jnchapel + horseracing + turf-writers   3

Hatton provides window into racing's golden age
"The line that began with Vosburgh reached its apex – but also its culmination – with Hatton. His erudite, lively writing elevated Thoroughbred racing to the classics during a time when horse racing was the most popular spectator sport in the country. Hatton’s death, at age 69, left a gap that seems increasingly unlikely to be filled. Racing itself has changed, and so, too, has the style in which its writers chronicle it. Stories about heroes of the turf have given way to stories about slot machines and animal welfare and declining revenue streams. There is, with reason, more cynicism now. Hatton had a greater stage to play on. One could imagine him writing about the theater or literature, but instead he wrote his Iliad about horse racing. He saw it as his task to uphold its history and principles."
horseracing  journalism  turf-writers  turf-writing  racing-history 
11 weeks ago by jnchapel
Zenyatta worth watching before stellar career ends
"Rachel Alexandra, retired from racing this week, was a tremendous filly, but she was no Zenyatta. I touted Rachel Alexandra for 2009 Horse of the Year and she won. But I was wrong. Zenyatta deserved that honor and I hope she'll be voted 2010 Horse of the Year. Zenyatta has never been defeated on the race track, but she was 'defeated' in a poll for Horse of the Year. That was a shame." Unbelievable.
horseracing  turf-writers  eclipse-awards  horse-of-the-year 
october 2010 by jnchapel

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