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Remember, part of this, specifically the part having to do with Myron's horses, has less to do with Tony, and more to do with Myron. Myron has been a cockroach in this business for his entire life. If it wasn't for George Segal, Myron would probably still be selling racing forms out in Las Vegas. Myron always looks out for Myron, and obviously it's at other people's expense. So, first, Myron breeds horses (and I don't know what % he actually owns of them), and sells interests in them at prices that Myron sets-----which IMO are grossly inflated. They are partnership horses that Myron then "manages" and if or what he charges for that, I have no idea. Now, I don't know if the people who buy into those horses ask Tony for his opinion before they do, but if they do, that's an inherent conflict of interest. Two, and I can't verify he did in fact do this, but I believe Myron has: a) also put horses through the ring, either bought them back and sold interests in them, and/or, b) Tony bought them for other owners, and Myron retained/bought back into the horse (at the sale price), and then sold interests in that piece he retained/bought back into. Simply another money-making scheme.Yes, Tony has bought Brittany horses. If a trainer ends up with "overly inflated" priced horses, owners are going to lose money. Period. Buy a colt for $100,000 earn $300k through his 2yo and 3yo year, sell him, and you make money. Arguably, LOL. Buy that same colt for $300,000, and obviously the results change. Regardless, this didn't happen with every horse. As I said, Tony has been on a bad run. His clientele is getting older, downsizing, perhaps leaving the business for the most part, some are shifting more to other trainers perhaps, etc. But this isn't the blame game.