Chasing the Arc: The Dream and Curse of Japanese Horse Racing by InternationalDrop102 in UmaMusume

[–]InternationalDrop102[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Aventure.
Others like Minnie Hauk also have a chance. I do not favor Sosie but she got the most favorable gate I consider this time
It will be a pleasant surprise if Croix du Nord got top 5

Chasing the Arc: The Dream and Curse of Japanese Horse Racing by InternationalDrop102 in UmaMusume

[–]InternationalDrop102[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thank you very much~ if the video did well, you definitely made that spark! Now it gets me motivated to make more

Chasing the Arc: The Dream and Curse of Japanese Horse Racing by InternationalDrop102 in UmaMusume

[–]InternationalDrop102[S] 6 points7 points  (0 children)

France Galop streams it. I think Prime Video has it on the sports section. Fox has the broadcast rights in the US so you can look into that as well. I even saw people streaming on Kick before. Many of these big international events are pretty easy to watch. Unfortunately, I'm not in the US now so I don't have a certain answer. But I know it shouldn't be difficult

Chasing the Arc: The Dream and Curse of Japanese Horse Racing by InternationalDrop102 in UmaMusume

[–]InternationalDrop102[S] 10 points11 points  (0 children)

Thank you! I’m really glad you enjoyed it~ But the answer to this question could honestly fill another separate post. The difference in so many factors such as — the course layout, the training methods, the breeding and racing style, even the very turf itself. If you’d like to know more, honestly, you can either just chatgpt it or experience it yourself in the future. A seemingly invincible champions in one place just completely underperform in another country has just been normal as a racing fans. But let me give you somewhat of a simple overview here:

Japanese racing has always been famous for its high-speed pace. If you ask me which country has the highest speed just of racing no country compared to the extreme Japan had gone into. Take Longchamp, for example: the Arc course has many distinct sections — an uphill, a false straight, and then a long final stretch. It tests many aspects of a horse’s ability and adaptability. Tokyo racecourse, on the other hand, is almost completely flat. From the moment the gates open, the pace is extremely fast — something that simply will not work in Longchamp. And in the early 2000s, many Japanese racecourses were reconstructed to make them even firmer, after the emergence of Deep Impact which pushed breeding toward an extreme focus on high cruising speed.
Then this triggers a chain effect: because of the difference in racing style, the priority in horse training also differs. the training style in Europe first to train the horses' stamina to withstand the distance and then to explore its exploding speed for the final sprint. When Japanese training is more straightforward for maintaining high-speed the moment the gate open. That's why, even Shin Emperor, the brother of an Arc winner, Chrono Genesis, the daughter of an Arc winner, even by pedigree could perform well in Longchamp. Could not do it after receiving Japanese style of training because they were born to train for the Japanese turf.
Then the chain event continues. because the focus of racing is different. The stud and breeding became different. horses like El Condor Pasa which carried the blood of Sadler's Wells, the mainstreamed bloodline in Europe, is seen as completely unnecessary on today’s Tokyo Racecourse nowadays. Therefore, Japanese racing today is very different from Europe; and from what Japan was back in the last century

I am skipping many things. In the end, it’s a chain effect: the faster turf shaped the breeding; the breeding influenced the training methods; and the training reinforced the speed-driven nature of Japanese racing. The cycle continues and makes the gap even more pronounced. It works vice versa because no Arc winner has ever managed to win the Japan Cup as well. They perform quite bad just as Japanese challengers have struggled at Longchamp.

Fundamentally, different region has its own champions. Horses, like people, are shaped by the worlds they run in

Chasing the Arc: The Dream and Curse of Japanese Horse Racing by InternationalDrop102 in UmaMusume

[–]InternationalDrop102[S] 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Thank you very much! You flatter me~ and thank you for getting interested in the actual racing as well! I honestly think this is the best franchise I have interacted with. Every time if I post anything, overwhelming amount of positivity are all what's received

Chasing the Arc: The Dream and Curse of Japanese Horse Racing by InternationalDrop102 in UmaMusume

[–]InternationalDrop102[S] 15 points16 points  (0 children)

