Friday, March 29, 2013

HANDICAP PERFECTION

(This is the final part of a five part series.)


In April 1954, it was reported that Gaga, the dam of Tom Fool, was named Broodmare of the Year for 1953 by the Kentucky Thoroughbred Breeders Association. Her recognition was undoubtedly due largely to the merits of her son, the great racing champion. It was now up to him to pass along his gifted genes to future generations, not yet born.


PART FIVE: THE GENERATIONS

Returning to Greentree, Tom Fool began what would become a successful career as a stallion, with a starting fee of $5,000. Within a few years he was syndicated at $50,000 per share for a total of thirty shares, with Greentree retaining fifteen.

Tom Fool produced 280 foals, and was represented with 203 starters for progeny earnings of $8,574,504. Many of his children possessed good range, and competed well at both sprints and distances.

THE SIRE

Tom Fool was the father of thirty-six black-type winners. A few of his kids are discussed below:

Jester – Bay colt, b.1955
Jester was out of Golden Apple by the multiple stakes winner Eight-Thirty.  From eighteen career starts, Jester won the Futurity at two, and finished third in the Cowden, and third the following year in the Jerome Handicap.

Dunce – Bay colt, b.1956
Out of the Mahmoud (Fr.) grey mare Ghazni, Dunce was a multiple stakes winner and multiple stakes placed from thirty-nine starts. At age two, he finished second in the Arlington Futurity, and third in Belmont Park’s Futurity Stakes. After turning three, Dunce captured the one mile Arlington Classic and 1 1/8 mile American Derby, and posted runner-up scores in the Blue Grass Stakes, behind future Kentucky Derby winner Tomy Lee, and a third place effort in the Preakness Stakes. Later, against older horses, Dunce finished second in the Washington Park Handicap behind the great champion and reigning Horse of the Year Round Table.  As a four-year-old, Dunce showed good form and stamina on the turf, winning the 1 3/16 mile Stars and Stripes Handicap, and running second in the 1 1/2 mile Bowling Green Handicap. On the main track he ran third in the seven furlong Carter.

Tompion – Brown colt, b.1957
Tompion, out of the unraced Count Fleet mare Sunlight, started thirty-nine times. He won the 6 1/2 furlong Hopeful Stakes, and was runner-up in the Hollywood Juvenile Champion Stakes, Saratoga Special, and Champagne Stakes, all at six furlongs. At three, Tompion annexed the Santa Anita Derby, and Blue Grass Stakes, and went into the Kentucky Derby as the favorite, finishing fourth. Later, he won the Travers Stakes. He finished second in both the 1 5/8 mile Lawrence Realization, and 1 1/8 mile Jersey Derby. As a four-year-old, Tompion won the Aqueduct Handicap and finished second in the San Fernando Stakes, and United Nations Handicap.

Funloving – Bay filly, b.1958
Funloving was out of the stakes placed mare Flitabout by two-time Horse of the Year Challedon. Funloving, from twenty-eight career starts, posted a victory in the Mother Goose, a second in the 1 1/4 mile Coaching Club American Oaks, and third place efforts in the Delaware and Monmouth Oaks.

Dinner Partner – Bay filly, b.1959
Dinner Partner was out of the winning mare Bluehaze by Horse of the Year Blue Larkspur. Dinner Partner was a black-type winner from twenty-nine starts and the future dam of Jim French, winner of the Santa Anita Derby, runner-up in the 1971 Kentucky Derby and Belmont Stakes, and third place finisher in the Preakness Stakes.

Silly Season – bay colt, b.1962
Silly Season was out of the bay mare Double Deal II (GB) by Epsom Derby winner Straight Deal (GB). He raced in England, and at age two won the Dewhurst Stakes, and the following year the Champion Stakes, while finishing second in the Two Thousand Guineas and Sussex Stakes.

Two of Tom Fool’s sons deserve special mention:

Tim Tam – Dark bay colt, b.1955
Owned by Mrs. Gene Markey, the former widow of Calumet Farm’s original owner Warren Wright, of all the horses this writer has studied, there were none more courageous than Tim Tam. The colt’s dam was the two-time champion Two Lea, another Calumet standout, and a daughter of the great stallion Bull Lea, also the father of racing immortal Citation. Tim Tam raced only once as a two-year-old, finishing fourth in a Maiden Special Weight. The following year he was outstanding, and the first legitimate Triple Crown threat in ten years. Tim Tam, doing much of his prepping in Florida, hit the ground running, and won six and seven furlong allowances within a span of five days in January, the latter on a muddy track. After dropping his next two races, he went on an eight race winning streak, going through two-thirds of the classics. He began on February 15, with a victory in the 1 1/8 mile Everglades on a good track. Two weeks later, he annexed the 1 1/8 mile Flamingo Stakes upon disqualification of Jewel's Reward for interference. Tim Tam followed this with wins in the 1 1/16 mile Fountain of Youth, and 1 1/8 mile Florida Derby, before cutting back to annex a seven furlong allowance at Keeneland. Under rider Ismael Valenzuela, Tim Tam captured the one mile Derby Trial at Churchill Downs five days before the Derby itself. He then won the Derby and followed it up with the Preakness Stakes at Pimlico.

Going into the 1 ½ mile Belmont Stakes on June 7, 1958, Tim Tam was poised to become the first American Triple Crown winner since Citation. He faced seven other three-year-olds including an Irish-bred named Cavan.

“In the backstretch, he and Cavan ran virtually in tandem and coming for home, the Irish-bred was close to the rail, with Tim Tam to his outside. After about ten furlongs, Valenzuela went to the stick and the colt bore out, then as he urged the colt once more, Tim Tam was unsteady...Cavan was long gone and hit the wire six lengths in front...Tim Tam was lame, yet on only three good legs and in obvious distress, he gallantly pushed himself in the final quarter to secure second money…”

Cavan finished first. But there was another runner in the race who was equally a winner, if not more so. And his name was Tim Tam.”  (1)

Tim Tam had fractured a sesamoid in his right front leg, which ended his career; but for his campaign the colt was deservedly chosen Champion Three-Year-Old Male. As a stallion Tim Tam perpetuated the legacy of his sire. To name just a few of his offspring were champions Tosmah and Davana Dale, and through his daughter, Tamerett, European champion Known Fact. Tamerett was also the second dam of Gone West. 

Tim Tam passed away in 1982, and three years later was inducted into the National Museum of Racing and Hall of Fame. Tim Tam, the model of courage, was certainly Tom Fool’s finest offspring of the 1950s.

Buckpasser – Bay colt, b.1963

“He was a perfectly conformed, nearly 17 hand horse, and beautiful to look at.” (2)

Without question Tom Fool’s greatest progeny was Buckpasser, an extraordinary racehorse and a real looker. In each of his three seasons, the great colt won or shared a championship. After finishing fourth in his juvenile debut in 1965, Buckpasser rattled off eight straight victories. Voted that year’s Champion Two-Year-Old Male, he was so good that despite missing the entire Triple Crown series the following season, he was voted Horse of the Year in 1966. After losing the first race of his sophomore campaign, Buckpasser went on another tear and won fifteen races in a row before his streak was finally snapped when he attempted the turf for the first time in the 1 5/8 mile Bowling Green Handicap. Carrying 135 pounds, he finished third behind Poker and Assagai, assigned 112 and 127 pounds respectively. A horse who tended to pull himself up when on the lead, Buckpasser’s wins were not by substantial margins, but were none-the-less consistent. In his last start, he met two fellow racing greats in the “Race of the Decade,” the 1967 Woodward Stakes, and finished second, just ahead of the speed marvel Dr. Fager. Buckpasser, plagued with a sore foot, was subsequently retired and went on to become an tremendously influential stallion.

Buckpasser sired thirty-five stakes winners including Relaxing ,the dam of the great Easy Goer, and Eclipse Two-Year-Old Champion Filly Numbered Account, the dam of Private Account, sire of the extraordinary undefeated filly champion Personal Ensign.

Buckpasser was inducted into the Racing Hall of Fame in 1970, and died in 1978.

