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Thread: picked up game in 18-22 min

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  1. #1
    Quote Originally Posted by FrostyPaws View Post
    When I use the word “game” I'm not using the literal meaning of the word. If that's the case, then picking a dog up in 10 minutes without anything wrong with it physically is picked up game. And that would be simply because it scratched over.

    If I'm to look at it that way, then every dog I've ever picked up during schooling, that didn't quit, was picked up game. No. Not at my house, literal meaning or not. Being game means more, TO ME, than the simply willingness to continue at any juncture.
    Again, I believe two things are being confused: 1) the mindset of the dog "at the time he was picked up," versus 2) the permanent state of the dog "being game," for sure.

    You are trying to attribute #2 in the place of #1.

    The statement "a dog was picked up game" is not #2; it relates to #1.

    He was picked up and was still willing to go at that time ... it does not mean (and never was intended to mean) "the dog is a for-sure-game animal, under any circumstance."

    It was merely picked up at X time, still wanting to go, in this contest.

    Jack

  2. #2
    Quote Originally Posted by CA Jack View Post

    It was merely picked up at X time, still wanting to go, in this contest.

    Jack
    And that is about how I would look at it, and word it, right there. I wouldn't stick the word "game" in there as I simply save that for dogs that fit what I define as game for my own yard. I don't have a separation of the two.

  3. #3
    Quote Originally Posted by FrostyPaws View Post
    And that is about how I would look at it, and word it, right there. I wouldn't stick the word "game" in there as I simply save that for dogs that fit what I define as game for my own yard. I don't have a separation of the two.
    Well, in contests, it is often asked, "Was he willing to continue?"

    And you must answer yes or no.

    The no answer means the dog quit.
    The yes answer means the dog lost, but was still game (willing to continue) at the time of stoppage.

    Neither one is a permanent statement.

    A dog can quit in one contest ... and then win 8x more and never show a sign of quitting (like Crenshaw's Ch Rascal) ...
    And a dog can show game in one contest (be willing after some severe trauma) ... but then quit his next time out.

    In the end ... you just never know what's going to happen on "the next one" ... and NO man's "assessment" is ever 100%

    I think most of us, with some time under our belts, can analyze the surrounding factors and decide if there was enough adversity to take our hat off to the dog ... or not put too much stock in what happened.

    Jack

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