Alan F. Balch - Now, about Pegasus . . .

No, I’m not talking about the Pegasus World Cup.  Not yet, anyway.

I’ve been a fan of the original Pegasus since my earliest memories around horses, when he was the symbol of the American equestrian governing body.   As drawn by George Ford Morris, he appeared on the engraved medals and embossed certificates for horsemanship we were all trying to win.   

For those of us interested in pedigree, he was sired by Poseidon . . . Greek god of horses, incidentally, along with the sea, earthquakes, and storms.  And never underestimate the influence of the bottom line:  his dam was the hideous, winged, venomous monster Medusa, no doubt the source of his own lovely, powerful wings, but not his handsome countenance.  Nor his stunning white purity.

His jock was Bellerophon, who invented the riding helmet and safety vest, and, needing no whip, had his hands instead on a shield and golden spear.  

Bellerophon was sent on the original Mission Impossible (well understood by every single one of today’s riders, no doubt) – to slay the ferocious, fire-breathing, hybrid monster Chimera, whose very sighting was an omen for disaster.  Pegasus was his vehicle, and the necessary if not sufficient condition for vanquishing evil.

In short, the horse came first.  Still does.  Without Pegasus, the jockey was nowhere.  And the monster would live.

So it is quite fitting, at least in one sense, that the world’s richest race would bear the name of the heroic and inspirational Pegasus, thunderbolts and all.

In another sense, sadly, it simply calls attention to the chaos we face in American racing, particularly in California . . . top and bottom of that Pegasus pedigree, by the way, trace back to Chaos.  Repeatedly.

According to media reports, the 473-ton, 110-foot tall, dark steel and bronze depiction of Pegasus stomping a dragon (absent his jock) cost $30-million to construct at Gulfstream Park in Florida.  The World Cup purse there was $12-million in 2017, and is being elevated to $16-million in 2018.   

Out at faraway Santa Anita, owned by the same outfit, the Blood-Horse reported in 2013 that $15-million had gone toward more grandeur in the track’s most sumptuous areas, its Chandelier Room and added mezzanine suites.  More recently, apparently millions more have been dedicated to new table terraces and other opulent enclaves nearby.

In all, what’s that?  Probably $50-million in statuary and splendor alone.  Not those purses.  Not even counting the ongoing maintenance and improvement of that magnificence, as status, monuments, and indulgence for the privileged few. 

Despite the commitment of all that investment in extravagance and shrines, pre-eminent horseman D. Wayne Lukas didn’t hesitate publicly to decry the deplorable and decrepit state of the stables at Santa Anita following the draw for the Breeders’ Cup Classic that same year.  “I would be embarrassed to take an owner out there now,” he said, despite having called the Santa Anita backstretch home when he first joined the Thoroughbred community in 1978.  His own shed-row at the time had become the exemplar for all to emulate, there and everywhere else he raced.  He believed in luxury for his horses.

Our Sport of Royalty has always depended on commoners.  We commoners, to begin with, actually take care of the horses.  And as King Henry himself said, “All men are equal – on the turf, and under it.”  In more contemporary times, it has disproportionately been the commoners (among the horsemen, as well as in the grandstand), who have made the tip-top magnificence possible.  After all, as I never tire of reminding those who just won’t hear or comprehend, 90% of the races (filled by the commoners and bet on by commoners) must be attractive enough to fuel the betting that funds the 35% of purses that go to the stakes and our royalty, only about 10% of the races.

The World Cups in Dubai and Florida take the yawning gulf between hype and reality to a new level of absurdity.  There are probably 20 horses from the tens of thousands active in the world who will contest them in a given year, along with their connections.  In the American case, almost all of the money they’re running for is their own, so perhaps that “makes sense.”

What doesn’t make sense in any way is the ongoing neglect of investment in backstretch facilities and conditions, for horse and human alike, whether at Santa Anita, Golden Gate Fields, or any track, any place in the world, in a sport where the horse comes first, and its human caretakers should, too.

