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Secretaria­t’s mighty ride jolted all of horse racing

- By Beth Harris Associated Press

NEW YORK — Ron Turcotte peeked under his arm with about a quarter-mile to go in the Belmont Stakes. The other horses were mere dots behind him and Secretaria­t.

With the crowd roaring, the chestnut colt nicknamed Big Red hit the wire an astounding 31 lengths in front on June 9, 1973, at Belmont Park. The racing world had never seen anything like his performanc­e before or since.

When Justify runs in the Belmont on Saturday, it will be 45 years to the day Secretaria­t ended a 25-year Triple Crown drought by sweeping the Kentucky Derby, Preakness and Belmont.

“He’ll be awfully hard to beat,” Turcotte told The Associated Press by phone from his home in Canada. “I feel he’s going to win the Triple Crown.”

Turcotte thought the same thing about Secretaria­t.

Sent off as the 1-10 favorite by the crowd of 69,138, Secretaria­t faced just four rivals in the 1 Belmont, the longest and most grueling of the three-race series.

“I was very, very confident,” Turcotte recalled. “I didn’t think he could get beat.”

Among Secretaria­t’s four rivals was Sham, who had finished second in both the Derby and Preakness.

Sham’s jockey, Laffit Pincay Jr., had been instructed by trainer Frank Martin to go after Secretaria­t from the start.

Secretaria­t went to the early lead along the rail and was soon challenged by Sham. The two were even through a half-mile at a fevered pace in what became a match race with the rest of the field about 10 lengths behind.

“Even if he stayed with me, I didn’t think any way in the world he could beat me because my horse was so good,” Turcotte said. “He had trained so hard for the race and the others hadn’t done much.”

Sham poked his head in front around the turn, but not for long.

On the backstretc­h, Pincay sensed something wasn’t right with his horse. Turcotte noticed, too.

“I was feeling like he was weak. I tapped him again and I had nothing,” Pincay said, initially thinking Sham was bleeding.

He checked and didn’t see any blood.

Approachin­g the quarterpol­e, Pincay knew Sham was injured.

“He didn’t feel right to me, so that’s why I tried to save him,” Pincay told the AP. “I stopped him before the wire.”

Secretaria­t began distancing himself from his closest competitio­n as Sham started to fade.

“Secretaria­t is widening now,” track announcer Chic Anderson intoned. “He is moving like machine!”

Turcotte took his famous peek back to see how far behind the other horses were. The rest of the race he kept his eye on the timer in the infield.

“We kept breaking records through the stretch,” he said.

Secretaria­t ran the mile in 1:34 He reeled off 1 miles in 1:59, faster than his record time in the Derby.

He had long since ceased running against the other horses; he was racing the clock and history.

Big Red completed the last quarter in a scant 25 seconds. He finished in 2:24, a record that still stands.

Sham never raced and died in 1993.

Secretaria­t became a pop culture phenomenon, appearing on the cover of Time and a U.S. stamp and was the subject of a 2010 Disney movie. His name recognitio­n, even among those who don’t follow sports, remains strong 29 years after his death and he appears in the pedigree of many current racehorses. tremendous again

 ?? /AP ?? Secretaria­t, with jockey Ron Turcotte up, finished an astounding 31 lengths ahead of the field at the Belmont in 1973, winning the first Triple Crown in 25 years.
/AP Secretaria­t, with jockey Ron Turcotte up, finished an astounding 31 lengths ahead of the field at the Belmont in 1973, winning the first Triple Crown in 25 years.

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