Matt Graves pointed out last week that Affirmed and Afleet Alex have something in common: both won the Sanford and Hopeful at Saratoga as two-year-olds. Reading Pete Axthelm’s “The Kid” last night, I spotted another parallel: The 1978 Triple Crown winner also had a shortened Derby prep season — just 45 days — and the first race of Affirmed’s three-year-old campaign was a sprint that he won easily. His second was a 1 1/16 in which he struggled to beat even lightly regarded rivals. Sounds familiar.
Related: Another thing the two horses had in common is that they both had talented young riders — Steve Cauthen was only 18 when he rode Affirmed to the Triple Crown. Afleet Alex was piloted by an only slightly older Jeremy Rose to five wins in his first seven career starts. Rose won’t have the chance to ride Alex in any of the Triple Crown races though because trainer Tim Ritchey replaced him with the more seasoned John Velazquez early this year. I won’t presume to second guess that decision, never having trained a horse for a rigorous three-year-old campaign, but must wonder how secure Velazquez’s commitment to Ritchey and Alex is when his agent, Angel Cordero, has to call Ritchey to assure him that Velazquez will show up for the mount in the Arkansas Derby on April 16. (Philadelphia Inquirer)
The legendary runner turns 30 today. “If any horse could live to be 30 years old — despite a checkered early career that saw him pass through the hands of multiple trainers and owners, a grueling campaign on crooked legs that earned seven Eclipse Awards (including two Horse of the Year honors), a foul disposition that made other renegades seem like Mister Rogers, and a near-fatal bout with colic at age 27 — it would be John Henry, who was to celebrate that milestone on March 9 at his home in the Hall of Champions at the Kentucky Horse Park in Lexington.” (Thoroughbred Times)
Related: John Henry’s Hall of Fame page; a very nice biography of the birthday boy, with photos; and an earlier Thoroughbred Times profile, “John Henry still has moxie.”
Later: More than 200 people turned out at the Kentucky Horse Park to wish John Henry a happy birthday. “Despite his reputation as a grouch, John Henry, who turned the equivalent of 98 in human years, greeted the crowd rather calmly as they joined to sing Happy Birthday and moved in for a close-up view of the gelding in his winter coat” (Blood-Horse); Photo of retired jockey Chris McCarron, who rode John Henry in his last 14 starts, patting the woolly gelding (Yahoo).
“Not many thoroughbreds see 30, but John Henry, extraordinary when he raced, is among the leaders in longevity as well.” There are two thoroughbreds known to be older than John in Kentucky, and probably not that many more nationwide. (LA Times)
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