Sunday, October 14, 2012

A SONG FOR DAMASCUS


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


PART THREE: THE IMPENDING STORM



After the Kentucky Derby loss, Damascus became so good that it was apparent he was headed toward at least a divisional honor, and a prominent place in racing annals. He contested the other two three-year-old spring classics and nobody could touch the bay colt, who was representing in grand style the white and red dotted silks of Mrs. Edith Bancroft. Damascus arrived at Pimlico from his Laurel Park base on Saturday morning of the Preakness Stakes, with stable pony Duffy accompanying him. The change in Damascus was evident in a much calmer, composed horse than the agitated, nervous sort he had been at Churchill Downs that conceivably cost him Triple Crown immortality.

Balancing the Triple

The 92nd running of the Preakness offered a purse of $194,000 with the winner earning $141,500. When the gates opened, Damascus, under Bill Shoemaker, breaking from post position two, among a field of ten, was back in eighth, but went to the lead in the stretch and came home two and one-quarter lengths in front of In Reality. In third, another four lengths behind In Reality, was Proud Clarion. The winner covered the 1 3/16 mile classic in 1:55 1/5, then the second fastest effort in history. Damascus, an entry with Celtic Air, saw the latter set the pace, along with the Eddie Neloy trained Great Power. In the far turn, In Reality, Damascus, and Proud Clarion  made their bids, with Damascus prevailing.

Belmont Park was closed from 1963-1967 due to construction of a new grandstand. Damascus had a three furlong breeze at Delaware Park before vanning to Aqueduct for the 99th edition of the 1 ½ mile Belmont Stakes. Proud Clarion also worked the same distance at Aqueduct. Damascus drew post one, while Proud Clarion, the second choice, would leave from four. Braulio Baeza would also replace Bobby Ussery aboard Proud Clarion, and try to put his mount closer to the pace. Two horses expected to set the pace, were Prinkipo and Canadian-bred Cool Reception. Prinkipo was a bay colt by Belmont Stakes winner and 1952 Horse of the Year One Count. He had won his last three races on the front end by wide margins. Cool Reception, a chestnut colt, sired by Neartic, had been the top two-year-old male in Canada.

Damascus broke about sixth in the field of nine runners, but quickly moved up closer to the pace, took charge a furlong out from home, and scampered away by two and a half lengths. His win was tragically marred by an injury to Cool Reception. The horse fractured his right front foreleg during the race yet continued gallantly the last one-sixteenth of a mile and finished second, a half-length ahead of Gentleman James. An operation was later performed in hopes of saving Cool Reception but the colt reinjured the extremity after the surgery and had to be euthanized. The courageous Cool Reception would eventually be inducted into the Canadian Horse Racing Hall of Fame.

Damascus earned $104,950 after posting a time of 2:28 4/5. Proud Clarion, finishing out of the money, would now get a vacation. The Triple Crown had taken a lot out of him and he had lost weight.

Damascus’ trainer, Frank Whiteley, was highly confident in Damascus and felt that perhaps with two-thirds of the Triple Crown locked up, his colt had already earned at least divisional honors, and perhaps Horse of the Year; however, the general sentiment was that for Damascus to be so honored, he would have to defeat Dr. Fager.

Magical Summer

Beginning in the middle of June until early September, Damascus raced six times. On June 17, the colt faced five horses at Delaware Park, in the 1 1/8 mile Leonard Richards Stakes, with Ron Turcotte riding. With minimal effort, he won by three and one-quarter lengths after giving runner-up Misty Cloud and third finisher Favorable Turn, seven pounds.

On July 8 Damascus made his first start against older horses, with Bill Shoemaker back aboard. His reputation had climbed so high that he was required to give weight to his elders. Carrying 121 pounds, in Delaware Park’s 1 1/16 mile William DuPont Handicap, Damascus lost by a mere nose to the four-year-old Exceedingly, under only 113, with the five-year-old Flag Raiser, under 114, four lengths behind Damascus in third.

Damascus - Fager

Returning to Aqueduct on July 15, Damascus would next run in the 1 ¼ mile Dwyer Handicap. On the same day, at Rockingham Park, Dr. Fager was entered in the Rockingham Special, covering 1 1/8 miles, over fast conditions. Since his win over Damascus in the Gotham in March, Dr. Fager had annexed the one mile Withers Stakes in a rapid 1:33 4/5. He then proceeded to win the 1 1/8 mile Jersey Derby at Garden State Park by more than six lengths but was disqualified and placed last, the only time in his career when he was out of the money. On June 24, Dr. Fager destroyed a field of ten in the one mile Arlington Park Classic by ten lengths, over sloppy conditions.

The Dwyer, worth $75,000-added, was over slop. Damascus was in a field of nine and would carry 128, conceding as much as twenty-two pounds. He would collect $54,178 of the total $83,350 if he won. Dr. Fager, carrying 124 in the Rockingham Special, gave three to twelve pounds to six other horses. The favored Fager would net $53,802 of the $85,400 purse if he was victorious.

As the second choice in the Dwyer, Bold Hour contested the early pace, while favored Damascus broke last from post six, and rallied late to catch lightly regarded Favorable Turn, who ran one of his best races. With Shoemaker’s stout encouragement, two furlongs out Damascus hit the wire three-quarters of a length in front of the game Favorable Turn, under 112 pounds. Bold Hour faded, finishing sixth.

At Rockingham, Dr. Fager took charge early, led the entire way, and won easily, setting a track record of 1:48 1/5. Tentative plans called for a meeting between Dr. Fager and Damascus, at Saratoga on August 19, in the 1 ¼ mile Travers Stakes.

Damascus was again the favorite to capture the 57th running of the 1 1/8 mile American Derby, at Arlington Park, on August 5. Dr. Fager would start again on September 2 in the New Hampshire Sweep Classic at Rockingham, over 1 ¼ miles, and carry 120 pounds.

Damascus breezed three furlongs the day before his race. Assigned 126 pounds, he would again face In Reality, under 120. In Reality was a son of 1959 American Sprint Champion Intentionally, and his dam, My Dear Girl, was by Rough ‘n Tumble, the sire of  Dr. Fager.

Trained by “Sunshine” Calvert,  In Reality had already made sixteen starts and finished unplaced only once. By the end of his career, he would boast a superb racing resume with only one other non-placing. A tail-male descendent of Man o’War, and also inbred to Man o’War, 4Sx4D, In Reality would help sustain the Man o’War sire line, which continues today by his descendent Tiznow.

