Twenty-five years ago, Secretariat put on one of the most
dominating performances in sports history, capturing horse
racing's Triple Crown during a six-week
span in May and June of
1973. Sports Illustrated's Whitney Tower reported from the
Kentucky Derby, the Preakness and the Belmont Stakes. In
remembrance of Secretariat's remarkable feats, CNN/SI
presents excerpts from Tower's
dispatches:
It Was
Murder
After an inexplicable defeat, character assassins took pot
shots at Secretariat, but the favorite had his revenge in
the
Derby
by Whitney
Tower
Issue date: May 14,
1973
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Ah, the sweet smell of red-eeming roses.
(Jerry Cooke)
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When Secretariat was beaten in such mystifying fashion by
Angle Light and Sham in the Wood Memorial three weeks ago,
the axiom was recalled: "If a horse is great, you
won't have to say, 'Throw that last race out.' The great
ones never need that kind of
excuse."
After the happening at Churchill Downs last week, the old
saw may need revising. Secretariatand his team of Owner
Penny Tweedy, Trainer Lucien Laurin and Jockey Ron
Turcottewere gloriously redeemed. No colt in history ever
picked a better time or place
to line up his opponents and mow them down, one by one,
with brutal effectiveness. Before the largest crowd to see
a horse race in this country (a squirming, screaming and
sweating 134,476), Secretariat threw a 23-second final
quarter at his "grudge"
rival Sham and won the 99th Kentucky Derby in the track-record
time of 1:59 2/5. Crossing the finish line, the magnificent
chesnut drew a roar of approval. The 3-to-2 favorite on a
perfect May day had helped stimulate nearly $8 million into
the mutuel
windows (including $3,284, 962 on the Derby alone). As Turcotte
rode back to the winner's circle, doffing his blue cap, the
prerace doubters muttered, "Wood Memorial? Throw that
race out. We've seen greatness
today."
ALSO IN 1973: Preakness | Belmont Stakes
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