Riva Ridge – The
Unsung Champion
Joseph Di Rienzi
by Richard Stone Reeves (bloodhorse.com) |
Riva Ridge, a foal of 1969, was a thin bodied, light
colored bay son of the 1958 Champion Two-Year-Old First Landing from the mare,
Iberia. He was owned and bred by Meadow Stable of Doswell, VA. The family
patriarch, Christopher Chenery, had been in failing health and the stable
operation was run by his daughter, Mrs. Helene “Penny” Tweedy. The horse’s name
was derived from a favorite ski trail in Vail, CO at a resort that was co-founded
by Mrs. Tweedy’s husband, John, who in turned named it after a mountain in
Italy that was the scene of a strategic Allied victory in World War II.
Prior to Riva Ridge’s first start as a 2 year-old in 1971, there
was a disruption in the racing operation of Meadow Stable as the result of an
unexpected tragedy in a rival outfit. The Phipps family stable trainer, Eddie Neloy, died suddenly of a heart
attack. The question in the aftermath of Neloy’s passing was who would be the
Phipps’ next trainer? Roger Laurin, at the time training for
Meadow Stable, was offered the position.
Despite the caliber of horses Meadow Stable could produce, Laurin believed the
Phipps’ stable was racing’s premier operation, and with a potential superstar
in the making in two-year-old filly Numbered
Account, he accepted. However, in leaving Meadow Stable,
he made a recommendation for his replacement, namely, his father Lucien, which was agreed to by the
stable. It is rare in recorded history, and certainly so in thoroughbred
racing, when a son did more for the professional advancement of his father. Not
only would veteran Lucien Laurin train Riva Ridge to championship and classic
success, but Meadow Stable had a yearling that in a little over a year would
electrify the racing world as no horse in modern times would. That horse was Secretariat.
Riva Ridge did not make his debut until June, and it was
an uneventful seventh place finish at Belmont Park. He broke his maiden at next start at the same racetrack beating by 5½
lengths a horse that would be a rival the next 3 years - Rokeby Stables’ Key to the Mint. Unplaced in the Great
American Stakes at Aqueduct Racetrack, Riva Ridge went on to win his first
stakes race in the 6 furlong Flash Stakes at Saratoga Racetrack where he made
the acquaintance with jockey Ron Turcotte.
Riva Ridge next raced in Belmont’s Futurity and emerged with
a thoroughly professional 1½ length victory. By now, Riva Ridge was considered
the leading male 2 year-old in the U. S.
He cemented that position with an impressive 7 length victory in the one
mile Champagne Stakes at Belmont Park. Then traveling to Laurel, MD, Riva Ridge demolished the field in the 8½ furlong
Pimlico-Laurel Futurity by 11 lengths in stakes record time.
While Riva Ridge was dominating his male peers, Numbered
Account was doing the same in female counterpart races for juvenile fillies,
and the consensus was she was better than him. In an uncharacteristic but
sporting gesture, Roger Laurin and the Phipps stable decided to run Numbered
Account in the 8½ furlong Garden State Stakes where she would face Riva Ridge. The latter’s trainer Lucien
Laurin had great respect for the filly, but he was
very confident his horse would prevail, using the racing adage, “a good colt
will always beat a good filly”. Whether this was true in this instance or the
fact that Numbered Account had just raced a week earlier (winning the Gardenia
Stakes) was too much to ask, was not clearly established. In any case, she
raced evenly along the inside and never mounted a challenge finishing fourth.
Riva Ridge won by 2½ lengths over Freetex with Key to the Mint a neck back in third. Riva Ridge concluded the
year with 7 wins in 9 starts, whereas, Numbered Account’s record was 8 wins in
10 starts. They both received championship honors in their respective
divisions.
There were winds of change in the air at the start of 1972.
Gulfstream Park had won a court battle over Hialeah Racetrack to have the
“middle dates” in the Florida winter racing calendar. This meant the early 3 year-old
races would be at Gulfstream Park including the Florida Derby. Hialeah
re-shuffled its schedule such that the Flamingo Stakes actually preceded the
Everglades Stakes, its traditional prep -. There was also an unofficial boycott
by some leading New York stables of Gulfstream races. These outfits either
waited till the Gulfstream meet was over or shipped to California to race. This
delayed some of their horses’ 1972 debuts until Hialeah opened in March. Lucien
Laurin identified a schedule for Riva Ridge that
would only involve 3 preps leading to the Kentucky Derby, a minimization that
at the time was unorthodox.