There were five others in the line-up, including front runners Barbs Delight, who had won the Assault Handicap on July 22, and Diplomat Way. Hollywood Derby winner Tumble Wind was also entered.

The race was no contest as Damascus won by seven lengths, once again coming from well back with his patented stretch run. His finishing time of 1:46 4/5 was a track record. In Reality was next, followed by the honest Favorable Turn .

Domination

The Travers meeting between Damascus and Dr. Fager fell through when Dr. Fager caught a virus.

Damascus was still on course for Saratoga’s signature three-year-old event. The Travers Stakes had a long, rich history. Interestingly, the inaugural running, in 1864 of this upstate New York race, was won by a horse named Kentucky in a time of 3:18 ¾ when it was contested at 1 ¾ miles. The race had also covered various other distances including 1 ½ miles, 1 ¼ miles, 1 1/8 miles, and finally back to 1 ¼ miles, where it has remained since 1904. To this writer’s knowledge the stakes record for the current distance is still 2:00 flat, by General Assembly, a son of Secretariat, and posted in 1979. From 1927-1932 the race was called the Travers Midsummer Derby, and is still known figuratively today as the “Mid-Summer Derby.” It is reasonable to suggest that the Travers Stakes is the most prestigious three-year-old contest outside of the Triple Crown.  Past winners include Twenty Grand, Granville, Eight Thirty, Whirlaway, Shut Out, One Count, Native Dancer, Gallant Man (GB), Sword Dancer, and Buckpasser. In 1978, Affirmed won the race only to be disqualified. Other winners have been Arts and Letters, Honest Pleasure, Forty Niner, Easy Goer, and Holy Bull, while recently the race has seen Medaglia d’Oro, Birdstone, Bernardini, and Street Sense stand in its winner’s circle. In 1920, Man o’War defeated just two other horses, one who had handed him his only career defeat when he was two, and the other who had put him to the test in the Dwyer Stakes, Upset and John P. Grier respectively.  In 1982, Runaway Groom defeated all three winners of the Triple Crown classics, Kentucky Derby winner Gato Del Sol, who finished unplaced, Preakness winner Aloma’s Ruler, who finished second, and Belmont Stakes winner Conquistador Cielo, who arrived in third.

The 98th Travers Stakes had only four runners, Damascus, Reason to Hail, Tumiga, and Gala Performance. The purse was $75,000-added for a total of $80,100, with the victor collecting $52,065. When they were sent away, Gala Performance and Tumiga broke quickest and gained a huge advantage. Shoemaker, aboard Damascus, was undaunted and began to urge his mount after four furlongs. Flying over the slop, Damascus, who had been as much as sixteen lengths back, made up ten lengths with devastating quickness, and with incredible acceleration caught the leaders in another furlong, then swiftly passed them, widening his lead in the turn for home. In an unabashed display of superiority, Damascus' winning margin at the finish was twenty-two lengths. He also equaled the track record of 2:01 3/5, first set by Jaipur in 1962, and Buckpasser in 1966. It was his ninth win in eleven outings on the year, eight of them stakes, and his career earnings were now at $584,161.

On September 2, Dr. Fager ripped around the Rockingham Park track to win the $265,900, 1 ¼ mile New Hamsphire Sweepstakes Classic, and smash the track mark with a finishing time of 1:59 4/5.  The incredible Fager defeated In Reality by one and a quarter lengths, although in receipt of  six pounds from the runner-up, with Barbs Delight third.

Two days after Dr. Fager’s blistering performance, Damascus made his next start in the 1 1/8 mile Aqueduct Stakes, where he was supposed to meet reigning Horse of the Year and champion Buckpasser; however, the four-year-old colt had irritated his right front foot in a workout and missed the race. Damascus again won rather effortlessly by two lengths, under 125 pounds, and conceding weight to the next two arrivals, Ring Twice under 119, and Straight Deal under 116.

Damascus and Dr. Fager were both quickly earning a future seat with racing’s all-time greats. Another horse already had his place reserved.

Buckpasser

“He was a perfectly conformed, nearly 17 hand horse…. In his two-year-old debut in 1965, he finished fourth in a 5 ½ furlong maiden special weight. He would never be unplaced again…. And even after missing the Triple Crown races, he was voted Horse of the Year at age three.”

Buckpasser was a bay colt, owned and bred by Ogden Phipps. Foaled in Kentucky, in 1963, he was sired by the great handicap champion and 1953 Horse of the Year Tom Fool. Buckpasser’s dam, Busanda, was sired by Triple Crown winner and 1937 Horse of the Year War Admiral. Busanda was also a multiple stakes winner, among her credits the 1951 Suburban Handicap over males.”  (1)

Buckpasser was first voted a champion at age two, winning five straight stakes races. Then at age three he was simply sensational, sporting an almost unblemished record. After finishing second in a seven furlong allowance to begin his sophomore campaign, Buckpasser rattled off thirteen straight victories and became Thoroughbred racing’s first three-year-old millionaire with a bankroll of $1,038,369.  He won at a wide range of distances, from five furlongs to two miles, among his victories the Leonard Richards Handicap, the mile Arlington Classic Handicap, where he set a world record of 1:32 3/5, the Brooklyn Handicap, Travers and Woodward Stakes, Lawrence Realization, and Jockey Club Gold Cup. Buckpasser built up an extraordinary record despite a quarter crack to his right hoof that kept him out of the spring classics. “In November, he was named Horse of the Year, three-year-old male champion, and top handicap horse by Daily Racing Form and Morning Telegraph.” (1)

On the last day of 1966, Buckpasser won Santa Anita’s seven furlong Malibu Stakes and came right back on January 14, 1967 to begin his four-year-old season with another win at the venue in the 1 1/8 mile San Fernando Stakes. He then returned to New York to finish out his extraordinary career. At Aqueduct, on June 17, Buckpasser made his first start on grass, in the 1 5/8 mile Bowling Green Handicap under 135 pounds. His fifteen race winning streak was broken by stablemate Poker, under a feathery 112, with Assagai in second under 127, and. Buckpasser third.  Although failing to equal Citation’s consecutive win record, Buckpasser did eventually win sixteen straight races on the dirt, capturing the 1 ¼ mile Suburban Handicap, carrying 133 pounds, and giving the second and third horses twenty-two and twenty-four pounds respectively. Buckpasser had captured two-thirds of the New York Handicap Triple Crown, with the Suburban and one mile Metropolitan Handicap wins, the latter under 130 pounds. A win in the Brooklyn Handicap would make him only the fourth horse to capture all three handicap races, after Whisk Broom II in 1913, his own sire Tom Fool in 1953, and Kelso in 1961;  but he again had to give enormous weight allowances. “Assigned 136 pounds, against four other runners, Buckpasser was a distant second, as Handsome Boy, in receipt of twenty pounds, romped home by eight lengths in a blistering 2:00 1/5, just a few ticks off the track record.” (1)  Buckpasser was denied his handicap triple, but considering the circumstances, he had still performed like the champion he was.