THE BROODMARE SIRE

Tom Fool’s daughters produced ninety stakes winners, including the following:

Meadow Court (Ire.) – Chestnut colt, b.1962
Meadow Court, by Court Harwell, out of Tom Fool’s daughter,  Meadow Music, was foaled in Ireland and became a multiple group winning and placed runner in England and Ireland, and Irish Champion at age three. Among Meadow Court’s wins were the Irish Sweeps Derby, and King George VI & Queen Elizabeth II Stakes. He recorded runner-up efforts in the Dante Stakes, Epsom Derby, and St. Leger Stakes. In the Derby he finished behind the European legend Sea-Bird (Fr.).

Stop the Music – Bay colt, b.1970
Sired by champion Hail to Reason, out of the Tom Fool mare Bebopper, Stop the Music made thirty starts, and was a multiple stakes winner and stakes placed. His wins included the Champagne, Saratoga Special, and Dwyer Stakes. He also finished second in the Laurel and Belmont Futurities, Cowden, and third in the Youthful and Hopeful Stakes. The following year Stop the Music was runner-up in the Travers and Withers Stakes, and at age four ran second in the Stuyvesant and Vosburgh Handicaps, and third in the Whitney Handicap. As a five-year-old, Stop the Music finished second in the Metropolitan and Carter Handicaps, and third in the 1 1/4 mile Brooklyn Handicap.

Stop the Music later sired 1980 Eclipse Three-Year-Old Champion Male Temperence Hill, and multiple stakes winners Dontstop Themusic and Missys Mirage.

Hatchet Man – Grey or roan colt, b.1971
Sired by multiple stakes winner The Axe II, out of Bebopper, Hatchet Man recorded thirty-two starts, and was victorious in the Widener, Haskell Stakes, and Dwyer Handicap. Hatchet Man’s son, the bay gelding Beboppin Baby, won the Washington Park and Prairie Meadows Cornhusker Handicaps in the latter 1990s.

Late Bloomer – Bay filly, b.1974
Late Bloomer was sired by Three-Year-Old Champion Male Stage Door Johnny, out of Dunce Cap II by Tom Fool. She made twenty-four starts, posted eleven wins, five seconds, five thirds, earned $512,040, from 1976-1979, and was named Eclipse Champion Older Mare in 1978. Her dam, Dunce Cap II, would later become Broodmare of the Year in 1985.

Majesty’s Prince – Chestnut colt, b.1979
Sired by His Majesty, out of the Tom Fool mare Pied Princess, Majesty’s Prince made more than forty starts and was especially good on turf, winning both the Sword Dancer Handicap and Man o’War Stakes twice. He also finished third in the 1 5/8 mile Rothmans International Stakes behind the 1983 Eclipse Horse of the Year, European Champion, and Prix de l'Arc de Triomphe winner All Along (Fr.).

A grandson of Tom Fool, through daughter Fool-Me-Not, also deserves special mention:

Foolish Pleasure – Bay colt, b.1972

“…,Foolish Pleasure became a leading runner right out of the gate,…” (3)

The Florida-bred Foolish Pleasure, sired by What a Pleasure, was Eclipse Two-Year-Old Champion Male in 1974, and the following year won the Kentucky Derby, before finishing second in the Preakness Stakes, a length behind the winner, and second again, by a neck, in the Belmont Stakes. Unfortunately, what this exceptional colt is largely remembered for is his heartbreaking match race with the immortal Ruffian, which cost the beloved filly her life.

“Foolish Pleasure was also a casualty—his sterling reputation dimmed, his place in history tinged with sadness. It’s a harsh reality he didn’t deserve…over an entire career, Foolish Pleasure gave more joy than heartache.” (4)

Foolish Pleasure raced for three years, and posted twenty-six starts, for sixteen wins, 4 seconds, 3 thirds, and earnings of $1,216,705. His outstanding merits on the track were worthy of induction into the Racing Hall of Fame in 1995. 

After retirement from racing, Foolish Pleasure had a successful stallion career at Greentree. He produced 484 foals, of which 401 were starters, for nearly 300 winners, and 41 black-type winners, with over $19 million in progeny earnings. His standouts included European champions Baiser Vole and What Nonsense, and Bayford, a Two-Year-Old Champion in Canada. He also sired Santa Anita Derby winner Marfa, and Sword Dancer Invitational Handicap victor Kiri’s Clown. Foolish Pleasure was damsire of more than forty stakes winners.

The ultimate honor  
Living out his days at Greentree, Tom Fool was pensioned from stud duty four years before his death in 1976 at the age of twenty-seven. Hailed by many as the greatest handicap horse of the 1950s, and by turf writers as that decade's top horse, Tom Fool was inducted into the Racing Hall of Fame in 1960. Any discussion of the sport's greatest handicap champions must always include Tom Fool, who earned a significant place in racing history through what he accomplished in that magical season of 1953: perfection. His footprint remains indelible on racetracks, and his name remembered with admiration, respect, and affection.

Bibliography

A.P., “Gaga, Dam of Tom Fool, Named Broodmare of ’53,” The New York Times, April 6, 1954.

“Tom Fool,” Thoroughbred Champions: Top 100 Racehorses of the 20th Century (Lexington, KY: The Blood-Horse, Inc., 1999), p. 53.

“Tim Tam,” equineline.com, http://www.equineline.com/Free-5X-Pedigree.cfm?page_state=ORDER_AND_CONFIRM&reference_number=508760&registry=T&horse_name=Tim Tam&dam_name=Two Lea&foaling_year=1955&nicking_stats_indicator=Y

Thoroughbred Times Co., Inc., The Original Thoroughbred Times Racing Almanac 2009 (Lexington, KY: Thoroughbred Times Books, 2008), p. 91.

“Jester,” Pedigree Online Thoroughbred Database, http://www.pedigreequery.com/jester

Richard Sowers, The Abstract Primer of Thoroughbred Racing; Separating Myth From Fact To Identify the Genuine Gems & Dandies 1946-2003 (Stockbridge, GA: Old Sport Publishing Company, 2004), p. 126.

Daily Racing Form, The American Racing Manual 1992 (Hightstown, N.J.: Daily Racing Form Inc., 1992), p. 787.

“Dunce,” Pedigree Online Thoroughbred Database, http://www.pedigreequery.com/dunce

Sowers, The Abstract Primer of Thoroughbred Racing, p. 101.

Daily Racing Form, The American Racing Manual 1992, pp. 661, 667, 694, 722, 1013.

“Tompion,” Pedigree Online Thoroughbred Database, http://www.pedigreequery.com/tompion

Sowers, The Abstract Primer of Thoroughbred Racing,  p. 185.

A.P., “Son of Tom Fool Kentucky Derby Favorite,” The Miami News, May 1, 1960, Google News, http://news.google.com/newspapers?id=CrMyAAAAIBAJ&sjid=vOkFAAAAIBAJ&pg=3842,38035&dq=kentucky+derby&hl=en

A.P., “Hartack Rides Venetian Way To Kentucky Derby Victory,” Ocala Star-Banner, May 8, 1960, p. 10, col. 2, Google News, http://news.google.com/newspapers?id=HfApAAAAIBAJ&sjid=DwUEAAAAIBAJ&pg=3135,5589093&dq=kentucky+derby&hl=en

Daily Racing Form, American Racing Manual 1992, pp. 817, 821, 834, 863, 993.

“Funloving,” Pedigree Online Thoroughbred Database, http://www.pedigreequery.com/funloving

Daily Racing Form, Champions: The Lives, Times, and Past Performances of America’s Greatest Thoroughbreds, Revised Edition, Champions from 1893-2004 (New York: Daily Racing Form Press, 2005), pp. 54, 82.

Sowers, The Abstract Primer of Thoroughbred Racing, p. 111.

Daily Racing Form, American Racing Manual 1992, p. 735.

“Dinner Partner,” equineline.com, http://www.equineline.com/Free-5X-Pedigree.cfm?page_state=ORDER_AND_CONFIRM&reference_number=124280&registry=T&horse_name=Dinner Partner&dam_name=Bluehaze&foaling_year=1959&nicking_stats_indicator=Y

Daily Racing Form, The American Racing Manual 1992, p. 983.

