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3/16th miles race, Turcotte made his daring, early move, from last to first, three-wide and rolling.
The Daily Racing Form Chart Caller described the action:
"Secretariat broke well and was eased back and relaxed nicely as the field passed the stands for the first time. He was guided outside two rivals entering the clubhouse turn and responding when Turcotte moved his hands on the reins, made a spectacular run to take command entering the backstretch."
Turcotte's bold move was meant to seize the moment, place the destiny of the horse in his own hands. But it was risky. An early speed burst might bite into the colt's well of stamina. Rival riders poised to reel in Big Red in the latter stages, if he faltered.
However, there was no falter in Secretariat.
Down the backstretch Secretariat loped along on the lead. Around the turn and into the stretch he held about a 2½ length- margin on Sham (who had moved up to second) and held that margin to the wire.
The Form's Chart Caller summed up the second half of the race succinctly: "Secretariat was not threatened thereafter and confidently ridden to the finish."
As he had earned the roses in Louisville, Secretariat was awarded black-eyed susans for victory in Baltimore. It was smiles all around in the Secretariat camp.
But there was one small problem with the race: its time.
After breaking the Derby time record, sportswriters were keen to see if Secretariat could break Canonero II's 1:54 for the 1 3/16th miles Preakness in 1971. A time of 1:55 glowed in the lights of the electronic timer in the infield.
That was far from the final "Official" time of the race.
Minutes after the race, the track's clocker informed Pimlico officials that he had timed the race faster than the timer, with a clocking of 1:54 2/5. Also speaking up were two Daily Racing Form clockers, both veterans, who both had timed the event in 1:53 2/5 which would have broken the track record. In the days following the Preakness, CBS television entered the controversy and offered to allow officials to time the race on a video-tape replay. The network showed fans side-by-side replays of Secretariat's Preakness and Canonero's Preakness, and Secretariat got to the line first on TV.
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