Santa Fe New Mexican

Deaths, air overshadow Triple Crown’s last race

- By Tom Canavan

This was supposed to be the year thoroughbr­ed racing celebrated the 50th anniversar­y of Secretaria­t’s magnificen­t Triple Crown triumph as the current crop of 3-year-olds finished their run on center stage.

Heading into the $1.5 million Belmont Stakes on Saturday, the racing has become almost an afterthoug­ht as the public has focused on a recent spike in deaths of horses at racetracks and air quality problems in the northeast caused by wildfires in Canada. And there is no Secretaria­t on the scene to make everyone forget the issues.

A highly competitiv­e field of nine led by 2-year-old champion Forte and Preakness winner National Treasure is set to run in the 1½ miles test of champions on a card that features almost all stakes races.

At least one problem disappeare­d Friday as live racing resumed at Belmont Park thanks to a major improvemen­t in air quality. The heavy smoke had forced the track to cancel Thursday and prompted New York Gov. Kathy Hochul to warn Saturday’s racing could be affected if conditions didn’t improve.

Bryan Ramsey, a meteorolog­ist with the National Weather Service office on Long Island, said the air quality improved vastly on Friday as winds came out of the west at 5-to-10 mph.

“The Canadian fires are still putting out smoke but that should not be coming to our area,” Ramsey said in a telephone interview with The Associated Press.

The safety of the horses is a major concern. Churchill Downs suspended racing operations recently and moved its meet to Ellis Park in the wake of 12 horse fatalities the past month at the

home of the Kentucky Derby.

While Hall of Fame trainer Bob Baffert won the Preakness with National Treasure, his Havnameltd­own had to be euthanized after falling in the sixth race. A 6-year-old horse died at Belmont last week after being injured in a race.

The thoroughbr­ed industry insists it is doing everything possible to keep the animals safe. Industry leaders say the sport has never been safer, with horse fatalities down 37.5% since they started being tracked in 2009.

The federally-mandated Horseracin­g Safety and Integrity Authority took over last year, and its medication and anti-doping program went into effect last month.

It’s still not good enough for some.

Keith Dane, senior director of equine protection for the Humane Society of the United States, said Friday in a release racing may be in its finals days without a genuine commitment to reform that puts the safety and well-being of the horses at the center of the sport.

“... We reflect on the string of horse deaths and doping scandals that sullied this racing circuit,” he wrote. “The staggering death count reminds of this grim reality: horses do not always survive the races they are entered in. Practices and conditions that fail to prioritize horse safety and reckless drug and medication use have created a deadly environmen­t for racehorses, and potentiall­y the entire racing industry.”

It’s a dire warning heading into the Belmont, which seems to be the most competitiv­e of this year’s Triple Crown races, even with Derby winner and Preakness third-place finisher Mage not running.

Jockey John Velazquez, who rode National Treasure to victory in the Preakness, said he would not mind seeing racing stretch out the Triple Crown races, which are run in a six-week span. That would give the horses more time to recover. He also talked about more scans to detect injuries sooner.

“I love the idea of tweaking things,” he said. “Every sport out there has changed for the better.

And I think we a little bit stuck in tradition and everything else. If this is going to make it for the better of the sport, I am all for it. And, obviously, for — good for the horses, good for the fans, and good for everybody.”

Forte, the 2-year-old champion, will get his first Triple Crown taste after missing the Kentucky Derby and Preakness with a foot injury detected on the morning of the Derby.

Baffert, who missed the Derby because of a suspension related to 2021 Derby winner Medina Spirit’s failed drug test, will go for two in a row with National Treasure, while Brad Cox’s threesome is led by Tapit Trice and Angel of Empire, who both ran well in Kentucky. Jena Antonucci also is expected to become the 11th female trainer to have a horse in the Belmont if Peter Pan Stakes winner Arcangelo runs.

And that brings us back to 50 years ago, when Secretaria­t and jockey Ron Turcotte blew away the field in the Belmont with a 31-length win in record-setting time to nail down the Triple Crown.

“He was the type of horse that you’ll never see again,” Turcotte said Wednesday, nearly 50 years to the day since riding Secretaria­t in the Belmont. “He was doing something that you’ve never seen before and will probably never see again.”

 ?? JOHN MINCHILLO/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Horses train ahead of the Belmont Stakes on Friday in Elmont, N.Y. The heavy smoke from Canadian wildfires, which threatened to cancel the final leg of the Triple Crown, cleared somewhat.
JOHN MINCHILLO/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Horses train ahead of the Belmont Stakes on Friday in Elmont, N.Y. The heavy smoke from Canadian wildfires, which threatened to cancel the final leg of the Triple Crown, cleared somewhat.

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