Thoroughbred Times Co., Inc., The Original Thoroughbred Times Racing Almanac 2009, pp. 154, 165, 175.

“Silly Season,” Pedigree Online Thoroughbred Database, http://www.pedigreequery.com/silly+season

"Silly Season," equineline.com, http://www.equineline.com/Free-5X-Pedigree.cfm?page_state=ORDER_AND_CONFIRM&reference_number=454963&registry=T&horse_name=Silly Season&dam_name=*Double Deal II&foaling_year=1962&nicking_stats_indicator=Y

“Champion Stakes,” Wikipedia, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Champion_Stakes#Winners_since_1967


Daily Racing Form, Champions, p. 173.

Thoroughbred Times Co., Inc., The Original Thoroughbred Times Racing Almanac 2009, pp. 91, 96, 110-111.

"Known Fact," Pedigree Online Thoroughbred Databasehttp://www.pedigreequery.com/known+fact

“Numbered Account,” Pedigree Online Thoroughbred Database, http://www.pedigreequery.com/numbered+account

Thoroughbred Times Co., Inc., Thoroughbred Times Racing Almanac 2009, p. 86.

“Meadow Court,” Pedigree Online Thoroughbred Database, http://www.pedigreequery.com/meadow+court

“Irish Derby Stakes,” Thoroughbred Heritage, Turf Hallmarks, http://www.tbheritage.com/TurfHallmarks/racecharts/Ire/irishderby.html

“King George VI and Queen Elizabeth Stakes,” Wikipedia, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/King_George_VI_%26_Queen_Elizabeth_Stakes#Winners

“Sea Bird Wins Derby,” St. Joseph, Mo., News Press, June 2, 1965, p. 6B, col. 4, Google news, http://news.google.com/newspapers?id=UsBTAAAAIBAJ&sjid=4DgNAAAAIBAJ&pg=4025,198091&dq=epsom+derby&hl=en

Reuters, “Provoke wins Stakes,” The Leader-Post, September 8, 1965, p. 35, col. 3, Google news, http://news.google.com/newspapers?id=I-JUAAAAIBAJ&sjid=YjwNAAAAIBAJ&pg=3137,1494378&dq=st+leger+stakes&hl=en

“Stop the Music,” Pedigree Online Thoroughbred Database, http://www.pedigreequery.com/stop+the+music

“Stop the Music,” Pedigree Online Thoroughbred Database, http://www.pedigreequery.com/progeny/stop+the+music

Daily Racing Form, The American Racing Manual, pp. 177, 725, 746, 765, 788, 821, 861, 993, 1016, 1035, 1048, 1055, 1058.

Daily Racing Form, Champions, p. 310.

“DontStop TheMusic,” Pedigree Online Thoroughbred Database, http://www.pedigreequery.com/dontstop+themusic

Daily Racing Form, American Racing Manual 1992, pp. 649, 729, 891, 1010, 1045.

“Missys Mirage,” Pedigree Online Thoroughbred Database, http://www.pedigreequery.com/missys+mirage

Daily Racing Form, The American Racing Manual 1992, pp. 739, 776.

Thoroughbred Times Co., Inc., The Original Thoroughbred Times Racing Almanac 2009, p. 459.

“The Axe,” Pedigree Online Thoroughbred Database, http://www.pedigreequery.com/the+axe2

“Hatchet Man,” Pedigree Online Thoroughbred Database, http://www.pedigreequery.com/hatchet+man

"Hatchet Man," equineline.com, http://www.equineline.com/Free-5X-Pedigree.cfm?page_state=ORDER_AND_CONFIRM&reference_number=207431&registry=T&horse_name=Hatchet Man&dam_name=Bebopper&foaling_year=1971&nicking_stats_indicator=Y

Daily Racing Form, American Racing Manual 1992, pp. 674, 1055.

Thoroughbred Times Co., Inc., The Original Thoroughbred Times Racing Almanac 2009, p. 310.

“Hatchet Man,” Pedigree Online Thoroughbred Database, http://www.pedigreequery.com/progeny/hatchet+man

“Beboppin Baby,” Pedigree Online Thoroughbred Database, http://www.pedigreequery.com/beboppin+baby

Thoroughbred Times Co., Inc., pp. 418, 487.

“Late Bloomer,” Pedigree Online Thoroughbred Database, http://www.pedigreequery.com/late+bloomer
,
Daily Racing Form, Champions, pp. 192, 252, 272.

Dacing Racing Form, American Racing Manual 1992, pp. 812, 855, 864, 878, 953, 963, 1024.

"Majesty's Prince," Pedigree Online Thoroughbred Database, http://www.pedigreequery.com/majestys+prince

"Majesty's Prince," equineline.com, http://www.equineline.com/Free-5X-Pedigree.cfm?page_state=ORDER_AND_CONFIRM&reference_number=763691&registry=T&horse_name=Majesty's Prince&dam_name=Pied Princess&foaling_year=1979&nicking_stats_indicator=Y

Thoroughbred Times Co., Inc., The Original Thoroughbred Times Racing Almanac 2009, p. 74. 

“Foolish Pleasure,” Pedigree Online Thoroughbred Database, http://www.pedigreequery.com/foolish+pleasure

“Foolish Pleasure,” Thoroughbred Champions, p. 243.

“Baiser Vole,” equineline.com, http://www.equineline.com/Free-5X-Pedigree.cfm?page_state=ORDER_AND_CONFIRM&reference_number=914451&registry=T&horse_name=Baiser Vole&dam_name=River Rose (FR)&foaling_year=1983&nicking_stats_indicator=Y

“Tom Fool,” National Museum of Racing and Hall of Fame, Hall of Fame, Horses, http://www.racingmuseum.org/hall-of-fame/horses-view.asp?varID=152

"Bald Eagle Can Match Tom Fool," St. Petersburg Independent, July 3, 1960, p. 4-D, col. 1, Google newshttp://news.google.com/newspapers?id=KkRQAAAAIBAJ&sjid=OVcDAAAAIBAJ&pg=4329,236310&dq=bald+eagle+horse&hl=en

"Tom Fool," Thoroughbred Champions, p. 53. 

Notes
1) John Califano, “Courageous Champion: A Story about Tim Tam,” Gallop Out, http://wwwgallopout.blogspot.com/2011/01/courageous-champion-story-about-tim-tam.html
2) John Califano, “A Salute to Buckpasser,” Gallop Out, http://wwwgallopout.blogspot.com/2010_11_01_archive.html


4) Ibid.

Copyright 2013 by John Califano 

Sunday, March 17, 2013

HANDICAP PERFECTION



(This is the fourth of a five part series.)

Note to reader: Part Three of this story discussed three winners of the Handicap Triple Crown in New York. Shortly after posting that segment, it was discovered that a fourth horse, the colt Fit to Fight, also swept this triage in 1984. Part Three was edited to include information about Fit to Fight's achievement.


***

Although every effort has been made to provide good information in the segment below, it is still simply a sketch of a great horse, and not a comprehensive account. For the interested reader a more detailed study can be found in two excellent authoritative works strongly recommended by this writer: Eva Jolene Boyd's Native Dancer, in the "Thoroughbred Legends" series (Eclipse Press, 2000), and John Eisenberg's Native Dancer: The Grey Ghost; Hero of a Golden Age (Warner Books, 2003). 

******************************

As Tom Fool continued to assert himself as the American turf king, and dominate the handicap ranks as no other horse had previously done, another colt was capturing much of the national spotlight, delighting spectators with his handsome grey looks, charisma, and superior form; and like clockwork, he was winning one race after another. In 1953, as television grew in popularity and rapidly reached millions of homes, one of its brightest new stars was a big “Grey Ghost” who streaked across those black and white picture tubes, into the living rooms, and hearts, of sports fans. The public was thoroughly enchanted by him…and madly in love.