This is our Chimera, and we clearly have the resources to vanquish it . . . if not the will or the proper priority.  Remember that even Bellerophon ultimately learned the hard way that glory by itself is not entitlement, unceremoniously dumped by Pegasus.  He ended up alone, hated by gods and man alike.

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Alan F. Balch - Expertise?

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Mucus and airborne particles

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THIS ARTICLE FIRST APPEARED IN - NORTH AMERICAN TRAINER - ISSUE 27

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Alan F. Balch - Where went the marketing?

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Sid Fernando - no lie, no link (yet) between lasix and breakdowns

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North American Trainer (Issue 26 - Fall 2012)

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The unmistakable profile of Donnie K Von Hemel

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THIS ARTICLE FIRST APPEARED IN - NORTH AMERICAN TRAINER - ISSUE 26

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Relative Values - The Homeisters

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THIS ARTICLE FIRST APPEARED IN - NORTH AMERICAN TRAINER - ISSUE 26

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Gary West - The self-made billionaire bitten by the racing bug

Gary West’s first job as a teenager was as a pinsetter at an old bowling alley in Iowa. He has been rolling strikes ever since. West, a Thoroughbred owner for 32 years, has settled into a life of philanthropy in posh Rancho Santa Fe, California, with his wife Mary, after becoming a self-made billionaire in telecommunications, but he has not forgotten his humble roots.

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THIS ARTICLE FIRST APPEARED IN - NORTH AMERICAN TRAINER - ISSUE 26

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Author: Steve Schuelein

 

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Sid Fernando - The Lasix Anomaly

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Flying high - Training horses at altitude

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THIS ARTICLE FIRST APPEARED IN - NORTH AMERICAN TRAINER - ISSUE 26

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Fast recovery - Three tips to get your horse back to racing with Structural Integration

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THIS ARTICLE FIRST APPEARED IN - NORTH AMERICAN TRAINER - ISSUE 26

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To beet or not to beet? Will beetroot become part of the racehorse’s diet?

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Girl power - female jockeys

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Ken Snyder - (Issue 26 - FALL 2012)

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Behind the scenes at the Breeders’ Cup

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THIS ARTICLE FIRST APPEARED IN - NORTH AMERICAN TRAINER - ISSUE 26

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Preventing Laminitis with cryotherapy

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THIS ARTICLE FIRST APPEARED IN - NORTH AMERICAN TRAINER - ISSUE 26

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Stand and deliver - An important step forwards in equine fracture repair

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THIS ARTICLE FIRST APPEARED IN - NORTH AMERICAN TRAINER - ISSUE 26

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John McVeigh: in search of a global set of medication rules

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THIS ARTICLE FIRST APPEARED IN - NORTH AMERICAN TRAINER - ISSUE 25

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Alan Balch - Whither the Breeders’ Cup?

A year ago in this issue, I undertook to describe the state of North American racing in the years leading up to the inaugural Breeders’ Cup in 1984, as well as its true genesis.

But what about its evolution since then, and its future?

Although it’s hard to imagine racing now without it, to a great extent the Breeders’ Cup as we know it today mirrors and embellishes both its flaws and its sporting greatness.

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THIS ARTICLE FIRST APPEARED IN - NORTH AMERICAN TRAINER - ISSUE 26

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Author: Alan F. Balch

My Best Brother continues the Currin tradition of success

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BILL Currin is feeling a lot of brotherly love these days. Currin, a veteran owner and breeder and former trainer, is still tingling with emotion over a victory by My Best Brother in the $300,000 Del Mar Derby (G2) in September.

(Issue 26 - Autumn 2012)

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The views of William Koester

I am honored to have the opportunity to speak on a subject that is important to me as a life-long enthusiast of Thoroughbreds and racing. I previously chaired the Association of Racing Commissioners International (RCI), but the opinions and ideas expressed in this article are mine alone and do not necessarily represent either the RCI or the members themselves.

William Koester (Issue 26 - Autumn 2012)

 

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