Handsome Boy

Handsome Boy was a four-year-old colt in 1967, owned by Hobeau Farm, and a grandson of the great Count Fleet.  Sired by Beau Gar, he was out of the Nasrullah mare Marullah. At age three, Handsome Boy had defeated older horses in the 1 ¼ mile Trenton Handicap. He also won the 1 1/16 mile Hawthorne Diamond Jubilee Handicap, and in 1967 had already taken the one mile Washington Park Handicap. He would later run second in the two mile Jockey Club Gold Cup.  And he had defeated Buckpasser. This was obviously a very nice horse.

Great Power, Hedevar

Wheatley Stable's Great Power was a three-year-old, and a stablemate of Buckpasser. He was sired by Bold Ruler out of the Ambiorix (FR.) mare High Voltage. As a two-year-old, Great Power had won the six furlong Sapling Stakes at Monmouth Park, defeating In Reality, and equaled the stakes record of 1:09 2/5. He also won the Delaware Valley Handicap.

The five-year-old Hedevar was a stablemate of Damascus. An extremely fast, front running bay colt, Hedevar was another grandson of Count Fleet. On June 18, 1966, in Arlington Park’s Equipoise Mile, Hedevar equaled the world record of 1:33 1/5, which was eclipsed by Buckpasser the following week.

Six

Handsome Boy, Great Power, and Hedevar planned to meet up on September 30, 1967, at Aqueduct, in the 1 ¼ mile Woodward Stakes. They weren’t coming alone. Joining them would be Damascus, Dr. Fager, and Buckpasser.

It was time for everyone to put their cards on the table.

To be continued…

Note

1.     John Califano, “A Salute to Buckpasser,” Gallop Out, http://wwwgallopout.com/2010_11_01archive.html

Bibliography

A.P., “In Reality Top Choice In Richest-Ever Preakness,” The Palm Beach Post, May 20, 1967, p. 15.

U.P.I., “Damascus Avenges Derby Defeat,” The Pittsburgh Press, May 21, 1967 Section 4.

A.P., “Damascus Storms To Preakness Win” The Gazette, May 22, 1967, p. 21.

A.P., “Damascus’ Trainer Aims to Keep Horse Calm Until Belmont,” St. Joseph (Mo.) News-Press, June 1, 1967, p. 4C.

U.P.I., “It’s Proud Clarion Versus Damascus In Belmont Field,” Sarasota Journal, June 2, 1967 p. 20.

A.P., “Belmont favorites ready say trainers,” The Leader-Post, June 3, 1967, p. 23.

A.P., “’Damascus’ Wins Belmont Stakes,” The Daily News of the Virgin Islands, June 5, 1967.

U.P.I., “Damascus’ Trainer Says He’s The Best,” The Pittsburgh Press, June 5, 1967, p. 43.

Associated Press, “Top Horses In Action On Day’s Racing Card,” The Morning Record, June 17, 1967 p. 8.

A.P., “Stablemate Poker ruins Buckpasser,” Saskatoon Star-Phoenix, June 19, 1967, p. 19.

A.P., “For Damascus not much sweat,” The Leader-Post, June 19, 1967, p. 25.

A.P., “Damascus Bows To Older Horse,” The Tuscaloosa News, July 9, 1967, p. 12.

A.P., “Racing roundup,” Saskatoon Star-Phoenix, July 10, 1967, p. 16.

Associated Press, “Today an All-Star Day for Racing,” St. Joseph (Mo.) News-Press, July 15, 1967, p. 2B.

Dave P’Hara (Associated Press Sportswriter), “Dr. Fager Snaps Record In Easy Rockingham Win,” Ocala Star-Banner, July 16, 1967, p. 17.

A.P., “Damascus Cops Dwyer,” Ocala Star-Banner, July 16, 1967.

A.P., “Damascus, Dr. Fager Head For Showdown At Saratoga,” The Herald-Tribune, July 17, 1967, p. 17.

A.P., “Buckpasser Is Shocked ‘Handsomely,’” The Herald-Tribune, July 23, 1967.

A.P., “Damascus Solid Pick To Take American,” The Herald-Tribune, August 5, 1967, p. 14.

A.P., “Damascus Is Solid Choice To Win In American Derby,” The News and Courier, August 5, 1967, p. 3-B, col. 2.

“Intentionally,” Pedigree Online Thoroughbred Database, http://www.pedigreequery.com/intentionally

Thoroughbred Times Co. Inc., The Original Thoroughbred Times Racing Almanac 2009 (Lexington, KY: Thoroughbred Times Books, 2008), p. 111.

“In Reality,” Pedigree Online Thoroughbred Database, http://www.pedigreequery.com/in+reality

“In Reality,” equineline.com, http://www.equineline.com/Free-5X-Pedigree.cfm?page_state=ORDER_AND_CONFIRM&reference_number=228370&registry=T&horse_name=In Reality&dam_name=My Dear Girl&foaling_year=1964&nicking_stats_indicator=Y

A.P., “Damascus Takes American Derby,” The Modesto Bee, August 6, 1967, p. B9, col. 1.

A.P., “Damascus Shatters Arlington Record,” Palm Beach Post-Times, August 6, 1967, p. 1, col. 5.

“Damascus Arrives at Spa Track,” Schenectady Gazette, August 9, 1967, p. 26.

Daily Racing Form, The American Racing Manual 1992 (Hightstown, N.J.: Daily Racing Form Inc., 1992), pp. 1034-1035.

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), p. 297.

Thoroughbred Times Co. Inc., The Original Thoroughbred Times Racing Almanac 2009, pp. 478, 477.

