Laffit Pincay
Jay L. Clendenin / Los Angeles Times
Laffit Pincay, one of the most successful jockeys in horse racing history, poses at his Southern California home in May. It's been 30 years since Pincay's victory on Affirmed in the Hollywood Gold Cup.
Bill Dwyre

Laffit Pincay's win on Affirmed in Hollywood Gold Cup still glitters

Jay L. Clendenin / Los Angeles Times
Laffit Pincay, one of the most successful jockeys in horse racing history, poses at his Southern California home in May. It's been 30 years since Pincay's victory on Affirmed in the Hollywood Gold Cup.
Thirty years ago, in an era when race horses still raced, the Triple Crown winner and the legendary jockey combined for a thrilling victory at Hollywood Park.
Bill Dwyre
July 11, 2009
As horse racing struggles to define its present, it is of value to recall some of its glorious past.

Take, for example, June 24, 1979. Hollywood Park's prestigious Hollywood Gold Cup. Thirty years ago.

 
The same race will be run Saturday, the 70th edition of a tradition that began with Seabiscuit winning in 1938. By 1979, the Gold Cup purse had been raised to a then-unthinkable $500,000, in an era when crowds of 75,000 for big races were not out of the question.

Saturday's purse will be $700,000, which generates only marginal excitement in an era when Triple Crown races offer $1 million each, a race in Dubai is worth $6 million and the Breeders' Cup has two days of racing with almost all its races $1 million and above.

Today, horse racing throws money at its problems and hopes a generally uninterested public will be turned on. Usually, that begins to happen about the time developing stars are shipped off to the breeding barn, never to be heard from again.

Thirty years ago, Affirmed came to race in the Hollywood Gold Cup and there was little question that the public was turned on.

Affirmed was a star. He was the second straight Triple Crown champion, his sweep in '78 following Seattle Slew's in '77. Memories of the great Secretariat's similar sweep in '73 were still vivid.

As Seattle Slew had done, Affirmed kept racing as a 4-year-old. Stud duty could wait. There was an eager racing public to appease first.

When he arrived for the Gold Cup, Affirmed had already run 25 races. After he won his way into the Kentucky Derby with a victory in the Santa Anita Derby in April '78, he ran another race two weeks later, before the Derby. Then he swept through the Triple Crown over a five-week stretch in May and June, winning three thrilling duels with Alydar.

After an ordeal like that, today's thoroughbreds would be packed in ice and flown to Hawaii to rest for six months.

Steve Cauthen rode Affirmed to the Triple Crown, but in early '79, as trainer Laz Barrera raced his superstar in pursuit of a second straight horse-of-the-year award, Cauthen went into a terrible slump. He lost aboard Affirmed four straight times -- the great horse would fail to win only seven times in his 29 starts -- and so Barrera looked for new hands at the controls.

The story of how those hands turned out to belong to Laffit Pincay Jr. is a classic.

Pincay rode Affirmed for the first time in 1977 when the horse was a 2-year-old, and won. But it was decided that Affirmed would go East for further races, and that put Pincay and his agent, George O'Brien, in a tough spot. They had a good business going in California, owners and trainers who deserved loyalty.

"George said we can always get Affirmed back later," Pincay says.

And so Cauthen got the ride and Pincay's Triple Crown.

"I still think about that a lot," says Pincay, 62, and retired since 2003. "But it was just meant to happen that way."

O'Brien eventually made amends, not that Pincay blamed him.

Cauthen was on suspension at the time of the April '78 Santa Anita Derby, and Affirmed was scheduled to run in that important Kentucky Derby prep. Agents for Pincay and fellow star jockey Angel Cordero pushed hard for the ride. They decided to settle it with a coin flip.

O'Brien made the toss, his rider won, and Pincay's winning Santa Anita Derby ride stayed in Barrera's memory so that, when Cauthen went into his slump the next year, Pincay got the ride back. He rode Affirmed to a 10-length victory in the Strub Stakes at Santa Anita and finished off Affirmed's career with six more victories.

"If Angel had won that coin flip," Pincay says, "he would have gotten the ride when Stevie went into his slump."








LM Pagano's house has a timeworn elegance that feels more like New Orleans than Los Angeles. Photos
The leaf peepers have it all wrong. It's in the full bloom of summer that western Massachusetts really shines. Photos
The L.A. Police Chief's four bedroom home is on the market at $1,875,000. Photos
If fashion makes the man, we don't know what kind of man that makes Sasha Baron Cohen's Bruno. Photos | Review
 
 

ADVERTISEMENT

Scoreboard
Sponsored by


ADVERTISEMENT