|
|
Books > Sport & Leisure > Sports & outdoor recreation > Equestrian & animal sports > Horse racing > General
Burned out by working the baseball beat for years, in the summer of
1922 Damon Runyon was looking for a new sport to cover for The New
York American as a change of pace. Having pilloried golf just a few
years before, he went to Saratoga that August to sample horse
racing and found that "There, right in front of him, were so many
of the characters he so loved from his time covering the comings
and goings of the Manhattan night crowd." This was just the tonic
Runyon needed to emerge from his malaise. Runyon didn't just cover
the great races and which horse won: he would get to the track days
before and roam along the backstretch, speaking with the trainers,
the gamblers, the rich owners, and the wise guys, many of which
became model characters in his fiction and in the musical Guys and
Dolls. This book collects the best of Runyon's horse racing columns
to 1936, when he moved on to other beats. In addition to an
introduction, Reisler will include a "cast of characters" that will
provide short biographies of a number of people Runyon discusses in
his columns.
In between his romances with baseball, in early 1969 Bill Veeck
took up the challenge of managing Boston's semi-moribund Suffolk
Downs racetrack. "Being of sound mind and in reasonable possession
of my faculties," Veeck wrote, "I marshaled my forces, at the
tender age of fifty-four, and marched upon the city of Boston,
Massachusetts, like a latter-day Ben Franklin, to seek my fame and
fortune as the operator of a racetrack. Two years later, fortune
having taken one look at my weathered features and shaken its hoary
locks, I retreated, smiling gamely." When he took over the track,
Veeck had yet to learn that the normal daily output of some sixteen
hundred horses (including straw) would amount to so much, or be so
hard to dispose of. But that was the least of his problems. In the
tough-minded and Tabasco-tongued prose that is his trademark, Veeck
recalls the battles he won and lost, the fun he had, and what he
discovered about horse racing at "Sufferin' Downs." It's a zesty,
complicated story but a relentlessly fascinating one about the
inside workings of one of the most popular sports in America.
This is the true story of the most remarkable horse in history.
Foaled in the lavish Ottoman stables of the Topkapl Palace in the
late 1870s, this dark bay stallion was hard schooled in the
disciplines of war. Until now, his remarkable story has never been
told.
Here, for the first time, is the story of how America's first
national resort gave birth to, then nurtured, its first national
sport, introducing the country to a parade of champions and their
spectacular supporting characters. To experience this adventure is
to see why the Saratoga Race Course, America's oldest major sports
facility remains one of its most beloved and most successful.
They're Off! is as much a social history as it is sports history.
Edward Hotaling opens with a little-known visit by the first famous
tourist, George Washington, who tried to buy the place he called
"the Saratoga Springs". Soon the pursuit of happiness at our
original vacationland helped redefine America. Even at the height
of the Civil War, the country's first organized sport was launched
on a national scale.
The book is an account of one very ordinary person's quest to
become a racehorse owner and his growing obsession with and love
for the sport. This is not a book about famous jockeys, trainers
and horses. It is a story of the challenges and low points facing
an owner on a budget but it also describes the elation and joy when
things do, eventually, go right. There is also a useful section of
tips and do's and don'ts for those who want to have a go at
ownership for themselves.
|
|