Sunday, May 2, 2010
Bubble Economy Wins the Virginia Gold Cup Again!
The Steeplechase Times has the full story here. Scuba Steve was still our favorite horse of the day though!
Gold Cup Recovery in Effect
Hope everyone is having a great Gold Cup Recovery Day! Thanks again everyone for coming out and making this such a great event and a special thanks to our amazing volunteers for all of their great work! We'll be sending out a post-event e-mail to everyone to get your feedback on the event so we can make the event even better next year. Let us know what you think because this is YOUR event! We have pictures from the event up on our Picasa site (you can link to the album from the slideshow to the right) and on our JMU at Virginia Gold Cup Facebook group page.
Congrats to our Best Dressed Contest winners and a big thank you to Bailey's for the fantastic prizes and for hooking us all up with free passes to their fight event! We also need to thank JMU alum-owned Legends catering for all of their hard work, delicious food, and amazing mint juleps!
Of course, we have to give a final shout out to our event security, Bill, aka Life of the Party! Thanks Bill!
Congrats to our Best Dressed Contest winners and a big thank you to Bailey's for the fantastic prizes and for hooking us all up with free passes to their fight event! We also need to thank JMU alum-owned Legends catering for all of their hard work, delicious food, and amazing mint juleps!
Of course, we have to give a final shout out to our event security, Bill, aka Life of the Party! Thanks Bill!
Friday, April 30, 2010
The Final Countdown! Gold Cup Tomorrow!
We've had huge response this year and we're so excited to see everyone tomorrow and get those mint juleps flowing! Not only do we have a record number of JMU alums attending our first solo event in over a decade, but we have a lot of friends of JMU coming as well! Shout out to our friends from Virginia Tech, George Mason, William and Mary, George Washington, Randolph Macon, Longwood, ODU, Pitt, Penn, Princeton, Harvard, UNC, UMass, West Point, WVU, Johns Hopkins, Florida Atlantic, Queens, Cornell, Bucknell, Baylor, Lycoming, South Carolina, Clemson, Michigan State, Tennesee, Tampa, Wilkes, Miami, Lehigh, UConn, Tufts, the College of Saint Rose, SUNY Cortland, and Nebraska! WOW! Welcome everyone!!
Wednesday, April 28, 2010
Tuesday, April 27, 2010
More Cowbell!
In order to get everyone's attention on race day we decided that we needed to have a cowbell. Of course. We called around to several music stores (turns out they all carry them) and here is a conversation we just had:
"Hello do you carry cowbells?"
"Yes we do! Who is the cowbell player?"
"Me."
"Are you an experienced cowbell player or just starting out?"
"This is my first cowbell."
"Will you need a two tone cowbell?"
"No I just need a basic cowbell to hit to herd people."
"Fantastic."
Shout out to Alexandria Music for giving us half off our cowbell!
"Hello do you carry cowbells?"
"Yes we do! Who is the cowbell player?"
"Me."
"Are you an experienced cowbell player or just starting out?"
"This is my first cowbell."
"Will you need a two tone cowbell?"
"No I just need a basic cowbell to hit to herd people."
"Fantastic."
Shout out to Alexandria Music for giving us half off our cowbell!
The National Gallery of Art Explains the Drama of Steeplechase
The Virginia Gold Cup typically falls on the same weekend as the Kentucky Derby, and while it might not be quite as epic as The Run for the Roses, Gold Cup is just as exciting! If you think we exaggerate, consider that steeplechase racing is one of the most dangerous sports out there. The National Gallery of Art features this incredible painting by Degas and explains:
"Unlike horse racing on the flats, a steeplechase is a risky obstacle course. The French version is based on the English and Irish steeplechase, which is an informal race run in the countryside. A group of men on horseback would choose a steeple--a visible, fixed goal--and race toward it, riding over everything--bridges, fences, hedges, and streams--between the starting point and the end. People fell, frequently injuring or even killing themselves. In France "le steeplechase" was a somewhat more organized event, with a specific distance and course. It was very much a gentleman's race, designed for aristocrats, not for professional jockeys, and was a way for men to demonstrate their sangfroid, their ability to keep a cool head in dangerous circumstances. Certain places specialized in steeplechases, including Le-Pin, a racetrack in Normandy near the estate of the Valpinçons, friends whom Degas frequently visited.
In the early 1860s there were a few paintings at the Salon showing the steeplechase, but no one had painted anything like this. Instead of a modest genre painting of "a gentleman's race," it is epic, ambitious, and full of high drama. Degas has taken an ordinary event--the steeplechase--and turned it into a history painting. It's Alexander and Bucephalus, but in reverse. In this battle between man and horse--man and nature--man has lost. A fallen jockey lies in the foreground while the race continues."
"Unlike horse racing on the flats, a steeplechase is a risky obstacle course. The French version is based on the English and Irish steeplechase, which is an informal race run in the countryside. A group of men on horseback would choose a steeple--a visible, fixed goal--and race toward it, riding over everything--bridges, fences, hedges, and streams--between the starting point and the end. People fell, frequently injuring or even killing themselves. In France "le steeplechase" was a somewhat more organized event, with a specific distance and course. It was very much a gentleman's race, designed for aristocrats, not for professional jockeys, and was a way for men to demonstrate their sangfroid, their ability to keep a cool head in dangerous circumstances. Certain places specialized in steeplechases, including Le-Pin, a racetrack in Normandy near the estate of the Valpinçons, friends whom Degas frequently visited.
In the early 1860s there were a few paintings at the Salon showing the steeplechase, but no one had painted anything like this. Instead of a modest genre painting of "a gentleman's race," it is epic, ambitious, and full of high drama. Degas has taken an ordinary event--the steeplechase--and turned it into a history painting. It's Alexander and Bucephalus, but in reverse. In this battle between man and horse--man and nature--man has lost. A fallen jockey lies in the foreground while the race continues."
Saturday, April 24, 2010
Perfect Weather Forecast!
We're one week out and so far the forecast is calling for partly cloudy sunny, highs in the 70s 80s 90s (!) heaven. It's going to be a beautiful day at the races! We still have tickets left, so if you haven't bought your tickets yet, you need to check yourself before you wreck yourself (yeah you heard that) and click on the sales link now!
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