Sunday, March 27, 2011

The Five Generations of Maclean's Music


Last weekend an unknown and unraced three-year-old colt stepped into a starting gate and after disposing of his rivals with authoritative precision, became an immediate “buzz” horse.

Maclean's Music is a bay colt, bred by Jess Jackson's Stonestreet Thoroughbred Holdings, LLC, owned by Stonestreet Stables, LLC and trained by Steve Asmussen. On March 19, 2011, he faced eight other horses in a six furlong maiden special weight at Santa Anita Park. Under jockey Mike Smith, Maclean's Music broke sharply from post postion six and took a quick lead, went up by a length and a half after a half mile, increased it to three lengths in the stretch, then widened his margin by more than seven lengths as he crossed the wire. After fractions of :21 1/5, :43 2/5, and :55, Maclean's Music finished in a fast 1:07 2/5, earning a Beyer figure of 114, the highest ever given to a first time starter since the system was first introduced. Because of the speed favoring bias of the track, there are individuals who understandably look at this time and figure with reservations; yet it can't be argued that the visual athleticism was one of the most impressive seen in a novice racer, and he pocketed $32,400 of the $54,000 purse. Maclean's Music won't be coming to the big party at Churchill Downs on May 7, but a Preakness appearance may not be out of the question. After coping with shin issues as a two-year-old, the connections have wisely brought the colt along slowly. That patience may eventually be well rewarded.

The horse may breeze on Monday, March 28, but his next start is unknown. In the meantime, a look at his bloodlines should give some indication of what his true potential might be, and provide clues to what may lie ahead.

Sire - Distorted Humor
Maclean's Music was sired by Distorted Humor out of the Unbridled's Song mare Forest Music, and foaled on February 9, 2008 in Kentucky. Distorted Humor, also the father of Kentucky Derby/Preakness winner and three-year-old male champion Funny Cide, and Belmont Stakes winner Drosselmeyer, was among the sire leaders in 2010, behind only Giant's Causeway in progeny earnings. As a racer, Distorted Humor made twenty-three starts, was graded stakes placed and won Monmouth Park's Salvator Mile Stakes at age four, then at five took the seven furlong Commonwealth Breeders' Cup Stakes at Keeneland, in stakes record time. He also won the Churchill Downs Stakes, and one mile Ack Ack Handicap at Hollywood Park.

Forty Niner
Distorted Humor's sire, Forty Niner, was an exemplary racehorse, and perhaps even a great one. A juvenile champion in 1987, Forty Niner won five of his six starts, from six furlongs to 1 1/16 miles, among these the Sanford, Futurity, Champagne and Breeders' Futurity, then continued the following year with wins in the 1 1/16 mile Fountain of Youth before losing by a neck to Brian's Time in the 1 1/8 mile Florida Derby. At Keeneland, Forty Niner won the seven furlong Lafayette by five lengths before dropping the 1 1/16 mile Lexington by a head to Risen Star. After a strong closing finish in the Run for the Roses, Forty Niner lost by a neck to the filly Winning Colors. A contentious dual with her in the Preakness cost him any chance of victory, and he finished a distant seventh. Forty Niner bypassed the Belmont Stakes, and proceeded to win his next four starts beginning with a romp in a one mile allowance at Monmouth. He then defeated Seeking the Gold twice by a nose, in the 1 1/8 mile Haskell Invitational and Saratoga's 1 ¼ mile Travers Stakes. In his first appearance against older horses, he fell a neck short to eventual Horse of the Year Alysheba in the 1 ¼ mile Woodward Stakes, won the NYRA Mile, and ended his career with a fourth place effort in the Breeders' Cup Classic.

Forty Niner's dam was black-type winner File, a daughter of three-year-old male champion Tom Rolfe, who in turn was sired by the magnificent dual Prix de l'Arc de Triomphe winner and European champion Ribot (GB).

Danzig's Beauty
The dam of Distorted Humor was the graded stakes winner Danzig's Beauty, a daughter of the extraordinary sire Danzig by sire of sires Northern Dancer (CAN). Danzig's prolific production of stakes winning progeny included Danehill, Dance Smartly (CAN), Chief's Crown, Langfuhr and Hard Spun, to name only a few. Among his numerous descendents through his daughters is Fusaichi Pegasus.

Mr. Prospector
Through grandsire Forty Niner on his top and Gone West and Fappiano on the bottom, Maclean's Music is inbred 3x4x5 to the legendary stallion Mr. Prospector. Both a leading sire and a virtual perennial leading broodmare sire, Mr. Prospector fathered Miswaki, Conquistador Cielo, Gold Beauty, Kingmambo, Seeking the Gold, and Fusaichi Pegasus, et al. He was damsire of Pulpit and Mineshaft, et al.

Forty Niner's daddy, Mr. Prospector, made fourteen starts, and set track records at six furlongs. Mr. Prospector's sire, Raise A Native, was also the father of such illuminaries as Majestic Prince, Alydar, and daughter Genuine Risk. Raise A Native also sired Exclusive Native, father of American racing's last Triple Crown winner Affirmed. Mr. Prospector's dam, Gold Digger, by the illustrious Horse of the Year Nashua, twice won Pimlico's Gallorette Handicap on the turf when contested at 1 1/8 miles.

Dam - Forest Music
The dam of Maclean's Music is the gray/roan mare Forest Music, by Unbridled's Song. Forest Music made eighteen starts, winning the six furlong Adena Stallions' Miss Preakness Stakes, with third place finishes in Belmont Park's six furlong Prioress Stakes and the seven furlong Test Stakes at Saratoga. At age four, Forest Music won the six furlong Honorable Miss Handicap at the Spa.

Broodmare Sire – Unbridled's Song
Unbridled's Song, by Unbridled, won the 1995 Breeders' Cup Juvenile, and the following year annexed the Florida Derby and Wood Memorial. Unbridled's Song also sired graded stakes winners Rockport Harbor, Thorn Song, Octave, Eight Belles, Old Fashioned and Zensational. Forest Music's grandsire, three-year-old champion Unbridled, by Fappiano, is among the few horses, including Ferdinand and Alysheba, to win both the Kentucky Derby and Breeders' Cup Classic, and along with Sunday Silence has been the only horse to win the races in the same year.

Defer West
Forest Music's dam, Defer West, was sired by Gone West, the latter who won the Dwyer, Gotham and Withers Stakes. Gone West, also by Mr. Prospector, was out of Secrettame by Secretariat. Forest Music's second dam, Defer, was by the great Horse of the Year Damascus, by Horse of the Year Sword Dancer. Her third dam, I Pass, was sired by another great Horse of the Year, Buckpasser.

Fappiano
The other Mr. Prospector son related to Maclean's Music was the Florida-bred Fappiano, who won the 1 1/8 mile Discovery Handicap, then at four, took the mile Metropolitan Handicap and seven furlong Forego Handicap. Just past the first five generations of Maclean's Music, was Fappiano's dam, Killaloe, sired by perhaps the fastest Thoroughbred of all time, Dr. Fager, whose great range was from 5 ½ furlongs to 1 ¼ miles, with both dirt and turf prowess.

Where Now?
The pedigree of Maclean's Music suggests a good balance of speed and stamina lines, and a promising future. His next start will be widely anticpated, and whether or not he blossoms into a legitimate star still remains to be seen. But one thing is already certain. Many of the colt's ancestors have left a glowing heritage.

