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#1
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Who is Charles Hatton you may ask
Writer for the DRF. He coined the term Triple Crown.
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#2
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One of the 3-4 greatest turf writers ever..
Charles Hatton was the pre-eminent turf writer in the US for decades and it his writing that inspired me to start Derby Trail '03. His annual Year in Review essays in the American Racing Manual are masterpieces. He, Evan Shipman, WHP Robertson and Hervey stand at the top of the profession, and lately Joe Hirsch, Ed Bowen and Steve Haskin continue their tradition.
Here's Hatton's immortal ode to Secretariat... Weave for the mighty chestnut A tributary crown Of autumn flowers, the brightest then When autumn leaves are brown. Hang up his bridle on the wall, His saddle on the tree, Till time shall bring some racing king Worthy to wear as he! ~Charles Hatton~ Haskin tells a great story of his first days at DRF when Hatton would send him for cups of scalding hot coffee... Hatton would take two sips and the cup would then be set aside and quickly get too cool for his taste... at which point the young Haskin would be dispatched to fetch a new, piping hot cup...
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All ambitions are lawful except those which climb upward on the miseries or credulities of mankind. ~ Joseph Conrad A long habit of not thinking a thing wrong, gives it a superficial appearance of being right. ~ Thomas Paine Don't let anyone tell you that your dreams can't come true. They are only afraid that theirs won't and yours will. ~ Robert Evans |
#3
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great story Steve. It's hard to picture Haskin having to get a guy's coffee...
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Seek respect, not attention. |
#4
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Quote:
The term existed in England for over one hundred years ... applied to the 2,000 Guineas, Derby, and St. Leger stakes ... when American sports writer Grantland Rice began applying it to the Kentucky Derby, Preakness, and Belmont stakes ... after Gallant Fox won all three races in 1930. Charles Hatton was a most erudite and witty observer of thoroughbred racing. Here's a great anecdote about him ... Because he had always maintained that Old Rosebud in 1915 was the greatest winner of the Kentucky Derby ... and that Man O' War 1919-20 was the greatest American race horse ... many people accused him of being an old fuddy-duddy. But Hatton always insisted that he was just being objective. After Secretariat won an allowance race in his third start ... giving him two wins in three starts ... Hatton went to see him. On the following day ... in his Daily Racing Form column ... Hatton wrote, "Secretariat is the greatest race horse I have ever seen." People were astounded when they read this. They said to him, "Charlie ... surely you meant to write that Secretariat ... a 2YO who has only a maiden win and an allowance win ... has the potential to become a great race horse." "No," said Charlie, "I meant exactly what I wrote ... Secretariat is the greatest race horse I have ever seen." How's that for brilliant prognostication? |
#5
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i've always seen written that the term triple crown was applied to the derby, preakness and belmont after omaha, gallant fox's son, won the triple crown...
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Books serve to show a man that those original thoughts of his aren't very new at all. Abraham Lincoln |
#6
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Quote:
The campaign didn't get much traction until Gallant Fox's son Omaha won the races in 1935. After that ... the Triple Crown was almost universally recognized ... and horsemen began preparing their best young horses to win it. It's tough to say who was the first "real" Triple Crown winner ... definitely not Sir Barton or Gallant Fox ... maybe Omaha ... and certainly War Admiral was trained for it and won it. |
#7
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Quote:
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I'm greener than Al Gore so therefore I'm green enough! |
#8
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Quote:
... but I do know that Hollie Hughes ... who was born in 1889 ... called Secretariat "the horse of the century" in 1973. Hollie died in 1981 ... at age 92 ... and I don't think he ever retracted that statement. |
#9
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..deleted.....
Last edited by ezrabrooks : 08-16-2006 at 12:12 PM. |
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