On March 22, Riva Ridge made his 3 year-old debut in the 7 furlong
Hibiscus Stakes and came away with a handy 2¼ length victory. Riva Ridge’s next
start was the 9 furlong Everglades Stakes where he faced Florida Derby winner
Hold Your Peace. The race was run on a sloppy
racetrack and a major upset resulted in Head of the River, rallying off the pace, while
getting 10 lb. from Hold Your Peace, defeating the latter by ¾ of a length.
Riva Ridge, not previously showing a dislike for the slop, finished fourth
while trapped on the rail, beaten about 6 lengths. Most of the racing world was
stunned by this loss, but Lucien Laurin took the defeat in stride and claimed his
champion was still on target for the Derby as he shipped him to Kentucky. In the Blue Grass Stakes at
Keeneland Racetrack, Riva Ridge put his Everglades race in the background with
a totally professional 4 length victory.
The Kentucky Derby had 16 entries including the previous
year’s Two-Year-Old Champion in Riva Ridge, Hold Your Peace and Louisiana and Arkansas Derbies victor No
Le Hace. Riva Ridge was back in form,
but it was assumed he would be strongly tested early in the race by Hold Your
Peace. There was also good support for No Le Hace, whose closing style seemed
to fit the race shape. As it transpired, the Derby was pretty straight forward.
Ron Turcotte guided Riva Ridge to the front and set a
sensible pace with Hold Your Peace in nearest attendance. Down the backstretch,
Hold Your Peace was sent up to challenge the front runner, and both he and Riva
Ridge raced as a team around the final turn. Once they straightened into the
stretch, Riva Ridge readily pulled away and opened a commanding lead. No Le
Hace launching his rally from sixth place closed well to gain second 3¾ lengths
behind Riva Ridge with Hold Your Peace finishing a tired third, another 3½
lengths back. On a fast track, the final
time was good, and there seemed no excuses for anyone.
Riva Ridge winning the 1972 Kentucky Derby (courier-journal,com) |
As the Preakness Stakes at Pimlico Racetrack loomed, it
appeared Riva Ridge’s main rival would be Key to the Mint. The colt was not
ready for the Derby due to an injury suffered in Florida that set back his
preparation, but he had won both the Derby Trial and a race at Pimlico the week
before the Preakness. The “Middle Jewel” attracted a field of only 7 starters
with Riva Ridge the prohibitive favorite. Also in the race was Derby runner up No
Le Hace.
On Preakness Day, the track was sloppy and longshot Bee Bee
Bee, owned by young William
Farish III and trained by veteran Del W. Carroll went to the front under jockey Eldon Nelson.
Both Riva Ridge and Key to the Mint raced close together in mid-pack. They seem
poised to mount a challenge, but as the field turned into the stretch, Bee Bee
Bee bounded ahead and opened a lengthy lead. Both Key to the Mint and Riva
Ridge seemed to be struggling with the slop and finished third and fourth,
respectively, a neck apart, about 6 lengths behind the winner. Just as in the
Derby, No Le Hace closed significant ground to finish second
beaten just 1¼ lengths. The Preakness result derailed any hopes for a Triple
Crown attempt in the Belmont Stakes. It also marked the second time that Riva
Ridge was fourth in a race run on an off track.
On Belmont Stakes Day, the skies were clear, and the track
was fast. Riva Ridge was made the solid favorite in the field of 10
with Key to the Mint (who had just won the Withers Stakes) and No Le Hace nearly co-second choices. (The connections of
Bee Bee Bee chose not to contest this classic.) The race
was a tour de force for Riva Ridge. He took over the lead by the clubhouse
turn, set steady fractions and just galloped the field to submission. At the
end, he was 7 lengths in front of Ruritania who had a ¾ length margin on Cloudy Dawn. Key to the Mint, who gave
chase to Riva Ridge down the backstretch, tired from his efforts to finish
fourth, beaten over 12 lengths. No Le Hace was a never a factor in finishing
sixth. The time of the race marked one of the fastest at the current 1½ mile
distance. In retrospect, it was one of the most impressive performances ever in
the Belmont Stakes, but in a twist of history, Riva Ridge’s Belmont victory
will be dwarfed in 1973 by his stablemate Secretariat’s epochal win. In the
winner’s circle, the Meadow Stable owners and Ron Turcotte celebrated their first win in this classic. For
Lucien Laurin, this was his second Belmont Stakes winning
trainee, the first being Amberoid in 1966.