PART FOUR: NATIVE DANCER, AND THE ASCENDENCY OF TOM FOOL


Color him grey
In the early 1950s, he might have seemed an aberration, a grey horse enjoying success on Thoroughbred racing's highest level. If people couldn’t see him in person at a racetrack, the novelty of television still made it possible to witness this equine marvel of strength and beauty. Native Dancer grew into a magnificent 16.2 hand, 1,200 pound colt with an incredulous stride of twenty-nine feet. Nickamed the "Grey Ghost" or simply "the Dancer” he enjoyed the kind of fame experienced by very few horses throughout history. As the newspapers had narrated the mighty feats of Man o’War earlier in the century, creating a gigantic persona, television was doing the same for Native Dancer in the early 1950s, giving him star power unrivaled by previous champions.

Native Dancer was bred in Kentucky by owner Alfred G. Vanderbilt, a wonderful man, World War II veteran, and a racing visionary.  A member of the rich, elite aristocracy, Vanderbilt recognized the dignity of every person, and related warmly to them regardless of their status in society.

The breed
Foaled in 1950, Native Dancer’s only five generational inbreeding was to the great English champion sire Polymelus (GB), the father of the twentieth century's foremost progenitor, Phalaris (GB). The Dancer's sire, Polynesian, was a top level stakes racer and champion sprinter in 1947, at age five, and retired with fifty-eight starts, twenty-seven wins, 10 seconds, 10 thirds, and career earnings of $310,410. 

Native Dancer's dam, Geisha, was unremarkable as a racehorse; however, her sire, Discovery, also owned by Vanderbilt, was a standout weight carrier in the 1930s, and the first official Handicap Champion in 1936. Through Discovery, Geisha's great-grandsire, Fair Play, sired Man o'War, the most revered of all American Thoroughbreds.  Geisha’s broodmare sire was John P. Grier, the only horse to legitimately test Man o’War in a race. Her maternal great-grandsire was Whisk Broom II.

Already the best
Conditioned by Bill Winfrey, the Dancer's storied race career began at Jamaica, on April 19, 1952. He was among nine juveniles in a five furlong Maiden Special Weight, and Eric Guerin, a Cajun from Louisiana, would ride the grey in all but one of his twenty-two lifetime starts. Native Dancer easily won by four and a half lengths, in a time of :59 3/5, under 118 pounds. He stepped up to stakes company just four days later, winning the five furlong Youth Stakes with a commanding six length margin, stopping the clock in :59 2/5. He started seven more times in 1952, all in major stakes contests, breezing to victory each time. In Belmont Park’s 6 1/2 furlong Futurity, on September 27, Native Dancer hit the finish by more than two lengths, equaling the world record of 1:14 2/5. He made his final start over a route of ground, winning the two turn 1 1/16 mile East View Stakes, and setting a juvenile season earnings record of $230,496 to eclipse Top Flight's old money mark set in 1931.

Native Dancer was named Two-Year-Old Champion Male, and also became the first juvenile to receive at least a share of Horse of the Year (Thoroughbred Racing Associations), along with the Three-Year-Old Champion Male One Count (Daily Racing Form).

Triumph and heartbreak
In 1953, the three-year-old Native Dancer became the only legitimate challenger to Tom Fool for American racing supremacy.  On John B. Campbell's Experimental Free Handicap, the grey colt was assigned high weight of 130 pounds, four pounds over Tom Fool's leading weight the previous year. Bound for the Kentucky Derby, Native Dancer would have two preps at Jamaica.

Amid widespread anticipation, and almost six months to the day he ran his final juvenile race, Native Dancer began his campaign on April 18, 1953, in the 1 1/16 mile Gotham Stakes. Under 120 pounds, he effortlessly defeated eight rivals by two lengths. One week later, in the 1 1/8 mile Wood Memorial, the colt barely took a breath when cruising past six rivals by more than four lengths. 

Spring destination
On May 2, 1953, eleven horses entered the Churchill Downs starting gate for the 79th running of the Derby, before well over 100,000 spectators. Among the entries was the favorite Native Dancer, and the number two choice, Correspondent, a California-bred speedster, who set a track record in the 1 1/8 mile Blue Grass Stakes. Other horses who could factor into the outcome were Royal Bay Gem, a good stretch runner, sired by Australian-bred Royal Gem, and possibly Money Broker, winner of the Florida Derby. The wealthy philanthropist, Harry Guggenheim, owned a brown colt, who had never won a route race, and had been questionable for the ten furlong event. He was a fast horse who had shown signs of promise, but lacked consistency; somehow the "light went on" during Derby week, when he posted an impressive win in the Derby Trial, while skirting around the track record. That was good enough for Guggenheim and trainer Eddie Hayward, and the colt was given the chance to show his stuff in the race of a lifetime. His name was Dark Star.

Dark Star
Dark Star was another son of Royal Gem. The sire had raced in Australia, before standing at stud in the United States. Dark Star, a Kentucky-bred, was out of the brown mare Isolde, by the prominent stallion Bull Dog (Fr.), who was also the broodmare sire of Tom Fool. 

At age two, Dark Star got off to a quick start, winning the three furlong Hialeah Juvenile Stakes by two lengths. He then finished third in Belmont's Juvenile Stakes and third again, this time to Native Dancer, in the Futurity.

Conditioned first by Moody Jolly, the colt was later transferred to the Cain Hoy Stable of Hayward. Ranked twenty-third on the Experimental Free Handicap, the late Derby entry Dark Star had  Henry Moreno in the irons. Apparently somebody forgot to tell Dark Star that his odds were 25-1, because on Derby Day, the colt was anxious to show his appreciation for getting in.

Derby shocker heard 'round the racing world
Favored Native Dancer was coupled with stablemate Social Outcast at 7-10. He broke fast from post position six, but was out-footed by Dark Star, who subsequently dropped down to the rail, and led the parade, with Correspondent, under Eddie Arcaro, following his cue, ahead of Ace Destroyer. The Dancer, in early traffic, was holding a position in sixth. Entering the clubhouse turn, Moneybroker, under Al Popara, was just ahead of Native Dancer and to his outside. With instructions from Moneybroker’s trainer, Tennessee Wright, to get to the rail, Popara attempted to circle the big grey, then would clear him, and drop over; however, Moneybroker had other ideas and abruptly came down on the Dancer at the same time that Curragh King, to the grey’s inside, bore out, taking the Dancer with him. Squeezed hard between the two horses, Native Dancer was jolted, losing his stride, and causing Guerin to take him back in an effort to regain maneuverability. 

As they sped down the backstretch, Native Dancer had a lot of ground to make up and did just that, blowing by horses, and advancing to fourth. Through the far turn, he continued to race wide. Dark Star still held all the cards and was rating well under superb riding by Moreno, while Correspondent, holding his second spot, tracked about one and a half lengths behind the leader. Coming into the stretch, Guerin steered Native Dancer inside and it looked like he had a clear shot, but sensing the big horse’s approach, Moreno moved Dark Star toward the rail, and effectively shut off the lane. Guerin now redirected the Dancer out on the track and from there his twenty-nine foot strides propelled him relentlessly closer to his target. By now Correspondent had nothing left for the drive, leaving Dark Star all alone with the grey beast bearing down on him. Now the chase was on between two gallant horses, one desperately holding his lead, the other desperately trying to take it. Dark Star was tiring as Native Dancer got closer and closer. There wasn’t much real estate left. Would Dark Star hang on?

Dark Star was empty when he hit the wire. Native Dancer was right on top of him, and flew across the finish… just late.

The glory
It isn’t called “the greatest two minutes in sports” for nothing. Dark Star’s light was now brighter than any Thoroughbred in the racing universe. Aided by Moreno’s exceptional riding, Dark Star ran like he belonged, and this moment in history was his forever. His achievement was especially significant, and would never be forgotten, because of the horse he defeated. For Native Dancer’s large legion of fans, it was a moment of heartbreak, bewilderment, and mourning. Dark Star had given Native Dancer the only blemish on an otherwise spotless career.

