Book Review: Alydar’s Chief Counsel

If there was a Thoroughbred who ever needed legal counsel to mount an adequate defense of his life, then perhaps it would be Calumet Farm's MGISW Alydar.

His battles with rival Affirmed as both a juvenile, and of course, through the 1978 Triple Crown are now the stuff of legend. However, what has clouded all those spectacular past performances came during his stallion career when he tragically died from an injury which was sustained while he was in his Calumet stall on a November night in 1990. Officially chalked up as an accident, his sudden and shocking death has remained shrouded in conjecture ever since.

What happened to Alydar? That is the central question that Fred M. Kray attempts to tackle in his ambitiously titled new book, Broken: The Suspicious Death of Alydar and the End of Horse Racing's Golden Age.

There is nothing quite like a tenacious true crime writer. Plucky isn't a descriptor that goes far enough. It's one's dogged determination, coupled with an ability to stare deep into the abyss that demands sterner stuff. Kray has all of that and more. His passion for this topic is evident, and he possesses the requisite skills to follow a labyrinth of clues and misstatements that go back forty-plus years.

A former animal-rights attorney who was on hand to witness the John M. Veitch trainee when he won the 1978 GI Flamingo S. at Hialeah Park and the GI Florida Derby at Gulfstream Park, Kray began to delve into the case in 2018. He tried to track down those involved, performed seemingly countless interviews and attempted to weave together a story chock full of contradiction.

But has Kray actually uncovered a smoking gun or is this just a series of red herrings? Where exactly is the conspiracy to commit murder?

Broken flows rather like a true crime memoir. It's Kray's defense laid bare on behalf of the Thoroughbred in question. Committing the cardinal sin if we skip to the end of this mystery, the author mythically knots his favorite Windsor tie and strides to the same courtroom in Houston, Texas where the security guard who was on duty that fateful night was tried and sentenced. There, he gives his own account of why he believes Alydar was murdered. It's heartfelt, but somehow it falls just short of compelling drama à la Raymond Burr.

Still, what makes this work a worthy read is the journey. Kray starts with the initial, all-too-brief insurance investigation. He then moves briskly through a composite of Alydar's racing and breeding shed exploits and delves into the questionable economic practices of Calumet's J.T. Lundy & Co. After painstakingly wading through the ensuing trials which fingered less than a handful of Calumet figures, Kray opens the curtain for the final act in which he becomes the lead. Perched on his shoulder like a GoPro Camera, we watch as he sits in front of many a horse farm gate, chides a reluctant private detective who didn't deliver and relates a number of emotional moments with key witnesses.

Alydar visiting Lucille Gene Markey on Blue Grass S. Day in 1978 | Keeneland

The relationship he forms with Tom Dixon, the equine insurance agent who was the first on the scene at Calumet, is particularly poignant. Dixon is a no-nonsense umpire that calls them like he sees them, and Kray has to steadily battle for the former agent's uneasy trust in order to access key photographs and notes. 'Deep Throat', Dixon is not, but the back-and-forth between the pair as they argue points of view on several occasions is quite a chess match.

Speaking of emotional moments, Kray's interview with Alydar's groom, Michael Coulter is both enlightening to his case, but we also find a man who hasn't returned to the scene mentally in quite some time. Though a witness in one of the trials, Coulter's perspective was underutilized and from Kray's questions, we get a window into the relationship the groom built with this superb equine athlete. Coulter explains how tired Alydar was from over-breeding and addresses the horse's psychological state. This is important because there were constant questions throughout the different trials about Alydar's penchant for kicking stall doors.

What Kray finds is a trail of dead ends and memories which are parsed with a few nuggets of remembrance. The author leads us to the assumption that key players that do not want to talk are clinging to something deeper. His mission to ask everyone connected why there were no marks on the paint in Alydar's stall, and why the latch was not disturbed becomes an indelible part of the script. A tense section relates an interview with the well-known Dr. Larry Bramlage. It is particularly excruciating to plow through, but it also shows how resolute Kray is when it comes to defending Alydar. You feel both men's frustration bearing out and it makes for good theater in the Rood & Riddle waiting room where the interview was conducted.

