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Coligny wrote:Sound's as French as a Fiat Punto....
Or... Carlita Sarkozy... in fact...
Just adding... nothing... to the debate... sry
Yokohammer wrote:This incensed one of the Japanese runners so much that he ran over to the TV crew and screamed at them, telling them to interview a Japanese rather than waste their time on a foreigner.
nottu wrote:So what's the normal sanction for taking a bad line in a race in Japan?
And what exactly do they mean by that expression?
nottu wrote:Thanks for the info. I suspected that was the meaning. I don't believe the penalties for interference are as great in the US and Europe as they are for Japan and Australia.
This seems to me to be a good example of Japanese ambivalence-like/dislike with things foreign and foreigners. It is possible that the officials and business side of Japanese horseracing were lenient with the Frenchmen in a bid to accommodate the foreign rider and may have tried to push away from Japan's harsher penalty. At the same time, the jockey got kuso gaijin stoked up and wouldn't have enjoyed the Frenchman's presence in the race even if he was punished inordinately.
If they suspended the Frenchman for a number of days, what would it matter to him? Couldn't he just go back to France?
Anthony Crastus - French?
nottu wrote:why do you think that globalization has occurred and is respected, especially in nations with a great deal of national pride in horse racing - US, Ireland, ...?
nottu wrote:Naturally, the first place to look. But since all the money originates with the betters I still wonder why? Does internationalization of the rules and penalties generate more betting and revenue? If so, did the globalization coincide with internet wagering.
Yokohammer wrote:I don't know if this has anything to do with it, but there does seem to be some international betting going on. I actually knew a guy here in Japan who's job was to go to the JRA every day and bet on the races for a Hong Kong company. Come to think of it, I don't even know if that's legal, but it was happening for sure.
Number11 wrote:Sorry for being a stinking gaijin and asking some questions, but you seem very knowledgeable about this, Greji. That's pretty rare. It seems like everyone is full of crap these days.
I'm curious about the rationale of it being illegal. Do the large betting organizations influence the odds? Is off-track betting legal in Japan? I'm surprised to learn that Japan has the largest sales. I guess "shocked" is a better word.
I've never been to a race in Japan, but I'd like to go. Do you happen to know where boat racing and keirin rank compared to keba?
Thanks in advance for any info.
nottu wrote:However, the only cases I've read about involved the bookmaking operators themselves, not individual players.
Kanchou wrote:dammit, I can't stop staring at Greji's avatar.
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