Dark Star’s performance was anything but a fluke. He had set all the fractions, dusting off the initial quarter in :23 4/5, a half in :47 4/5, six panels in 1:12 1/5, and a mile in 1:36 3/5, before a fast finish in 2:02, only three-fifths shy of Whirlaway's stakes and track record. Dark Star ran the race of his life. He set the tone of the race, dictated it after taking the lead right from the gate, established perfect position along the rail, and avoided all the traffic, which enabled him to maintain leadership. He also rated beautifully under a fine ride by his jockey, and persevered with courage in the final critical yards to pull off a shocker. The winner also collected a nice paycheck worth $90,050 of the $118,100 purse.

Analysis
The Derby leaves practically no margin for error, and can be a merciless breaker of hearts. It doesn’t take the best horse to win the race, it takes the most fortunate horse to win it, and if the horse also happens to be the favorite, all the better. If circumstances go against the best horse, he has no more chance than a longshot.

There was speculation that the bumping incident in the clubhouse turn was intentional. The only person who knew with certainly whether it was or not was Al Popara, and he always denied any accusation. As an isolated event, it’s difficult to determine the degree of impact the bumping had on the race; however, based on the rider’s reaction and adjustments he felt needed to be made, the bumping probably set up a sequence of activity asked of Native Dancer, the dynamics of which even a great racer could not overcome. From his entry into the backstretch until he crossed the finish, the colt was simply too busy, racing wide and roaring down the backstretch, then going inside leaving the second turn, and finally forced wide again heading for home where he had to turn on the after burners in an attempt to catch the eventual winner. There were too many questions and the colt did everything in his power to answer them, and just about succeeded.

Moving forward
Native Dancer quickly regained his winning stride and would never relinquish it again. On May 16, he recorded a four length victory in Belmont Park’s one mile Withers. One week after that, he won the Preakness, just holding off Jamie K, by the skin of his teeth, the margin at the wire a head. Dark Star was also in the race and again took the lead, but sadly, bowed a tendon in the run for home, an injury that ended his racing career.  When it counted the most however, on that first Saturday in May, Dark Star came through with brilliance, determination, and courage.

Native Dancer next won the 1 1/2 mile Belmont Stakes, and in July, captured the 1 1/4 mile Dwyer Stakes at Aqueduct, over four others. He then moved to Arlington Park fourteen days later and romped by nine lengths in the one mile Arlington Classic, beating seven opponents, including Jamie K, over a heavy track while conceding weight.  

Meeting of champions?
The Maryland Jockey Club set a tentative date of October 24 for the Pimlico Special, the same race which fifteen years earlier had seen the matchup between Seabiscuit and War Admiral. They also increased the purse from $25,000 to $50,000 to attract Tom Fool and Native Dancer. The 1953 edition would have a full field. The Westchester Racing Association was hoping to bring the two superstars to Belmont Park, suggesting the one mile Sysonby on September 26. The race had been scheduled later in the meeting, but to accommodate Native Dancer, it was changed and the purse also increased from $20,000 to $50,000. The race would be weight-for-age, requiring the four-year-old Tom Fool to concede weight.

On August 15, Native Dancer ran in the 1 1/4 mile Travers Stakes, destroying four hapless rivals by five and a half lengths, under 126 pounds, giving runner-up Dictar six pounds and the third arrival, Guardian, a dozen. 

The meeting of Tom Fool versus Native Dancer was intensely anticipated. The fans were in Native Dancer’s corner, but many horsemen and turf writers felt that Tom Fool was the better horse, praising Native Dancer as an outstanding three-year-old, but of the opinion that the handicap leader would have the edge. Tom Fool would be a more aggressive runner, and especially tough at a mile, while Native Dancer would do his best running coming from off the pace, and closing powerfully. Tom Fool should prove superior, although at longer distances it was more uncertain, with Native Dancer having more chance of winning the farther they ran. Yet Tom Fool had won three races at 1 ¼ miles, one in which he carried 136 pounds. 

In the American Derby on August 22, Native Dancer carried 128 pounds, and faced seven horses. After running eleven lengths behind in seventh during the early going, he advanced into fourth as the race progressed, before effectively closing ground and drawing away from Landlocked, under 120, crossing the finish by two lengths.  Landlocked finished next, one and a quarter lengths ahead of Precious Stone, given an assignment of 114. The time for the 1 1/8 mile trip was 1:48 2/5.

Any hopes for a meeting between the two titans became dashed when it was discovered that Native Dancer had bruised his foot in the race. Unable to compete at his best, and behind in his training, the decision was made to put him away for the year. The excitment and suspense over a meeting were over.

Great vs. great
Tom Fool and Native Dancer, undoubtedly the two greatest racehorses of the 1950s, never met. Speculation about which horse was actually better would go on to the present day with no foregone conclusion. With the passing of years, Native Dancer has generally been held in higher esteem, perhaps due to his participation in the Triple Crown races, and the ongoing allure that these and other three-year-old events maintain. It is also hard to argue against a horse who won twenty-one of twenty-two starts, with his lone loss by a mere head after a troubled trip.

Native Dancer became a true legend; however, in 1953, Tom Fool was probably better. This requires no apologies from Native Dancer. As all racing followers know, a great four-year-old will typically defeat a great three-year-old.  In future decades, four-year-old Seattle Slew beat his younger counterpart Affirmed, and the following year Affirmed, at age four, defeated the three-year-old Spectacular Bid. The superiority of the elder does nothing to diminish the credibility or greatness of the three-year-old, especially if the sophomore acquitted himself strongly. Tom Fool, as a four-year-old, was not going to be beaten by anybody. He won over a range of distances, against tough competition, and showed amazing versatility, while carrying burdensome weights, and becoming only the second horse at that point in time to win the Handicap Triple Crown.

Native Dancer was an icon. He was nationally better known, and whether by large margins or razor thin ones, the horse knew how to reach the finish line first. In the end that is the only objective, and Native Dancer must have had an intense will to win, and did so with amazing consistency.

Both Tom Fool and Native Dancer would certainly have elevated their historic status among the greats to even higher levels if not for conditions beyond their control. Tom Fool missed the Triple Crown due to sickness. Native Dancer had his three-year-old season cut short because of injury, and never faced older horses.

Native Dancer returned as a four-year-old, and although starting only three times, showed he could also carry weight successfully. After winning the Metropolitan Handicap under 130 pounds, he capped his career with a nine length victory under 137. Native Dancer earned $785,240 in his three years, and later equaled his achievements on the track with amazing contributions in the stud. He became one of the most influential sires of the second half of the century with a legacy which flourishes today.

Perfect
In the absence of his only credible threat, Tom Fool headed to Belmont Park for the Sysonby to face Alerted and the filly Grecian Queen. There had been four defections. He had put in a quick work during the week, covering a mile in 1:35 4/5, faster than the 1:36 2/5 winning time when he took the race the year before. Tom Fool took the lead soon after the start and kept it, eased off by his rider as he approached the finish, the margin three lengths in a clocking of 1:36 4/5. He profited $36,400 of the $54,500 purse. 

In the 1 3/16 mile Pimlico Special, worth $50,000, on October 24, Tom Fool put away Navy Page and Alerted by eight lengths after seizing the lead from the start. Posting fractions of :47 4/5, 1:11 4/5, and a mile in 1:37 1/5, the great colt hit the wire in 1:55 4/5 for a new track record, eclipsing Capot's old mark. It was his eleventh straight victory and tenth for the year without a defeat. He left the racetrack with first prize money of $30,000, giving him $256,355 for 1953. Navy Page outlasted Alerted by a nose for second, and received $10,000, while Alerted netted $7,000.

Closure
Tom Fool had run his last race in what had been one of the most extraordinary handicap campaigns in history. His conquests had ranged from 5 1/2 to ten furlongs, usually in dominating, decisive fashion. He had also set a track record, and equaled another.

Tom Fool retired with a record of thirty starts, for 21 wins, 7 seconds, 1 third, and career earnings of $570,165. He had finished out of the money only once. Even in his “sub-optimal” year of 1952, the colt had defeated older horses three times.

The greatest horse in America
Tom Fool deservedly earned three titles in 1953. He was named Champion Handicap Horse, Champion Sprinter, and Horse of the Year. Native Dancer was named Champion Three-Year-Old  Male, and returned in 1954 to be chosen Horse of the Year for the second time.