Abstract, “Dr. Fager’s Training Is Interrupted by Virus; Tartan Stable Colt Is Forced out of Travers on Aug. 19,” The New York Times, August 4, 1967.

A.P., “Damascus Roars To Win Travers And Tie Record,” Spartanburg Herald-Journal, August 20, 1967.

A.P., “Damascus Wins Travers Race,” The Modesto Bee, August 20, 1967, p. B-8.

A.P., “Pretense Is Upset In $113,000 Race,” The Modesto Bee, August 20, 1967, p. B-8, col. 5.

A.P., “Foot Injury Bothers Buckpasser; May Miss Match With Damascus,” The Spokesman-Review, September 3, 1967, p. 3.

Times Wire Services, “Buckpasser Out of Stakes; Dr. Fager ‘Ready To Go,’”St. Petersburg Times, September 4, 1967, p. 4-C.

Associated Press, “Buckpasser Out; Race Of Year Off,” Ocala Star-Banner, September 4, 1967, p. 9.

A.P., “Dr. Fager Takes Rich Race,” The Gazette, September 5, 1967, p. 30.

Daily Racing Form, Champions, p. 203.

A.P., “Damascus Wins,” The Gazette, September 5, 1967, p. 30.

A.P., “Woodward May Match Big Three,” The Modesto Bee, September 5, 1967, p. A-6.

Richard Stone Reeves; Edward L. Bowen, “Buckpasser,” Belmont Park: A Century of Champions (Lexington, KY: Eclipse Press, 2005), p. 86.

 “Handsome Boy,” Pedigree Online Thoroughbred Database, http://www.pedigreequery.com/handsome+boy

Daily Racing Form, The American Racing Manual 1992, pp. 1037, 836.

“Great Power,” Pedigree Online Thoroughbred Database, http://www.pedigreequery.com/great+power

Lucy Heckman, Damascus Thoroughbred Legends No. 22 (Lexington, KY: Eclipse Press, 2004) p. 90.

Abstract, A.P., “Tosmah Is Second, A Length Behind; Blum Guides Victor Home in 1:33 1/5 for $9.20 Pay Off Bold Bidder Is Third,” The New York Times, June 18, 1966.

Copyright 2012 by John Califano

Sunday, September 30, 2012

A SONG FOR DAMASCUS


(This is the second of a six part series.)


PART TWO: DEVELOPMENT


 Beginnings

While at Jonabell Farm, there was nothing remarkable about the very young Damascus, who did not stand out in the crowd, and had no issues or idiosyncrasies. Sent to Virginia for training as a racehorse, the colt would turn into a handsome bay, standing around fifteen, three to sixteen hands tall. A very intelligent horse, he was well put together, and strong, especially in the hind end. Other than a right rear half pastern, and a small star on his forehead, he had no physical markings.

Unlike his sire, Sword Dancer, who began to race early, and often, but didn’t experience success until much later, Damascus would not make his juvenile debut until almost the end of September, and it was apparent early on that he was a gifted and special athlete.

Preliminaries

Damascus would be trained throughout his career by Maryland-based Frank Whiteley, who had already attained prominence with Tom Rolfe, Three-Year-Old Champion Male in 1965, after winning several key stakes races, including the Preakness Stakes. Tom Rolfe, by Ribot (ITY), also finished a respectable sixth among twenty entries in that year’s Prix de l’Arc de Triomphe behind the European superhorse Sea Bird (FR). Whiteley’s fame would soar with Damascus and continue into the next decade.

Damascus would have six different riders during his career, but the man who sat on his back in twenty of his first twenty-two starts was Bill Shoemaker. The colt made four starts as a juvenile, his first two at Aqueduct, beginning on September 28, 1966, in a seven furlong Maiden Special Weight, among a field of fourteen. Breaking from post eleven, he was well back early, advanced to mid-pack, and closed well enough to finish second, two and a half lengths shy of Comprador, at equal weights of 122 pounds. He contested the same distance two weeks later, again in a field of fourteen, under 122, and proceeded to run off by eight lengths in 1:24 3/5. Seventeen days later, at Laurel Park, and again covering seven furlongs, he went gate to wire, destroying six opponents, his winning margin twelve lengths. On November 30, he was back at Aqueduct and captured the one mile Remsen Stakes, in a drive, against thirteen other runners on a track labeled “good.”

His juvenile year over, Damascus had posted three wins and a second in four starts with $25,865 in earnings.  He had shown plenty of upside during a good campaign, but one which did not earn him a championship.  Successor, a Bold Ruler bay colt, out of the Princequillo (GB) mare Misty Morn, and conditioned by Eddie Neloy, was voted Two-Year-Old Champion Male after making nine starts with wins in three stakes. Successor was also a stablemate of Buckpasser, who would be named Horse of the Year. After losing the seven furlong Cowdin, ten days later Successor won the one mile Champagne, splitting this pair with the John Nerud trained prodigy Dr. Fager.

Tommy Trotter assigned Damascus 119 pounds on the Experimental Free Handicap for incoming sophomores. Successor topped the division at 126 pounds, and Dr. Fager received 125.

Rapidly rising

Damascus began his three-year-old campaign on March 11, 1967, at Pimlico, with Maryland rider Nick Shuk in the irons. In a six furlong allowance, the colt had a dull break, then endured a troubled trip, yet still managed to prevail by a head over Solar Bomb at equal weights of 122.

Returning to Aqueduct for his next three races, and Shoemaker back aboard, Damascus won the seven furlong Bay Shore Stakes impressively, with the margin two and a half lengths. It was the colt’s fifth consecutive victory, and with the Kentucky Derby six weeks away, his reputation was rapidly rising. His next start along the way was the one mile Gotham Stakes on April 15, where he would face eight other runners, among them, and making his three-year-old debut, Dr. Fager.

Dr. Fager

Dr. Fager was a Florida-bred bay colt, owned and bred by Tartan Farm, and sired by the bay horse Rough ‘n Tumble, a black-type winner from sixteen starts. Dr. Fager’s dam was the Better Self bay mare Aspidistra, a Kentucky-bred winner from fourteen starts. Like Damascus, Dr. Fager shared lineage to the Teddy (FR.) line, although he wasn’t a tail-male or tail-female descendent. The Tartan colt was inbred 4SX5D through his paternal grand-dam, Roused, who was sired by Bull Dog (FR.), a son of Teddy, and again on the bottom, through his second dam, Tilly Rose, who was sired by Bull Brier, a son of Bull Dog. Teddy could also be seen in the fifth generation through Dr. Fager's broodmare sire Better Self. In addition, Bee Mac, the dam of Better Self, was a daughter of the great War Admiral, and hence gave Fager a distant relation to Man o'War.

