds back, but was met with a vociferous campaign to stop their return. The deputy leader of the Green party group on Oxford City Council joined up with the Lib Dems and branded dog racing βa barbaric practiceβ. Actress Miriam Margolyes, who was brought up in Oxford, weighed in, writing a letter to the council that described racing as a βghastly businessβ. A petition from the animal rights group Peta attracted more than 32,000 signatures.
Everyone assumed the council would buckle under the pressure. But the greyhound track did reopen for business in September, and on the opening night the small number of protestors were greatly outnumbered by the 2,000 or so spectators who all had a wonderful time.
Many tracks have been lost in recent years but Greater London still has Romford, and Birmingham has Perry Barr, both historic venues dating back to 1929. If the sport is to survive, we need to get out there on cold winter evenings to support it.
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Post by SALFORD GIRL on Feb 5, 2023 23:50:51 GMT
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