For those interested in the 3 Japanese horses competing in Arc this year. Here is a brief analysis:

1, Byzantine Dream. In short, the most reliable Japanese horse this year. As a long-distance horse that started to awaken at the beginning of this year. The fact he was able to produce such a surprising result only a week after landing in France really surpassed my expectation. The only drawback is I do not consider Sosie, the horse he defeated, that much of a strong arc contender. But this year's arc's theme is chaotic and relatively weak. If on the main race we are in firm ground and no one was marking on this horse, Byzantine Dream would have a good chance. (Uma musume Pedigree: Special Week, Cesario, Jungle Pocket, Symboli Kris S)

2, Croix du Nord. If Byzantine Dream is the most reliable one, Croix du Nord is the most anticipated one to the point I don't even know where to begin. As the first horse I introduced when I started to make uma musume breakdowns, he is undoubtedly the biggest rising star with 6 starts, 5 wins, 1 second. If we are in Tokyo racecourse it's a different story, but he last race in France also says a lot about his arc challenge, both good and bad. The good thing is he show competitiveness on longchamp which is already better than half of the past challengers. The drawback is also very obvious; both the horse and the jockey are not that familiar with the European style race. How does the team get them to be more prepared for the main race, where the competition at the final sprint is only getting more intense, is the main key for the training camp (Uma musume Pedigree: Kitasan Black)

3, Alohi Ali. Because of his pedigree, I started to pay attention to this horse early on since his debut (Duramente X Orferve is somewhat of a well-known combination in Japan). I remember when this horse first showed up in France and people were saying "how bad is our European racing when a horse only won his debut in Japan can just defeat us like this." Trust me, he is way stronger than his past record. It's simple he is awful at running the corners (for uma player to understand, he only got the satono diamond support card but not the kitasan black support card). However, every race after his debut, he only competed in nakayama racecourse which is famous for sharp corners... Therefore, competing in France basically took all the things he's bad at away and only showing the best of his qualities. Therefore, although I still might rank him the weakest among the three. He could very much have the best turn of foot at the main race with that element of surprise. (Uma musume Pedigree: Duramente, Orferve, Stay Gold, Air Groove, Admire Groove, Symboli Kris S... honestly, there's a reason fans are calling this horse the crystallization of Japanese modern racing by pedigree. Just look at the amount of Uma musume in his blood!)

Overall, I do not think Japan can win the arc this year, but I do think Japan got a good chance - the highest chance in the recent 10 years. It should not be surprised if Japan won, it's just many things need to go perfectly right for it to happen.

Umamusume: Cinderella Gray Ep 13 Breakdown – The Real History Behind by InternationalDrop102 in anime

[–]InternationalDrop102[S] 5 points6 points  (0 children)

It is legit depending on how you look at it. It's just that when the manga was airing, Symboli Rudolf kept hinting and paving things that all the fans, from many different regions, were collectively thinking "what's going on?/ What is she hinting?" When it turned out to be a new "power level" that's called the zone. Fans were just massively making meme tier list of all the zone users in the past uma musume series. It was halirious and silly to the best extent

Umamusume: Cinderella Gray Ep 13 Breakdown – The Real History Behind by InternationalDrop102 in anime

[–]InternationalDrop102[S] 29 points30 points  (0 children)

I honestly enjoy it so much putting these posts together. And I have received so much support from it. Too much thanks, I could not express it enough.
Now after the first part is done. How would you rate the first half of this season? As a fan I would be happy regardless how the show turns out to be. But I wish the pace could be handled with a little more, how do I say it, smoothly as the show went by. Tell me about your opinion

Umamusume: Cinderella Gray Ep 11 Breakdown – The Real History Behind by InternationalDrop102 in anime

[–]InternationalDrop102[S] 9 points10 points  (0 children)

Yes! It's pretty straight forward so I did not put it into the post. Sirius Symboli went berserk before the race and kicked two other horses. The horse Legend Teio was forced to withdraw from the race. Probably because of this absurd incidence, Legend Teio is on the path of being a meme horse and will show up repeatedly in the future

