The Kentucky
Futurity, which dates back 121 years, is the oldest race of any importance in
the sport. By contrast, the Hambletonian only goes back 88 years. The Futurity
has always been contested at The Red Mile, with the exception of a couple of
editions in the 1930’s, after a fire destroyed the grandstand, and four years
during World War II. The purse money has never matched that offered by the
Hambletonian, which is double that of the Futurity, partly because the race has
not been up for bid on a regular basis like the Hambletonian. The latter
started in Syracuse, quickly relocated to Lexington, then moved on to Goshen,
DuQuoin and finally New Jersey. Saratoga, Latonia, Washington Park and Liberty
Bell were all angling for it in the mid-1970s. You can’t hold the Kentucky
Futurity in New York or Pennsylvania. The race itself, surface of the track and
geographical location comprise a unique package.
Fillies have
enjoyed more success racing in the Futurity than they have in the Hambletonian;
they won the former at a 30% rate, while taking only 15% of the latter. Five
fillies won both, with the last being Emilys Pride in 1958. The last three
fillies to win the Hambletonian, Kerry Way, Duenna and Continentalvictory, did
not race in the Kentucky Futurity. Peace Corps, who was named TOY when she won
the race in 1989, kicked off a stretch of three wins in four years for the
distaff set in Lexington. The Nearly Perfect filly, Whiteland Janice, won two
years later for Mike Lachance, when Tommy Haughton’s Somatic broke stride while
on his way to victory. And the following year the Super Bowl filly, Armbro
Keepsake, beat Baltic Striker and favorite Giant Force for John Campbell. The
1976 win by the great Speedy Scot filly, Classical Way, over Hambletonian
winner Legend Hanover and Yonkers Trot champ, Chiola Hanover, was surely one of
the best.
There have
been large gaps between distaff wins in the Hambo, which you don’t find in the
timeline of the Futurity: there was a 17 year stretch between wins by Kerry Way
and Duenna, and it was another 13 before Continentalvictory got hers. Both
races now feature filly divisions. The Oaks started in 1971 and the Filly
Futurity in 1986.
Since the
inaugural Hambletonian in 1926, 26 Kentucky Futurity winners have also won that
race, ten in the 45 years since Nevele Pride won both in 1968. No rhyme or
reason to it: no common winner in the last four; a common winner in the four
before that; only two in the 34 years prior to that. During the thirty year
stretch between Flirth’s Hambletonion win in 1973 and Amigo Hall’s win in 2003,
Self Possessed, the sire of today’s premier stallion, Cantab Hall, was the only
trotter to win both. On the pacing side, during the thirty year stretch between
1977 and 2007 there were five common winners between the Little Brown Jug and
the Meadowlands Pace. Never as many as one might expect.
There have
only been eight winners of the Trotting Triple Crown. The last was Glidemaster,
eight years ago. He’s a failed stallion, and his predecessor, Windsong’s
Legacy, who won two years earlier, passed two and a half years after completing
his Triple Crown quest. Just as one must trace back 42 years to find a Triple
Crown hero on the pacing side, one who left a powerful mark as a stallion—Most
Happy Fella—one must go back almost that far—42 years—to find Super Bowl on the
trotting side.
The Kentucky
Futurity is so steeped in tradition that the driving and training record of
seven is still held by the late Ben White who drove his last winner 77 years
ago. Now that’s tradition!
From a
family perspective, the Simpson’s have experienced the most success in the
modern era. John Sr. completed the third Triple Crown when he won with 900
pound speed demon Ayres in 1964. This was after the mighty might somehow got
out of his stall during the night and got into a tussle with a chain link fence
that left him battered and bruised. Certainly the most bizarre story associated
with the Futurity. Simpson had also won 13 years earlier with Ford Hanover. His
son, John Jr., won four times, once with his father’s colt Timothy T—from the
first crop of Ayres—and also with Clarence Gaines’ Waymaker and Classical Way
and Norman Woolworth’s Bonefish filly, Filet Of Sole. And Jim Simpson trained
1986 winner Sugarcane Hanover, who upset division winner Royal Prestige, a
winner of seven in a row after suffering a narrow loss to Nuclear Kosmos in the
Hambletonian.
Bill
Haughton, who drove five Jug winners and trained six, never drove one in the
Futurity. It was the only significant stakes race he never won. He lost to son
Peter and 2 for 17 Quick Pay in 1976 when he had Hambletonion winner Peter
Lobell. Quick Pay had never won a race in 2:00. Peter also ruined the Triple
Crown bid of Speedy Somolli in 1978 with the journeyman Speedster trotter,
Doublemint. Younger son, Tommy, won the Futurity with Final Score when he was
only 23 years old, and he got a training credit when Napolitano ruined Mack
Lobell’s Triple Crown bid in 1987.
Stanley
Dancer trained and drove two of the eight Triple Crown winners—Nevele Pride and
Super Bowl. Maybe Nuncio will give John Campbell that record tying win number
seven next week. Chuck Sylvester has trained six. Ralph Baldwin and Joe O’Brien
had five winners each.
We’ve had
five years of low key winners of the Kentucky Futurity, Creatine and My MVP won
for Mike Lachance the last two years. Not since 2009, when HOY Muscle Hill
scored an easy win for Brian Sears, has a star won it. Father Patrick faltered
in the Hambletonian, but he’s in Lexington and staked to the Futurity. A world
record performance that turns heads at The Red Mile would be nice about now.
Joe
FitzGerald
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