Less than a month after his Belmont Stakes triumph, Riva
Ridge was sent west to contest the 1¼ mile Hollywood
Derby and assigned 129 lb. In a race which his connections considered his
“hardest”, Riva Ridge was pressed all the way, but he held on to win by a neck
over Bicker, carrying 114 lb. At this
point, the Meadow Stable star was considered the presumptive 3 year-old
champion as well as a leading candidate for Horse of the Year honors.
Back on the East Coast, Riva Ridge traveled to the New
Jersey Shore on August 5 to run in the Monmouth Invitational Handicap where he
carried top weight of 126 lb. On a fast track, Riva Ridge, in contending
position for much of the race showed no punch when the real racing began and
retreated to fourth, beaten some 6 lengths behind Freetex (117 lbs.) whom he had defeated decisively 4
times previously. The result at the time seemed inexplicable, and his
connections speculated that their horse had been given a tranquilizer, but in
retrospect, it appears the trip to California, combining with Riva Ridge’s
grueling effort in the Hollywood Derby took a toll on the slender colt.
After this defeat, Riva Ridge was given a month off before
returning to the races in the Stymie Handicap at Belmont Park. There he faced
the 1971 Kentucky Derby winner Canonero II who had been winless in 6 starts in 1972. In
this rare meeting between two Derby winners, the 4 year-old Canonero carrying
only 110 lbs. collared pacesetting Riva Ridge (123 lbs.) around the stretch turn
and drew away to a 5 length win in world record time for the 9 furlong distance.
With Key to the Mint ascending since his loss in the Belmont
Stakes with victories against older horses in the Brooklyn Handicap and Whitney
Stakes and against his own age in the Travers Stakes, the 3 year-old
championship was no longer a foregone conclusion for Riva Ridge. The two rivals
met in the Woodward Stakes run in 1972 at 1½ miles. Alas, for Riva Ridge, the
Belmont surface had been inundated with rain, and the son of First Landing,
after contesting the pace, fell back to finish fourth (again) with Key to the
Mint holding on for the victory. Racing against each other one more time in
1972, this time in the 2 mile Jockey Club Gold Cup, the sophomores faced a
stern rival in the 4 year-old Autobiography who had been promoted to second
after suffering interference in the Woodward. As luck (all bad) would have it
for Riva Ridge’s connections, the Gold Cup was run during a drenching downpour.
Autobiography dominated the raced winning by 15 lengths with Key to the Mint besting
Riva Ridge for second (and subsequent 3 year-old honors).
There was still more pain for the Meadow Stable crew in that
they accepted an invitation to run Riva Ridge in the Washington D. C.
International, and on a soggy turf course (still more rain!), he finished a
well beaten sixth. Despite Riva Ridge’s disastrous second half of year campaign
which saw championships slip from his grasp, it was not all gloom and doom for
his connections. A horse Meadow Stable owned and bred was not only the
Two-Year-Old Champion of 1972, in that Eclipse Award voters saw in this colt so
much, he was acclaimed Horse of the Year. Of course, I am talking about the incomparable
Secretariat.
By the time Riva Ridge made his 4 year-old debut on May 12,
1973, the racing fortunes of Meadow Stable had altered considerably.
Christopher Chenery had died in early January. In order to continue the
operation of the racing stable, Penny Tweedy and her siblings sold future
breeding shares in their greatest asset - Secretariat for a total syndicate
value of $6.08 million – a sum unprecedented at the time for a horse who had
only raced as a juvenile. Under intense scrutiny from the shareholders (and the
racing public) Secretariat had come through with a track record setting win in
the Kentucky Derby.
With little fanfare, Riva Ridge won his initial start, a 6
furlong allowance race at Aqueduct. By the time he made his next start in the 1
mile Metropolitan Handicap, Secretariat had won the Preakness in remarkable
fashion and all the racing world was now waiting breathlessly for the
completion of the first Triple Crown sweep in 25 years. In the Met Mile, “Riva”
faced his old rival Key to the Mint, weighted equally at 127 lb. As if the
fates continued to conspire against him, it rained heavily at Belmont Park, and
Riva Ridge floundered in the slop finishing seventh with Tentam under 116 lb. upsetting
Key to the Mint.