There is something very Citizen Kane about Broken. Like the reporter who is sent to find out what Charles Foster Kane meant when he said 'Rosebud' on his deathbed, we may never know what happened to Alydar that night at Calumet in 1990. Was his leg hit with something? Was more than one person involved? Who knew about the coverup at Calumet? Who knows something right now? Questions will continue to float. While we are on a roll, did Kray prove that this was the end of horse racing's 'Golden Age' as the book's subtitle suggests? That answer seems even more amorphous.

Instead, maybe we can take a sliver of comfort in knowing that there are some things we just can't uncover about a tragedy. If you read Broken as an homage to this Thoroughbred, then we need to thank the author for his contribution and determination. What we can say is that if Fred Kray had defended Alydar, at the very least, he might have had his day in court.

Broken: The Suspicions Death of Alydar and the End of Horse Racing's Golden Age by Live Oak Press, 348 pages, photos, May 2023.

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Galileo Off The Mark At Royal Ascot As Warm Heart Takes The Ribblesdale

It took its time coming this year, but the expected Royal Ascot winner for the great Galileo (Ire) aptly arrived courtesy of Ballydoyle as Warm Heart (Ire) captured Thursday's G2 Ribblesdale S. for the late legend. Stepping up to a mile-and-a-half trip that was always going to see her excel following her hard-fought win in the 10-furlong Listed Haras de Bouquetot Fillies' Trial S. at Newbury last month, the 13-2 shot was in the right spot early with Ryan Moore's unerring radar to her advantage.

As the initial strong pace slackened notably after the first half mile, Warm Heart was close up while Shadwell's keen-going 5-6 favourite Al Asifah (GB) (Frankel {GB}) was compromised several lengths behind without cover. As Warm Heart took a narrow lead two out, Al Asifah arrived out wide with a threat that was to prove only short-lived as the eventual winner produced a 11.88 split to take command. At the line, the daughter of the triple group 1 winner Sea Siren (Aus) (Fastnet Rock {Aus}) had 2 1/2 lengths to spare over Lumiere Rock (Ire) (Saxon Warrior {Jpn}), with TDN Rising Star Bluestocking (GB) (Camelot {GB}) 1 1/4 lengths further behind in third.

“She is a straightforward filly and they didn't go hard, so I was in a good spot and it all worked out,” Moore said. “She was a better filly today up to a mile and a half.” Aidan O'Brien added, “We thought that a mile and a quarter was maybe as far as she was going to get and we didn't know when she got to the front today whether she would run out of stamina. She got the trip very well today and Ryan gave her a beautiful ride. She's out of a great mare and usually those fillies with good pedigrees do improve–physically she's doing great.”

Pedigree Notes
Warm Heart is the fifth foal out of Sea Siren, whose top-level victories came in the Manikato S., Doomben 10,000 and BTC Cup. She is also responsible for Galileo's G3 Derrinstown Stud Fillies S. runner-up Celestial Object (Ire) and the stable's ill-fated Arbutus (Ire) who broke down during the Listed Yeats S. last season. The third dam is the G1 Karrakatta Plate winner Hold That Smile (Aus) (Haulpak {Aus}), while the family includes the G2 Bank of New Zealand Breeders' S. scorer and stakes producer Lady Dehere (NZ) (Dehere). Her final Galileo is a 2-year-old colt named Bremen (Ire), after which she produced a yearling colt by Camelot (GB).

