If it was a short race Thoroughbred would have won but the type of Thoroughbred matters.
Thoroughbreds are considered a hotblood breed.
It depends. Sprinting, it might be unless the thoroughbred is bred for racing. then the thoroughbred might win. in a long run, the thoroughbred would win
A greyhound bus ticket from Newark, New Jersey, to Chicago, Illinois would cost between $100 and $150. The price would depend on the time of year, and the time of day of travel.
Famous Woman was a thoroughbred horse who was born in 2000. All of her ancestors were also thoroughbreds, so that would mean that any foal of hers was also a thoroughbred if she was bred to a thoroughbred.
The genus and species for Thoroughbred is the same for all modern horses, Equus Caballus.Some sites consider the breed to be a subspecies, which would make the Thoroughbred: Equus Caballus thoroughbred. Whether or not this is in common use the distinction is of somewhat limited value, since this type of "subspeciation" is artificially created.
The most famous greyhound in the world can be debated endlessly. However, one criteria that can be used would be which greyhound has had their picture spread most widely throughout the Internet. In that regard I would have to say that the answer would be "Lucky, the Reindeer Dog".
I don't think Greyhound goes to Panama City, Panama. Go to the Greyhound website and use the fare calculator there to look up the fare between any two cities that they actually stop in.
"feral thoroughbred horse" is very nearly an oxymoron. A thoroughbred must, by definition, be bred in captivity. Asking where the habitat of something that cannot exist is is rather pointless. It's possible that a thoroughbred horse could escape, but its habitat would then be "somewhere around where it used to live, probably" which is not really very informative.
The obvious answer to that would be a Quarter horse.
If you are talking about thoroughbred gallop races, that would be the NTRA. NTRA stands for National Thoroughbred Racing Association. Go to www.ntra.com for more information.
It would be tight. But I'd bet on the QH. QHs have a record 57 mph, while most greyhounds have only 45 mph. No guarentee, though. The horse might trip, the dog get a short-cut, or te people organising the race tilt the finish line to the greyhound's side. ; ) : P
Hmmm.... you would have to ask a Greyhound driver that question, because Greyhound Schedule itineraries only detail approximate Departure/Arrival times and traveling distance.