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Triple frown

Charismatic finishes third; Lemon Drop Kid wins Belmont

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Posted: Monday June 07, 1999 01:29 PM

  Lemon Drop Kid's jockey Jose Santos celebrates after Lemon Drop Kid won the 131st Belmont stakes. Matthew Stockman/Allsport

NEW YORK (CNN/SI) -- For the third straight year a horse won the first two legs of the Triple Crown but lost the Belmont Stakes. On Saturday Lemon Drop Kid upset Charismatic's bid for history.

Jose Santos guided Lemon Drop Kid to a victory in the Belmont Stakes.

Charismatic finished third, but had to be driven off the course in a trailer after apparently injuring his front right leg.

Shortly after the finish, Charismatic, the Kentucky Derby and Preakness winner, was pulled up by jockey Chris Antley, who immediately dismounted. It appeared the strapping chestnut colt was favoring his left foreleg.

Lemon Drop Kid, ridden by Jose Santos, took the lead from Charismatic with about an eighth of mile left and got to the end of the 1 1/2 miles ahead of another longshot, Vison and Verse.

Charismatic's injury

The career-ending injury sustained by Charismatic in the Belmont Stakes involves fractures to two bones in his lower left foreleg, similar to an ankle injury a human athlete might suffer.

Charismatic sustained a condylar fracture in the cannon (shin) bone, which is a fracture of the knobby end of the bone. He also suffered a vertical fracture in his lateral sesamoid, one of two small bones located above and at the back of the fetlock (ankle), according to Dr. Jim Hunt, veterinarian for trainer D. Wayne Lukas.

"It's a complete fracture, the bone is broken to the outside," said Hunt. "There's actually a piece of bone that is loose. He's also sustained a vertical fracture in his lateral sesamoid.

"We can fix the condylar fracture with no problem. The lateral sesamoid is a little bit trickier, it simply has to heal with time."

Dr. Stephen Selway, another Lukas veterinarian, said the surgery will take place Sunday morning.

The colt's lower leg was placed in a cast and he was returned to his stall in the barn at Belmont Park, where Lukas said he was resting comfortably. Surgery at the equine hospital next to Belmont Park will insert screws to hold the fragments of bone together.

"The cast he's wearing now is more of a traditional cast, it's very tight and snug now. They think the sesamoid will heal on itself. All of the tendons look real good," Lukas said.

He speculated the injuries might have occurred at different points of the race.

"They may have happened in different strides because there are two fractures," Lukas said. "Usually when there's multiple fractures they don't happen at the same time, they happen sequentially. He does seem pretty comfortable now."

 

The filly Silverbulletday was in the hunt until the quarter pole and then faded in her bid to become the first of her sex to win the Belmont since Tonya in 1905.

It was the third straight year that a bid for the elusive Triple Crown was foiled, and this one ended on a very sad note.

Just moments after the Kentucky Derby-Preakness winner finished, a pall dropped like a curtain over the crowd of 85,818, biggest in New York racing history, as Chris Antley pulled up the big chestnut colt and dismounted.

About an hour later, the word came that Charismatic fractured two bones in his left front leg -- the cannon bone and the sesamoid.

"That means he's through as a racehorse," said veterinarian Dr. Larry Bramlage. "We expect him to be fine as a stallion."

Dr. Jim Hunt, a veterinarian for Charismatic trainer D. Wayne Lukas, said the horse will have surgery Sunday, but that it was not life-threatening.

The colt's lower leg was placed in a cast and he was returned to his stall in the barn at Belmont Park, where Lukas said he was resting comfortably. Surgery at the equine hospital next to Belmont Park will insert screws to hold the fragments of bone together.

"Naturally, you hate to see a horse get hurt," said winning trainer Scotty Schulhofer. "I would have felt better if it hadn't happened."

Even if the injury hadn't occurred, it appears Charismatic wouldn't have been able to hold off Lemon Drop Kid and Vision and Verse, who were a head apart at the wire, with Charismatic another 1 1/2 lengths back.

Bramlage said the injury apparently occurred just past the wire.

It was an unfortunate ending for the former claimer who had caught the public's imagination in his bid to give a Triple Crown to Lukas and owners Bob and Beverly Lewis. The Lewises had failed to win the Triple Crown two years ago when the Bob Baffert-trained Silver Charm finished second in the Belmont.

"We're devastated at the thought that anything could be wrong with Charismatic," Bob Lewis said.