Copyright 2011, 2012 by John Califano




Wednesday, February 16, 2011

Pride of Canada, Queen of the Continent


Twenty years ago, she was the dominant female Thoroughbred racer in North America and until 2002, the region's only filly to win an offically male dominated Triple Crown. She became the first from her country to win a Breeders' Cup race, and retired as the world's all-time leading female money earner. She beat the girls and she beat the boys, on the dirt and on the turf. She was all class, versatility, and heart. She was not only Canada's best but the best anywhere, and befitting her name, danced all the dances with authority. How could anyone not love or admire Dance Smartly?

Family Strength
The dark bay/brown filly Dance Smartly (Can.), nicknamed “Daisy,” was owned and bred by Ernie Samuel's Sam-Son Farm. Foaled in 1988 in Ontario, she was by the great sire of sires Danzig, and a granddaughter of 1964 Canadian Horse of the Year, American champion, and incomparable stallion of the latter half of the twentieth century, Northern Dancer (Can.), the first horse to win the Kentucky Derby in 2:00 flat. Dance Smartly's dam was the Smarten mare Classy 'n Smart (Can.), who won the Canadian Oaks and several other key races, in route to a Sovereign Award as Canada's three-year-old female champion in 1984. Dance Smartly was also a half sister to Smart Strike (Can.), who would go on to sire Eclipse champions English Channel, Lookin at Lucky, and two-time Horse of the Year Curlin. Dance Smartly's second dam was the blue-hen mare No Class (Can). Her third dam, Classy Quillo was out of Quillopoly, the latter sired by leading American/European stallion Princequillo (Ire.), who fathered Round Table, 1958 Horse of the Year/multiple champion, and arguably the greatest of all U.S. grass runners. Princequillo also sired Somethingroyal, dam of the immortal Secretariat.

Emergence
Dance Smartly was conditioned by James E. Day, and as a two-year-old, ridden in all but her first start by Sandy Hawley. Her career was off beautifully with two 5 ½ furlong victories at Woodbine. On July 7, 1990, she broke her maiden by more than three lengths, then returned in an allowance on August 1 with a four and three-quarter length win against seven others. Two weeks later, at Fort Erie, Dance Smartly ran into her first roadblock named Regal Pennant, who defeated her by two and a half lengths in the Ontario Debutante Stakes; however, it was more than seven lengths back to the third filly. Dance Smartly returned to Woodbine on September 15, and in her first attempt on the grass, scored by a half length in a division of the Natalma Stakes, on a yielding course.

Stateside
Dance Smartly made her first start in the United States during the tragic seventh Breeders' Cup on October 27, at Belmont Park that saw three horses, among them the great Go for Wand, die, and a fourth horse suffer a non-fatal fracture. The Juvenile Fillies, with a field of thirteen, was Dance Smartly's first start over a mile and breaking from post seven, she contested the pace with fellow Canadian and stablemate Wilderness Song, before succumbing to the brilliant, undefeated and eventual Eclipse two-year-old champion Meadow Star, who ran away with the 1 1/16 mile race by six lengths. Dance Smartly didn't go home empty however, finishing third.

Dance Smartly had won three of her five starts on the year, with a second and a third, and was given a Sovereign Award as Canada's top two-year-old filly. She would now get a nice break, return in May of the following year, and blossom into an extraordinary presence.

Journey to Glory
During her incredible campaign of 1991, the three-year-old daughter of Danzig would make all her starts in graded stakes company, the first three at Woodbine. Dance Smartly proceeded to annex the six furlong Star Shoot on May 4, 1991 by two and a half lengths, in a time of 1:10 3/5. One month later, she won the 1 1/16 mile Selene by more than three lengths.

Although jockey Brian Swatuk had ridden Dance Smartly in her last two victories, beginning on June 16, in the 1 1/8 mile Canadian Oaks, Dance Smartly would have Pat Day in the irons. He would stay aboard for the duration of her career. The filly also seemed stronger as the distances grew longer. She easily won the Oaks by four and a half lengths.

Dance Smartly now had bigger fish to fry.

Gallop for the Guineas”
On July 7, 1991, the oldest major continuously run race in North America, the 132nd Queen's Plate, known as the “Gallop for the Guineas,” was held at Woodbine. It would be a banner day for Sam-Son. Dance Smartly and her stablemate Wilderness Song were taking on the boys in the 1 ¼ mile run. This was Canada's greatest horse race, their equivalent to America's Kentucky Derby and first leg of the country's Triple Crown of Thoroughbred racing. Wilderness Song set a hot pace, and going into the first turn, Bolulight was close on her outside, with Shudanz next, followed by Dance Smartly. Traveling down the backstretch, Wilderness Song and Bolulight maintained their positions and Dance Smartly had creeped up to third in tight quarters next to Shudanz. The six furlongs were travelled in 1:11 4/5 and a mile in 1:37 1/5. After coming out of the far turn, straightening for home, Wilderness Song still hung on to a slight advantage but Day now steered Dance Smartly in the clear where she was able to engage her stablemate, pass her, and easily run off by eight lengths, crossing the finish in 2:03 2/5. Wilderness Song was next, followed by Shudanz. Another stablemate, the colt Rainbows for Life, finished fourth.

Dance Smartly was just warming up.

Doubling Down
The second leg was the 56th running of the Prince of Wales Stakes at Fort Erie Racetrack, on July 28. Dance Smartly, breaking from post five, faced five other rivals, among them Wilderness Song and Shudanz. When they were sent away for the 1 3/16 mile affair, Dance Smartly dropped back, while Wilderness Song set a fast pace with Shudanz in closest pursuit by the rail. At the clubhouse turn, Shudanz was next to the leader with Dance Smartly in third, and the complexion remained unchanged into the backstretch with Dance Smartly following a few lengths back but within striking distance. Wilderness Song, always pressured by Shudanz, had never been able to relax. Turning into the stretch, Dance Smartly confronted the leaders on the outside, took charge about a furlong out, and at the wire was two lengths in front, as Professor Rabbit closed for second, followed by Shudanz. Wilderness Song eventually faded to fifth, behind Rainbows for Life, who again finished fourth. The game filly had done all the dirty work, setting fractions of :45 4/5, 1:10, and 1:36 3/5, with Dance Smartly finishing the job in 1:56 3/5.

The Queen's Plate/Prince of Wales winner would now return to Woodbine on August 18, and run on the Marshall Turf course in an attempt to do what no other female in North America had ever done.

The Triple
The three Canadian races, that make up the country's Triple Crown, are identical in distance to America's Triple Crown, but run during the summer months and restricted to Canadian-breds. These contests are dissimiliar to the American classics in another remarkable respect: two of the three races are on the dirt, with the last leg on the grass (Note: with the relatively recent arrival of synthetic surfaces, the Queen's Plate is currently run on Polytrack).

In 1932, a chestnut filly named Queensway won the King's Plate, the Breeders' Stakes and Prince of Wales Plate. It wasn't until 1959 however that the three races officially became Canada's Triple Crown. Before 1991, only four horses had swept the series: New Providence (1959), Canebora (1963), With Approval (1989) and Izvestia (1990). In 1991, one tough lady decided to shatter the glass ceiling.

