Saturday’s Kentucky Derby had a stellar line-up, with the likes of $2.3 million yearling purchase Sierra Leone, erratic but brilliant Fierceness and undefeated Japanese star Forever Young, not to mention 17 other contenders. It’s the one day of the year when even people who normally don’t care about horse racing actually do care about horse racing.
But the question was, would the 150th anniversary of the iconic race go down in history as one of the 10 Best Kentucky Derbies?
That’s the title of a new book from the staff and correspondents of The Blood Horse recounting the most memorable runs for the roses. This iconic race, replete with mint juleps and tradition, has many stories to tell.
And yes, you can add another chapter to this volume, and consider changing the name to the 11 Best Kentucky Derbies.
Not only was there a three-way, almost-too-close-to-call at first sight photo finish, but the winning trainer and jockey achieved a memorable double. The day before taking the Derby with Mystik Dan, conditioner Kenny McPeek and rider Brian Hernandez won the Kentucky Oaks with Thorpedo Anna.
In the Derby, Dan nosed out Sierra Leone and Forever Young in a memorable stretch duel. It’s one that won’t soon be forgotten.
While you’re in the mood to consider Derbies past and present, this book about the best of those races offers not only cherished memories, but also little-known facts abut the most famous Derby winners. Even those of us who really follow racing will discover untold tales and relish reminders of greatness while leafing through its pages.
You can probably guess that the number one story is “The Legend of Big Red” — who else but Secretariat 51 years ago, at the first stop on his way to Triple Crown glory. (That’s our cover photo).
Before the race, he had been syndicated for more than $6 million. Think what that would be in today’s currency. He had a following, he was a star, he rewrote the record book and is probably the one most people think of when they hear the word “racehorse.” He is best known, of course, for clinching that Triple Crown, a feat many thought might never be accomplished again, because it hadn’t happened since 1948 when Citation swept the Derby, Preakness and Belmont trio.
His great rival, Sham, is part of Sec’s story, and deserves deference for his heartbreaking try against the magnificent champion, so let’s not forget him.
Two years before Secretariat, Canonero II also was a sensation. Who would have thought that a colt who sold for $1,200 due to a crooked front leg would have any potential at all? But he wound up in the barn of trainer Juan Arias, who grew up in the slums of Caracas and slept in horse stalls when he got his first full-time job at the track.
Canonero, named after a type of singing group, won his first race in Venezuela and came to Del Mar in the U.S., where he showed promise but bad luck meant he didn’t get sold and went back to South America. The story of how he finally got nominated to the Derby is worth reading, as well as the saga of subsequent trials and tribulations. not to mention his come-from-behind triumph.
Talk about an underdog (underhorse?) He was a real horse of the people.
The “Bad Dream Derby” demonstrated that nightmares can come true, unfortunately. You’ve heard of most of the field in the 1957 Run for the Roses: Bold Ruler, Gallant Man and Round Table. Iron Liege, however was not a household name.
But he wound up the winner when the great jockey, Willie Shoemaker, misread the finish line and stood up in the stirrups aboard Gallant Man, enabling Iron Liege to cross the finish line first. In an eerie twist, Gallant Man’s owner, Ralph Lowe, had a dream two days before the Derby in which that’s exactly what happened.
Trainer John Nerud heard the nightmare story and repeated it to the jockey the night before the Derby, emphasizing to the legendary Shoemaker that he should “Ride past the wire.” When the dream became reality, one has to wonder if the power of suggestion had something to do with the misadventure.
There are plenty of other tales worth telling in this volume. It’s as good an accessory for future Derby days as the all-important hat (or that julep). There’s Regret, the first filly to win the Derby in 1915, the long-tailed Whirlaway in 1941 and Alysheba, a determined winner who astounded the crowd when he amazingly recovered from a stumble to take the trophy in 1987. And we can’t forget that longshot of longshots, 2022 winner Rich Strike.
So who do you like in the 2024 Derby? Will the winner’s story become a conversation piece that morphs into another memorable addition to Derby history? Let’s hope it’s a tale worth telling, and remembering.
If you want the book, click here for a link to buy it.