Dr. Fager was sixteen hands, well proportioned but not overly muscular. He appeared to be a red tinted bay compared to the brown bay Damascus. Fager also had a small star on his forehead.

To say that Dr. Fager was a fast horse would be like saying that Marilyn Monroe was an attractive woman or that Fred Astaire was a good dancer and leaving it at that. There are just no sufficient superlatives to accurately describe the phenom of speed, spirit, and power who was Dr. Fager. If one looked for the word “freak” in a dictionary, it would not be surprising to see a thumbnail of Dr. Fager next to the definition. All kidding aside, it is enough to simply state that Dr. Fager would become arguably the swiftest Thoroughbred in history. His strength, vitality, eagerness to compete, and aggressive style were his trademark, and the headstrong, hot blooded personality, and aversion to being challenged on the lead by another horse, were part of what defined him, but could also be his undoing. Dr. Fager’s extraordinary demonstrations of speed were almost beyond belief, particularly considering the tremendous imposts he would be required to carry later in his career.

Moving along the journey of Damascus, there will be more to say about the great Fager.

Snapped

Nine horses showed up for the $57,800 Gotham, with Damascus breaking from the very outside. In post five was Dr. Fager, under rider Manuel Ycaza. When the gates sprung, Damascus broke sharply, but the speedy Royal Malabar eventually took the lead with Damascus and Dr. Fager in pursuit. Royal Malabar was up by  about three lengths in the backstretch, but was done exiting the far turn. Damascus went ahead but Dr. Fager soon ranged up on his outside, and the two horses roared down the stretch, locked in combat, leaving the others behind. Damascus was in tight, close to the rail with Dr. Fager next to him. Fager began moving away, hitting the wire a half-length ahead. After fractions of :23 3/5, :46 1/5, and 1:10 2/5, Dr. Fager finished the job in 1:35 1/5. Damascus' win streak had been snapped and Shoemaker was self-critical, feeling he had moved the horse prematurely, and then costing him a positional advantage.

The great rivalry had begun and Dr. Fager had drawn first blood; however, the two horses would have to wait until autumn to resume their private war. In the meantime, Damascus would stay on course for the Triple Crown. Dr. Fager would bypass the classics and go elsewhere.

Build Up

While Dr. Fager waited almost a month to make his next start, Whiteley reeled Damascus back one week later in the East’s premiere Derby prep, the 43rd  edition of the Wood Memorial at Aqueduct, a 1 1/8 mile two-turn race with a purse totaling $112,400. Damascus had never gone over a mile, so this would be a good test of his stamina. He was even money, facing eight rivals, including a horse named Brunch. A stablemate of Dr. Fager, Brunch was unraced at two, but had won all three of his starts thus far as a three-year-old. He was the second choice and Ycaza would ride him. Brunch set the early pace, but wouldn’t be around at the end, finishing last as Damascus left no doubt of his superiority, disposing of his rivals by six lengths in 1:49 3/5 under the classic weight of 126 pounds. The winner collected $73,060, with his next stop Louisville, Kentucky on May 6.

The fever

The Derby picture wasn’t an open and shut case of Damascus versus everybody else, although legitimately it could be viewed that way, especially with Dr. Fager out of it. There were other horses who wanted their say including California-bred Ruken, the Santa Anita Derby winner, who went on to defeat Successor by a nose in a seven furlong allowance at Keeneland on April 15, then won the Stepping Stone Purse, over the same distance, two weeks later at Churchill Downs, in a field that included In Reality. Successor, who would also contest the Run for the Roses, dropped his next start as well, finishing fourth in Keeneland's 1 1/8 mile Blue Grass Stakes on April 27, as the previous year’s Arlington-Washington Futurity winner, Diplomat Way, romped home by eight lengths. Dawn Glory, who had set a track record in the 1 1/8 mile Survivor Stakes, and finished third in the Wood, would now avoid Damascus and defected. Another highly regarded horse was Flamingo Stakes winner Reflected Glory, but due to a sore shin, would also sit the Derby out. Two sons of Hail to Reason would run. Reason to Hail, a dark bay/brown gelding, who had finished third in both the Florida Derby and Gotham Stakes behind winners In Reality and Dr. Fager respectively, and won the California Derby at Golden Gate Fields, was in. The other Hail to Reason entry, a bay colt and runner-up in the Blue Grass, was Proud Clarion.  

Dancing

The preliminaries now over, it was time for the 93rd running of “the greatest two minutes in sports.”  The Kentucky Derby would have fourteen horses try for their moment of glory, the biggest slice of the $162,200 purse, and a permanent place in the history books. The Churchill Downs track had also strengthened security for fear of a threatened demonstration by protestors who were in favor of an open housing law, but the day would be peaceful.

From the rail out were second choice Ruken, favorite Damascus, Dr. Isby, Diplomat Way, Barbs Delight, Successor, Proud Clarion, Dawn Glory, Field Master, Gentleman James, Lightning Orphan, Second Encounter, Reason To Hail, and Ask the Fare.

Shoemaker, piloting Damascus, was looking for his fourth Derby victory. He had won in 1955, aboard the great California-bred Swaps, and again in 1959, when Tomy Lee (GB) had defeated Damascus’ sire by a nose. Shoemaker’s third win had come in 1965 aboard Lucky Debonair. The jockey would probably have won in 1957 aboard Gallant Man (GB) if he hadn’t misjudged the finish line and prematurely stood up in the irons, costing his mount the race. It gave Calumet Farm’s Iron Liege just enough time to hit the finish ahead of him. In 1964, Shoemaker bypassed the chance to ride Northern Dancer, instead hopping aboard Hill Rise, the latter who finished second behind the Canadian colt.

Prior to the Derby, Reason to Hail, trained by Hirsch Jacobs, developed a mild case of hives. A few horses worked, including Damascus, who covered three furlongs in :35 3/5, and the Lloyd Gentry trained Proud Clarion, who had a blow out at the same distance, followed by a gallop. Several other horses had gallops or walks.