The next chapter
The racehorse Tom Fool would now return to Greentree to become the stallion Tom Fool. It was only a matter of time before his influence on American racetracks would extend into the breeding shed, and perpetuate a great legacy.

To be continued...

Bibliography

“Native Dancer,” Thoroughbred Champions: Top 100 Racehorses of the 20th Century (Lexington, KY: The Blood-Horse, Inc., 1999), p. 36.

Eva Jolene Boyd, Native Dancer Thoroughbred Legends No.7 (Lexington, KY: Eclipse Press, 2000), photo-p. 1.

"Native Dancer," Pedigree Online Thoroughbred Database, http://www.pedigreequery.com/native+dancer

Daily Racing Form, Champions: The Lives, Times, and Past Performances of America's Greatest Thoroughbreds, Revised Edition, Champions from 1893-2004 (New York: Daily Racing Form Press, 2005), pp. 54, 56.

Daily Racing Form, Champions, p. 157.

A.P., "Dancer Has Owner in Tizzy," The Vancouver Sun, September 29, 1952, p. 15, col. 4, Google news, http://news.google.com/newspapers?id=OIBlAAAAIBAJ&sjid=-IkNAAAAIBAJ&pg=1972,4628049&dq=native+dancer&hl=en

U.P., "Native Dancer May Be 'Horse of the Year,'" Deseret News And Telegram, October 23, 1952, p. A15, col. 1, Google news, http://news.google.com/newspapers?id=nrMwAAAAIBAJ&sjid=RU4DAAAAIBAJ&pg=4734,4371802&dq=native+dancer&hl=en

Boyd, Native Dancer, pp. 52-53.

Cleon Walfoort, "There's Lots of Reasons Why Native Dancer Won't Win Derby -- None of Them Very Good," The Milwaukee Journal, May 1, 1953, p. 4, col. 4, Google news, http://news.google.com/newspapers?id=fUYaAAAAIBAJ&sjid=fiMEAAAAIBAJ&pg=5563,181910&dq=native+dancer&hl=en

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John Eisenberg, Native Dancer: The Grey Ghost; Hero of a Golden Age (New York, N.Y., Warner Books, 2003), pp. 115-119, 137.

A.P., "Derby Field Has 12 Starters but Two Depend on Weather," The Milwaukee Journal, May 1, 1953, p. 4, col. 3, Google news, http://news.google.com/newspapers?id=fUYaAAAAIBAJ&sjid=fiMEAAAAIBAJ&pg=2802,180017&dq=native+dancer&hl=en

A.P., "100,000 To See Unbeaten Native Dancer Run Against 11 Others Today In Derby," The Gettysburg Times, May 2, 1953, p. 5, col. 4, Google news, http://news.google.com/newspapers?id=5lQmAAAAIBAJ&sjid=qP8FAAAAIBAJ&pg=1488,4782144&dq=native+dancer&hl=en

Boyd, Native Dancer, p. 82.

Eisenberg, Native Dancer, p. 150.

A.P., "Jockey Mapped Strategy, But Dark Star Took Over -- And Won," Milwaukee Sentinel, May 3, 1953, Google news, http://news.google.com/newspapers?id=65QxAAAAIBAJ&sjid=rQ8EAAAAIBAJ&pg=4682,1134120&dq=native+dancer&hl=en

Dink Carroll, "playing the field," The Gazette, May 4, 1953, p. 24, col. 1, Google news, http://news.google.com/newspapers?id=VYItAAAAIBAJ&sjid=ZJkFAAAAIBAJ&pg=6901,573046&dq=native+dancer&hl=en

John Chandler, "Jockey Henry Moreno Is Given Credit For Clever Ride; Grey Bumped Early," The Gazette, May 4, 1953, p. 25, col. 3, Google news, http://news.google.com/newspapers?id=VYItAAAAIBAJ&sjid=ZJkFAAAAIBAJ&pg=6901,573046&dq=native+dancer&hl=en

Triangle Publications, Inc. (Morning Telegraph), "Kentucky Derby Chart, 'Seventh Race,'" The Gazette, May 4, 1953, p. 25, col. 3-4, Google news, http://news.google.com/newspapers?id=VYItAAAAIBAJ&sjid=ZJkFAAAAIBAJ&pg=6901,573046&dq=native+dancer&hl=en

A.P., "Dancer fails in Derby; Dark Star scores in terrific upset," The Leader Post, May 4, 1953, p. 18, col. 3, Google news,  http://news.google.com/newspapers?id=9RNUAAAAIBAJ&sjid=mDkNAAAAIBAJ&pg=4136,489708&dq=native+dancer&hl=en

A.P., "Eric Guerin Says Derby Bumping Not Accidental," The Gazette, May 6, 1953, p. 23, col. 2, Google news, http://news.google.com/newspapers?id=V4ItAAAAIBAJ&sjid=ZJkFAAAAIBAJ&pg=4615,979261&dq=native+dancer&hl=en

Boyd, Native Dancer, p. 111.

A.P., "Dancer, Tom Fool Race Goal of Pimlico Track," The New York Times, August 4, 1953.

Jack Cuddy, "Horsemen Feel Tom Fool Could Beat Native Dancer," The Milwaukee Journal, August 5, 1953, p. 2, col. 8, Google news, http://news.google.com/newspapers?id=8loaAAAAIBAJ&sjid=0yMEAAAAIBAJ&pg=3993,2164874&dq=tom+fool&hl=en

James Roach, "Tom Fool-Native Dancer Race in Prospect as Belmont Changes Sysonby Date; Mile Test Sept. 26 Raised To $50,000," The New York Times, August 8, 1953, p. 17.

A.P., "Native Dancer Loafs to Win in American Derby," The New London Conn., Evening Day, August 24, 1953, p. 15, col. 4, Google news, http://news.google.com/newspapers?id=p-wgAAAAIBAJ&sjid=JnMFAAAAIBAJ&pg=4336,3988440&dq=native+dancer&hl=en

A.P., "Tom Fool, Dancer to Meet Sept. 26," Schenectady Gazette, August 26, 1953, p. 22, col. 6, Google news, http://news.google.com/newspapers?id=PEohAAAAIBAJ&sjid=TIEFAAAAIBAJ&pg=1218,3292001&dq=tom+fool&hl=en

"Native Dancer-Tom Fool Race Is Off," The New York Times, September 13, 1953, p. 1, p. 4, col. 6.

James Roach, "Tom Fool Triumphs In $54,500 Sysonby," The New York Times, p.1, p. 8, col. 2.

U.P., "Two Will Oppose Tom Fool Today," The New York Times, October 24, 1953.

United Press, "Tom Fool Takes Pimlico Special In a Romp in Track-Record Time," The New York Times, October 25, 1953, p.1, p. 6, col. 5.

"Tom Fool Chosen Horse Of The Year," The New York Times, November 21, 1953.

A.P., "Writers Pick Tom Fool As 'Horse of the Year,'" The New York Times, December 17, 1953. 

Boyd, Native Dancer, p. 146.

Copyright 2013 by John Califano 

Friday, February 22, 2013

HANDICAP PERFECTION

(This is the third of a five part series.)


The four-year-old Tom Fool would make his juvenile championship season of 1951 seem a mere footnote to what he would achieve in 1953. The horse with the kind, gentle disposition off the racetrack had become the most feared on it.



PART THREE: THE MOST FEARED HORSE IN AMERICA


Trainer John Gaver had Tom Fool make his four-year-old debut at Jamaica, on April 25, 1953, among a field of five, limbering up his muscles in an easy 5 1/2 furlong Handicap, offering $7,500 added money, for ages three and up. 

Assigned 128 pounds, and giving five to sixteen pounds to his opponents, Tom Fool broke from post one, and took a brief lead before jockey Ted Atkinson settled him down in third, letting Do Report go on with it. At one point the Menow colt was three and a half lengths back, but always moving smoothly and at five furlongs, in :58 2/5, he advanced into second, before surging ahead and pulling away with a two and a half length spread at the wire. The winner's time was a quick 1:04 1/5, just a few ticks shy of the track mark, and the paycheck was $4,930.

