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June 9, 1973 - The Belmont Stakes - Secretariat
http://www.secretariat.com ^
Posted on 01/14/2014 12:21:54 PM PST by NKP_Vet
Secretariat raced into the ever glow of immortality in the 1973 Belmont Stakes. His victory, by one of the widest margins in the history of the American turf 31 lengths ahead of his nearest challenger and in a world record time for the 1 1/2 miles distance 2 minutes 24, remains one of the most memorable in sports history. At any moment, a racing fan who might have seen a thousand races, or ten thousand races, or just ten races, can think of those winning numbers 31 and 2:24 and be transported instantly back in time. Back to one of the landmark achievements of a sport as old as horse and man.
The numbers 31 and 2:24 merely trigger the REAL memory of a horse running as no horse had ever seemed to run before or since.Secretariat ran more powerfully, and with more fluid skill than one could ever hope from a horse. And humans hope for much from horses. To feel the glory of Secretariats Belmont is to be flooded with emotion of having seen something of true wonder.
The most lasting image, in fact, is probably not in the numbers at all. Those numbers came later, after Secretariat crossed the finish line. Only those who have seen countless races would instantly know what the time on the teletimer meant. Few of us know the record times for horse races of various distances at different tracks, even though a possible track record was part of the talk leading up to the 1973 Belmont Stakes. For most of us, it took an expert announcer to explain that Secretariat had just run the fastest Belmont in history.
(Excerpt) Read more at secretariat.com ...
TOPICS: History; Music/Entertainment; Sports
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To: NKP_Vet
Yes, it's on dirt, but Kelso set his record going around 3 tight turns. Belmont's turns are huge and sweeping compared to Laurel's turf. I am familiar with both tracks. Kelso was not a turf horse at all; dirt was very much his preference.
Secretariat was a wonderful horse; I do not believe that I will live to see another one like him.
Find the video of Dr Fager on the dirt at Arlington Park in 1968, and see if you think anything would have ever beaten him. He won carrying 130 pounds, and he did it easily and could have gone faster.
21
posted on
01/14/2014 1:54:48 PM PST
by
Nepeta
To: NKP_Vet
I was in high school at the time and remember watching the race with my family in my parents living room. What a race, it was almost surreal. Even though I didn’t know much about horse racing, I loved Secretariat followed him through the Triple Crown. I agree, we will never see the likes of Secretariat again.
To: NKP_Vet
I was on the rail in Saratoga when Onion beat Secretariat, I think it was in the Whitney stakes. I have a great picture of the post parade.
23
posted on
01/14/2014 2:06:46 PM PST
by
1Old Pro
To: 1Old Pro
Arriving at Saratoga in the summer of 1973, Secretariat was the Conquering Hero returning home. The Big Red colt had won his first stakes race at Saratoga the previous summer. Even then, as a two-year-old rookie racehorse, knowledgeable observers were beginning to hail him as something special. Now, he was the Triple Crown champion, the first to sweep the Kentucky Derby, Preakness and Belmont Stakes since Citation, 25 years before. As many of the top horses and stables in the country arrived in Saratoga Springs, N.Y., for the famous summertime race meeting, Secretariat stood at the top of the world of sports stars, and few thought he would ever lose another race. But he did. In the Whitney Stakes, before another huge throng of adoring fans, Secretariat ran second to a little-known horse named Onion. Secretariat had lost races before. But that was then, and this was now. The defeat stunned everyone. There is a reason they call Saratoga the Graveyard of Champions. The list of famous racehorses who have lost at Saratoga is almost as long as the list of famous horses who have won there. In fact, there is a race at Saratoga called the Jim Dandy, which is named in honor of a horse called Jim Dandy, who once upset Gallant Fox (another Triple Crown winner) at odds of 100-1. It was at Saratoga, in 1919, that the word upset entered the American sports lexicon. Thats when a horse named Upset beat the mighty Man o War. It was the original Big Reds only defeat. In those days, the word upset had a more literal meaning, along the lines of tip over, or capsize. But it had no particular connection with sports. Then came Upsets victory over the seemingly invincible Man o War. So shocking was Upsets triumph over Man o War, that sports scribes began to describe unexpected outcomes in other sports like football and basketball by saying so-and-so pulled off an Upset. Eventually, the capitalized U in Upset became lower case as upset became a part of regular usage, and a word we know well today. Of course, the word onion never has gained as clear a usage as upset, but Onions upset victory over Secretariat on Aug.4, 1973 will long be remembered as one of the most startling