Antley's quick action drew praise from Lukas, veterinarians and Bob Lewis.

"He was simply marvelous," Lewis said. "He might have saved the horse."

The disappointed Lukas, who has won 12 Triple Crown races and all three of them in one year but with different horses, said: "I think we had the right horse at the right place on the right day, but we didn't get the right situation.

 
Triple Crown Near Misses
Horses who won the Kentucky Derby and Preakness,but failed to win the Triple Crown in the Belmont Stakes -- with placing, lengths behind the winner and winner in parentheses:
Year Horse
1944
1958
1961
1964
1966
1968
1969
1971
1979
1981
1987
1989
1997
1998
1999
Pensive (2nd, 1/2, Bounding Home)
Tim Tam (2nd, 6, Cavan)
Carry Back (7th, 14 3/4, Sherluck)
Northern Dancer (3rd, 6, Quadrangle)
Kauai King (4th, 7 1/2, Amberoid)
Forward Pass (2nd, 1 1/2, Stage Door Johnny)
Majestic Prince (2nd, 5 1/2, Arts And Letters)
Canonero II (4th, 4 1/4, Pass Catcher)
Spectacular Bid (3rd, 3 1/4, Coastal)
Pleasant Colony (3rd, 1 1/2, Summing)
Alysheba (4th, 14 1/4, Bet Twice)
Sunday Silence (2nd, 8, Easy Goer)
Silver Charm (2nd, 3/4, Touch Gold)
Real Quiet (2nd, nose, Victory Gallop)
Charismatic (3rd, 1 1/2, Lemon Drop Kid)

"It's racing and these things happen. We'll deal with them."

Antley said he didn't know when the injury occurred but said he felt Charismatic ease a bit about the eighth pole.

"It was almost like letting out air. He eased off the run he started on," he said.

Lemon Drop Kid certainly deserved his victory but it was a disappointing ending, since many had hoped to see Charismatic become the first horse to win the Triple Crown since Affirmed in 1978.

The race also was billed as a showdown between the Triple Crown challenger and the sensational filly Silverbulletday, making her debut against males after winning 11 of 12 against fillies.

It happened for a mile, and then Silverbulletday faded to finish seventh. But her presence in the race likely played a big part in Charismatic's defeat.

Surprisingly, Charismatic chased the pace much earlier than is his custom, laying second behind Silverbulletday from the clubhouse turn until less than a half-mile remained.

"I can't believe he [Charismatic] ran away [on the pace] with her," Jerry Bailey, Silverbulletday's rider, said. "It's tough to go head and head that far, but I could see Antley's horse was kind of rank. I looked over and he was trying to get him back, but he couldn't get him back."

Lemon Drop Kid, ridden by Jose Santos, was fourth with a quarter-mile to go, then was taken outside for his winning charge down the middle of the track. He took the lead from Charismatic with an eighth of a mile remaining and won in 2:27.88.

The colt, owned by Laddie and Jeanne Vance, paid a winning mutuel of $61.50, fourth-largest in the 131-year history of the race. His place and show prices were $26 and $10.60.

Lemon Drop Kid finished a head in front of Vision and Verse, trying to become the first non-Derby and Preakness starter to win the Belmont since Shulhofer did it with Colonial Affair in 1993.

Vision and Verse paid $44.40 and $17 and Charismatic was $3.60.

Completing the order of finish after fourth-place Best of Luck were Stephen Got Even, Patience Game, Silverbulletday, Menifee, Pineaff, Prime Directive, Teletable and Adonis.

Lemon Drop Kid earned $600,000 for his second victory in five starts this year and fourth triumph in 11 career outings.

"He came over to the track great and I've said ever since we put him in training he's been a nice horse," Shulhofer said. "He needed a little time to get going and he peaked on the right day."

While Lemon Drop Kid ended up in the winner's circle, it was Charismatic who was on the minds of many as they left Belmont Park.

Once again the fragility of racehorses and the uncertainty of racing was brought home.

"All week, we talked about how maintenance-free this horse was and how durable he is," Lukas said.

The tearful Antley, who rode back into the limelight with Charismatic after being sidelined for 18 months with weight problems, said: "He gave us a lot. He gave America a lot. The game goes one."

 
Related information
Stories
By the Numbers: Belmont Stakes
Schulhofer wins 2nd Belmont under dark cloud
Charismatic's broken leg ends racing career
Fillies falter in Triple Crown races
Stats
Belmont Stakes Results
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