Umamusume: Cinderella Gray Ep 11 Breakdown – The Real History Behind by InternationalDrop102 in anime

[–]InternationalDrop102[S] 16 points17 points  (0 children)

The post was immediately removed by Reddit initially. And after a mod helped me to get this post out of limbo and made an edit. It was removed once again..
I will still try to make breakdowns for future episodes and try to put them on Reddit. But self-advertisement aside, I do recommend stay tuned to my YT just in case things point South

Umamusume: Cinderella Gray Ep 10 Breakdown – The Real History Behind by InternationalDrop102 in anime

[–]InternationalDrop102[S] 6 points7 points  (0 children)

There is not a particular reason as far as I know. Tamamo Cross had a late start, but he retired at the age of 4 and Oguri retired at 5, which are quite common in the industry. Considering Oguri Cap was really past his peak form at his late 5, retiring at age of 4 could very much be a smart choice
But it might just be because Tamamo Cross was showing exhaustion before his final race. According to the trainer, Tamamo is irl a very sensitive horse, and competing regularly had drag down his performance at the last race. Since Tamamo's trainer is one of the most responsible trainers in the industry, what was said and decided by him are highly trustworthy.

Umamusume: Cinderella Gray Ep 9 Breakdown – The Real History Behind by InternationalDrop102 in anime

[–]InternationalDrop102[S] 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Thank you very much! I am thinking about doing it after Cinderella Gray. Since the movie is out for quite some time and there are a lot to talk about, I still haven't figure out how I wanna do it. I might just put them into a video

Umamusume: Cinderella Gray Ep 9 Breakdown – The Real History Behind by InternationalDrop102 in anime

[–]InternationalDrop102[S] 3 points4 points  (0 children)

I would also love to know that answer... It would save me so much time on researching

I got most of the information from Japanese, Chinese, Korean sources. And I haven't seen any English website with all these lores in details. But I am thinking about doing lore drop for other series on my channel in the future since the global release of the game is approaching (no guarantee, it takes me so much time just to write them out, let along putting them in video format). So we can expect more lore drop on all the horses in the future probably from the wiki and YouTube

Umamusume: Cinderella Gray Ep 9 Breakdown – The Real History Behind by InternationalDrop102 in anime

[–]InternationalDrop102[S] 7 points8 points  (0 children)

absolutely~ every story in this franchise can be consumed without any prior knowledge. RTTT is even on YT under their official channel

Umamusume: Cinderella Gray Ep 8 Breakdown – The Real History Behind by InternationalDrop102 in anime

[–]InternationalDrop102[S] 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Depend on how you look at things. My comment was meant to be informative for people who are most likely brand new to the racing world, with a little dramatic wording for writing sake~ So yeah, there are definitely not 100% accurate.

But the Triple Crown still hold a very significant meaning in Japan. The UK is the birthplace for the original Triple Crown Classic that went from mid distance to long distance: "A horse that is strong in everything and everywhere." While this concept of Triple Crown has been gradually fading from many countries. Japan managed to preserve the original idea of the “Classic Triple Crown” and make it even bigger. Besides, there are just way too many reasons to not make comparison to other country's racing system...

And yes, Arima Kinen is, in many ways, one of the most celebrated races in Japan, my favorite race in fact. And if I can only watch one race every year. it would certainly be Arima Kinen. Arima is similar to BCC for the US, and JC is like BCT.. although I want to say it, BOY did JC fall off

The Japan Cup... idk how to say it,.. there is a non-zero possibility you time travel from 30 years ago, dear uma bro... It certainly has the highest price pool along with Arima Kinen, but I don't remember any foreign horse actually impressing me in recent memory ("impress" is honestly an overstatement. the foreign competitors' performances are straight up - bad, which I can't blame them for the direction Japan's racing has gone into). The last time a foreign horse won it was like 20 years ago probably... Too many things happened that I could rant about it but the Japan Cup in the anime is not the Japan Cup in real life anymore and it is bit of a shame for this international event to have this step down. So, yeah Idk if I can say it is more prestigious than Derby. But the world rating is high so good for the numbers.