Belmont Stakes 1973
Owned by Christopher and Penny Chenery, under the Meadow Stable banner, and trained by Lucien Laurin, Secretariat won 16 of his 21 races and just over $1.3 million (approximately $9.5 million, accounting for inflation) in prize money. However, ‘Big Red’, as he was affectionately known, will always be best remembered for his three-year-old campaign, in 1973, during which he won the Kentucky Derby, the Preakness Stakes and the Belmont Stakes, thereby becoming the ninth horse in history to win the American Triple Crown.
Remarkably, Secretariat set, and still holds, records for the fastest winning times in all three races. His 31-length victory in the Belmont Stakes, which he completed in 2:24, led Charles Hatton, columnist for the ‘Daily Racing Form’, to proclaim, “He could not have moved faster if he had fallen off the grandstand roof.”
At Belmont Park in Elmont, New York on June 9, 1973, Secretariat faced just four rivals, the pick of which was Sham, whom he had already beaten in the Kentucky Derby and the Preakness Stakes. Consequently, Secretariat was sent off at 1/10 to complete the Triple Crown, but even such hugely prohibitive odds proved entirely justified. Secretariat, on the inside, and Sham, on the outside, set off at breakneck speed and heading down the back straight were 10 lengths ahead of their nearest pursuer. However, after early exertion soon took its toll on the latter, who would eventually fade to finish last, as Secretariat drew further and further clear.
“He is moving like a tremendous machine!” exclaimed announcer Chic Anderson as Secretariat approached the home turn and the son of Bold Ruler galloped on in splendid isolation all the way to the finish line. His winning margin was, and still is, the widest in the history of the Belmont Stakes and his winning time took 2.60 seconds off the previous world record for a mile and a half.