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#1
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Phar Lap
This horse probably has the best case for Horse of the World.
Prior to 1935 -- pari-mutual wagering was outlawed in California. The Mexico track Caliente was the Santa Anita of its day and Agua Caliente Handicap was the Big Cap of its day. In Phar Lap's final 35 races -- he had a record of 35-32-2-0 -- the only time he missed the board was when he failed to carry a record 150lbs in the 2 mile Melbourne Cup. Interestingly -- he raced with no whip. The symbol W stands for whip. The symbol stands for spurs. You could use both whip and spurs -- but riders rarely did. Nice place price by the way! He was the 129lbs highweight in his dirt debut. Preakness Stakes winner Dr. Freeland was next at 120lbs. American Derby winner Reveille Boy was in at 118lbs. Spanish Play (4th in the Kentucky Derby at 3 and New Orleans Handicap winner) was in at 117lbs. How fast did Phar Lap run?: Race 4: 9 Furlongs in 1:54.20 ($600 claimer, 11 horse field, won by 1.5 lengths, winner carried 110lbs) raw figure of 67 Race 6: 8.5 furlongs in 1:47.60 ($800 claimer, 9 horse field, won by 2 lengths, winner carried 114lbs) raw figure of 64 Race 9: 8.5 furlongs in 1:47.00 ($800 claimer, 10 horse field, won by 3 lengths, winner carried 107lbs) raw figure of 69 Race 12: 8.5 furlongs in 1:45.80 ($1,800-to-$2,500 claimer, 8 horse field, won by 3 lengths, winner carried 90lbs) raw figure of 81 Race 13: Phar Lap wins by 2 lengths -- 10 furlongs in 2:02.80 under 129lbs. raw figure of 110 Race 14: 10 furlongs in 2:07.20 ($800 claimer, 9 horse field, winner by a length under 106lbs) raw figure of 75 Race 15: 10 furlongs in 2:08.00 ($500 claimer, 10 horse field, winner by 7 lengths under 106lbs) raw figure of 69 |
#2
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Here is the video replay of the entire race: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bROtR5ivyZw
Here is part of what was written about Phar Lap before the race: |
#3
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#4
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I looked up the result charts for the day of his dirt win today -- and watched his dirt win on Youtube.
There is no disputing he ran a great race. Obviously he was an incredible horse on grass. Salvator wrote: "The Agua Caliente performance proclaimed him all if not more than he had been represented" Quote:
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#5
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With his suspicious death and all -- and looking at his form -- I wonder if this horse was heavily doped throughout his racing career.
He seemed too impossibly good to be true...and after a dismal 1-for-10 start to his career no less. It appears almost comical how much better he was than everything else in his Aussie races. He made a complete mockery of that field under true handicap conditions on dirt and ran very fast despite a stupid ride. |
#6
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I was looking at his Wikipedia entry the other day, and it claims that his heart (which is on display at a museum) weighs in at 6 lbs, versus 3ish for the average thoroughbred. It also said that horses were often given arsenic solutions, and testing on his mane showed repeated dosing over his lifetime.
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