National Post (National Edition)

DANCER’S IMAGE, DRUGS & MLK

ENDURING MYSTERY SURROUNDIN­G DISQUALIFI­ED 1968 KENTUCKY DERBY CHAMPION RESONATES TO THIS DAY

- Rick Maese The Washington Post

At least in the moment — and certainly in the 24 hours that followed — there was nothing ambiguous about the finish of the race. Dancer’s Image was a full 11/2 lengths ahead of any other horse. Bets were paid out; trophies were distribute­d. The headline of The New York Times the next day blared, “Dancer’s Image Rallies to Win Kentucky Derby,” and The Washington Post put a photo of the victorious grey horse on Page 1 with the headline “Winner’s Image.”

But a race that’s supposed to last barely two minutes instead dragged out nearly five years before a victor was definitive­ly crowned. In the 144-year history of the event, the 1968 race stands as the Derby’s lone drug scandal and the only time a winning horse was disqualifi­ed.

“Fifty years is a long time, but still today questions abound,” says Abby FullerCata­lano, whose father owned Dancer’s Image, the horse that was first across the line at the 1968 Derby and listed last in the official race records.

While Dancer’s Image was feted at the track, a bad drug test led to his disqualifi­cation and several years of legal wrangling. For many of the principals, the ensuing courtroom drama failed to produce answers, and the horse’s connection­s never understood how Dancer’s Image could fail a drug test.

Was the testing bad? Had a medication that was authorized for training somehow not cleared his system? Or was it something more nefarious?

Peter Fuller, the horse’s owner, had a theory that many find just as credible a half-century later. In the weeks before the race, he had shown support for the widow of recently assassinat­ed Martin Luther King Jr., which drew the ire of many during a tumultuous period in which racial tensions divided communitie­s across the country. Did the charitable act by a New England horse owner inspire someone to sabotage Dancer’s Image in the days before the Kentucky Derby?

“I have no doubt,” daughter says today.

In Louisville this weekend, 20 of the world’s best 3-year-old thoroughbr­eds will line up for a race that loves its history and usually celebrates its past. But don’t expect any remembranc­es of Dancer’s Image. Fifty years later, he’s the Derby’s forgotten, fallen champion.

“What we do know,” says Milton Toby, author of the book Dancer’s Image: The Forgotten Story of the 1968 Kentucky Derby, “is that on that day, he ran faster than any other horse in the Derby.”

BETTORS’ SECOND CHOICE

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Peter Fuller was so confident in his horse that he practised the walk from his box at Churchill Downs to the winner’s circle ahead of time. Bettors had made Dancer’s Image the Derby’s second choice, at 7-2 odds. He had the pedigree (son of Native Dancer), the resume (12 career wins — three more than any other Derby horse) and the jockey (Bobby Ussery had won the previous year’s Derby aboard Proud Clarion).

But Dancer’s Image also had some ankle issues that cast some doubt in the days leading into the race, and his handlers were being cautious.

“They maintained in the face of persistent rumours this week to the contrary that the colt would be fit and ready at post time,” the Post reported at the time.

Dancer’s Image received medication early in the week, and he completed his training runs. Then on race day, he got a bad break out of the gate. The horse was bumped and quickly fell 15 lengths off the lead.

But he slowly started moving through the field, weaving past the others. At the top of the stretch, Ussery slid the horse to the inside and passed the favourite, Forward Pass, at the eighth pole.

“I was too small to see it all with my own eyes,” says Fuller-Catalano, who was nine at the time, “but I remember looking at the people around me — Mom, Dad, aunts and uncles — screaming and yelling. Dad saying, ‘Here he comes! Here he comes!’ ”

FROM LAST TO FIRST TO LAST

Dancer’s Image somehow went from last to first, just the fifth Derby winner at the time to do so. The horse was draped with a garland of roses, Fuller was handed a trophy and everyone connected with the horse was still celebratin­g the next night when track officials got word something was amiss.

Warner Jones, a longtime board member at Churchill Downs, called Fuller, according to a Los Angeles Times report, and said, “They’ve got a problem with your horse’s test.”

“What are you talking many people already knew, when he cut me off.”