Tom Fool returned to Belmont Park for his next three starts, beginning with the inaugural running of the Joe H. Palmer Handicap on May 19. He would carry 130 pounds, spotting six other horses nine to twenty-five pounds, including the ten-year-old veteran Tea-Maker.

Tea-Maker
F. Ambrose Clark's dark bay gelding Tea-Maker, foaled in 1943, didn't begin racing until age five, and then proceeded to rack up 104 starts by the time he met Tom Fool. Sired by the stakes winner Only One out of Tea-Leaves, Tea-Maker's damsire was Pharamond II (GB), Tom Fool's paternal grandsire. In Tea-Maker's first nine starts, seven were over hurdles, at distances of 1 1/2 to 1 3/4 miles, with his best effort a second place finish in the National Maiden on August 6, 1948, at Saratoga. Five days later, he won on the flat in a seven furlong Maiden Special Weight. After resuming flat racing for keeps, Tea-Maker won his next two allowance races, at seven furlongs and 1 1/2 miles, at Aqueduct and Belmont Park respectively, and during his long career continued to compete at a variety of distances up to 2 1/16 miles. The gelding ran largely in lesser handicaps and allowances, but also won the Vosburgh, Autumn Day, Jamaica, Wilmington, Fleetwing, and American Legion Handicaps, with these victories over six or seven furlongs. Tea-Maker would retire in the autumn of 1953, with a resume boasting 115 starts, 29 wins, 23 seconds, 16 thirds, and $211,530. 

Joe H. Palmer Handicap 
Named after the late turf writer of The New York Herald Tribune, the Joe H. Palmer Handicap was six furlongs. Tom Fool would break from post four, and Tea-Maker, under 114 pounds with Hedley Woodhouse aboard, from post six. Tom Fool, away well, breezed along in second, as Nullify, carrying 105 pounds, started things off. Tom Fool was just coasting along until two furlongs left to run, when he moved ahead to a five length lead, before gearing down at the wire, with a one and a half length margin. Tea-Maker, closing resolutely, arrived next, followed by Dark Peter. The added purse of $15,000 netted Tom Fool approximately $10,000, with the runner-up earning $3,000. 

The race had been a glorified workout for the winner, but his next start, in only four days, would prove more challenging.

The Met
The sixtieth running of the one mile Metropolitan Handicap, first leg of the Handicap Triple Crown, had nine original starters, but at post time there were two drop outs, Hitex, a winner over Tom Fool in the previous season's Rippey Handicap, and Bryan G. Tom Fool would again carry 130 pounds.

Seven horses went to the gate, including five-year-old Royal Vale (GB), under 127. A great-grandson of Phalaris (GB), Royal Vale was a former claimer who eventually caught fire in stakes company. He set a grass course record in Hialeah's Miami Handicap, and annexed the Bowie, before winning Jamaica's Gallant Fox and the Dixie at Pimlico. Jack Westrope was in the irons. The 1951 Kentucky Derby winner, Count Turf, would run and carry a mere 109 pounds. He was coupled with Mr. Turf, under 100 pounds, the latter whom Tom Fool was already familiar with as a two-year-old. Now he was giving Mr. Turf thirty pounds. The San Juan Capistrano winner Intent was in the field, in addition to Cold Command, second to Royal Vale in the Gallant Fox and Dixie. It was a solid group and Tom Fool would get a chance to produce some perspiration.

After the field was sent away on a "good" track, Mr. Turf took the lead and maintained his position until the far turn when Tom Fool drifted out and overtook him in the stretch, at which point he veered in. Meanwhile, Royal Vale had come from off the pace to make a strong rally, was almost even with the new leader, but missed the tag by a half length at the finish. Intent, under 125, carried wide by Tom Fool on the turn, finished well to garner third, a half length behind the runner-up. After a quarter in :22 3/5, a half in :46, and a six furlong split in 1:11 1/5, Tom Fool arrived in 1:35 4/5, and picked up $25,800.

Round two
One week later, Tom Fool and Royal Vale met again, in the 1 1/4 mile Suburban Handicap, second race in the handicap "triple" and a distance Tom Fool had covered only once, in August of the previous year, when he finished third in the Travers Stakes, over sloppy going.

The field was paired down to seven after several scratches, namely High Scud, Golden Gloves, Master Fiddle, Risque Rouge, and Tom Fool's stablemate, seven-year-old One Hitter, a very good multiple stakes winning/placed chestnut horse, and a son of another Greentree Stable standout, the duel classic winner Shut Out. One Hitter had won the Suburban in 1952. 

The track was labeled "fast" despite its sub-optimum rain moistened condition. Favored Tom Fool, breaking from post one, carried high weight of 128 pounds. Royal Vale, next in the wagering, was in post six, assigned 124, and leaving post five, under 126, was the reigning Horse of the Year (Daily Racing Form) and Three-Year-Old Champion Male One Count.

More than 43,000 showed up to see a horse race, and they were not disappointed. The affair began in the chute, with the runners going two furlongs before entering the main track. Tom Fool and Royal Vale were off sharply, with Tom Fool catching a flyer, covering a quarter in :24, a half in :47 1/5, before zipping six furlongs in 1:11. With Royal Vale in pursuit, the leader went up by three lengths as they came out of the backstretch. Tom Fool finished a mile in 1:35 3/5, but exiting the far turn, Royal Vale was steadily cutting into his lead. Atkinson employed his bat to keep the Menow colt on his business, but Royal Vale was charging, and rapidly moving in. The two horses, in tandem, hit the wire in a photo, the result in Tom Fool's favor by a nose. It was his first win over the classic distance, and he stopped the timer in 2:00 3/5, the second fastest time in the race's history. Whisk Broom II, who went on to sweep New York's three big handicaps in 1913, held the Suburban record of 2:00, under 139 pounds. 

The race, a $50,000 added affair, meant a nice sum of $40,400 for the winner, which increased his career earnings to almost $395,000. 

Crossing over

Tom Fool, four for four on the year, was now one race away from joining Whisk Broom II, as the only other horse to win the  Handicap Triple Crown; however, the 1 1/4 mile Brooklyn Handicap, the series' third leg, wasn't until July 11. In the interim he was going to make another start, which marked the colt's transition from a very good racehorse to a great one. After winning a major ten furlong contest, Tom Fool would now move to Aqueduct on June 27, and cut back to the seven furlong Carter Handicap; if he won, he would do so under 135 pounds, the heaviest weight ever successfully carried in the test. Going from a classic route to a seven furlong race was a tall order, let alone having to do so with a high impost.

The Carter Handicap
The race was first run in 1895, with a purse of $600. Initially at a distance of 1 1/4 miles, and won by six-year-old Charade, under 110 pounds, in a time of 2:11 3/5, the Carter Handicap morphed into the seven furlong contest it remains today. In 1896, Deerslayer, a four-year-old, also under 110, was victorious in a shortened 1 1/8 mile affair. In its third year, the race was shortened again to 1 1/16 miles, annexed by  Premiere. The following season, the Carter was just shy of seven furlongs, and in 1899 through 1902, was contested at 6 1/2 furlongs.  

Several horses won the Carter twice, including Audacious in 1920-21, Osmand, 1928-29, Flying Heels, 1930-31, and later Forego, 1974-75, and Lite the Fuse, 1995-96. Prior to the 1953 edition, only four winners had carried at least 130 pounds, Old Rosebud, under 130, in 1917, Naturalist, under 132, in 1919, Osmand, also under 132, in 1929, and Apache, under 130, in 1945. 

Impressive

The 53rd running of the Carter Handicap, offering $59,800, saw nine horses go to the gate, with Tom Fool set to leave from post five, conceding to his rivals thirteen to twenty-nine pounds. Tom Fool's stablemate, Northern Star, currently owned the track record of 1:22, set in 1952, under 115. Could Tom Fool even come close to that time under twenty additional pounds, particularly after just running a 1 1/4 mile race under 130? The question wasn't only the weight assignment but whether the distance disparity, going long to short, might have dulled his speed.

