JC / Railbird

Goodbye, Tom Ainslie

“Richard Carter, a newspaper journalist and author who wrote on crime, medicine and baseball but was best remembered for his books on racetrack handicapping under the pseudonym Tom Ainslie, died last Saturday in New City, N.Y. He was 89″ (New York Times).

Among the books Carter wrote as Ainslie are “The Compleat Horseplayer” (excerpt), “Ainslie’s Encyclopedia of Thoroughbred Handicapping,” and “Ainslie’s Complete Guide to Thoroughbred Racing,” a now classic handicapping primer. “Before him, there was a widespread assumption that the only thing a horseplayer would want to read was a pamphlet with some quickie system in it,” said Andrew Beyer of the author. “He was the first person to really write literately and intelligently about handicapping” (DRF).

More from Bill Finley: “Anyone who has ever written a handicapping book, enjoyed a handicapping book or profited from reading a handicapping book owes thanks to Dick Carter.”


3 Comments

I first met Tom Ainslie (Dick Carter) personally while working at The Racing Times in approximately 1991. He came into a meeting of the top editorial staff and happened to sit next to me. I was in awe. I said you’re Tom Ainslie aren’t you and he replied in the affirmative. I told him I had read his book “The Complete Horse Player” and he acknowledged my comment. It was the thrill of a lifetime that I will never forget. You have my deepest condolences for your loss. It is also a great loss to the racing community.
Sincerely,
Stanley W Borchers

Posted by Stanley W Borchers on September 8, 2007 @ 9:51 pm

Stanley, thanks for sharing your memories of Ainslie. I never had the pleasure of meeting the great writer, but his “Guide” was indispensable to me when I was falling hard into racing and remains one of my favorite books about the sport.

Posted by Jessica on September 9, 2007 @ 10:05 am

Jessica,
Literally the day before Tom Ainslie died, a neighbor in my building who knows what I do for a living lent me his copy of “The Body Language of Horses.” People must die, but their language can go forward. — John

Posted by J.S. on September 11, 2007 @ 7:46 pm