Seattle Slew
Other
colts have gone into the Triple Crown series having
not yet lost a race, but only Seattle Slew has emerged
undefeated with the Triple Crown title.
Seattle Slew was purchased for the bargain price
of $17,500 by Mickey Taylor for his wife Karen.
Veterinarian Dr. James Hill had recommended the
purchase and he shared in the ownership along with
his wife Sally.
He trained in Maryland, and there was nicknamed
"Baby Huey" after a clumsy cartoon character.
Trainer Billy Turner began him in New York, where
he won his first two starts, and was then entered
in the Champagne Stakes. He broke fast, grabbed
the lead, and drew off to a nine and 3/4 length
victory in time which was the fastest mile ever
run by a two year old. After those three starts,
he was turned out for the winter, and named champion
2yo colt.
Turner started him back in March, in a Hialeah 7
furlong allowance race, which he won by 9 lengths.
Then he was entered in the first major race for
sophomores - the Flamingo Stakes. As usual, he shot
to the front, and by the time he had reached the
far turn, he was leading by ten lengths. Jockey
Jean Cruget didn't wish to use up the colt in prep
races, so he slowed Seattle Slew down and won by
4 lengths. Even so, the time was the third fastest
running of the Flamingo Stakes in its history.
He reappeared a month later in the Wood Memorial
at Aqueduct. Just as before, he opened a 6 length
lead, by Cruget eased him to win by 3 1/4 lengths.
To date, every race he had entered had been an easy
romp, and understandably, he was a huge favorite
to win the Kentucky Derby. The bettors hammered
his odds down to 50 cents on the dollar.
Although greatly washed out in the paddock, Seattle
Slew kept his wits about him. He would need them
for the start. The gates opened and Slew emerged
off balance. He swerved to the right, colliding
with Get The Axe, and bumped almost sideways. But
he kept his feet, and straightened himself out.
Starting from behind was something Seattle Slew
was not accustomed to. He charged into a wall of
horses, comprised of Flag Officer, Bob's Dusty and
Affiliate, shouldered his way through, and after
a quarter mile found himself in second place behind
For The Moment. The pair raced together swiftly
through the opening fractions. The first half mile
was run in :45 4/5, and at the mile post, Seattle
Slew finally assumed command. He was leading by
three in the homestretch, but was confident enough
to allow the margin to narrow to 1 3/4 lengths at
the wire. Run Dusty Run was second, Sanhedrin was
third.
The Preakness saw a much better start. He came out
clear and unobstructed. Cormorant took the lead,
but Seattle Slew pressed in second place. The pair
set a blistering pace, running the first mile in
1:34 4/5, the fastest first mile ever run in the
race. In the homestretch, Seattle Slew took over,
drawing out to 3 lengths, but as before, eased to
a 1 1/2 length victory. Iron Constitution and Run
Dusty Run followed. The final time of 1:54 2/5 was
the second fastest Preakness ever, if one goes by
the "official" time and assumes Secretariat's
time of 1:55 was correct.
The Belmont Stakes marked the first time Seattle
Slew had ever run on a muddy track, but it made
little difference to him. He aassumed the lead early
and maintained it to the wire, winning by an easy
4 length margin. The pair chasing him home were
the same two from the Derby - Run Dusty Run and
Sanhedrin.
The owners wished for Seattle Slew to run on the
west coast, in the Swaps Stakes in early July, but
trainer Turner didn't see the move as being in the
colt's best interests, and besides, Slew needed
a rest. But the owners insisted and so they went.
The Swaps Stakes turned into the worst race of Slew's
career. He finished in 4th place, beaten over 16
lengths by J.O. Tobin. At that point, Turner was
dismissed and new trainer Doug Peterson took over.
However, for a while it looked like Peterson would
have no horse to train. Slew developed a life-threatening
virus, and his future career looked to be in jeopardy.
Slowly, he recovered, and began light training once
again. By May of the following year, he was well
enough to race. He won a 7 furlong Aqueduct allowance
by 8 1/2 lengths on a sloppy surface, but then stayed
away from the track for another three months.
In August he returned in a 7 furlong Saratoga allowance,
winning by 6 lengths, and was ready to tackle the
9 furlong Paterson Handicap under the lights at
The Meadowlands. Taking the lead from the start,
he looked like a winner in the stretch, but his
stamina had not yet returned from the layoff, and
Dr. Patches got past him to win by a neck.