The weather forecast called for possible showers.

Not today

Damascus would later define himself for all time, but it would not be in racing’s most famous event.

When the gates opened, Barbs Delight was away first, with Diplomat Way and Damascus following his lead. Damascus dropped to fourth as Dawn Glory and Diplomat Way kept after the pacemaker, who carved out fractions of :22 1/5, :46 3/5, and six furlongs in 1:10 4/5. With a mile covered in 1:36, going around the far turn, Barbs Delight’s lead was shrinking, with Diplomat Way and Damascus still giving chase in the stretch. Damascus, who had been quite nervous and even upset before the race, was rank during it. Meanwhile, coming from well behind, Proud Clarion had put himself in the act under rider Bobby Ussery, and as Damascus faltered, Proud Clarion became the new leader, sustaining his run to the wire in a time of 2:00 3/5, to record the third fastest Derby time in history, just off Northern Dancer’s record of 2:00 and only a tick slower than 1962 winner Decidedly’s 2:00 2/5. One length behind in second was Barbs Delight, and Damascus was third, four lengths behind the winner, on a track which played fast.

Proud Clarion’s owner, John Galbreath and his Darby Dan Farm, also won the race in 1963 with Chateaugay, who went on to finish second in the Preakness Stakes and return to the winner’s circle after capturing the Belmont Stakes. Proud Clarion, who on the year had previously won only two sprint races at Keeneland, in addition to his runner-up effort in the Blue Grass, could now try to emulate, and perhaps surpass, Chateaugay. The Derby had been Ussery’s first time on the horse. With four previous Derbies to his credit, he had ridden Bally Ache to a second place finish behind Venetian Way in the 1960 running. Proud Clarion, who collected $119,700, hadn’t even been a sure bet to run until his effort in the Blue Grass. The horse had no rider until just a few days before the race, had worked poorly earlier in the week but picked it up in a later drill on Friday. In 1966, Gentry had conditioned the brilliant Graustark, who missed the Derby after a fracture was discovered in his right hind, and which subsequently ended his career.

Damascus earned $12,500 on one of the worst days of his career. He probably would have performed closer to his true form had it not been for the fact that a stable pony named Duffy was not with him prior to the race. With the ongoing attention, and noise from the large Derby crowd, Damascus became extremely worked up, and brought this to the track. In an effort to prevent this situation from happening again, Duffy became a companion for Damascus, accompanying him on race days. The pony had a calming effect on the colt, which might have made a big difference in the Derby.

Damascus would make eleven more starts in 1967. The Derby loss, although disappointing, would become almost a footnote to what was ahead, and how the summer and fall would shape his eventual place in history.

To be continued…

Bibliography

Lucy Heckman, Damascus Thoroughbred Legends No. 22 (Lexington, KY: Eclipse Press, 2004), p. 38.

Richard Stone Reeves; Edward L. Bowen, “Damascus,” Belmont Park: A Century of Champions (Lexington, KY: Eclipse Press, 2005), p. 90.

Audrey Pavia; Janice Posnikoff, DVM, Horses For Dummies (Hoboken, N.J.: Wiley Publishing, Inc., 2005), pp. 24-25.

Heckman, Damascus, pp. 40-41.

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), p. 227.

Daily Racing Form, Champions, pp. 202, 225.

Heckman, Damascus, pp. 49-51.

From abstract, Joe Nichols, “Damascus Takes $28,600 Bay Shore,” The New York Times, March 26, 1967, p. 157.

C.P., ‘Racing Roundup,’ “Convincing win by Damascus in Bay Shore worth $28,600 at Aqueduct,” Saskatoon Star-Phoenix,  March 27, 1967, p.16.

From abstract, Joe Nichols, “Damascus Rated 2-1 and Dr. Fager 5-2 in Aqueduct’s Gotham Stakes Today,” The New York Times, April 15, 1967, p. 24.

“Rough ‘N Tumble,” equineline.com, http://www.equineline.com/Free-5X-Pedigree.cfm?page_state=ORDER_AND_CONFIRM&reference_number=425257&registry=T&horse_name=Rough'n Tumble&dam_name=Roused&foaling_year=1948&nicking_stats_indicator=Y

“Dr. Fager” equineline.com, http://www.equineline.com/Free-5X-Pedigree.cfm?page_state=ORDER_AND_CONFIRM&reference_number=133321&registry=T&horse_name=Dr. Fager&dam_name=Aspidistra&foaling_year=1964&nicking_stats_indicator=Y

“Aspidistra,” equineline.com, http://www.equineline.com/Free-5X-Pedigree.cfm?page_state=ORDER_AND_CONFIRM&reference_number=20458&registry=T&horse_name=Aspidistra&dam_name=Tilly Rose&foaling_year=1954&nicking_stats_indicator=Y

Richard Stone Reeves; Edward L. Bowen, “Dr. Fager,” Belmont Park: A Century of Champions (Lexington, KY: Eclipse Press, 2005), pp. 92-93.

Steve Haskin, Dr. Fager, Thoroughbred Legends No.2 (Lexington, KY: Eclipse Press, 2000), p. 62.

A.P., “Dr. Fager’s Derby Status Rests On Owner Of Colt,” The Morning Record, April 17, 1967, p. 9.

Orlo Robertson (Associated Press Sports Writer), “Derby field is wide open,” Hopkinsville Kentucky New Era, April 17, 1967, p. 12.

A.P., “Kentucky Hopefuls in Wood Memorial; 9 Starters Ready To Go at Big A,”Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, April 22, 1967, p. 9.

A.P., “Dawn Glory’s Had Enough of Damascus,” The Free Lance-Star, April 24, 1967, p. 13.

Orlo Robertson (Associated Press Sports Writer), “Damascus Wood Showing Whittles Field For Derby,” The Park City Daily News, April 24, 1967, p. 10.

A.P., “Damascus Big Choice To Annex Kentucky Derby Next Saturday,” The Blade, April 30, 1967.

A.P., “It’s Derby Day In Louisville,” The Palm Beach Post, May 6, 1967, p. 15.

A.P., “Proud Clarion answers call; Longshot’s charge nets Derby crown,” The Leader-Post, May 8, 1967, p. 25.

A.P., “Mud-Loving Jockey Rode Derby Victor,” The News and Courier, May 7, 1967.

