Jockey did right thing to ease up Big Brown
Desormeaux's actions a big contrast to greedy owners and classless trainer
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'I was done. I had no horse' Big Brown jockey Kent Desormeaux talks about the last-place finish, and Da' Tara's jockey Alan Garcia and trainer Nick Zito talk about their upset win. NBC Sports |
140th Belmont Stakes |
Slide show |
No crown for Big Brown Big Brown fails to capture Triple Crown as long shot Da' Tara goes on to win the 140th running of the Belmont Stakes more photos |
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The mystery of why Big Brown, the winner of the Kentucky Derby and the Preakness and the forbidding favorite to complete the first Triple Crown in 30 years, performed so poorly will be answered in time, by the veterinarians who swarmed around him at the finish line and then followed him to his barn. But whatever the sport lost in terms of history and publicity when Big Brown failed in his bid, it recouped thanks to Desormeaux, who proved that there are good people in the sport who put the horses first, something critics had reason to question this season.
"This is the best horse I ever been on," Desormeaux said. "Something was wrong, I took care of him."
Thoroughbred racing had been fairly besieged by controversy in the last few weeks, ever since the catastrophic breakdown of the filly Eight Belles, who collapsed on two broken ankles just after finishing a valiant second to Big Brown in the Derby. Her death, combined with the undeniable seediness of Big Brown's connections, who hardly are poster boys for the integrity of the sport, provoked debates about everything from breeding of unsound horses, to whether the use of steroids should be banned, to whether racing needs more regulation. But Desormeaux made his own contribution to the debate with his sterling conduct, which suggested that you can't regulate conscience in the people who handle horses, you can only hope that they have it, and use it.
Maybe it was the oppressive heat, which made the track seem like ash and caused a haze to hang in the air like smoke over the sprays of oak trees and neatly trimmed hedges in the paddock. Maybe it was the small, seemingly minor crack in Big Brown's hoof, for which he had been treated earlier in the week. Maybe it was some other undiagnosed ailment or injury that caused Big Brown to be so unresponsive. Desormeaux didn't care what it was. He just knew something wasn't right. A hundred yards before the last turn, "I was done, I had no horse," Desormeaux said. So he eased the horse up and away from the rail, refusing to pursue Nick Zito's long-shot Da' Tara.
It wasn't that Big Brown necessarily was injured -- there was no outward sign of lameness. It was just something that Desormeaux sensed. "There is something amiss," Desormeaux said. "He's probably just tired. I thought in this horse's best interest, let's just get him back to the barn and recharge his batteries."
It was no great tragedy that Big Brown's owner and trainer were disappointed in their quest to make Big Brown the first Triple Crown winner since Affirmed in 1978. Everyone is entitled to a shot at redemption, but the fact is, the people attached to the horse were irretrievably crummy. They've had plenty of chances at redemption and come up shysters every time, and were a constant reminder over the past few weeks that thoroughbred racing is sometimes less the sport of kings than a shabby, shady exercise in using animals as a get-rich-quick scheme.
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