Greatness
The 1 ½ mile Breeders' Stakes completed the Triple. The race's 101st edition on August 18, would have Dance Smartly face nine runners in her quest for immortality. Breaking from post six, on the yielding grass course, she and the others were sent away in good order. Speak No Evil set the pace with Shudanz tracking. Dance Smartly was about four lengths back in third. As they crossed the main track and onto the inner turf course, Speak No Evil went very wide but held the lead with Shudanz next along the hedge, and Dance Smartly maintaining her position about three lengths back in third, with a considerable gap to the fourth horse Rainbow Gold. After a half in :47, Shudanz took a slight lead over Speak No Evil with Dance Smartly still bidding her time, keeping well off the pace. Entering the backstretch, Shudanz had widened his lead. Shiny Key, who had been well back, was now starting his late run, as Dance Smartly engaged the leader. Dance Smartly was now on Shudanz's outside and as they turned for home, she passed him, then widened the gap between herself and the others in the stretch. Shudanz' claim on second would be fleeting. A furlong out, January Man was also rallying but Dance Smartly continued to separate herself, hitting the wire eight lengths in front with Shiny Key crossing next, a head in front of January Man.

Dance Smartly had won Canada's Triple Crown. In later years, two more horses accomplished this feat, but both were colts, Peteski in 1993 and Wando in 2003. With her greatest achievement now securely tucked away in the history books, what could Dance Smartly possibly do for an encore?

Supremacy
Dance Smartly was far from finished. One month later, she stepped into the gate for Woodbine's Molson Million on September 15 against nine horses, among them Fly So Free, the previous year's Eclipse champion two-year-old male. Shudanz was also back for more punishment and Dance Smartly was happy to oblige him. After a duel with the game colt, she disposed of him by two lengths with Majesterian six lengths behind in third.

Dance Smartly had now defeated the boys four consecutive times and had even been considered for the 1 ¼ mile Breeders' Cup Classic at Churchill Downs on November 2. She would instead opt for the Breeders' Cup Distaff at 1 1/8 miles. In her second U.S. appearance, she would make certain the outcome was different.

Queen of the Continent
Thirteen fillies and mares lined up for the eighth running of the Distaff and Dance Smartly would leave from post ten. After the start, Wilderness Song got the jump but longshot Richard's Lass quickly assumed control. Meanwhile, Day kept Dance Smartly tucked away in fourth. Going into the clubhouse turn, the grey/roan Brought to Mind was close to the leader on her outside. Rounding the turn into the backstretch Dance Smartly was in the middle of the group with a half in :47 1/5. The situation began to shift approaching the far turn as Brought to Mind moved up on Richard's Lass with Fit for a Queen stalking. Coming out of the turn into the stretch run, Dance Smartly, out on the track, pressed the leaders and passed them, while Versailles Treaty closed strongly. At the wire it was Dance Smartly ahead by one and a half lengths with Versailles Treaty finishing a game second, and Brought to Mind third.

Perfection
Dance Smartly won all eight races in 1991, half of these against her male counterparts. She had affirmed her dominance and supremancy in Canada's most prestigious events and on North America's biggest stage. For her accomplishments she was named Sovereign Horse of the Year in Canada, its top three-year-old female, and Eclipse three-year-old female champion in the United States. There was no other lady in Dance Smartly's class.

Beyond the Applause
In 1992, the Queen of racing would race four times, all on the turf, the first two at Woodbine against males, followed by a pair at Arlington Park. She made her four-year-old debut on June 14, and lost by a  nose to the gelding Thunder Regent in the 1 1/8 mile King Edward Gold Cup after conceding six pounds to the winner. In mid-July Dance Smartly rebounded with a half length win in the 1 ¼ mile Canadian Maturity, over a soft course.

On August 15, Dance Smartly contested the 1 1/16 mile Arlington Budweiser Breeders Cup Handicap. After running more aggressively and closer to the leaders, she finished third. On September 5, in the the Beverly D at 1 3/16 miles, she was close to the action early, finally settled down after about four furlongs, but fell short of a winning bid, notching a credible third, a neck behind runner-up Ruby Tiger and less than two lengths back of winner Kostroma.

Dance Smartly had given a stunning three-year performance. In 17 starts, she was never out of the money, recording 12 wins, 2 seconds, 3 thirds, and earnings of $3,263,836. At the time, she was the richest female ever; however, the great filly had not been immune to a few physical issues, and her epic runs on the track were now at an end. A promising career as a broodmare lie ahead.

Offspring and a Final Tribute
Dance Smartly was awarded another Sovereign in 2001 as outstanding broodmare. Her colt Scatter the Gold and filly Dancethruthedawn, both by Mr. Prospector, followed their dam's example by winning the Queen's Plate in successive years, with the former also victorious in the Prince of Wales Stakes.

Dance Smartly remained the only female in North America to win a Triple Crown until Mediavilla R., a granddaugher of Danzig, became the first of her sex and the last runner to capture Puerto Rico's Triple Crown in 2002.

Dance Smartly was inducted into the Canadian Horse Racing Hall of Fame in 1995 and the National Museum of Racing and Hall of Fame in Saratoga Springs, New York, in 2003. A race named in her honor, the Dance Smartly Stakes (Can.-IIT) is run in July. In 2007 the industry lost one of its finest equine ladies when Dance Smartly died after a paddock accident at the age of nineteen. Her legacy and the excellence she brought to the sport are permanent signatures on the hearts of racing enthusiasts throughout North America and particularly in Canada. An enduring affection continues to cast its light on one of this continent's great fillies.

Copyright 2011, 2012 by John Califano










Friday, January 28, 2011

Courageous Champion: A Story about Tim Tam


By 1958, ten years had passed since Thoroughbred racing's last Triple Crown winner. The climb up racing's Mt. Everest, in hopes of seeing a horse sweep all three classics, was once again about to begin. Only one horse proved up to the daunting challenge, and he nearly succeeded. What made him so special wasn't the fact that he barely missed, but rather, why he did, and how he responded to the greatest moment of adversity in his life. He was Tim Tam.

Heritage
Tim Tam, a dark bay colt, was bred and raced by Calumet Farm and trained by Horace A. "Jimmy" Jones. The farm, first owned by Warren Wright, was in the hands of his widow, the remarried Mrs. Gene Markey. Calumet's dynasty was legend, made especially famous by two Triple Crown winners, the colorful Whirlaway in 1941, and the immortal Citation in 1948. Now the farm had another potential superstar in Tim Tam. Sired by the great handicap champion and 1953 Horse of the Year Tom Fool, Tim Tam was out of the champion mare Two Lea, who was sired by Calumet's amazing stallion Bull Lea. Two Lea also demonstrated prowess against males, finishing third in the 1950 Santa Anita Handicap, behind Noor and Citation. The bloodline was fabulously rich, with Bull Lea and Tom Fool's dam Gaga both sired by the French racer Bull Dog, who led the American sire list in 1943 and was leading broodmare sire three consecutive years in the '50s. He was a full brother to Sir Gallahad III, father of 1930 Triple Crown winner Gallant Fox. Tim Tam was inbred to Bull Dog, and thus to the great European racer and sire Teddy.

Tim Tam raced only once as a two-year-old, making his debut in a six furlong Maiden Special Weight on October 18, 1957, when he finished fourth.

Off On The Right Foot
On January 17, 1958, Hialeah opened its meeting, where three-year-old Tim Tam would make six consecutive starts. Under jockey William Hartack, the colt recorded his first win by almost three lengths, covering six furlongs in a time of 1:11 1/5. Five days later, under muddy conditions, and asked to carry ten more pounds, Tim Tam scored by a half-length in an allowance at seven furlongs, clocked in 1:25 1/5. Beau Daumier, in receipt of eight pounds, followed.

