Monday, May 9, 2016

They kill horses by the numbers....too???

Seabiscuit (May 23, 1933 – May 17, 1947) was a champion Thoroughbred racehorse in the United States. A small horse, Seabiscuit had an inauspicious start to his racing career, but became an unlikely champion and a symbol of hope to many Americans during the Great Depression.

Birth Date - May 23, 1933 5+2+3+1+9+3+3=26
Death Date - May 17, 1947 5+1+7+1+9+4+7=34

Birth Year Numerology 19+33=52
Death Year Numerology 19+47=66

Seabiscuit died 6 days before his 14th birthday which equates to 156 months.

156 Thirty Three 66 (Add the 6 days to 66=666)


While Seabiscuit had not lived up to his racing potential, he was not the poor performer Fitzsimmons had taken him for. His last two wins as a two-year-old came in minor stakes races. The next season, however, started with a similar pattern. The colt ran 12 times in less than four months, winning four times. One of those races was a cheap allowance race on the "sweltering afternoon of June 29", 1936, at Suffolk Downs. That is where trainer Tom Smith first laid eyes on Seabiscuit. His owners sold the horse to automobile entrepreneur Charles S. Howard for $8000 at Saratoga, in August.

117 Tom Smith 36
48 Tom 12
69 Smith 24

June 29,1936 - 6+2+9+1+9+3+6=36

154 Charles S. Howard 64...73...82
66 Charles 30...39
69 Howard 33


Howard assigned Seabiscuit to a new trainer, Tom Smith, who, with his unorthodox training methods, gradually brought Seabiscuit out of his lethargy. Smith paired the horse with Canadian jockey Red Pollard (1909–1981), who had experience racing in the West and in Mexico. On August 22, 1936, they raced Seabiscuit for the first time. Improvements came quickly, and in their remaining eight races in the East, Seabiscuit and Pollard won several times, including the Detroit Governor's Handicap (worth $5,600) and the Scarsdale Handicap ($7,300) at Empire City Race Track in Yonkers, New York.


105 Red Pollard 51
27 Red 18
78 Pollard 33

August 22, 1936 - 8+2+2+1+9+3+6=31
Year Numerology for first race 19+36=55


On November 1, 1938, Seabiscuit met War Admiral and jockey Charles Kurtsinger in what was dubbed the "Match of the Century." The event was run over 1 3 ∕ 16 miles (1.91 km) at Pimlico Race Course. From the grandstands to the infield, the track was jammed with fans. Trains were run from all over the country to bring fans to the race, and the estimated 40,000 at the track were joined by 40 million listening on the radio. War Admiral was the favorite (1–4 with most bookmakers) and a nearly unanimous selection of the writers and tipsters, excluding a California contingent.


Race Year Numerology - November 1, 1938 – 11+1+1+9+3+8=33

205 Match of the Century 79 (79 Champion)

108 Seabiscuit 36...45...54
128 George Woolf 65
57 George 39
71 Woolf 26

100 War Admiral 46
208 Charles Kurtsinger 82...91...100...109
66 Charles 30...39
142 Kurtsinger 52...61...70


When the bell rang, Seabiscuit broke in front, led by over a length after 20 seconds, and soon crossed over to the rail position. Halfway down the backstretch, War Admiral started to cut into the lead, gradually pulling level with Seabiscuit, then slightly ahead. Following advice he had received from Pollard, Woolf had eased up on Seabiscuit, allowing his horse to see his rival, then asked for more effort. Two hundred yards from the wire, Seabiscuit pulled away again and continued to extend his lead over the closing stretch, finally winning by four lengths despite War Admiral's running his best time for the distance.

132 Two Hundred 51 (132 Lead in English) (51 Gifted in Simple)


On April 10 1940, Seabiscuit's retirement from racing was officially announced. When he was retired to the Ridgewood Ranch near Willits, California, he was horse racing's all-time leading money winner. Put out to stud, Seabiscuit sired 108 foals, including two moderately successful racehorses: Sea Sovereign and Sea Swallow. Over 50,000 visitors went to Ridgewood Ranch to see Seabiscuit in his seven years there before his death.

144 Ridgewood Ranch 81 (81 Legend in Jewish)
100 Ridgewood 55
44 Ranch 26
144 Forty four 54

Seabiscuit died of a probable heart attack on May 17, 1947, in Willits, California, six days short of 14 years old. He is buried at Willits Ranch in Mendocino County, California. Did the owner of Seabiscuit sacrifice his horse 6 days before his 14th birthday??? A quick check on the life span of a thoroughbred reveals that Seabiscuit could have lived between 25-30 years so it's conceivable that Seabiscuit died by the numbers. Seabiscuit's birthday is contrived to render a numerology of 26 = GOD and/or LIE.


Complete Biography is found on: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Seabiscuit

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