Belmont Stakes 2006
Welcome to the 2006 Belmont Stakes. We trust you enjoy the
races and find something useful on our website.
Where is the Belmont Stakes?
Belmont
Park
When is the Belmont Stakes? June 10, 2006
Brief History of the Belmont Stakes
The first Belmont in the United States was not the famous stakes race or even
the man for whom it is named. Rather, the first Belmont was a race horse that
arrived in California in 1853 from his breeding grounds of Franklin, Ohio. The
Belmont Stakes, however, are named after August Belmont, a financier who made
quite a name and fortune for himself in New York politics and society.
Obviously, Mr. Belmont was also quite involved in horse racing, and his imprint
is even intertwined within the history of the Kentucky Derby.
The Belmont's Age
One thing the Belmont does have over the Derby is that it is the oldest of the
three Triple Crown events. The Belmont predates the Preakness by six years, the
Kentucky Derby by eight. The first running of the Belmont Stakes was in 1867 at
Jerome Park, on, believe it or not, a Thursday. At a mile and five furlongs, the
conditions included an entry fee of $200, half forfeit with $1,500 added.
Furthermore, not only is the Belmont the oldest Triple Crown race, but it is the
fourth oldest race overall in North America. The Phoenix Stakes, now run in the
fall at Keeneland as the Phoenix Breeders' Cup, was first run in 1831. The
Queen's Plate in Canada made its debut in 1860, while the Travers in Saratoga
opened in 1864. However, since there were gaps in sequence for the Travers, the
Belmont is third only to the Phoenix and Queen's Plate in total runnings.
Some Monumental Belmont Moments
In 1890, the Belmont was moved from Jerome Park to Morris Park, a mile and
three-eighths track located a few miles east of what is now Van Cortlandt Park
in the Bronx. The Belmont was held at Morris Park until Belmont Park's opening
in 1905.
Here's a tidbit you didn't see in Derby or Preakness history. When Grey Lag won
the Belmont in 1921, it marked the first running of the Belmont Stakes in the
counter-clockwise manner of American fashion. This 53rd running was a mile and
three-eighths over the main course; previous editions at Belmont Park had been
run clockwise, in accordance with English custom, over a fish-hook course which
included part of the training track and the main dirt oval.
The first post parade in this country came in the 14th running of the Belmont in
1880. Until then the horses went directly from paddock to post.
The Belmont has been run at various distances. From 1867 tp 1873 it was 1 5/8
miles; from 1874 to 1889 it was 1 1/2 miles; from 1890 through 1892, and in
1895, it was held at 1 1/4 miles; from 1896 through 1925 it was 1 5/8 miles;
since 1925 the Belmont Stakes has been a race of 1 1/2 miles.
Champion Sires
As we saw in the breeding section of the Call To The Derby Post Betting How-To
Page, champions horses breed champion horses. This certainly holds form in the
Belmont Stakes. A total of eleven Belmont Stakes winners have sired at least one
other Belmont winner.
Man o' War heads the list of Belmont champion sires. Not only did he win the
race himself in 1920, but three of his subsequent sires won it as well: American
Flag in 1925, Crusader in 1926 and War Admiral in 1937, who went on to win the
Triple Crown.
Commando won the 1901 running, then sired Peter Pan, the 1907 champ and the
Colin, the 1908 winner.
1930 champion Gallant Fox sired both Omaha (1935) and Granville (1936).
Count Fleet won the 1943 edition, and then sired back-to-back Belmont winners
with Counterpoint (1951) and One Count (1952).
1977 Triple Crown winner Seattle Slew sired a Call To The Derby Post favorite in
Swale, who won both the Derby and the Belmont in 1984, as well as A.P. Indy, who
won the Belmont in 1992. 1999 Belmont winner Lemon Drop Kid is also a descendant
of the Slew.