A.P., “Proud Clarion Wins In Derby,” The News and Courier, May 7, 1967.

A.P., “Says Trainer: ‘Proud Clarion Fooled Me,’” Milwaukee Sentinel, May 8, 1967.

A.P., “Graustark Finished Forever?” The Vancouver Sun, May 2, 1966, p. 18.

Heckman, Damascus, pp. 61-65.

Copyright 2012 by John Califano 

Saturday, September 22, 2012

A SONG FOR DAMASCUS



(This is the first of a six part series.)


Note: Among the sources referenced for this story is Lucy Heckman’s excellent biography Damascus (Eclipse Press:2004), listed in the bibliography below, and which examines the long life of the great horse. Her account begins with a detailed discussion of his pedigree, followed with his racing career, and finally tenure as a stallion. This writer strongly recommends her book.


It was called the “Race of the Decade”, and the “Race of the Century”. Three major titans of the American turf ,who would all one day enter the Racing Hall of Fame, and be considered among the pantheon of greatest runners of all time, collided on an autumn day in 1967, on a New York racetrack, to settle their affairs. When the 1 1/4 mile contest was over, one  would be recognized as the top equine runner in America. What transpired, in front of more than 55,000 spectators, was a display of such sheer power, that it left no doubt who the country's premiere horse was.


PART ONE: PARENTAGE


The horse was bred and owned by Mrs. Edith W. Bancroft. He was a result of centuries of top breeding, handed down by his Foundation Sire, the Darley Arabian. On his dam’s side, he was descended from an English Foundation Mare called the Bustler Mare, making him a member of Family Number Eight, which also produced Whirlaway, Bold Ruler, Nijinsky, and Ruffian to name just a few. He was inbred 4Dx5S to Phalaris (GB), the great sire of the modern era; Selene (GB) the outstanding filly racer and dam of the immortal Hyperion (GB); and the American standout racer and stallion Blue Larkspur.

The colt’s sireline traced back through five generations to the French racer and stallion Teddy (FR) until the blood coursed its way to his father, a smallish chestnut male, foaled on April 24, 1956, and given the name Sword Dancer.

Sire – Sword Dancer

Sword Dancer was a Brookmeade Stable Virginia-bred son of multiple stakes winning Sunglow out of the unraced By Jimminy mare Highland Fling. By Jimminy was the 1944 Three-Year-Old Champion Male. Sword Dancer was also inbred 4Sx5D to Fair Play, and through his third dam, Speed Boat, was a tail-female descendent of Man o’War.

Trained by Elliott Burch, in 1958 the two-year-old Sword Dancer made fourteen starts, usually among large fields, and lost his first seven races, all between three and 5 ½ furlongs, while racing in Florida and the East Coast. He finally broke his maiden in a six furlong Maiden Special Weight on August 23, at Saratoga, against eleven other juveniles. Although the winner’s circle continued to elude him, he ran credibly, and demonstrated glimpses of the brilliance which would emerge the following year. Going beyond seven furlongs for the first time at Suffolk Downs on October 18, Sword Dancer caught a fast track and won his first stake, the one mile, seventy yard Mayflower by four and a half lengths, defeating thirteen opponents, with plenty in reserve. Contesting a route of ground in the 1 1/16 mile Garden State Stakes, at Garden State Park, he posted a good third place effort over the slop behind Tomy Lee (GB) and eventual two-year-old champion male First Landing. Sword Dancer concluded his year with a fourth place effort in Jamaica’s Remsen Stakes.

On March 11, 1959, Sword Dancer returned as a three-year-old, finished fifth in the 6 ½ furlong Hutchinson Stakes at Gulfstream Park, and thirteen days later  annexed a mile, seventy yard allowance. Now pointed toward the Triple Crown races, he finished a strong second, less than a length short of winner Easy Spur in the 1 1/8 mile Florida Derby. Arriving at Churchill Downs on April 25, for a seven furlong allowance, Sword Dancer again met Easy Spur in addition to the brilliant Citation filly and Santa Anita Derby winner Silver Spoon. He went gate to wire, keeping Easy Spur contained by a length, with Silver Spoon another length and a half back.

On May 2, Sword Dancer became involved in a heated duel with Tomy Lee in the Kentucky Derby, after both horses stayed close to the pace behind early leader Troilus. Heading home, Sword Dancer had a slim lead, but it was Tomy Lee who slipped past him at the finish, the margin a nose. A seventeen minute foul claim inquiry lodged by Sword Dancer’s rider, Bill Boland, ensued, but the result was allowed to stand, making Tomy Lee only the second foreign-bred horse to win America’s most famous Thoroughbred race. Finishing third was First Landing. With Bill Shoemaker now in the irons, on May 16 Sword Dancer played bridesmaid again, finishing second to Royal Orbit in the Preakness Stakes after early contention.

Sword Dancer then got down to serious business. He made seven more starts in 1959, and won all but one race. Along the way, he captured the one mile Metropolitan Handicap, 1 ½ mile Belmont Stakes, and 1 ¼ mile Monmouth Handicap, with the latter two over sloppy conditions. After losing by three-quarters of a length to Babu in the 1 3/16 mile Brooklyn Handicap at Jamaica, Sword Dancer quickly returned to the winner’s circle, winning Saratoga’s 1 ¼ mile Travers Stakes, before defeating his elders in the 1 ¼ mile Woodward Stakes at Aqueduct, in a field that included reigning Horse of the Year Round Table. Sword Dancer concluded his campaign with a seven length victory in the two mile Jockey Club Gold Cup, again beating Round Table, albeit receiving weight allowances in his last two starts.

Sword Dancer’s dominance earned him Horse of the Year honors in addition to being named Champion Three-Year-Old Male and co-Champion Handicap Horse.

In 1960, as the fabled gelding Kelso began his five-year reign as American racing king, Sword Dancer returned for a credible four-year-old season of twelve starts, but his best days were behind him; however, he occasionally showed his championship form by winning the 1 1/8 mile Grey Lag Handicap, the 1 1/4 mile Suburban Handicap, and  repeated as Woodward Stakes winner. He also raced three times on the grass, finishing a game second in the 1 3/16 mile United Nations Handicap, and third in the 1 1/2 mile Man o'War Stakes. He retired from the track with career numbers of thirty-nine starts, fifteen wins, 7 seconds, 4 thirds, and $829,610 in earnings. He was inducted into the National Museum of Racing and Hall of Fame in 1977.

