For those who have been around Thoroughbred racing for awhile, we all know the horses in recent history who competed in the Triple Crown. You could have not read about and followed Animal Kingdom, or Mine That Bird or I'll Have Another the last several years, on social media and elsewhere. Some of these horses, though, have captured the imagination of the public, and some have not done quite as well.
For the last few that have competed for the Triple Crown, i.e. in the box when the gate springs in the Belmont Stakes with a chance at glory, the google search stats are below.
The highest rated horse in terms of search interest is not American Pharoah, it's a horse who, of course, never won the Triple Crown, Smarty Jones.
Sometimes we forget the charisma, and backstory, the colt had.
He jogged in front of 8,500 - it seemed on the short side - at Philly Park, of all places, and at least part of this draw was his everyhorse status:
''I'm here for this wonderful Cinderella story,'' said Lois McKeown, who
arrived at Philadelphia Park at 7:30 a.m. so she could get a nice
location along the rail for Smarty Jones's public gallop. ''He is the
Seabiscuit of our times.''
The above graph can be interpreted in many ways. But, regardless, it took me by a little bit of surprise. American Pharoah is everywhere in this internet world. The free column inches are humungous. He achieved what Smarty, and others, could not do.
But there's old Smarty, way back in 2004, leading the pack. The charismatic little colt with a backstory that people absolutely loved has a place in racing history, and will likely be remembered for a long time.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Most Trafficked, Last 12 Months
-
Welcome to the 8th edition of the Monday Super Spectacular Blog! It was Preakness week and frankly instead of a horse racing pool, next yea...
-
I continue to be fascinated with both the press and general football fan reaction to the Bill Belichick 4th down decision in Sunday's ga...
-
Last week's inaugural Super Spectacular Monday Blog got a lot of hits, and not just from Russian bots (although cпасибо to all Russian r...
-
On the Harness Edge this morning, I see that there is a story up about the BCSA offering their members up for driver and trainer interviews ...
-
We'll all remember Memorial Day '24 because of the Met Mile as the day Ray Cotolo dressed up like a hot dog. Hope @RayCotolo au...
-
Welcome to the Super Spectacular Blog Vol 5 . Thanks for reading and sharing this disorganized barrage of thoughts and links each week. Ti...
-
As most of you have heard, Charles Simon passed away yesterday at age 57 . Although a lot of you knew Chuck better than I, I still felt a s...
-
Last night's Uncle Bill twitter spaces, where TVG's Fanduel's Mike Joyce joined some raucous horseplayers was, well, kind of in...
Similar
Carryovers Provide Big Reach and an Immediate Return
Sinking marketing money directly into the horseplayer by seeding pools is effective, in both theory and practice In Ontario and elsewher...
1 comment:
I was very disappointed when Smarty Jones retired. I thought his Derby and Preakness were fabulous. Not to redboard, but I felt much better about AP in the Belmont than Smarty. Ap is a freak that can adapt to any pace scenario , while Smarty didn't rate quite as well imo. I believe AP would have beaten Smarty on their best days. The only 2 3yos I've really seen that would beat him were Holy Bull and Seattle Slew and maybe Easy Goer on the right type of track. Of course Secretariat is untouchable, but I was only 5 when I saw him run and didn't really earn my racing wings until I was 8 or 9 lol.
Post a Comment