The following horses have sired one Belmont winner each: Duke of Magenta of 1878
sired Eric (1889); Spendthrift of 1879 sired Hastings (1896); Hastings then
followed his again by siring Masterman, the 1902 winner. The Finn of 1915 sired
Zev (1923); Sword Dancer of 1959 sired Damascus (1967); last but not least,
Triple Crown winner Secretariat of 1973 sired Risen Star, the 1988 winner.
Money at the Belmont
Oh, have times changed. The purse for the first running of the Belmont was
$1,500 added with a total purse of $2,500, with the winner's share taken by the
filly Ruthless. The lowest winner's share in Belmont history was the $1,825
earned by The Finn in 1915. The Belmont set an opposite record in 1992, in which
the richest Belmont purse ever totaled 1,764,800. Five times in Belmont history
only two horses entered the race: 1887, 1888, 1892, 1910 and sadly, 1920, the
year Man O'War triumphed. The largest field, on the other hand, was 15 in 1983,
when Caveat defeated Slew O' Gold. In 1875 14 horses ran, when Calvin outdueled
stablemate Aristides, that year's winner of the inaugural Kentucky Derby. The
Belmont's lowest paid winner: Count Fleet in 1943, who paid a paltry $2.10. The
Belmont's highest winner: Sherluck in 1961, who dished out $132.10. A favorite's
race: Of the 129 Belmont runnings through 1997, the favorite had won 58 times,
including 9 out of the last 25. There have been some strange twists of betting
in Belmont history. Since the advent of mutuels in New York in 1940 there have
been six times when no place or show betting was taken on the Belmont Stakes.
The last time there was no show wagering was in 1978 when Affirmed and Alydar
held their famous confrontation. There was also no show betting when Secretariat
won his Triple Crown in 1973; no wonder--Secretariat won by a record 31 lengths.
Show betting was also eliminated in 1957 when Gallant Man defeated Bold Ruler,
and also in 1953 when Native Dancer won. In 1943, believe it or not, there was
no place or show wagering when Triple Crown winner Count Fleet went off $.05 to
the dollar and won by 25 lengths. To wrap it up, Whirlaway completed his Triple
Crown victory in 1941 without show betting. In other words, by the time horses
dominate the Derby and Preakness, there just might not be that many challengers
when the horse goes to complete the sweep. Since 1940 there have also been 30
horses listed as odds-on favorites in the Belmont Stakes. In 1957, there were
two: Gallant Man, who won at 19-20, and Bold Ruler, who finished third at 17-20.
Of these 30, only 12 went on to win. The highest on-track mutuel handle on the
Belmont: 1993. A total of $2,793,320 was bet on the Belmont that year, with
$1,409,970 wagered on win, place and show betting, and $1,293,954 on the daily
double, exacta and triple.
The Fastest Belmont
Who else? Secretariat set a world-record that still stands for the mile and a
half distance on a dirt track at 2:24. (He had finished a mile and a quarter at
1:59, faster than his own Derby record of 1:59 2/5.)
Belmont Trophies
"The Belmont Stakes trophy is a Tiffany-made silver bowl, with cover, 18 inches
high, 15 inches across and 14 inches at the base. Atop the cover is a silver
figure of Fenian, winner of the third running of the Belmont Stakes in 1869. The
bowl is supported by three horses representing the three foundation
thoroughbreds--Eclipse, Herod and Matchem. The trophy, a solid silver bowl
originally crafted by Tiffany's, was presented by the Belmont family as a
perpetual award for the Belmont Stakes in 1926. It was the trophy August
Belmont's Fenian won in 1869 and had remained with the Belmont family since that
time. The winning owner is given the option of keeping the trophy for the year
their horse reigns as Belmont champion."
Belmont
Stakes in 2006
Today, this
marquee meet of the Maryland racing season will feature
27 stakes races for purses of $4.455 million. Purses for
thirteen races were increased from a year ago, while just one
was decreased. Fourteen of the added-money races, including all
10 of the graded stakes for the meet, are slated for Preakness
week, including nine on Preakness Day.
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