This
year in front of a Coronavirus limited
crows Medina Spirit crossed the wire first at the 147th Kentucky Derby. But the roses were almost immediately tainted
when the horse tested positive for a
banned substance, the corticosteroid betamethasone sending
the racing world into an uproar.
Madina
Spirit was trained by legendary Bob Baffert who has shepherded record seven Derby wins,
seven Preakness Stakes victories,
and three Belmont Stakes victory in his career. He claimed to be baffled by the results despite earlier charges of substance violations at two earlier races in
2020. Eventually he claimed that the
substance was unknown to him in an ointment
used on race day. An investigation by
Derby Stewards is on-going, although bet record seven Kentucky Derby wins, seven
Preakness Stakes victories and three Belmont Stakes wins in his career. Betters will be allowed to keep their winnings and still cash in
tickets.
Perhaps
because the substance was not injected or
ingested Banford may get off the
hook. Or it might be that a judgement against him might taint all of his previous big wins and shake
confidence in an industry now
falling on hard times as legal on-line sports betting cuts
deeply into the income at the window for tracks. Madina Spirit was
allowed to run in the Preakness this weekend and placed third.
Despite
these perilous developments, the Derby got off to a famous start.
The blue bloods and their carriages occupied the infield of Churchill Downs for the first running of the Kentucky Derby. |
It
was 1875. Good
times were rolling again in the Blue
Grass State. Ten years after the end of the Civil War Kentucky, the former divided
border state which had been the scene
of some hard fighting, but had
largely escaped the utter devastation wrecked on much of
the Deep South as well as the pangs and pains of Reconstruction,
was feeling frisky. The river
trade on the Ohio was thriving. The eastern
coal fields were fueling an industrial explosion and bringing new money pouring into the state, even
as the miners who dug the black gold did not much share in it.
As
usual the Bourbons on their great estates with their sprawling lawns and miles of crisp white painted fencing skimmed the wealth, got fat, and played with their horses. Louisville Blue Bloods got together for
an upgrade from the fairgrounds and ramshackle tracks that had dominated horse racing. They had in mind something much grander, along the lines of the prestigious Epsom Downs in England, home of the storied Derby Stakes. John and
Henry Churchill leased 80 acres for
that purpose to their nephew, Colonel Meriwether Lewis Clark Jr., President of the Jockey Club and grandson
of explorer William Clark. He laid out an unusually long track one mile dirt track with a shorter turf track inside of it. He erected larger grandstands capable of seating a few thousand. There was plenty of land for stables and exercise areas in the back
stretch and the Louisville and
Nashville Railroad could bring horses to race from across the country.
The
new track would open that spring at a very good time. America, thanks to newspapers, illustrated
magazines, and the telegraph was
going sporting mad. And with professional
baseball in its infancy, sporting men followed horse racing and bare knuckle boxing and were ready and
willing to lay a bet on any likely
contest.
Clark
and the Jockey Club decided to launch their new track, grandly dubbed Churchill Downs with a stakes race rich enough to attract the best young horses from the
best blood lines in America. They called it the Kentucky Derby.
On
May 17, 1875 ten thousand people flocked to the track. Gentlemen in high silk hats, frock coats,
striped pants, spats, and kid gloves
and their ladies in flowered and feathered hats pinned jauntily to their ringlets, acres of shining
silk in dazzling colors, bustles,
and twirling parasols sat in Landaus and other fine carriages with liveried
drivers lined along the rails. The
grandstands were crowded with the middling
folk—the merchants and clerks, doctors and lawyers, railroad and steamship men, the yeomen
farmers, students—men
mostly. Standing crowding the rails were
the rough laborers, dock hands, stablemen, as well as the loungers,
loafers, and drunks that were common in
any town, and the occasional enterprising
strolling prostitute keeping an eye open for winners. Here the Black
and White mingled and jostled. Everyone loved the races.
Circulating
through them all were the sporting men in their bowlers or soft hats and
checkered suits willing to take any man’s wager. The smell of cigars, whiskey, sweat, and money was thick in the May air.
There
were 15 fine looking entrants in the
featured race which was to be run over
a mile and a half course. Getting them calmed and lined up must have been a chore,
the inevitable delays rising excitement in the crowd. When the starting
gun went off it resembled a cavalry
charge more than a race, but as the horses pounded around the track they began to string out and one horse pulled
ahead, dominating all of the
others.
19-year-old
Oliver Lewis was in the saddle of Aristides who was supposed to be the jack rabbit in the race expected to get off a fast start to wear the rest of the field down over the long distance so that Chesapeake, the stable’s
favored horse, could come from
behind for the win. It did not work
out that way. After briefly being
challenged, Aristides began stretch out
his lead to cross the finish line
with a two length lead in 2 minutes
and 37.75 seconds, a world record for
the distance. Aristides’s half-brother Chesapeake never made his break and finished in 8th
place. Both were owned and bred by H.P. McGrath and trained by Ansel Williamson. The winner received a
purse of $2,850 and he second place finisher Volcano received
$200. Substantially more money than that
changed hands in betting.
In
the flowery prose that was even then
the province of sports writers, one covering the event for the Louisville Courier-Journal wrote,
“It is the gallant Aristides, heir to a mighty name, that strides with sweeping
gallop toward victory...and the air trembles and vibrates again with the
ringing cheers that followed.”
All
in all it was a thrilling day. And a successful
one. The Derby almost instantly became
the premier event for three-year olds.
After
Lewis, a fan of the long distance, sold his interest in 1895, new ownership shortened the race to the current mile and a quarter. They also built new grandstands with the distinctive twin towers now known the
world over. And they began the custom of presenting the winner with a blanket
of roses.
There would be other changes, too. In 1875 Oliver Lewis was one of 13 out of 15 jockeys who were Black. So were the majority of the trainers like Williamson. But in the Jim Crowe Era, it would never do to have the silks of gentlemen worn by Black men. For decades yet to come the jockeys at Churchill Downs would be nearly as white as those fences.
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