Markey's barn also had the promising dark bay/brown colt Kentucky Pride, winner of both his starts at two. A son of Bull Lea, out of the multiple stakes winning mare Blue Delight, Kentucky Pride's damsire was the 1929 Horse of the Year Blue Larkspur. In his three-year-old debut, Kentucky Pride raced six furlongs and romped home by eight lengths. On January 28, both Tim Tam and Kentucky Pride returned in a six furlong allowance against eight others. Kentucky Pride prevailed to record his fourth win. Tim Tam, sitting well off the pace, caught fire in the stretch to finish third, behind the Christopher Chenery owned speedster Yemen.

Prepping in Florida
Kentucky Pride and Tim Tam returned as the favorites on February 5 in the seven furlong Bahamas Stakes. Among eleven runners, Kentucky Pride led the parade, but found himself caught in a speed duel with Alhambra. The brown son of Olympia got the worst of it, but the fight also took its toll on Kentucky Pride, and in the stretch, Olymar started to pick up the pieces, going inside the tired leader, before finishing the job a half length in front in a rapid 1:22 4/5. Tim Tam was wide but made an impressive late run to finish third, a nose behind his stablemate. Ten days later Jones brought his pair back for the 1 1/8 mile Everglades. It had rained earlier in the day, but by the seventh race, the Hialeah track was sufficiently dry to be labeled good. Tim Tam, assigned 114, was in receipt of three pounds from Kentucky Pride. Yemen held a sizeable lead until Kentucky Pride ran him down around the far turn. Tim Tam was also rolling, saving ground on the inside, and caught Kentucky Pride in the stretch, before drawing away by 1 1/4 lengths in a time of 1:51 2/5. Tim Tam had made five starts within a month, posting three firsts, and two thirds. He would return in two weeks.

Nine three-year-olds showed up for the 1 1/8 mile Flamingo Stakes, on March 1. Tim Tam was the favorite but another highly regarded colt was Elizabeth Graham's Jewel's Reward, the two-year-old champion of 1957 (Thoroughbred Racing Associations). Each horse carried 122 pounds and all left the gate in good order. A furlong out, Tim Tam and Jewel's Reward hooked up, with Tim Tam getting bumped repeatedly. At the wire Jewel's Reward was a head in front, clocking 1:48 4/5, but because of the interference to his rival, the stewards moved him down to second. Tim Tam was declared the winner.

On March 19, Tim Tam was at Gulfstream Park for the 1 1/16 mile Fountain of Youth Stakes, a tune-up for the upcoming Florida Derby ten days later. A field of ten loaded and Tim Tam broke the fastest, but was then taken back. He trailed most of the field going into the clubhouse turn, advanced at the far turn but was still only fifth turning for home. Kept near the rail, he surged to the lead and cruised home by two lengths over E.P. Taylor's Grey Monarch. The time on the fast track was 1:42 4/5. Building on the the pultry sum Tim Tam had earned the year before, in less than three months of 1958, he had pocketed close to $138,000.

Tim Tam would prevail in the Florida Derby, on March 29, but he had to earn every speck of dirt to do it. Lincoln Road, a huge longshot, had the audacity to turn what should have been a procession for Tim Tam into a horse race. From the start, Lincoln Road flashed his heels, and just did relinquish the top spot in the final strides. Tim Tam broke slowly. Through three-quarters, Lincoln Road held a sizeable advantage, but Tim Tam advanced steadily and into the turn had overtaken every runner but the leader. As Tim Tam headed for home, Lincoln Road came out, giving Tim Tam an inside opening, and the colt catapulted to the wire a half length in front, going 1:49 1/5 for the nine furlongs, well short of the world record of 1:46 4/5 set a year earlier by General Duke in the same race. Grey Monarch was seven lengths back in third.

Kentucky or Bust
Tim Tam made his next appearance on April 18 and won a seven-furlong allowance at Keeneland. His time of 1:22 1/5 eclipsed the track mark by a fifth of a second, previously held by Your Host and Iron Liege. Through fractions of :23 2/5, :45 2/5, and 1:09 3/5, Tim Tam bolted down the stretch and hit the wire a half-length ahead of Nadir.

Following the allowance, Bill Hartack had broken his left leg in a starting stall mishap. Jones needed a new rider and among the aspirants, the 24-year-old Ismael Valenzuela was selected for Tim Tam's next start, the Derby Trial on April 29. Among a field of seven other runners, Valenzuela kept the horse well off the pace, while Ebony Pearl was in front. When it was time for Tim Tam to go, he had to check twice, and move outside of horses, but once clear, Ismael guided him inside and the colt blasted home, a neck ahead of Ebony Pearl. Giving the runner-up six pounds, Tim Tam finished in 1:39 3/5 on a surface labeled slow.

Pesty Lincoln Road
On May 3, the eighty-fourth Kentucky Derby was dampened by rainy weather and a muddy track, cutting the field size to fourteen. Each runner would carry the classic weight of 126 pounds. The favored Tim Tam drew the 2-hole with Jewel's Reward just to his outside. Ebony Pearl, was coupled with Jewel's Reward and would break from thirteen. Also entered in the race was a chestnut who had captured the media's attention. The exciting California-bred closer Silky Sullivan, trained by Reggie Cornell, had been stopping hearts on the West Coast, coming from out of the clouds by as many as forty lengths to win. "Silky" was simply spectacular to watch, and Bill Shoemaker would be aboard, breaking from post twelve. Lincoln Road, who had put a scare in Tim Tam in their previous meeting, was again one of the longshots, and parked in seven.

At the break, Lincoln Road, under rider Chris Rogers, broke first and would maintain his position almost the entire way. Tim Tam was well back through a half, then began to gradually move forward along the inside, before encountering some traffic around the far turn. As Valenzuela urged him on, the colt swept past the field but was all out in the stretch to collar the leader at the finish. The margin was a half length. Lincoln Road had put his heart on the line, not to mention his speed, and Tim Tam was again reminded of it, needing everything he had to snatch racing's biggest prize from his grasp. Bringing up third, another half length back, was Noureddin, who was six lengths ahead of Jewel's Reward. The final time in the slop was a pedestrian 2:05. Calumet had now won the famous race seven times.

Much of the discussion following the Derby was about Silky Sullivan's dismal performance. Whatever the reason, his trainer didn't offer any excuses, while many criticized the track conditions. “Silky,” an extremely popular horse, would have another chance to strut his stuff in the second jewel.

Black-Eyed Susans
Tim Tam headed next to Maryland for the 82nd running of the 1 3/16 mile Preakness Stakes on May 17. This time the weather was good and the track fast. Seven of the Derby horses would return to challenge Tim Tam, and there would be four new shooters. Tim Tam would break from post eight. Silky Sullivan's loyal followers never wavered and many were hoping he would still provide the excitement that he failed to demonstrate two weeks earlier. Lincoln Road had finally earned respect, and was bet way down. At the start, Tim Tam settled back and saved ground. Lincoln Road controlled the proceedings until Tim Tam emerged at the top of the stretch to take the lead and draw off to win by a length and a half. Lincoln Road, the bridesmaid once again, was more than three lengths ahead of Gone Fishin. The splits had been :46 4/5, 1:11 3/5, 1:37 4/5 and Tim Tam's final time was 1:57 1/5, well off Nashua's 1:54 3/5 set three years earlier. Silky Sullivan, coming late, could only manage eighth. To go along with their Derby victories, Calumet now had a sixth Preakness, and Tim Tam had recorded his eighth consecutive win.

