
Barbara D. Livingston
American Pharoah had far more rivals to defeat in his Triple Crown sweep than most of his predecessors.
As
a dozen horses since 1978 tried to win the Belmont Stakes and the
Triple Crown, racing purists have harbored mixed feelings about some of
these bids. It would be almost a sacrilege for a less-than-great horse
to have his name inscribed on the list of Triple Crown winners that
includes some of the sport’s immortals.
American Pharoah is not another Secretariat, Affirmed, or Seattle
Slew. But after his front-running victory Saturday, he deserves an
exalted place in racing history, for he swept the Kentucky Derby,
Preakness, and Belmont Stakes at a time when the feat has become more
difficult than ever.
American Pharoah has the most potent combination of strengths that a
horse can possess in American dirt racing. He has high speed, but also
has the talent and temperament to conserve that speed and employ it when
his jockey asks. Accordingly, American Pharoah has been able to get an
ideal tactical position in every one of his seven straight victories.
And that is what he did in the Belmont.
Most of his seven rivals lacked any early speed; only Materiality had
ever displayed enough quickness to indicate that he might challenge the
favorite. His trainer, Todd Pletcher, declared, “We’ve got to put some
pressure on American Pharoah.” But Materiality couldn’t do it — he
delivered a dismal performance and finished last -- and American Pharoah
immediately seized the lead.
"In the first turn,” jockey Victor Espinoza said, "it was the best
feeling I’ve ever had.” After he set a moderate pace over the
exceptionally fast racing surface — a half mile in 48.83 seconds, six
furlongs in 1:13.41 — the outcome of the Belmont was decided. American
Pharoah had plenty of energy left to draw away strongly in the stretch,
and racing had its 12th Triple Crown winner.
It is difficult for many handicappers (myself included) to heap
lavish praise on horses who win with perfect trips like this one. After a
horse captures a race with an unchallenged early lead, we’re looking to
bet against him the next time he runs, not anoint him a superhorse.
And American Pharoah’s performance in the Belmont was not of
superhorse quality, no matter what millions of viewers might have
thought as they watched him drawing away to win by 5 ½ lengths. He ran 1
½ miles in 2:26.65 on the same card that a fair-to-middling group of
older stakes horses covered the distance only .48 second slower. It was
certainly a good effort: His Beyer Speed Figure of 105 was the best in
the Belmont since 2007, but still a bit below the historical norm for
the race.
Before making a definitive judgment about how American Pharoah stacks
up against the all-time greats, racing fans should wait to see him
challenge top older horses later in the year. That’s usually the acid
test for a 3-year-old. Affirmed and Seattle Slew did not fully certify
their greatness until their post-Triple Crown phase of their careers.
Regardless of the quality of his individual performances, and
regardless of what he does in the future, American Pharoah’s sweep of
the three classics is an achievement more notable than those of the 11
horses who did it before him.
The weeks leading up to his Belmont were filled with discussion about
the reasons that the Triple Crown has been so difficult to win for the
last 37 years. Some horses of the past lost because of bad rides or
because they encountered a superior rival. But in recent years, three
significant developments have affected 3-year-olds bidding for the
Triple Crown:
* Because of their popularity and large purses, the Triple Crown
races have attracted big fields that make them more difficult to win.
Citation faced a grand total of 15 rivals in three races; American
Pharoah had to defeat 17 in the Derby alone.
* As the breeding of U.S. Thoroughbreds has changed, virtually no
horses have a pedigree to run 1 ½ miles on the dirt, creating an
obstacle that didn’t affect the stamina-rich horses of previous
generations.
* Racing three times in five weeks is too difficult for modern-day
horses, who are regularly given much more time between starts -- except
in the Triple Crown. From 2006 until this year, 23 horses ran in the
Preakness and came back to run in the Belmont three weeks later. All 23
lost. Fresh horses who rest five weeks from the Derby to the Belmont now
hold a significant advantage.
These factors weren’t relevant in the Triple Crown until early in the
new millennium, and they are becoming more important. U.S. horses
continue to be bred with an emphasis of speed over stamina. Horses need
and get more rest between races. In view of these trends, Triple Crown
winners will be increasingly rare. American Pharoah’s sweep will look
even more impressive if nobody duplicates the feat for another 37 years.