After winning the
Kentucky Derby and the Preakness in photo finishes,
Silver Charm failed to complete his march into history yesterday when he was overtaken in the final
100 yards and lost the
Belmont Stakes to
Touch Gold by three-quarters of a length before a throng of 70,682 spectators at
Belmont Park.
Silver Charm, the gray colt from
California, seemed to have won the race in the homestretch when he caught and passed his old rival,
Free House. But he simply did not see Touch Gold rushing past both of them on the outside. And, in a flash, the dream of a lifetime was gone: Silver Charm did not become the 12th horse to win the
Triple Crown, nor the first since Affirmed did it 19 years ago, and he missed the chance to win the $5 million bonus that went with sweeping
America's three classic races for 3-year-olds.
''I saw a shadow out of the corner of my eye,'' said the jockey
Gary Stevens, describing the final seconds of the race aboard Silver Charm. ''It was Touch Gold, and Silver Charm never saw him.''
Touch Gold, who ran fourth in the Preakness after stumbling badly out of the starting gate, came back three weeks later to run a shrewd and strategic race in the
Belmont. And he did it with a fiberglass patch wrapped around his left front foot, which he cut when he kicked himself during his disastrous start in the Preakness.
This time, he stalked the leaders during a slow pace and made the final turn for home still trailing Silver Charm and Free House. But after a rousing duel down the homestretch, he executed his coup, running down Silver Charm in the final strides. Free House finished another length behind in third place.
''
It's sad not to have a Triple Crown,'' said
Frank Stronach, the
Canadian horseman who owns Touch Gold. ''But this is a competition. That's what racing is all about.''
The Silver Charm camp accepted the melodramatic defeat with grace.
Bob Lewis, the beer distributor from
Southern California who owns the colt with his wife, said: ''The horse is in a class that few reach. It was a wonderful ride from start to finish. We'll go on from here.
''How can you feel downhearted when you win the
Derby and the Preakness and finish second in the Belmont?''
http://www.nytimes.com/
1997/06/08/sports/touch-gold-sneaks-in-to-steal-silver-charm-s-crown
.html?src=pm
- published: 06 Jun 2012
- views: 13494