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Event of the Year - by Emily Hufford
The defining moment of Event of the Year's career came
well after he was retired, and only two years before his death. The moment
that would stand out as - perhaps - the moment that sealed Event of the
Year's legacy: in a long, drawn out poll taken by trainers everywhere,
he was voted the Greatest Horse Of All Time.
He looked like a champion on paper well before his birth.
By Seattle Slew and out of the Mr. Prospector mare Classic Event, he had
'success' written all over his pedigree. The dark bay colt was foaled
in March and was plagued by injuries as a yearling and a two-year-old.
He was taken on by trainer Kellie Whitehead, a relatively new trainer
who had been around show horses all of her life. She was immediately impressed
by the strapping colt, and then blown away by his workouts. As a three
year old, he had matured tremendously, and a workout of 5 furlongs in
:58.1 convinced Whitehead that this colt was for real.
"I know it's a bit ambitious," she said the morning after
she entered him in the Santa Anita Derby, "but, I think I have something
here."
The grade 1 race would be contested at 1 1/8 miles, and
only 3 horses would go postward. Event of the Year broke like a rocket
and rushed to the lead, setting blistering fractions (:45.0, 1:11.9) before
storming under the wire, the winner by 6 lengths.
Going into the Kentucky Derby off one start seemed ludicrous,
but he was favored going into the race. 5 other horses challenged him,
including future star sire Chilito and future Breeders' Cup Mile winner
Skip a Stream.
Event of the Year sat behind an increasingly rapid pace,
took command around the far turn, and then drew off impressively in the
stretch. The ovation he received was huge and his final time &endash;
1:59.3, was phenomenal.
Heavily favored to win the Triple Crown, the first of
the colt's 2 losses would come in the Preakness Stakes. He sat off the
pace and then when he rushed up to challenge, the tiring Sweetsouthernsaint
bumped him hard. Event of the Year staggered, regained his feet, running
on to finish third by two necks.
With the Triple Crown now out of his sight, the pressure
was off the colt when he traveled to Belmont for the third leg of the
series. He was co-favored in the race and sat just off the pace until
the field moved into the far turn, when the colt challenged for the lead
and then drew clear to win by a length. He had the three year old championship
nearly locked up, but to be Horse of the Year he would need to defeat
Silver Charm and Skip Away, who had dominated the older division all year.
The Breeders' Cup was held at Belmont that year, and despite facing star
older horses and both of the horses who had defeated him in the Preakness,
he went postward as the favorite.
In the race, Skip Away went to the lead with Silver Charm
2 wide on his outside and Event of the Year ran tucked along the rail.
On the far turn he moved in between the two older stars and then dueled
to the wire, winning by a half length and becoming the 6th three year
old to win the Classic.
He was awarded Horse of the Year and Champion Three Year
Old Colt. He missed the first month of his four year old year when he
suffered a quarter crack, but was heavily favored in the Strub Stakes
at Santa Anita. He ran in mid-pack early before exploding to a powerful
6 length win over Preakness winner Victory Gallop.
Then came the inevitable &endash; weight. Event of the
Year would carry 131 pounds in the Santa Anita Handicap, 5 more than rivals
Silver Charm and Skip Away. Skip Away took a relaxed lead for much of
the race, but the freight train that was Event of the Year stormed to
a neck victory. Then came the Hollywood Gold Cup, where Event of the Year
finally met his equal in ability: the filly Serena's Song. The filly had
a similar record and would carry 130 pounds in the then-handicap race.
Event of the Year would carry 135.
Under the weight, Event of the Year missed the start
and struggled to regain his feet. He was rushed up to run off the pace,
and then missed to Serena's Song by a nose. Trainer Whitehead worried
about the colt's cracked heels and gave him the rest of the summer off
to relax before training up to the Breeders' Cup Classic. The race would
be run at Churchill Downs that year and remains one of the finest fields
assembled.
Serena's Song would go to the post, as well as Silver
Charm and Skip Away, plus that year's Kentucky Derby winner Battle Cry
and Belmont winner Bet Me Mom, as well as future Classic winner Storm
and Silence. The race was run with much controversy when stakes winner
Pulpit savaged Storm and Silence off the turn, but on the front end, Event
of the Year was sweeping to the lead after running 4 wide for much of
the race. He had a clear lead in the stretch, but the younger Battle Cry
and the classy Serena's Song were coming after him quickly. It didn't
matter for Event of the Year, he was already under the wire, an easy winner.
After receiving his second Horse of the Year title, as
well as Champion Older Horse, Event of the Year retired to stand for $100,000.
Many of his offspring became legends as well, including the immortal Priceless
Forever, Triple Crown winning Tremendous, fantastic filly Three Day Event,
and two year old superstar The Natural. Event of the Year died of a virus
only a few years after he retired. Whitehead retired from training shortly
before his death. Even though Event of the Year died prematurely, his
impact on racing as a sire and a racehorse will last forever.
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