They made the unpreceden­ted decision to declare the second-place horse, Forward Pass, the Derby winner. Dancer’s Image had gone from last to first on race day and was demoted back to last three days later.

CHAOS IN THE RACING WORLD

Billy Reed was a sportswrit­er working at the Louisville Courier-Journal at the time and had just covered his first Derby. When the track’s decision leaked on a Tuesday afternoon, “it was absolute chaos in the office,” he said. “Nobody knew much about post-race urinalysis, all the procedures, what the chemist did. Everybody was caught completely off-guard. It was that way across the nation: Everybody was stunned.” in his system on race day.

“To the best of my knowledge, Dancer’s Image had not had any drugs of a prohibited nature,” Harthill told The New York Times.

CONNECTION TO DEATH OF MLK

Martin Luther King Jr. was killed in Memphis on April 4, 1968. Two days later, Fuller entered Dancer’s Image in the Governor’s Gold Cup race in Bowie, outside Washington, and won. Fuller quietly sent the race purse — more than $75,000 — to King’s widow, Coretta Scott King.

“It was just my way of saying, ‘Hey, this was a hell of a guy,’” Fuller once explained to the Boston Herald.

He didn’t publicize the gesture, and there were no splashy headlines. But broadcaste­r Win Elliot caught wind of the donation and told the story on-air during the Wood Memorial.

The news wasn’t universall­y celebrated across the horse racing world and certainly not across all of Kentucky. During race week the previous year, King drew attention away from the Derby by demonstrat­ing against housing discrimina­tion in Louisville and staging a rally downtown. “I know that hadn’t endeared him to the big shots back there,” Fuller later explained to the Los Angeles Times.

In the weeks leading into the Kentucky Derby, Fuller and his family received angry letters and death threats. His horse was derided around town with a racial slur, according to some reports, and back in New England, one of his stables was set on fire.

According to Toby, Fuller reached out to Jones, the chair of Churchill Downs at the time, to request additional security for his horse.

“Jones told Fuller that it wouldn’t be necessary because the track had ‘great security,’’’ Toby said. In actuality, the author said, “security was very lax. It would’ve been easy for almost anyone to get to the horse, if they wanted to.”

Fuller once described the track guard stationed at Dancer’s Image barn to The Associated Press as “an old fella sitting in a chair and asleep.” And so if someone was really that upset with the horse owner’s support of King’s widow, Fuller later theorized, why wouldn’t they come after his horse?

“I’ve always wondered if what happened to the horse could have come in retaliatio­n for my support of King,” Fuller told the Los Angeles Times.

COURT CASE TOOK 5 YEARS

Fuller had been an amateur boxer and wrestler back in college, so he had little interest in backing away from a fight. He took the Kentucky State Racing Commission to court, eager to restore the Derby win and his horse’s reputation.

Dancer’s Image won the first round when a Kentucky county judge said the commission’s disqualifi­cation was based on evidence “lacking in substance.” But they’d lose the ensuing appeals. Fuller’s legal fees ballooned and soon topped the Derby’s $122,000 prize money. In April 1973, Fuller threw in the towel. The 1968 Kentucky Derby was finally over, nearly five years after it began.

Less than a year later, Kentucky’s racing commission agreed to legalize phenylbuta­zone, the drug that cost Dancer’s Image the win and long had been a staple in most barns.

Dancer’s Image ran just once more, finishing third at the Preakness, which was won by Forward Pass. But he was quickly disqualifi­ed for bumping another horse and dropped to eighth. Fuller retired his horse shortly after. Dancer’s Image was eventually sold and enjoyed a long stud career overseas before dying in 1992.

Fuller was 89 when he died in 2012. He remained in the horse business for years but never had another Kentucky Derby contender. The controvers­y always ate at him.

Fifty years later, the first horse across the finish line is the last one many want to remember.

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES ?? Jockey Bob Ussery, owner Peter Fuller, left, and trainer Louis C. Cavalaris Jr. celebrate with Dancer’s Image in May 1968.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES Jockey Bob Ussery, owner Peter Fuller, left, and trainer Louis C. Cavalaris Jr. celebrate with Dancer’s Image in May 1968.

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