upsets in sports. There really was little remarkable about Onions victory over Secretariat. It happened in the same way as do many races every day: a speed horse gets a clear lead, has a chance to pace himself, and finds enough gas left in the tank to hold off his challengers. On this day it was jockey Jacinto Vasquez delivering a perfectly-judged ride aboard Onion. And Onion was a sharp racehorse for the Whitney. He had just set a new track record for 6 1/2 furlongs 11 days before at Saratoga. The footnotes from the Daily Racing Forms chart of the Whitney tell the story: ONION sprinted away to a clear lead around the first turn, made the pace under good rating, and while remaining well out from the inner rail, responded readily when challenged by SECRETARIAT at the far turn, lugged in slightly just inside the final three sixteenths, was quickly straightened away and proved best under brisk urging. SECRETARIAT, the Form continued, knocked open the stall doors before the start, came away in good order, ducked to the inside after entering the backstretch, went up after ONION at the far turn, continued to race along the rail while dueling with that rival until the final sixteenth and weakened. At the betting windows, the track offered win wagering only, and Onion paid a nice $13.20, with Secretariat losing at odds of ten cents on the dollar. Onions victory brought considerable attention to that horses trainer, Allen Jerkens, who handled the horse for the Hobeau Farm, a prominent New York-based stable. It was the first of several notable upsets for Jerkens, who soon was being called The Giant Killer. The upset of Secretariat, incidentally, was not the only surprise of that week at Saratoga. Three days earlier, Secretariats stable-mate, Riva Ridge was upset in a minor race by a 51-1 shot named Wichita Oil. At the time, advertising men with Phillip Morris Co. had been discussing a special match race called the Marlboro Cup between Secretariat and Riva Ridge, the two Kentucky Derby winners from the same barn. After both were beaten in the same week by unknowns, one wag suggested the Marlboro match race should pit Onion versus Wichita Oil. Very funny. But the special Marlboro race idea wasnt dead.
24
posted on
01/14/2014 2:12:37 PM PST
by
1Old Pro
To: NKP_Vet
This screams inequality! Shouldn’t the other horses have time subtracted from their runs so they can better compete and make it a fairer race? The President needs to issue an executive order doing this.
To: 1Old Pro
Especially in horse racing.
Even when you know, you never know.
To: AU72
...paid 2.10 to win... I can't help but remember a now dead friend of mine once eyeing up the tote board at the track and exclaiming, "1 to 20 odds?!? F*** that horse! I'd rather lose 10 bucks than win a dime!".
27
posted on
01/14/2014 5:37:10 PM PST
by
Rodamala
To: nicksaunt
Lost in all the excitement of his surreal performance in the Belmont Stakes was his record setting performance in the Kentucky Derby. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Secretariat_%28horse%29 "On his way to a still-standing track record (1:592⁄5), Secretariat ran each quarter-mile segment faster than the one before it. The successive quarter-mile times were 251⁄5, 24, 234⁄5, 232⁄5, and 23. This means he was still accelerating as of the final quarter-mile of the race. No other horse had won the Derby in less than 2 minutes before, and it would not be accomplished again until Monarchos in 2001. Sportswriter Mike Sullivan said, in admiration: I was at Secretariat's Derby, in '73. . . That was...just beauty, you know? He started in last place, which he tended to do. I was covering the second-place horse, which wound up being Sham. It looked like Sham's race going into the last turn, I think. The thing you have to understand is that Sham was fast, a beautiful horse. He would have had the Triple Crown in another year. And it just didn't seem like there could be anything faster than that. Everybody was watching him. It was over, more or less. And all of a sudden there was this, like, just a disruption in the corner of your eye, in your peripheral vision. And then before you could make out what it was, here Secretariat came. And then Secretariat had passed him. No one had ever seen anything run like that a lot of the old guys said the same thing. It was like he was some other animal out there.[16]" Secretariat set track records in all three Triple Crown races in 1973. 41 years later he still holds the records. Their will never be another Big Red.
28
posted on
01/14/2014 6:58:23 PM PST
by
NKP_Vet
("Rather than love, than money, than fame, then give truth" ~ Henry David Thoreau)
To: Rodamala
Best three minutes in sports history.
29
posted on
01/14/2014 6:59:52 PM PST
by
EQAndyBuzz
("The GOP fights its own base with far more vigor than it employs in fighting the Dims.")
To: 1Old Pro
I was on the rail in Saratoga when Onion beat Secretariat, I think it was in the Whitney stakes. I have a great picture of the post parade.
I was on that rail that day, too.
30
posted on
01/14/2014 7:02:12 PM PST
by
Nepeta
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