A Tough Climb Up the Hill
In the years between Citation and Tim Tam, five horses had won two of the three Triple Crown races. In 1949, after finishing second in the Derby to Ponder, Capot won the Preakness and Belmont Stakes. The following year, Middleground captured the Roses, and was runner-up to Hill Prince in the next leg, before winning the third. In what has been undoubtedly the most shocking Derby upset in history, in 1953 the great Native Dancer, after a very troubled trip, lost by a head to Dark Star, before going on to win the Withers, and final two classics. Nashua finished second to Swaps in 1955, then in the California-bred's absence won the last two races. In 1956, Needles took the first and third jewels, but finished second to Fabius in the middle.

Tim Tam was unique. He was the only horse during that period to make a legitimate assault on the Triple Crown because he had already won the first two races.

Great Loss...Greater Honor
The Belmont Stakes, named after August Belmont I, whose son would become breeder and first owner of Man o'War, would run its 90th edition on June 7, 1958. Tim Tam had never raced at Belmont Park but worked that week on the track, was in top form, and would attempt to gain membership in the exclusive fraternity of Triple Crown winners. While racing on the most competitive level for the third time in five weeks, the Belmont Stakes, at 1 1/2 miles, was the most demanding test of a horse's stamina, perserverance, and courage. Tim Tam would now show the depth of his character but the manner in which he had to demonstrate it was regrettable.

Entering the race, the Derby and Preakness winner would meet seven other horses, including a highly regarded Irish chestnut named Cavan. Bred by F.E. Tuthill, and owned by Joseph E. O'Connell, the colt had won four of his five starts on the year, including the Peter Pan Stakes a week earlier. Under rider Pete Anderson, he would break on the extreme outside with Tim Tam next door in post seven. Lincoln Road sat this one out. Under ideal weather conditions and a fast track, the field was off with Page Seven showing early dash. Tim Tam, as was his custom, began well back. 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. Valenzuela then realized that something was wrong and did not perservere. Cavan was long gone and hit the wire six lengths in front. After fractions of :48 2/5, 1:13 3/5, and 2:04 1/5, he stopped the clock in an unremarkable 2:30 1/5, nearly four seconds slower than Gallant Man's record time the year before. 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, five and a half lengths ahead of C.V. Whitney's Flamingo. Tim Tam's injury had cast a pall over the day, and the door leading into racing's highest patheon had been slammed shut.

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.

Damage Control
Tim Tam's right front leg was immediately X-rayed. The vet's final diagnosis revealed not only the full extent of the leg's condition, but also the enormity of the colt's heart. Tim Tam had fractured one of the sesamoids, apparently during his run in the stretch, yet despite the trauma, the horse had been determined to go out a champion. On June 17, ten days after the race, bone fragments were surgically removed at the University of Pennsylvania School of Veterinary Medicine. The procedure went well and Tim Tam remained under care before being discharged a few weeks later. Although there was optimism that the horse could eventually resume training, in August he was officially retired.

Heart of a Champion
In December, the Thoroughbred Racing Assocations and Daily Racing Form named Tim Tam the 1958 three-year-old champion. In 14 lifetime starts, Tim Tam compiled a record of 10 firsts, 1 second, and 2 thirds. His only non-placing had been fourth in the lone start as a juvenile. Tim Tam had career earnings of $467,475, almost all of it in his three-year-old season.

Legacy
The following year Tim Tam began his career at stud for Calumet. He sired the champion filly and later older mare Tosmah, Kentucky Oaks winner, Nancy Jr., and Royal Entrance, the sire of champion three-year-old filly Davona Dale. Tim Tam's daughter Tamerett is the dam of European champion Known Fact and the second dam of the great sire Gone West. Tim Tam was also broodmare sire of male grass champion Mac Diarmida, juvenile filly champion Before Dawn and multiple grade one winner Tentam.

Three years after his death in 1982, Tim Tam was inducted into the National Museum of Racing and Hall of Fame. Like many Thoroughbreds that had preceded him, and others that would follow, Tim Tam had possessed the highest virtues of his breed. The colt's notable victories made him a champion, but in  defeat, Tim Tam had achieved greatness. His remarkable courage and perseverance, despite severe hardship, had been his ultimate triumph.


Copyright 2011, 2012 by John Califano




Sunday, January 16, 2011

The Toast of New York Part Three: Great and Beautiful

Easy Goer and Sunday Silence would go their separate ways over the summer, with plans to meet up again in the autumn at Gulfstream Park for the Breeders' Cup Classic.

Supremacy
Beginning with the Belmont Stakes, Easy Goer remained in New York and gave one of the most dominating runs in history. He made four more starts over the next two months, three of these against older horses, beginning on August 5 at Saratoga in the 1 1/8 mile Whitney Handicap. After a compromised trip in close quarters, Easy Goer found a sliver of daylight, bolted to the lead about two furlongs from home and recorded a four and a half length win, finishing in 1:47 2/5, only two-fifths of a second off the stakes and track record.

Easy Goer returned two weeks later for a comfortable three length score in the 120th Travers Stakes, the three-year-old marquee event of the summer season. He covered the 1 ¼ mile distance in 2:00 4/5, the third fastest in the race's history. In his typical manner, Easy Goer stayed off the pace, but in striking position as Clever Trevor took the lead. He made his move turning into the stretch, and went in front with about a furlong remaining. Clevor Trevor's credible effort earned him the runner-up spot, nine lengths in front of Shy Tom.

At Belmont Park on September 16, Easy Goer again defeated his elders in the 1 ¼ mile Woodward Stakes. Carrying top weight of 122 on a muddy track, and stuck in tight quarters on the inside, Day was finally able to maneuver him out where he began to roll after a mile. He assumed the lead a furlong from the wire, then widened it to two lengths at the finish, giving runner-up Acedemic thirteen pounds.

Three weeks later, Easy Goer contested the 1 ½ mile Jockey Club Gold Cup, scoring his fifth consecutive win against six others, including Prized who in July, defeated Sunday Silence in the Swaps Stakes, at Hollywood Park. Getting a five pound break in weight, Easy Goer went ahead going into the far turn, shook loose of Cryptoclearance, and ran off by four lengths.

Meanwhile following his defeat to Prized, Sunday Silence romped to a six length win in the 1 ¼ mile Super Derby at Louisiana Downs, on September 24.

Easy Goer and Sunday Silence were about to meet again on the biggest stage in North American racing and Easy Goer would regain his favoritism. It seemed he had clearly validated himself as the best horse in America; but there was one hitch. Nobody bothered to tell Sunday Silence.

Game, Match, Point
The sixth Breeders' Cup event was held on November 4, 1989. Easy Goer arrived after a four week layoff and Sunday Silence after six weeks. McGaughey had enjoyed wins in the Sprint with Dancing Spree and the Juvenile with Rhythm, and now was hoping that his biggest star, Easy Goer, would give him and Mr. Phipps the Classic. A field of eight was entered, with three million dollars and  the Horse of the Year title on the line. Easy Goer and Sunday Silence, the latter under Chris McCarron, were at opposite ends of the parking lot. The Belmont Stakes winner was in post one and the Derby/Preakness victor in eight. The start was clean but Easy Goer broke a little slow and was behind most of the pack while Sunday Silence gained good position. Slew City Slew took an early lead and set a brisk pace covering the quarter in :22 2/5, with Blushing John a few lengths back and Present Value next. Mi Selecto and Sunday Silence followed them, but Easy Goer hadn't hit his stride yet. Slew City Slew maintained his lead after a half in :46 1/5, but at three-quarters, run in 1:10 2/5, Blushing John was on top. As the horses rounded the far turn, Sunday Silence made his move and Easy Goer closed in on him from the outside. But as Easy Goer advanced, Sunday Silence surged, and opened up a cushion. Down the stretch, Sunday Silence finally went past a stubborn Blushing John, while Easy Goer, now at full throttle, was eating up a lot of ground. He roared down the middle of the track, but arrived just late as Sunday Silence crossed the finish a neck in front. Blushing John salvaged third.