Sword Dancer sired 15 black-type winners. One of the mares he was bred to was a chestnut named Rock Drill by Triple Crown winner Whirlaway. Rock Drill was a black-type winner, and with Sword Dancer produced a chestnut filly in 1963 named Lady Pitt, who would win the Mother Goose, Coaching Club American Oaks, and be named 1966 Three-Year-Old Champion Female. Sword Dancer's other champion was a son, one year younger than Lady Pitt.

Dam – Kerala

Kerala was an unraced bay mare, bred in Kentucky by Greentree Stud, sired by My Babu (FR.) out of the Sickle (GB) mare Blade of Time, and foaled in 1958. My Babu was a two-year-old English champion male and a multiple stakes winner, which included the Two Thousand Guineas at age three. My Babu was later a successful sire in Europe and the United States.  Kerala’s dam, Blade of Time, also produced 1945 Santa Anita Derby winner Bymeabond.

As a broodmare, Kerala’s first two foals were bay fillies. Full View, sired by black-type winner Nadir, was born in 1962, and became a winner from 43 starts. Kerala’s second daughter, by black-type winner Tulyar (IRE.), arrived the following year. She was Aunt Tilt, a stakes placed runner from 37 starts.

Kerala next visited the court of Sword Dancer, and from that cover, on April 14, 1964, at John A. Bell III's Jonabell Farm in Kentucky, gave birth to Mrs. Bancroft's bay colt. And thanks to what the offspring later did on the racetrack, Kerala was selected 1967 Broodmare of the Year. The colt’s name was Damascus.

To be continued…

Bibliography

“Damascus,” Pedigree Online Thoroughred Database, http://www.pedigreequery.com/damascus


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), p.202.

“Family 8: Bustler Mare,” Thoroughbred Heritage, Historic Dams, http://www.tbheritage.com/HistoricDams/EngFoundationMares/Family8/Family8.html

“Sword Dancer,” Pedigree Online Thoroughbred Database, http://www.pedigreequery.com/sword+dancer

“Sword Dancer,” equineline.com, http://www.equineline.com/Free-5X-Pedigree.cfm?page_state=ORDER_AND_CONFIRM&reference_number=493926&registry=T&horse_name=Sword Dancer&dam_name=Highland Fling&foaling_year=1956&nicking_stats_indicator=Y

“Sunglow,” Pedigree Online Thoroughbred Database, http://www.pedigreequery.com/sunglow

Daily Racing Form, The American Racing Manual 1992 (Hightstown, N.J.: Daily Racing Form Inc., 1992), pp. 758, 1055.

Daily Racing Form, Champions, p. 82.

Thoroughbred Times Co., Inc., The Original Thoroughbred Times Racing Almanac 2009 (Lexington, KY: Thoroughbred Times Books, 2008), p. 110.

Daily Racing Form, Champions, p. 170.

“Sword Dancer,” Thoroughbred Champions: Top 100 Racehorses of the 20th Century (Lexington, KY: The Blood-Horse, Inc., 1999), pp. 154-155.

Orlo Robertson (Associated Press), “Tomy Lee Captures The Kentucky Derby,” The Florence Times, May 3, 1959, p 1.

Associated Press, “English Colt Wins Kentucky Derby,” The News and Courier, May 3, 1959.

Daily Racing Form, Champions, p. 136.

Daily Racing Form, Champions, p.170.

“Lady Pitt,” equineline.com, http://www.equineline.com/Free-5X-Pedigree.cfm?page_state=ORDER_AND_CONFIRM&reference_number=262881&registry=T&horse_name=Lady Pitt&dam_name=Rock Drill&foaling_year=1963&nicking_stats_indicator=Y

“Lady Pitt,” Pedigree Online Thoroughbred Database, http://www.pedigreequery.com/lady+pitt

Daily Racing Form, The American Racing Manual 1992 (Hightstown, N.J.: Daily Racing Form, Inc., 1992), pp. 735, 898.

Thoroughbred Times Co., Inc., The Original Thoroughbred Times Racing Almanac 2009, p. 110.

“Rock Drill,” equineline.com, http://www.equineline.com/Free-5X-Pedigree.cfm?page_state=ORDER_AND_CONFIRM&reference_number=419679&registry=T&horse_name=Rock Drill&dam_name=Flyaway Home&foaling_year=1951&nicking_stats_indicator=Y

“Lady Pitt,” Pedigree Online Thoroughbred Database http://www.pedigreequery.com/lady+pitt

“Kerala,” Pedigree Online Thoroughbred Database, http://www.pedigreequery.com/kerala

“My Babu,” Pedigree Online Thoroughbred Database, http://www.pedigreequery.com/my+babu

Lucy Heckman, Damascus Thoroughbred Legends No. 22(Lexington, KY: Eclipse Press, 2004) p. 35-36.

“Bymeabond,” equineline.com, http://www.equineline.com/Free-5X-Pedigree.cfm?page_state=ORDER_AND_CONFIRM&reference_number=70177&registry=T&horse_name=Bymeabond&dam_name=Blade of Time&foaling_year=1942&nicking_stats_indicator=Y

Daily Racing Form, The American Racing Manual 1992 (Hightstown, N.J.: Daily Racing Form Inc., 1992), p. 982.

“Kerala,” Pedigree Online Thoroughbred Database, http://www.pedigreequery.com/progeny/kerala

“Full View,” equineline.com, http://www.equineline.com/Free-5X-Pedigree.cfm?page_state=ORDER_AND_CONFIRM&reference_number=177023&registry=T&horse_name=Full View&dam_name=Kerala&foaling_year=1962&nicking_stats_indicator=Y


“Tulyar,” equineline.com, http://www.equineline.com/Free-5X-Pedigree.cfm?page_state=ORDER_AND_CONFIRM&reference_number=521716&registry=T&horse_name=*Tulyar&dam_name==Neocracy (GB)&foaling_year=1949&nicking_stats_indicator=Y

“Aunt Tilt,” equineline.com, http://www.equineline.com/Free-5X-Pedigree.cfm?page_state=ORDER_AND_CONFIRM&reference_number=22500&registry=T&horse_name=Aunt Tilt&dam_name=Kerala&foaling_year=1963&nicking_stats_indicator=Y

Lucy Heckman, Damascus, p. 105.
Copyright 2012 by John Califano