Eleven days later came the Marlboro Cup, also at
9 furlongs. That race would mark the first ever
meeting between two Triple Crown winners, since
that year's hero Affirmed was in the line up. The
result was perfectly appropriate. The elder crown-wearer
Seattle Slew won by three lengths over the younger
Affirmed. And it was far back to the third place
horse, Nasty and Bold.
Two weeks after that, he reappeared in the Woodward
Stakes at Belmont, marking the third time within
that month that he had raced. But he won easily
over Exceller by 4 lengths. Then came the 1 1/2
miles of the Jockey Club Gold Cup. The going was
sloppy, and the racing would be fierce. Seattle
Slew bounded out to the lead, but Affirmed and Life's
Hope went right with him. They blazed suicidal fractions,
speed not typically seen in a distance event. Then,
Affirmed's saddle slipped loose, and he was forced
to ease up from the furious pace. (Affirmed would
finish 5th in that race, the only time that champion
ever finished off the board.) As Affirmed began
to fade, the chase was picked up by Exceller. They
turned into the stretch. Exceller had wrested a
half length lead over Seattle Slew, but Slew fought
back to return to Exceller's head. The pair crossed
the line together, but it was Exceller who was judged
to be the winner. This stretch drive is still recalled
by many to be among the all-time best - right up
there with Sunday Silence and Easy Goer's Preakness.
Slew made one more start - the Stuyvesant Handicap
at Aqueduct and won without much effort by 3 1/4
lengths, despite carrying 134 lbs. Then he was retired
to stud at Spendthrift Farm, where his estimated
value had been placed at a record figure of $12,000,000.
In time he was moved to Three Chimneys Farm where
he has lived ever since, and where he will remain
for the rest of his days. Even now, at the age 24,
he is still saddled up and jogged at the farm every
morning. It is the policy of Three Chimneys Farm
to engage in this regimen with each of their stallions,
as they believe it keeps them fit, healthy and happy.
Prominent offspring: Horse of
the Year A.P. INDY, champions SLEW O'GOLD, SWALE,
CAPOTE, LANDALUCE, and DIGRESSION. Major stakes
winners SLEW CITY SLEW, LIFE AT THE TOP, LAKEWAY,
TSUNAMI SLEW, ADORED, SLEWPY, TAIKI BLIZZARD,
and so many others.
His daughter's best offspring include:
CIGAR, GOLDEN ATTRACTION, HISHI AKEBONO, MULCA,
JADE FLUSH, AMERICAN CHANCE, SEEKING THE PEARL,
SLEW OF REALITY, and others.
Pedigree:
Seattle
Slew br.c.
born 1974 |
Bold
Reasoning, 1968 |
Boldnesian,
1963 |
Bold Ruler |
| Alanesian |
| Reason to
Earn, 1963 |
Hail to Reason |
| Sailing Home |
| My Charmer,
1969 |
Poker, 1963 |
Round Table |
| Glamour |
| Fair Charmer,
1959 |
Jet Action |
| Myrtle Charm |
(female family # 13)
Born:
Feb. 15, 1974, bred in Kentucky by Ben S. Castleman
Currently: Active stallion at Three Chimneys
Farm, Midway, Kentucky
Racing
Record:
| Year |
Age |
Starts |
1st |
2nd |
3rd |
unp. |
earnings |
| 1976 |
2 |
3 |
3 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
$
94,350 |
| 1977 |
3 |
7 |
6 |
0 |
0 |
1 |
641,370 |
| 1978 |
4 |
7 |
5 |
2 |
0 |
0 |
473,006 |
| total |
|
17 |
14 |
2 |
0 |
1 |
$1,208,726 |
Stakes Record:
at 2:
- won - Champagne Stakes
- Champion 2yo Colt
at 3:
- won - Kentucky Derby
- won - Preakness Stakes
- won - Belmont Stakes
- won - Flamingo Stakes
- won - Wood Memorial
- Champion 3yo
Colt
- Horse Of The Year
at 4:
- won - Marlboro Cup Handicap
- won - Woodward Stakes
(new track record)
- won - Stuyvesant Handicap
- 2nd - Jockey Club Gold
Cup
- 2nd - Paterson Handicap
- Champion Handicap Horse
|