Thursday, Royal Ascot, Britain
RIBBLESDALE S.-G2, £235,875, Ascot, 6-22, 3yo, f, 11f 211yT, 2:30.41, g/f.
1–WARM HEART (IRE), 128, f, 3, by Galileo (Ire)
1st Dam: Sea Siren (Aus) (MG1SW-Aus, SW & MGSP-Ire, $1,743,772), by Fastnet Rock (Aus)
2nd Dam: Express A Smile (Aus), by Success Express
3rd Dam: Hold That Smile (Aus), by Haulpak (Aus)
1ST GROUP WIN. O-Mrs J Magnier, M Tabor, D Smith & Westerberg; B-Coolmore (IRE); T-Aidan O'Brien; J-Ryan Moore. £133,765. Lifetime Record: 5-3-1-0, $231,472. *Full to Celestial Object (Ire) (Galileo {Ire}), GSP-Ire. Werk Nick Rating: A. Click for the eNicks report & 5-cross pedigree, or the free Equineline.com catalogue-style pedigree.
2–Lumiere Rock (Ire), 128, f, 3, Saxon Warrior (Jpn)–Last Gold (Fr), by Gold Away (Ire). (55,000gns Ylg '21 TATOCT). O-M O'Flynn; B-The Last Partnership (IRE); T-Joseph O'Brien. £50,713.
3–Bluestocking (GB), 128, f, 3, Camelot (GB)–Emulous (GB), by Dansili (GB). 1ST GROUP BLACK TYPE. O-Juddmonte; B-Juddmonte Farms (East) Ltd (GB); T-Ralph Beckett. £25,380.
Margins: 2HF, 1 1/4, NO. Odds: 6.50, 14.00, 4.50.
Also Ran: Crown Princesse (Fr), Sea Of Roses (GB), Al Asifah (GB), Climate Friendly (GB), Lmay (Ire), Ghara (GB), Village Voice (GB), Perfect Prophet (GB), Understated (GB), Midnight Mile (Ire), Rocha Do Leao (Ire), Red Riding Hood (Ire), Ferrari Queen (Ire), Maman Joon (Ire). Scratched: Infinite Cosmos (Ire), Luckin Brew (Ire).

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NYRA: Saturday’s Cross Country Pick 5 Features All-Turf Sequence From Royal Ascot, Belmont Park

The New York Racing Association, Inc. (NYRA) will host a Cross Country Pick 5 on Saturday featuring an all-turf sequence from Belmont Park with international stakes action from Royal Ascot.

The Cross Country Pick 5 requires bettors to pick the winner of five select races from tracks across the country. The minimum bet for the multi-track, multi-race wager is 50 cents. Wagering on the Cross Country Pick 5 is available on ADW platforms and at simulcast facilities across the country with each week featuring a mandatory payout of the net pool. The Cross Country Pick 5, boasting a low 15 percent takeout, offers sequences with races from Belmont Park and partner tracks across the country.

The first four legs of the sequence come from Royal Ascot in the United Kingdom, beginning in Race 1 [9:30 a.m. Eastern] with the Listed Chesham at seven furlongs for juveniles.

The field of 23 is led by a formidable trio of Aiden O'Brien trainees in Pearls And Rubies, who enters from a determined first-out graduation sprinting five furlongs on June 11 at Navan, and the pair of Buttons and Content, who finished first and third, respectively, in a June 8 maiden at Leopardstown going the Chesham distance. Second-out maiden winner La Guardia looks to upset the O'Brien runners off an impressive 2 1/4-length score on May 27 for conditioner Richard Hannon.

The sequence continues in Race 2 [10:05 a.m.] with the Group 3 Jersey for sophomores sprinting seven-furlongs. Juddmonte's Covey looms large for trainers John and Thady Gosden off a 3 1/4-length victory last out in the May 27 Silver Bowl Handicap at Haydock. The son of Frankel looks to make it four wins in-a-row, dating to a second-out graduation in April at Newmarket. Trainer Charlie Appleby will challenge with two runners in Grade 1-winner Mysterious Night and Group 2-winner Noble Style.

The middle leg features a talented group of sprinters 4-years-old and up vying for Group 1 glory in the six-furlong Queen Elizabeth II Jubilee [Race 3, 10:40 a.m.], led by the Anthony and Sam Freedman-trained Artorius as he cuts back from a close fourth-place effort in the 7 1/2-furlong Group 1 Agency George Ryder in March at Rosehill.

The Flying Artie colt earned his first Group 1 coup earlier this year off a 209-day layoff when taking Canterbury in March at Randwick. The loaded field includes the Richard Gibson trainee Wellington, a Group 1 winner in Hong Kong, and the Christophe Clement-trained Big Invasion, who enters from a game second to Caravel in the Grade 1 Jaipur on June 10 at Belmont.

The penultimate leg sees overseas action wrap up in Race 4 [11:20 a.m.], the Group 2 Hardwicke for 4-year-olds and up traveling 1 1/2 miles. The Owen Burrows-trained Hukum returned from a nearly one-year layoff to win the 1 1/4-mile Group 3 Brigadier Gerard on May 25 at Sandown, attending the pace early before pouncing in the final furlong to win by a half-length. The field of 11 includes last year's winner Broome, who was a last-out third in the Group 2 Yorkshire Cup for O'Brien. The son of Australia won the Group 2 Dubai Gold Cup earlier this year by a neck over Siskany, who went on to capture the Grade 2 Belmont Gold Cup two starts later.