The track was fast, and after the gates opened, Tea-Maker got the jump, but was passed by Tom Fool, before Atkinson shuffled him back into fifth place, and let Squared Away, under 122, do the honors. The situation remained unchanged and Squared Away was going along with a good advantage, with Tom Fool still around mid-pack until the turn into the home stretch. Atkinson let him know it was time, but never whipped him, and Tom Fool accelerated, coming to terms with Squared Away a half furlong out, then easily went ahead, putting more space between himself and his rivals. He hit the finish eased up with a two length margin, and was followed by Squared Away, who was just over two lengths ahead of Eatontown, under 113. After rapid splits of :22, :44 3/5, and six furlongs in 1:09 2/5, Tom Fool's final time was 1:22, equaling Northern Star's record. Going off at 13-20, Gaver's superstar picked up $41,700 after one of the most impressive performances of the era. 

In Perspective
To give some perspective to what Tom Fool had done, in all the future editions of the Carter Handicap, only one other horse, Bold Ruler, one of the decade's fastest runners, would be victorious under 135 pounds, five years later, in a time of 1:22 3/5 on a fast track. Prior to the Carter, Bold Ruler ran in the six furlong Toboggan, just shy of two weeks earlier, a contest he won under 133. Following the Carter sixteen days later, Bold Ruler, under 135, finished second in the one mile Metropolitan, two lengths behind Gallant Man (GB), under 130. Bold Ruler's three races were within a span of twenty-nine days, always going shorter to longer incrementally. 

Tom Fool had sandwiched his track record equaling Carter win between two 1 1/4 mile races, the Suburban, on May 30, and what would be his next start following the Carter, the Brooklyn Handicap on July 11, albeit in the much longer span of forty-three days. In the Brooklyn, the finale of the handicap triage, Tom Fool would carry 136 pounds.

Triple threat
In 1936, Discovery won the Brooklyn Handicap for the third consecutive time, at the shorter distance of 1 1/8 miles, becoming the first horse to do it under 136 pounds. Today it is run at 1 1/2 miles, at Belmont Park, but during various other time spans the coverage was 1 1/4 miles. One other horse, Forego, in 1974-76, won the race three times, the latter two over ten furlongs, with his third victory under 134 pounds. The stakes record for that distance is 1:59 1/5, set by Damascus, under 130 pounds, in 1968. 

In the days of the extraordinary handicap champions, a great weight carrying horse didn't simply pack a heavy load; he also conceded plenty of it. The Brooklyn initially had seven starters, for whom Tom Fool would have conceded twenty-six to thirty-four pounds. Except for Golden Gloves, around 8-1 odds, everyone else was in double digits with Tom Fool around 1-10. 

The 1953 Brooklyn offered an added $50,000 purse. At post time the field had been cut to five, with Tom Fool going off at 1-4, higher than originally assumed due to concern for the load he would pack, and the twenty-six to thirty-one pound allowance he gave the others. The bettors needn't have been concerned. When the group left the gate, Golden Gloves, under 110, took the initiative with Tom Fool tracking closely in second. In the far turn, he made his move, overhauled Golden Gloves in the stretch, and easily coasted home, geared down which reduced the final margin to one and a half lengths. Golden Gloves arrived next, seven lengths ahead of High Scud, carrying 109. 

The splits were :24, :48 3/5, 1:13 2/5, 1:38, and 2:04 2/5. Tom Fool earned just under $38,000 to lift his career total to $474,590, putting him eleventh on the all-time list. 

In 1961, the great gelding Kelso became the third horse to win the triage. He took the Met under 130, Suburban under 133, and the Brooklyn also under 136. Within these races, Kelso finished second in the Whitney, over 1 1/8 miles, carrying 130, but was elevated to first on disqualification of the winner.

In 1984, Fit to Fight, a bay colt by Chieftain out of Hasty Queen II, whose sire and damsire were Bold Ruler and One Count respectively, completed the Handicap Triple Crown as a five-year-old. His Metropolitan win was under 124 pounds, Suburban under 126, and 1 1/2 mile Brooklyn under 129.

Beginning with his final race in 1952, Tom Fool had won seven consecutive starts. He was so feared that Aqueduct had allowed only win betting in the Brooklyn to prevent a minus pool, and the disgruntled fans made their dissatisfaction known; and in his four remaining races in 1953, at three other tracks, no betting of any kind was allowed. 

Scared 
Tom Fool would make his next two starts at Saratoga, followed by a race at Belmont Park, and conclude his career at Pimlico. He would merely "toy" with the few brave rivals who dared face him over distances of one mile, 1 1/4 miles, one mile again, and 1 3/16 miles. In each start he would be asked to carry "only" 126 pounds.


Most trainers would not run their horses against him. In the upcoming Wilson Stakes, on August 4, which he had won as a three-year-old, and Whitney Handicap, four days later, Tom Fool faced just one horse each. 

The five-generation outcross, Indian Land, was a four-year-old bay horse, owned by Alfred G. Vanderbilt and trained by Bill Winfrey. Indian Land would race for seven years, post 126 starts, and later in 1953, win the Vosburgh Handicap. To prevent Tom Fool from simply galloping around the rain drizzled track in a walkover, Vanderbilt entered his horse as a sporting gesture. Indian Land had no chance of winning, but would pick up $3,000 of second money. Tom Fool, always in command during the contest, did as he pleased, never in any hurry, and arrived home eight lengths to the good of his rival after setting modest fractions of :23 2/5, :46 2/5, 1:11 1/5, and finally the mile in 1:37 1/5. He earned $10,925, to increase his total bankroll to $485,515, and was now among history's top ten earners.

Tom Fool faced Putnam Stable's Combat Boots, who received a twelve pound pull, in the 1 1/4 mile Whitney Handicap. Combat Boots was another trooper, a five-year-old bay horse, and a son of 1940 Two-Year-Old Champion Male Our Boots, out of the unraced mare Miss Dodo, by Man o'War. Combat Boots would finish up his career as a black-type winner, and record 100 starts. 

Combat Boots, with Eugene Rodriguez riding, led through the first part of the race, and kept at it with a two length advantage in the backstretch before Atkinson, with no urging, asked the question. Tom Fool promptly answered, going in front with five-sixteenths to go. He continued easily and out-finished his brave foe by three and a half lengths at the wire, in a pedestrian 2:05 2/5, over a fast track, before more than 23,000 in the seats. The $23,000 purse netted the champion $18,250, and lifted him over the half million mark in earnings. Combat Boots didn't walk away empty-handed either, and was paid $5,000 for showing up. 

Who's next?...
Tom Fool would now return to Belmont Park and run in the Sysonby Mile, on September 26, before calling it a career in the Pimlico Special on October 24. Alerted, now five-years-old, and whom Tom Fool defeated in last year's Sysonby and Greg Lag Handicap, would reunite with him for both races, and at equal weights. The outstanding filly Grecian Queen, a dark bay/brown daughter of Heliopolis (GB) would also run in the Sysonby. Grecian Queen was no pushover. After her career got off to a slow start at age two, Grecian Queen went on to annex the Schuylerville, Astarita, Demoiselle, and a division of the Marguerite Stakes. As a three-year-old, she had already won the Prioress, Coaching Club American Oaks, Gazelle, New Castle Handicap, and Monmouth Oaks, and was headed for a championship. She had never run outside her division however, and as good as she was, it was hard to imagine a female sophomore taking down the four-year-old titan, Tom Fool, who had now won his last nine starts, and remained perfect during the current campaign. 

Is there any competition out there?

Tom Fool was arguably the best racehorse in America; but he wasn't the most famous. That distinction went to an immensely popular three-year-old gray colt, who in two years had thus far won seventeen of eighteen starts, with his only loss, by a head, due to a poor trip. Owned by Vanderbilt and residing in Winfrey's barn, he was a winning machine, cutting down rivals with amazing precision.

If there was any horse with the ability to defeat Tom Fool, it was this one...maybe. Everyone was aware of it, and clamored for a meeting between the two stars. A few racetracks were trying to make arrangements for what could become one of the biggest sporting events of the decade, and probably the greatest equine matchup of the century. 

To be continued...

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Copyright 2013 by John Califano