Although nobody knew it yet, the great rivalry was over.

Who Was Greater?
Sunday Silence had defeated Easy Goer in three of their four meetings, on America's biggest race days. Regardless of any speculation as to why Easy Goer couldn't get his rival's measure more often, it doesn't change what transpired nor should academic discussion influence their place in history. In any ranking, it is only fair that Sunday Silence be put ahead of Easy Goer. This does not necessarily mean Sunday Silence was a more talented horse, but perhaps he possessed certain athletic attributes that served him better on smaller tracks and off tracks. Sunday Silence was also quicker out of the gate, with more ability to change gears around turns, and adaptability over various track conditions. Easy Goer generally stayed off the pace, but depending on how aggressively he was ridden, could be closer. Easy Goer was particularly tough on larger ovals like Belmont Park, regardless of its surface conditions. The wide sweeping turns of "big sandy" were better for a physically imposing horse who could strike with power. Both colts demonstrated superiority at the classic distance of ten furlongs, but beyond this range, it's likely Easy Goer would have continued to prevail. It could also be speculated that Easy Goer may not have been razor sharp entering the Classic, having last raced over twelve furlongs. Coming into the race, he had made four starts after the Triple Crown series to Sunday Silence's two. Sunday Silence's largest winning margin over Easy Goer was two and a half lengths on a day when neither horse showed his top form, and his other two wins, were by very slim margins. Easy Goer's victory, albeit on his home track, was a runaway.

Could there have also been intrinsic factors? Both were game horses with great character, Sunday Silence, perhaps acquiring his virtues from adverse experiences, starting with  his close brush with death at an early age, then later from being so often snubbed and constantly asked to prove his worth. Easy Goer's qualities may have been inherited from his sire. On the one occasion when they actually went eyeball to eyeball, neither horse gave an inch, and both demonstrated tremendous courage. The ending to the Preakness probably didn't result because Sunday Silence was a better horse, but due to  trip scenarios, and positioning down the stretch.

Each horse affected the other's final place among the equine greats. Without Sunday Silence, Easy Goer would have been the 'horse of the 1980s.' Without Easy Goer, Sunday Silence would have been racing's twelveth Triple Crown winner. Sunday Silence didn't barely miss winning the Triple Crown. He never really had a chance. Comparing the two horses from this perspective could suggest that although Sunday Silence had a numerical edge, in the final analysis, the rivalry was a draw. None-the-less, when it was time for presentation of the annual Eclipse Awards for 1989, Sunday Silence was rightfully named Horse of the Year and three-year-old male champion. It must have been quite regrettable however that Easy Goer, a horse who had crushed one of Secretariat's records, run the fastest mile ever by a three-year-old, recorded the second fastest Belmont Stakes in history, and later won four more consecutive grade 1 races, three in older company, and finally lost the Breeders' Cup Classic by only a neck, went home with nothing.

Exits
Easy Goer and Sunday Silence had every intention of renewing their rivalry in 1990.  The Breeders' Cup, at Belmont Park, would have provided an opportunity for Easy Goer, on his home track, to take another swing at his formidable foe, perhaps landing his punch squarely on the jaw. After a long layoff, and training in Florida, Easy Goer made his four-year-old debut on May 16, 1990, in the seven furlong Gold Stage Stakes at Belmont Park and cruised to a seven and a half length victory in 1:22 1/5. Just twelve days later he showed up again to contest the one mile Metropolitan Handicap and for the first time in his career, the colt finished lower than second. After giving the winner, Criminal Type, seven pounds and runner-up Housebuster fourteen, Easy Goer finished a close third. It had taken a weight concession and two advancing stars to defeat him. Criminal Type would ultimately be named Horse of the Year, and Housebuster a two-time sprint champion. On July 4, Easy Goer bounced back in the 1 ¼ mile Suburban Handicap and put away six others, giving runner-up De Roche and third finisher Montubio thirteen pounds each.

Sunday Silence returned on June 3, in the 1 1/8 mile Californian at Hollywood Park and held off Stylish Winner, after giving him eleven pounds. He returned on June 24 in the 1 ¼ mile Hollywood Gold Cup, again conceded weight, and lost by a head to Criminal Type.

At almost the same moments in time, both horses would leave the racetrack for good. In a workout in late July, Easy Goer fractured a sesamoid bone and was retired. Only two weeks later, Sunday Silence sustained a ligamentous injury, and also called it quits. Thus racing saw strikingly parallel exits for two great horses, whose accomplishments and confrontations enriched it with such a beautiful array of performances.

Easy Goer bowed out with 20 starts, 14 firsts, 5 seconds, and 1 third. His wins included nine grade 1 victories, highlighted by his sweep of the Belmont Stakes, Whitney Handicap, Travers Stakes, Woodward, and Jockey Club Gold Cup. His trio of wins in the Belmont, Travers, and Gold Cup would not be duplicated for twenty years until Summer Bird did it in 2009. Except for his juvenile debut, when he lost by a nose, the only horses who could beat him were champions. Like his contemporary Sunday Silence, Easy Goer was never out of the money, and amassed earnings of $4,873,770, a bankroll almost identical to that of Sunday Silence who finished with $4,968,554, after recording 14 starts for 9 wins, and 5 seconds. Both colts would now begin the next phase of their lives.

Enshrined Forever
In retirement, American breeders embraced Easy Goer but rejected Sunday Silence, who yet again had to prove himself, this time as a stallion. And just like every other challenge, the black horse met and exceeded all expectations. Standing at stud in Japan, Sunday Silence became the country's perennial leader and one of the world's greatest sires. In 2002, Sunday Silence was struck by the terrible equine disease laminitis and on August 19, died of heart failure. He was only sixteen-years-old. Sunday Silence's life, although not full in years, had certainly been so in substance.

Easy Goer's lifespan was even shorter, but no less noteworthy. On May 12, 1994, at the young age of eight, Easy Goer died of an apparent heart attack. His brief tenure as a stallion had appeared quite promising. He sired Whitney and Travers Stakes winner Wills Way, and graded stakes winning filly Furlough. His best offspring was undoubtedly My Flag, winner of the Breeders' Cup Juvenile Fillies, Coaching Club American Oaks, Asland Stakes, and Gazelle, while graded stakes placed in several other races including the Belmont Stakes. My Flag went on to produce two-year-old filly champion Storm Flag Flying by Storm Cat.

Easy Goer was inducted into the National Museum of Racing and Hall of Fame in 1997 one year after Sunday Silence was so honored. Although Easy Goer's meetings with Sunday Silence were a large part of his remarkable career, these alone did not define him. Easy Goer was among the superstars of the last three decades, the toast of New York, and a true American equine hero. The great and beautiful chestnut, named Easy Goer, continues to be remembered with adulation and affection. His position among the equine legends is enshrined forever.


Recommended Reading

To the author's knowledge, there is no biographical work devoted to Easy Goer; however, below is a very partial list of resources to aid the individual in further study.

Online
Google” 'News Archive'

Newspaper Archive” (database available at some libraries, or with subscription).

"New York Times Article Archive"

http://www.racingmuseum.org/hall-of-fame/horses-view.asp?varID=62

Print
The Blood-Horse, Thoroughbred Champions: Top 100 Racehorses of the 20th Century (Lexington, KY: The Blood-Horse, Inc., 1999).

