|
|
Only asking because I'm curious. I'm wondering if anyone has ever had a stallion with 1 down wk5 land anywhere towards the top half of their breed LBs? Has 4 up wk4 Edited at December 27, 2018 05:21 PM by Ora Equestrian
|
|
|
|
|
Well, I think it'd depend on how strong the breed is. I had a boy up 3 on 4, and down 1 on 5 land #9 WBELB. He also produced 9 EEEs this year.
But no one else around him was down on 5. So i'd say its definitely possible, but not probable for hitting top 15.
|
| |
|
|
|
Jellos Warmbloods said:
Well, I think it'd depend on how strong the breed is. I had a boy up 3 on 4, and down 1 on 5 land #9 WBELB. He also produced 9 EEEs this year.
But no one else around him was down on 5. So i'd say its definitely possible, but not probable for hitting top 15.
He's an AA boy. ABLB sire & dam so quite strong lineage. Will be interesting to see how he goes :) Thanks for your input Jello!
|
|
|
|
|
I know there have been a handful of ABLB boys down one week 5, but agree with Jello - he probably won't be high up, but he could still make the ABLB. A bigger factor for LB placement will be his week 8, whether he continues training 4/6 up. Most of the top ABLB boys right now are training 5 or more week 8.
|
| |
|
|
Moderator |
Like the training in the round pen for bravery, each training session can give more or less boost to each of the traits of a horse. If one horse is strong but has for example 5 weak training sessions in a row for one trait, this one will probably not train up ( = show another bar ) as fast as a trait that had 5 top training sessions in a row. This is why some horses seem to be strong/weak in one trait after a couple training sessions - but a few weeks later or as an fully trained adult this stat turns out to be as strong/weak as another one, that seemed to be different.
I know a couple of "weak" trainers that landed quite high or even on top of the LB and I know even more training-wonderhorses with really outstanding training that bombed when it came to LB position or producing. Besides: training up has absolutly nothing to do with the ability to produce good or weak foals ;)
I searched and found this boy of mine - bred from Nat ;)
https://horseeden.com/horse.php?id=16315455
He had one down in w5, managed to hit and stay on the ABLB and got these rewards in his freshman year:
Year #109: TR Do Me No Favors was #1 top freshman sport horse sire. Year #109: TR Do Me No Favors was #5 top freshman sire overall. Year #109: TR Do Me No Favors was #86 top jumping sport horse sire. Year #109: TR Do Me No Favors was #64 top dressage sport horse sire. Year #109: TR Do Me No Favors was #30 top eventing sport horse sire. Year #109: TR Do Me No Favors was #78 top eventing sire overall. Year #109: TR Do Me No Favors was #42 top Yearly EEE producer overall.
If you look at his traits now and compare them with his training in the first 9 weeks, there is a lot of difference visible! This is why it is so hard to tell, if a strong/weak trait after only 4-9 training sessions is really strong/weak or just had a couple of (un)fortunate random training efforts!
Edited at December 28, 2018 05:09 AM by Kuewi KNN Stable
|
| |
|
|
|
Achilles, Helicons boy, is #3 WBLB and he had Scope down week 5. I think anything is quite possible on this game. There is always hope! Edited at December 28, 2018 10:31 AM by Amberle
|
|
|
|
|
New Era was down wk 5 and wk 9! He only went up 4/6 wk 8 but still managed to land #6 Ablb and not be Svened! So I say itÂ’s possible but I probably got lucky! The foal needs to be strong itself and actually have some good luck! Edited at December 28, 2018 08:11 AM by Jumy Stable
|
|
|
|
|
Thanks everyone for your input :)
|
|
|