Life is pretty busy right now. Work has picked up, we started practice at the high school where I coach basketball, wedding planning continues and the holiday’s are just around the corner. Regardless, I find some time everyday to check on the ins and outs of harness racing. Two states where we race (Illinois and New Jersey) are in battles over new legislation that would allow either slots at the racetracks or in the case of the Meadowlands, allow racing at all. My take on that is simple. If you are a state that allows gambling, there is no reason you should try and stop a slots at the track bill. If you don’t believe in ANY gambling, I can respect that as well…it is a totally different argument. However, in states where gambling exists, slots at tracks generates more gambling revenue, costs the taxpayers nothing and supports and entire sub-industry of horse racing that creates thousands of jobs, often in rural areas. It also encourages out of state investment and what state wouldn’t want out of staters pumping money into their industries? The ONLY reason to stop something like that is if you are in bed with the casinos or just totally against gambling of any kind. That’s it. It is a damn shame to watch the sputtering political process. Let’s forget about those issues just for a second and flashback a year.Last year everything was very different. While there were other things going on, the focus was more directed toward one thing: The Windy City Pace.
Greg, Danny and I were cautiously optimistic about In Over My Head’s chances in the week leading up to the Windy City. We liked his post position (#3) and were confident veteran driver Dale Hiteman could carve out a good trip for him. With a purse of $225,000, fifth place would lead to a payday of $11,250 and take Mo over the $100,000 mark for the year. Not too shabby. I distinctly remember taking little pieces of paper with horses names on them and sliding them around my desk trying to simulate possible scenarios of how the race could break down. I was pretty sure that Mo would get shuffled back and be out of the money coming into the stretch. However, we knew his closing kick was fast…especially on a half mile track since he can go from 80% speed to 100% speed in a heartbeat on that short home stretch. I thought it would be enough to get in for 5th…MAYBE even 4th. The stretch goal was third. That would have been incredible.
Well, we were right about one thing. He did use his rocket fire finishing kick that night, but after Hiteman worked out a second over trip, he wasn’t fighting for fifth. He was closing on the leaders and when he crossed the wire just a nose in front of Sheer Desire, he had delivered us a once in a lifetime memory.
The full story that I wrote the day after can be found here. It still gives me goose bumps:
http://inovermyheadracehorse.blogspot.com/2009/11/o-my-godi-think-he-just-won-it.html
There are so many parts to the story of that are fun to remember, but one that has been coming to me in recent days takes us all the way back to when In Over My Head was just two. I went down to Maywood one night to watch him race in a simple little non winners of 2 conditioned race. I was only a small owner at that time through John Butenschoen’s partnership. Greg and I didn’t buy him together until about three months later at an auction. As fate would have it, Danny planned to head down that night too as one of Greg’s horses was also racing that night. What better way to spend a night than heading down to Maywood with Danny and talking horses for the 4 + hour car ride? At that time, Mo (who wasn’t known as Mo yet), was struggling with making a lot of breaks. As it turned out, he was just having some growing and maturity issues, but we didn’t know that at the time. In one of his warmup trips, John brushed him past the grandstand at full speed. He wanted to test him a bit before the race given his recent problems. I vividly remember standing on the rail that night with no one around but Danny and I. In Over My Head looked awesome and in that short stretch of racetrack displayed incredible speed. “Damn he’s fast” I thought at the time.
About 14 months later, on Windy City Pace night in 2009, he was even faster over that exact same stretch of racetrack. He needed every ounce of that speed to win the race. The only thing faster that night was our group charging down to the winner’s circle. I’m pretty sure we would have even left Mo in the dust.
That night, Greg, Danny, Kacy, Laura, my brother Kirk, Laura’s brother Ryan and wife Jamie got to take in the experience of having our 55-1 long shot win. It was so much fun, we decided to go back this year. Even though we don’t have a horse racing, what better way to remember that night than to be at the track? I wish everyone racing in this year’s Windy City Pace the best of luck. Can lightening strike twice? I don’t know…that would mean One More Laugh (a horse the quality of If I Can Dream) would have to get upset.
In that magical #3 post position is a horse named Voomerang. His stats are strikingly similar to In Over My Head’s last year. I’m sure he’ll be a long shot. I’m also sure I’ll put a couple buck down on him to win.
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