A little over a week after Secretariat ran the most monumental
race in American thoroughbred racing history in the Belmont Stakes, Riva Ridge, almost unnoticed, bounced back on a fast
surface at Suffolk Downs in the Massachusetts Handicap with a track record equaling
performance. This set up another meeting with Key to the Mint and Tentam in the 9½ furlong Brooklyn Handicap at
Aqueduct. Assigned top weight of 128 lb., Key to the Mint was a slight favorite
over the Meadow Stable representative who carried 127 lb. with Tentam
at 119 lb. In an exciting renewal of the Brooklyn run on a fast racetrack on
Independence Day, Tentam went to the lead setting a rapid pace closely pursued
by Key to the Mint with Riva Ridge just off the pace in third. Ron Turcotte sent Riva Ridge to challenge the leaders in
the stretch, and after Key to the Mint faltered, Riva Ridge edged clear of
Tentam. Once in the lead, Riva Ridge needed all his courage to hold off the
oncoming True Knight (117 lb.) by a head. Tentam finished third 2
lengths back with Key to the Mint fourth, beaten another 3½ lengths. In
winning, Riva Ridge had set a new world record for the distance on dirt.
Finally deigning to forego racing on a wet surface, the
connections of Riva Ridge withdrew him from the Suburban Handicap which was won
by Key to the Mint. Racing twice at Saratoga Racetrack during the month of
August, Riva was second in an allowance race on grass and won narrowly a
similar type race on dirt.
In an effort to capitalize on the national attention given
to Secretariat, the Marlboro Tobacco Company
initiated a race that would bring together all the major horses racing in 1973
for a large purse that would serve as a “championship” race. Run at Belmont
Park in September at 9 furlongs, the Marlboro Cup Handicap, as the race was
called, was a precursor to the Breeders’ Cup Classic. Many times these
“invented” races fail to attract a competitive fail, but the initial running of
this race exceeded beyond any expectations. The field, by invitation only,
contained (with weights): 3 year-olds Secretariat (124 lb.), who had not raced
since a shocking loss in the Whitney Stakes, and Travers Stakes winner Annihilate
‘Em (116 lb.); older runners Riva Ridge (127 lb.), Key to the Mint (126 lb.), Cougar II (126 lb.), Kennedy Road (121 lb.), and Secretariat’s Whitney Stakes
conqueror Onion (116 lb.).
Ron Turcotte chose to ride Secretariat while Eddie Maple received the assignment aboard Riva Ridge.
Before the Marlboro, questions swirled around Secretariat after his loss in the Whitney. However, the
betting public made the Secretariat – Riva Ridge entry the overwhelming favorite. (Is it any
wonder, as combined they represented horses who had been awarded 3 championships
and had won 5 classics?) As the race unfolded, Secretariat, had the benefit of
perhaps, the most illustrious “rabbit” in racing history, namely Riva Ridge.
His Meadow Stable entry mate challenged both Onion and Kennedy Road for the lead down the backstretch forcing a
torrid pace as Secretariat was poised in fifth on the outside. Riva Ridge
deposed of his rivals around the final turn as Secretariat ranged up on the
outside. In the stretch, Secretariat pulled away from Riva Ridge. At the finish,
Secretariat was 3½ lengths in front of Riva Ridge who had 2 lengths on Cougar who closed strongly from last place. Onion was
fourth, Annihilate ‘Em, fifth, Kennedy Road, sixth
and Key to the Mint finished last. The time of the 9 furlong race
was a new American dirt record, and the result gave the public what they came
to watch - a great horse triumphant.
After his strong second in the Marlboro Cup, Riva Ridge
would face the starter 2 more times. (He was scratched out of the Woodward
Stakes due to a sloppy track.) In the 9 furlong Stuyvesant Handicap at Aqueduct
and carrying a career high 130 lb., Riva set a new track record winning by 3
lengths. In the Jockey Club Gold Cup, Prove Out, who had upset Secretariat in
the Woodward, showed his victory was no fluke in dispatching Riva Ridge who
faded to sixth and last in his final race. Additional honors were accorded Riva
Ridge as he was voted an Eclipse for Champion Older Male Horse. His career
record shows 17 wins, 3 seconds, and a third from 30 starts and earnings of
over $1 million.
Riva Ridge had been syndicated (at $5.12 million) for stud
duties in the summer and joined his stablemate Secretariat at Claiborne Farm,
Paris, KY. As a stallion, Riva Ridge
had some success with his best performers being major stakes winners Tap Shoes,
Blitey, Alada and Expressive Dance. He died from an
apparent heart attack in 1985.
Despite having his initial trainer abandon him and being
overshadowed for a good part of his racing career by his illustrious
stablemate, Riva Ridge won some hearts, especially Penny Tweedy, who had said
repeatedly Riva was her favorite, giving him credit for helping save the racing
stable from dissolution. The racing community finally recognized the colt’s achievements
when in 1998 he was inducted into the Racing Hall of Fame. No longer unsung,
Riva Ridge is now celebrated among horse racing’s pantheon of stars.