The sequence closes out stateside in Race 6 [3:41 p.m.] from Belmont Park, the $150,000 Wild Applause at one-mile on the Widener turf for sophomore fillies. Four-time Eclipse Award-winning trainer Chad Brown saddles two contenders in graded stakes-winner Liguria and stakes-placed Tax Implications. The former is making the second start of her sophomore campaign off a fifth-place finish in the Grade 2 Edgewood in May at Churchill Downs while the latter makes her first start since a runner-up effort in the Chelsey Flower in October.

The Clement-trained Breath Away has never finished worse than second in four lifetime outings and seeks her second career stakes conquest, while Soviet Excess streaks into her stakes debut off a pair of wins at Gulfstream Park for Hall of Fame conditioner Todd Pletcher.

Free Equibase past performances for the Cross Country Pick 5 sequence will be available for download at https://www.nyra.com/belmont/racing/cross-country-wagers.

America's Day at the Races will present daily coverage and analysis of the spring/summer meet at Belmont Park on the networks of FOX Sports. For the complete broadcast schedule, visit https://www.nyra.com/belmont/racing/tv-schedule.

Cross Country Pick 5 – Saturday, June 24

Leg A: Royal Ascot, Race 1 – Chesham (9:30 a.m. Eastern)

Leg B: Royal Ascot, Race 2 – G3 Jersey (10:05 a.m.)

Leg C: Royal Ascot, Race 3 – G1 Queen Elizabeth II Jubilee (10:40 a.m.)

Leg D: Royal Ascot, Race 4 – G2 Hardwicke (11:20 a.m.)

Leg E: Belmont Park, Race 6 – $150K Wild Applause (3:41 p.m.)

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Locally-Trained Golden Bandit On Top In Canterbury Derby; Florent Geroux Pilots Three Stakes Winners

Canterbury Park's Northern Stars Turf Festival, featuring five turf stakes, attracted jockeys and trainers from around the country. Locally based horses stood their ground and won two of those stakes when Cupids Crush wired the field in the $75,000 Curtis Sampson Oaks and Golden Bandit won the $100,000 Canterbury Derby. The remainder of the evening belonged to Florent Geroux, one of the top riders in the country, who won the other three $75,000 stakes, the Brooks Fields, the Dark Star Turf Sprint and the Lady Canterbury, all for trainer Jonathan Thomas.

Cupids Crush, a Minnesota-bred filly owned by Xtreme Racing Stables LLC and trained by Mac Robertson, was making her sixth career start but had not raced a route of ground or on the turf. She broke alertly under Eduardo Gallardo and was never seriously challenged stopping the clock in stakes record time of 1:34.35 for a mile on the turf.

“I always really like her. She's done everything right,” Mac Robertson said. “She's always been fast.”

Robertson worked her over the turf course June 17 to allow Cupids Crush to see the course the trainer said. Cupids Crush paid $18.60 to win, the largest price of the evening.

Golden Bandit, the 2 to 1 third choice in the Canterbury Derby, stalked One in Vermillion, passed him coming out of the final turn, pulled away by 4 lengths mid-stretch and held on to win by 1 1/2 lengths as One in Vermillion attempted to rally. Favorite Worthington finished third, another 1 1/4 lengths back.

Golden Bandit was ridden by Adam Beschizza, trained by Coty Rosin and is owned and was bred in Kentucky by Barry and Joni Butzow. He paid $6.00 to win.

Geroux's wins came aboard Fuerteventura in the Brooks Fields for owners Robert LaPenta and Brereton Jones, Regal Realm in the Lady Canterbury and High Front in the Dark Star Turf Sprint, both owned by Augustin Stables. Fuerteventura paid $3.80, Regal Realm $4.80 and High Front $6.00, all as the betting favorites.

The evening ended with another winning favorite, the fifth on the card, as Sir Sterling won the $55,000 MTA Stallion Auction Stakes by 3 1/4 lengths with Lindey Wade aboard. Wade won his 1,500th career race earlier on the card aboard Wright Winged. Sir Sterling is trained by Tony Rengstorf for owner Chad Kuehn. He paid $3.80.

Total handle for the nine-race card was $2,522,806.

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