Sunday, July 15, 2012

Miura Bulls

The Bulls Ferruccio Lamborghini Named The Miura After

Namesake for not only the eponymous 1966 supercar but most Lamborghinis, noted by Hemingway and countless dead matadors, these are the cunning, ferocious Miura bulls of Andalusia.Miuras have been around longer than the State of California. Derived from five Spanish breeds of fighting bull, they have been living on the estate of Don Eduardo Head of Islera, Islero's mother. Photo Credit: Guzmán Lozano Miura and his descendants  since 1842. Names which would later surface on Lamborghini cars date back to the 19th century: Gallardo was the name of one of the five breeds used by Don Miura, while Murciélago was a particularly hardy bull which survived 28 sword strokes in a 1879 bullfight, prompting the crowd to call for the matador to spare its life, which he did. Like many of its pampered, garage queen namesakes, it lived out its remaining days free of worry.

Thirty years before a certain Italian tractor billionaire would focus his car company’s branding on his obsession with Miuras and all things bull, Ernest Hemingway wrote about Don Eduardo’s bulls in Death in the Afternoon, his 1932 book about bullfighting: 
[…] there are certain strains even of bulls in which the ability to learn rapidly in the ring is highly developed. These bulls must be fought and killed as rapidly as possible with the minimum of exposure by the man, for they learn more rapidly than the fight ordinarily progresses and become exaggeratedly difficult to work with and kill.
Bulls of this sort are the old caste of fighting bulls raised by the sons of Don Eduardo Miura of Sevilla […]

It was after a 1962 visit to the Miura ranch that Ferruccio Lamborghini decided to use a fighting bull as the mascot of his company. Lamborghini’s first cars were given conventional numeric names, but his young team’s violent, dramatic, mid-engined supercar was named after Don Eduardo’s bulls, and the fourth production model was presented to the rancher himself.

The Miura was just the beginning. Future Lamborghinis would delve deep into bullfighting history. The lovely, understated Islero was named after the bull which killed the legendary Manolete, eulogized in Time magazine on September 8, 1947. 

Reventón killed the Mexican bullfighter Félix Guzmán in 1943. Diablo was another Miura from the late 19th century. In a twist, the Espada is named after the long sword used in bullfights, while one gets the sense that LM002 will be the name of a cybernetic bullminator set to wreak havoc on the Spanish countryside in 2012.





It was a Miura bull like this, named Bailador that killed Joselito.

 


- 11th May 1801 - José Delgado ("Pepe Hillo"),
killed by the bull Barbudo.
- 20th April 1862 - José Rodríguez ("Pepete"),
killed by the bull Jocinero.
- 7th May 1922 - Manuel Granero,
killed by the bull Pocapena.
- 11th August 1934 - Ignacio Sánchez Mejías,
killed by the bull Granadino.
- 28th August 1947 - Manuel Rodríguez Sánchez ("Manolete"),
killed by the bull Islero.
- 26th September 1984 - Francisco Rivera ("Paquirri"),
killed by the bull Avispado.
- 30th August 1985 - José Cubero ("Yiyo"),
killed by the bull Burlero.

How many people, beside family and friends will remember your name and deeds after you are gone?

 

"Now, I leave it to you to make up your mind whether you can bear to watch one, and then watch it. If you can’t, fine. However, remember that as the stereotypical British family sits down together at the traditional time of the bullfight – 5pm on the Sunday – with their bellies filled with roast beef to watch David Attenborough narrate as a lion eviscerates yet another buffalo  – when they call their Spanish cousins barbaric they are at best guilty of hypocrisy, and at worst xenophobia."


Excerpt from:
Into The Arena: The World Of The Spanish Bulllfight


Bullfighter Arrested for Fleeing Bull--Which Is As It Should Be. There Should Be More Law's Against Being Candy Ass!!!!






"Cowards die many times before their deaths
The valiant never taste of death but once"
 William Shakespeare

LOL Matador Gets What He Deserves ????





Totally deserved it.

Revenge is sweet

karma

I believe the matador killed 2 of the bull's brothers...
Revenge is a dish that is best served cold...

I love when the bulls get their revenge.

It was recently inquired, "what's the old saying for this happening?". It took me a while to remember, but I believe the saying goes:  "You mess with the bull, you get it's horn shoved up underneath your chin in such a manner that it punctures the skin and pierces your lingual frenulum before exiting your oral orifice."

hahaha, nice! i hope, he got a handicap for the rest of his live!!!

Pity, that horn should take his complete brains out. Sadist people and they calling that a sport. Why the f*ck we give Spain 30 billion and they can still do this?

"What is wrong with people when they sympathize with an animal but not a human???"

Francisco Rivera Paquirri--1978




Watch at 0:28 when the picador and horse get picked up and tossed  backward.  How weak and inferior do you suppose that bull is?

Paquirri





For you members of the human race, or mankind if you will, who are still cheering and applauding the death of Paquirri, as being "deserved", "serves him right", "got what he had coming", know that Paquirri had a wife, children and a family, not unlike you, I, and most of the world.   But Paquirri had one thing you will never have, something you can only imagine at, something that set him apart from you, and placed him on a different planet, far, far out of your reach.  Don't resent and hate him for that superiority.
Paquirri was first married to Carmen Ordonez, with whom he had two sons, Cayetano Rivera Ordonez and Francisco Rivera Ordonez.  Both these sons are matadors and form part of the Ordonez family bullfighting dynasty(your family dynasty is no more or no less important then Paquirri's, John Milton)   After divorcing Ordóñez, he married the famous Spanish singer Isabel Pantoja, with whom he had a son named Francisco José Rivera Pantoja.

The Circus "NO SPIN ZONE": The Ordonez Brothers--Son's of the Great Paquirri



Watch closely starting at 1:38 when Paquirri walks the bull across the ring, as nonchalantly as someone walking their dog in the park, without a leash or lead rope, only capeing it from point A to point B.  Most great Torero's have/had more knowledge of animal behavior/animal movement in their little finger, then a lot of "trainers" in my profession will ever have in a lifetime.  Fact 



As Paquirri lay's dying he is reassuring the Doctor's to be calm, they have done all that they can do.  You hater's can only hope to breath some of the rarefied air of a Paquirri, as you walk through your timid world of safety.  Paquirri was gored by a bull named "Avispado" (Spanish for smart or especially aware) during a bullfight in Pozoblanco, and died while he was being transported to Córdoba Hospital.  Mankind still know's the name of the bull who killed Paquirri.   That is about as great of an honor as even a human being can expect. 


Against The Best Laid Plans.....





"This appears to be a well placed estoque but amazingly the animal did not go down immediately.   The young man is lucky he only suffered a broken collar bone."

The most gruesome sight is when the sword opens a conduit between a pressurised blood vessel and a lung, causing blood to spew out of the mouth. Whether it is the most distressing reality for the animal, I don’t know. It is the long deaths upset me personally the most: when the bull walks back to the wooden barrier, clutching onto life. Sometimes, though, even then he is not without fight.

Excerpt from Into The Arena: The World Of The Spanish Bulllfight