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

Ray Paulick, Sunday Silence Thoroughbred Legends, No. 12 (Lexington, KY: Eclipse Press, 2001).

Richard Stone Reeves; Edward L. Bowen, Belmont Park: A Century of Champions (Lexington, KY: Eclipse Press, 2005).

Copyright 2011, 2012 by John Califano

Wednesday, January 5, 2011

The Toast of New York -- Part Two: Adversary


On January 4, 1989, the winter book favorite for the Kentucky Derby was officially crowned the previous year's Eclipse two-year-old male champion. Easy Goer had been vacationing in Florida since November, enjoying much deserved down time, his activity limited to a walking routine. By mid-January the honeymoon was just about over and the colt would now begin work toward a campaign geared to maximize his chances to secure for the Phipps family and McGaughey, the most coveted victory in Thoroughbred racing. Easy Goer's Derby prep races would be the seven furlong Swale Stakes on March 4, at Gulfstream Park, followed a month later with Aqueduct's one mile Gotham, and the 1 1/8 mile Wood Memorial on April 22.

On Notice
Easy Goer had become quite imposing between the end of his two-year-old campaign and his three-year-old debut. With a bigger, stronger frame, he had been working impressively. A field of six lined up for the Swale with Easy Goer in post one. Breaking last, he was ahead of just one horse going into the backstretch as front running Trion went up by several lengths, carving out a quarter in :21 4/5, and a half in :44 3/5. Easy Goer now began to move, coming to Trion's outside before passing him in the stretch, and bounding away by more than eight lengths in the swift time of 1:22 1/5, fastest of the meeting. His strong start had put everyone on notice, and his next race would leave them gasping.

Dominance
Easy Goer returned to New York for his final two starts before heading to Kentucky. On April 8, in a small field of five, Easy Goer was parked outside for the one mile Gotham Stakes. When they left the gate, Diamond Donnie and Cantrell Road set a fast early pace. Exiting the chute, Easy Goer aggressively made a move to track the leaders, and after a wicked quarter in :22 2/5, retreated briefly. The front runners continued to blister the oval, covering the half in :44 1/5. Around the far turn Easy Goer advanced again on the outside, as they ran six furlongs in 1:08 3/5. Cantrell Road had dropped back, but Diamond Donnie went on, and coming into the stretch, Easy Goer ranged up beside him, before drawing away. By the sixteenth pole he was up by at least eight lengths and hit the wire by thirteen in an astonishing 1:32 2/5! He had crushed Secretariat's track mark by a full second and was only a tick behind Dr. Fager's world record, set in the Washington Park Handicap at Arlington Park in 1968. Easy Goer had carried 123 pounds, while the great Fager, at age four, was under 134. But Easy Goer's time was the fastest ever recorded by a three-year-old.

Two weeks later, Easy Goer carried his momentum into the two-turn Wood Memorial. He left post three in a field of six, as Diamond Donnie took the early lead, with Triple Buck in second and Easy Goer tracking in third on the outside. Around the first turn Easy Goer crept up to second. Down the backstretch Diamond Donnie stayed a length in front of Easy Goer, covering the half in :48 3/5. On the far turn Easy Goer moved up alongside the leader, before scampering away, his winning margin three lengths, with Rock Point and Triple Buck finishing second and third respectively. The time was a modest 1:50 3/5, but Easy Goer did only what was necessary, especially with the biggest race of his career in two weeks. The colt had also reached a milestone, going over the one million dollar mark in earnings. He seemed poised to enter a sphere of supremacy beyond that of any peer who sought to challenge him.

Meanwhile, a dark, powerful storm was approaching from the west.

The Black Horse
There was another colt raising a stir, in California, but so far had not received much national notoriety. His body wasn't a striking copper that glistened in the light, nor did he have the bloodlines or looks to raise eyebrows. He was more the color of coal, and like a black hole, threatened to swallow up any opponent that got in his way. He was a tough, gritty survivor who had already cheated death. He wasn't handsome or in possession of a lovely conformation. When his owner tried to sell him at auction, there was no interest, so horse and master went on home. That dark bay colt, so different from the glamour horse in the east, did have one thing in common however with Easy Goer, and it was the only quality that really mattered: he could run. His name was Sunday Silence.

Bred by Oak Cliff Thoroughbreds in Kentucky, sired by Halo out of the Understanding mare Wishing Well, Sunday Silence was Easy Goer's only legitimate contemporary, foaled the same year, and owned by Arthur Hancock III, who later shared that ownership with Dr. Ernest Gaillard, and the legendary trainer Charlie Whittingham, who conditioned him. The colt won once in three starts as a juvenile, finishing second twice, and never in stakes company. One of the horses to defeat him was a Seattle Slew son named Houston, who would return the following year. Sunday Silence grew into his shoes as a three-year-old in 1989, and like Easy Goer, would prep three times prior to the first Saturday in May, all at Santa Anita. On March 2, with regular rider Patrick Valenzuela in the irons, Sunday Silence started in a 6 ½ furlong allowance on a sloppy track, took charge early, and maintained his lead to the wire by more than four lengths. He was back on March 19 and captured the 1 1/16 mile San Felipe Handicap, by just under two lengths. On April 8, the same day Easy Goer put in his spectacular Gotham run, Sunday Silence made some fireworks of his own. In the West Coast's biggest three-year-old race, Sunday Silence destroyed ten other horses by eleven lengths in the 1 1/8 mile Santa Anita Derby in the scintillating time of 1:47 3/5.

The two best horses in the land were on a collision course.

Back to Mud
Easy Goer arrived in Kentucky with fanfare. On May 6, fifteen horses entered the Churchill Downs starting gate for the 115th edition of America's most famous race. Others in the field included Easy Goer's stablemate Awe Inspiring, who had won the Everglades and Flamingo Stakes, the Garden Stakes winner Faultless Ensign, Dansil, who had taken the Arkansas Derby, Blue Grass Stakes winner Western Playboy, and Houston, who had earlier romped in the seven furlong Bay Shore Stakes in New York, but was spanked by Sunday Silence in the Santa Anita Derby. Although he had spiked a fever prior to the race, Houston also had a distance question he needed to answer. Trained by D. Wayne Lukas, Houston was given another opportunity to make the Derby lineup and proceeded to win the one mile Derby Trial on April 29.

As the favorite, Easy Goer, attempted to become the first Wood/Derby winner since Pleasant Colony in 1981, and the first two-year-old champion to win the race since Spectacular Bid in 1979, Mother Nature again interfered. The area had received rain over the past week, temperatures were cold, and the track was muddy as it had been six months earlier when the colt had lost. In front of more than 122,000 spectators, and after a nine minute delay to reshod Triple Buck, Easy Goer was led into post thirteen. A few doors down, in post ten, was Sunday Silence. When the group was sent off, Sunday Silence came in and bumped Triple Buck as Houston and Dansil got the jump. As they went into the clubhouse turn, Easy Goer was in fifth, just behind Sunday Silence, with the quarter run in :23. Down the backstretch, Houston maintained his lead, covering the half in :46 3/5, Sunday Silence remained unchanged, with Easy Goer farther back. As they rounded the far turn, Houston was still in front but tiring as Sunday Silence came along his outside and took the lead into the stretch, where he began to run erratically, in response to his rider's whip. Houston finally dropped back, and Easy Goer, struggling over the mud, rallied but it was too late to catch Sunday Silence who had separated himself, as he approached the wire. Easy Goer was next, two and a half lengths behind the winner, and managed to hold off Awe Inspiring by a neck, while three-quarters of a length behind him was Dansil, who was only a nose behind the fifth horse Hawkster. Houston finished eighth. It wasn't the prettiest run race and neither of the leading horses looked particularly formful. Easy Goer hadn't fired, and Sunday Silence's zig zag pattern nearing the finish, had concluded in a time of 2:05, the slowest since 1958, when Tim Tam, under Pat's uncle Ismael “Milo” Valenzuela, had recorded the idential clocking on the same surface conditions. There was no question that a line could be drawn through Easy Goer's performance, after being victimized again by a muddy track he couldn't grab. While the Sunday Silence people were now beaming with confidence over a possible Triple Crown winner, Easy Goer's backers were certain their horse would return to his outstanding form, given different circumstances. In round two of what would become an epic battle, Easy Goer would try to validate his reputation as a potential superhorse, and Sunday Silence would once more have to prove he truly belonged in his arch rival's class. In their next confrontation, they would put on quite a show.

