As he came to the Belmont Stakes in
June 1973 with a chance to become the first Triple Crown winner in a
quarter of a century, Secretariat led the news headlines in North
America. The Big Red Horse made the covers of Time, Newsweek and
Sports Illustrated - something that hadn't happened before, or
since.
In his book "The Most Glorious Crown,"
author Marvin Drager rounded up several clips from the millions of
words printed about the Big Red Horse. Some writers, perhaps more
used to human newsmakers, struggled a bit to define what was so
phenomenal about Secretariat.
"He has a neck like a buffalo, a back
as broad as a sofa," Time magazine reported. But Newsweek sports
columnist Pete Axthelm, who never saw a racetrack he did not wish to
attend, glided across the typing turf.
"Secretariat
generates a crackling tension and excitement wherever he goes,"
Axthelm wrote. "Even in the kind of gray weather that shrouds lesser
animals in anonymity, Secretariat's muscular build identifies him
immediately; his glowing reddish coat is a banner of health and
rippling power. Magnificent enough at rest ... when he accelerates
... he produces a breathtaking explosion that leaves novices and
hardened horsemen alike convinced that, for one of those moments
that seldom occur in any sport, they have witnessed genuine
greatness."
While Axthelm was waxing poetic, pithy
New York Post columnist Larry Merchant (now better known as HBO's
sharp-tongued boxing analyst) clicked off his words in Broadway
staccato:
"Secretariat," said Merchant, "is the
kind of Big Horse that makes grown men weep, even when they are
flint-hearted bettors, even when he goes off at 1-10. He is the
apparently unflawed hunk of beauty and beast they search for
doggedly in the racing charts every day, and never seemed to find.
His supporters rhapsodize over him as though he is a four-legged
Nureyev, extolling virtues of his musculature, his grace, his urine
specimens." If he were to lose the Belmont, Merchant warned, "the
country may turn sullen and mutinous."
The media explosion over Secretariat
set an interesting benchmark in the coverage of horse racing. While
the sport has never since enjoyed quite the fervor and anticipation
in the press as it enjoyed in Secretariat's run up
to the 1973 Triple Crown, the nation's media DID learn in that year
how to turn out The Big Story about a horse racing hero.
We've seen that in the spring of 2003, as the New York-bred gelding Funny Cide made a run for glory in the Triple Crown.
In no way whatsoever were the stories of Secretariat and Funny Cide alike. They were horses from opposite sides of the railroad track. But if one was Equine Royalty, and the other is Equine Everyman, that's just part of the story that makes headlines.
Bill Doolittle
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