Part 1
He has done all he can; time for the historians to rank him
I've been a fan and follower of Horse Racing since 1977 when Seattle Slew blazed to a Triple Crown. The next year, I saw another Triple Crown when Affirmed outdueled Alydar in three scintillating races. In 1979, Spectacular Bid won the Kentucky Derby and Preakness and here I was an 11 year old who thought winning Triple Crowns was easy. In fact, I might have been rooting against The Bid just to see the streak end. In 1980, the great filly Genuine Risk won the Derby and then appeared to be bumped by eventual winner Codex in the Preakness. It took 18 days for Codex's victory to become official. But, in my four years watching Triple Crown races, it appeared to me that winning the crown wasn't that hard.
As we know, it took 37 years for American Pharoah to become the 12th horse to capture the coveted Triple Crown. And, then on Saturday, The Pharoah cemented his legacy by romping home by 6 ? lengths in the Breeder's Cup Classic. In my 39 years of following the sport, I have never seen a horse with a better cruising speed than American Pharoah. History may show that there may have been faster horses, but Pharoah's cruising speed, to me, is second-to-none. We have seen him go out, settle, pick up the pace, settle and then pick it up and settle again. His Preakness winning time was a slow 1:58.46 for 1 3/16 miles, but one must remember that he passed 6 furlongs in 1:11.42 and then turned his engine off. We all know how effortlessly he won the Haskell and the Classic, once again, just cruising--and holding it--all the way.
By John Furgele
John Furgele hails from Grand Island, NY, just miles from the mist coming from Niagara Falls. Always a sports fan, I was drawn to the Triple Crown due in most part to my father, who always made sure we watched the Derby, Preakness and Belmont Stakes. In 1984, as a 16 year old, I was out practicing for my upcoming road test---and struggling---when my dad ordered me to pull into a "less than stellar" tavern so we could watch Swale win the Kentucky Derby. From that day on, my love of the Sport of Kings continued to grow. If I mention Spend a Buck to some of my hometown friends, it won't go over well, but that's a long story. In addition to loving all things horse racing, I work in sales, have three "nice" kids and live in Glenmont, and yes, still believe that the Buffalo Bills will win a few Super Bowls before "it's over."
He has done all he can; time for the historians to rank him
I've been a fan and follower of Horse Racing since 1977 when Seattle Slew blazed to a Triple Crown. The next year, I saw another Triple Crown when Affirmed outdueled Alydar in three scintillating races. In 1979, Spectacular Bid won the Kentucky Derby and Preakness and here I was an 11 year old who thought winning Triple Crowns was easy. In fact, I might have been rooting against The Bid just to see the streak end. In 1980, the great filly Genuine Risk won the Derby and then appeared to be bumped by eventual winner Codex in the Preakness. It took 18 days for Codex's victory to become official. But, in my four years watching Triple Crown races, it appeared to me that winning the crown wasn't that hard.
As we know, it took 37 years for American Pharoah to become the 12th horse to capture the coveted Triple Crown. And, then on Saturday, The Pharoah cemented his legacy by romping home by 6 ? lengths in the Breeder's Cup Classic. In my 39 years of following the sport, I have never seen a horse with a better cruising speed than American Pharoah. History may show that there may have been faster horses, but Pharoah's cruising speed, to me, is second-to-none. We have seen him go out, settle, pick up the pace, settle and then pick it up and settle again. His Preakness winning time was a slow 1:58.46 for 1 3/16 miles, but one must remember that he passed 6 furlongs in 1:11.42 and then turned his engine off. We all know how effortlessly he won the Haskell and the Classic, once again, just cruising--and holding it--all the way.
By John Furgele
John Furgele hails from Grand Island, NY, just miles from the mist coming from Niagara Falls. Always a sports fan, I was drawn to the Triple Crown due in most part to my father, who always made sure we watched the Derby, Preakness and Belmont Stakes. In 1984, as a 16 year old, I was out practicing for my upcoming road test---and struggling---when my dad ordered me to pull into a "less than stellar" tavern so we could watch Swale win the Kentucky Derby. From that day on, my love of the Sport of Kings continued to grow. If I mention Spend a Buck to some of my hometown friends, it won't go over well, but that's a long story. In addition to loving all things horse racing, I work in sales, have three "nice" kids and live in Glenmont, and yes, still believe that the Buffalo Bills will win a few Super Bowls before "it's over."