Gun Fire
In the two weeks leading up to the 114th Preakness Stakes in Baltimore, Maryland, Easy Goer was back in New York and training well. There was a question however about Sunday Silence after he had bruised his right front foot. With treatment to the area, he worked in a temporary bar shoe, and was fit and ready on race day. In the days leading up to the contest, rain had made the Pimlico track sloppy, but by Saturday, May 20, it was dry and fast. In addition to Sunday Silence and Easy Goer, others returning for the 1 3/16 mile race were Dansil, Houston, Hawkster and Northern Wolf. New shooters were Rock Point and Pulverizing. Easy Goer was again backed as favorite, and broke from post position two. Sunday Silence would get away in stall seven. When the gates opened, Easy Goer hopped in the air, losing a step and getting off last, while Sunday Silence and the outside horse, Northern Wolf, made slight contact with each other. Pulverizing started the proceedings with Houston alongside. Going around the first turn, it was Northern Wolf in charge with Houston next. Sunday Silence was just behind them, with Easy Goer farther back but gradually gaining position on the outside. The quarter was run in :23 2/5. Down the backstretch, Houston built a three length lead, but Sunday Silence rapidly advanced to his flank, with Easy Goer looming up just as quickly on the outside. With a half in :46 2/5, Easy Goer caught Sunday Silence, and moved ahead, causing the Derby winner to be momentarily sandwiched between him and Houston, and forcing Valenzuela to check. Easy Goer was moving well, having engaged Houston, but Sunday Silence quickly regained his stride after six furlongs in 1:09 3/5. Houston bowed out and the gauntlet was thrown down, as Easy Goer and Sunday Silence sped away from the others. Racing down the stretch, they were practically glued to each other in a furious dog fight, with the conditions going against Easy Goer, who was pinned to the rail. If he was going to win this race, there was no margin for error. The two horses slugged it out, neither cracking, but Easy Goer was too tightly hemmed in. What made his situation even worse was the position of his head which was turned sideways toward his rival instead of focused on the finish line. When they crossed the wire in a photo finish, the outcome was uncertain, until the nose that had crossed over first was identified. It belonged to Sunday Silence, and he had recorded a time of 1:53 4/5, the third fastest in Preakness history after Tank's Prospect's 1:52 2/5 and Gate Dancer's 1:53 3/5.

With Sunday Silence now on the verge of Triple Crown glory, the distant hoofbeats of Affirmed and Alydar seemed to be crossing the expanse of time.

Cannon Fire
It had taken Sunday Silence not one, but two wins over Easy Goer before he finally gained the respect he had already been entitled to. He had beaten the champion fair and square on an off track and again on a fast dry one, and even the staunchest Easy Goer followers had to concede that perhaps there was a horse the equal of their own. This didn't mean they were jumping off the bandwagon, and hopefully back in his familiar New York surroundings, the final leg might be different. But this time, with the anticipation of possibly the first Triple Crown winner in eleven years, Sunday Silence would be favored.

Winning horse racing's Triple Crown may be the most difficult feat in sports, and remains the greatest achievement in Thoroughbred racing. There are only eleven members of this exclusive club. The demands placed on a young three-year-old horse require not only ability, but courage, perserverance, mental and physical toughness, maturity and stamina over a period of five short weeks at various distances of ground. The last leg is the 1 ½ mile Belmont Stakes, run in cavernous Belmont Park, and for most horses, is the only time they would ever be asked to go that far. Called the “Test of the Champion,” the Belmont Stakes is run after an already long and arduous campaign. This race was also the one remaining hurdle between Sunday Silence and inclusion into that special club. Sir Barton was the first to sweep the series in 1919 and Affirmed the last in 1978. In the ensuing years, three horses, Spectacular Bid, Pleasant Colony and Alysheba, won the first two races, then faltered in the third. Swale, in 1984, won the Derby and Belmont Stakes, but finished seventh to Gate Dancer in the Preakness. Risen Star, in 1988, finished third in the Derby behind the filly Winning Colors, then won the last two races. Now destiny was beckoning Sunday Silence.

On June 10, ten horses showed up for the 121st running of the Belmont Stakes: Hawkster, fifth in the Derby and Preakness; Awe Inspiring, third in the Derby; Rock Point, third in the Preakness; Irish Actor, seventh in the Derby and later second in the Peter Pan Stakes; Triple Buck, ninth in the Derby; and the two protagonists, Sunday Silence and Easy Goer. Also making their first classic appearances were Imbibe and Fire Maker, Peter Pan winner and fourth finisher respectively.

Sunday Silence was in post six and next to him in seven was Easy Goer. After being sent on their way, Sunday Silence jumped out in front but was immediately confronted and passed by the American-bred but European raced Le Voyageur, making his first start in the States and first try on dirt. Easy Goer was also in good position between these two. Rounding the first turn, Le Voyageur maintained his lead, with Sunday Silence stalking. Easy Goer had dropped back but was still in a good spot. The quarter was :23 1/5. As they made the half in :47, Le Voyageur stayed in front into the backstretch, with Sunday Silence sitting just off him, followed by Triple Buck, and Easy Goer to his outside. Le Voyageur had opened up a few lengths, covering six furlongs in 1:11 1/5, but Sunday Silence was closing the gap, as was Easy Goer, just off his flank. Le Voyageur was stubborn and would not bow out quietly. Rounding the far turn, Sunday Silence caught the leader, after a mile in 1:35 4/5. Right at this point, Sunday Silence caught a glimpse of immortality, that was gone as quickly as it had appeared. Easy Goer was moving up fast on his outside. Now with three horses across the track, Le Voyageur grudgingly gave way. Easy Goer on his home track, with its wide sweeping turns, was not going to be denied again. As they left the far turn, and entered the stretch, Easy Goer exploded past Sunday Silence, his lead increasing with every stride. He kept pouring it on, as the connections of Sunday Silence watched their hopes evaporate. When the dust had cleared Easy Goer's winning margin was eight lengths, and he had finished his run in a blazing 2:26. Only Secretariat, the horse many felt Easy Goer might come to emulate, had ever run the race faster. Sunday Silence, crossing the wire in second, was a length ahead of the gallant Le Voyageur, who was twelve lengths ahead of Awe Inspiring. Hawkster, who finished fifth yet again, would later distinguish himself with a twelve furlong world record time on the Santa Anita turf course.

The wait for another Triple Crown winner would continue. But for Easy Goer, he was back on top of the mountain, if not standing alone, at least sharing it with a great adversary.

To Be Continued

Copyright 2011, 2012 by John Califano