Champions | 1990-1999

vindication for the antonacci’s

  • August 4, 1990

  • East Rutherford, NJ

  • The MeadowLands

  • Purse $1,346,ooo

It was the same situation as in 1989. A horse owned by a Lou Guida-headed group and a horse owned by Frank Antonacci and partners were squaring off in the second jewel in trotting’s Triple Crown. The year before, the same confrontation ended in a dead-heat and a legal tangle. This time, however, there was a clear cut, if slightly unlikely, winner of the 65th Hambletonian.

The pre-race favorite was Royal Troubador, 1989’s Two-Year-Old Trotting Colt of the Year who had already captured the Yonkers Trot. Others that merited respect included King Of The Sea, Armbro Iliad, The Devil, Crown Bones and Beacon Course victor Embassy Lobell, who was owned by a Lou Guida-managed group. Embassy Lobell captured his division of the first heat in 1:56.1 with Mike Lachance at the lines. Trapped on the rail for three-quarters of a mile. Embassy Lobell made up ground when he shook loose and trotted by Armbro Iliad in the deep stretch. In the second division, lightly-raced Harmonious, co-owned by Antonacci, didn't figure against veteran Royal Troubador. But someone forgot to tell Harmonious. John Campbell sent the strapping son of Crowning Point after Royal Troubador at the half, and blew on by to win in 1:55. Harmonious almost didn't make it to the Hambletonian, much less the second heat. Only a few days before the big day, trainer Osvaldo Formia had found the colt cut and scraped in his paddock, after hurting himself suffering from colic. The cuts weren't severe, however, and Formia treated Harmonious' colic with the human medicine Maalox. In the final heat, Embassy Lobell drew the rail and Harmonious the two-hole. Campbell elected to drop in behind Lachance and Embassy Lobell, while Royal Troubador and King of the Sea battled on the front end. Lachance made his move on Royal Troubador after that colt posted a :56.2 half, and Campbell sat in third. Royal Troubador held the lead until the three-quarter mark in 1:25, and Campbell took Harmonious around that rival and Embassy Lobell as well. Harmonious coasted under the wire a length and a half in front in 1:54.1, with Embassy Lobell second and Royal Troubador hanging on for third. It was a glorious day in the winner's circle for Lindy Farms' Frank Antonacci, his family, and trainer Formia. After the frustration of the outcome the year before, the victory was all the sweeter. And the hero of the day was the lightly-raced, slightly banged and battered Harmonious - and a dose of Maalox.

Richest Hambletonian purse ever. The Hambletonian was Harmonious' first win in a stake; although he had won four of five starts are a 3-year-old coming up to the Hambletonian. Prepped for the classic primarily in overnight races, breaking his maiden the first week of June at the Pocono Downs in a $1,500 condition event. In his next start, he made a break, finishing ninth in the American-National Stake at Sportsman's Park in Chicago. Returning to the east coast he won a qualifier and then three straight overnight races at the Meadowlands during the month of July, the fastest in 1:57 1/5. It marked the second consecutive Hambletonian winnner trained by Argentiana native Osvaldo Formia, who also was the caretaker for two Hambletonian winners: Speedy Somolli (1978) and Lindy's Pride (1969). Harmonious was voted Trotter of the Year. Harmonious was from the first crop of Crowning Point, one of only six Hambletonian winners produced in their sire's initial foaling crop. The five others: Hoot Mon (Helicopter, 1953); Speedster (Speedy Scot, 1963); Ayres (Timothy T, 1970); Green Speed (Duenna, 1983); Mystic Park (Mack Lobell, 1987); and Valley Victory (Victory Dream, 1995).

Champions | 1990-1999

Giant Victory For All

  • August 3, 1991

  • East Rutherford, NJ

  • The MeadowLands

  • Purse $1,238,ooo

The 1991 Hambletonian was story book material. Fresh from a stunning triumph in the Meadowlands Pace with Precious Bunny, Jack Moiseyev, harness racing’s newest superstar of the sulky, won his second $1 million purse event in 22 days with Giant Victory’s win in the 66th Hambletonian. Eleven months earlier, the 31-year-old native of Neptune, New Jersey, had completed a six-month suspension for driving infractions. Yet, for Moiseyev, his first Hambletonian was the ultimate catch-drive.

Shortly after the draw for the race, he looked down at the overnight sheet and saw his name next to the eventual winner. Per Eriksson, Giant Victory’s trainer, had explained, "We put Jack on because Sonny (John Patterson, Jr.) had MB Felty and he (Jack) has been hot lately." And it just figured that the red-hot Giant Victory, a colt by Super Bowl, would come through with trotting's biggest prize in the shadow of Giants Stadium, home of the 1990 Super Bowl Champions. Co-owners Jacqueline and Theodore Gewertz of Oradell, New Jersey, both long-time Giants fans, had put through a name change for their colt (formerly Healthy Glow) following the Giants' 1987 Super Bowl victory. Together with partners Stan and Steve Robins of Yorktown Heights, NY, the Gewertzes saw their prize trotter post back-to-back, come-from-behind decisions in 1:54.4 (fastest of the day) and 1:55. Giant Victory enjoyed a perfect trip in the second elimination and responded with a three-length score over Big Brown and Cysta's Best. The favored entry of MB Felty and UConn Don finished one-two in front of Super Pleasure in the first $119,000 elimination. The Ron Gurfein-trained winner, another son of Super Bowl, was timed in 1:55 for HVH Trotting Stable, M. Larsson, and MB Felty Stable and Lindy Farms (Antonacci family). The Antonaccis and trainer Osvaldo Formia (UConn Don) were both going for their fourth Hambletonian and a record three in a row. It was not to be. Their charges were second and third, respectively, behind Giant Victory in the $1 million final. Moiseyev stalked the pace from fifth position and masterfully wheeled his stretch kicker three-quarters of a length past his arch rivals. Giant Victory improved his 1991 record to 12-7-2-1. The Gwertzes, trotting horse owners for the past ten years, and Per Eriksson, were high on Giant Victory right from the first time they saw him. Jacquie Gewertz remembers well when the colt first came into the sales ring as a yearling. "My husband and Per looked at each other and said 'This colt's got Hambo written all over him. Let's buy him regardless of his price.' We did, and we got a hot Hambo horse for the first time for only $25,000." With the 1991 Hambletonian under his belt, Giant Victory's bankroll swelled to $805,116, making him a giant bargain.

Renamed Giant Victory (for the NFL football team's 1987 Super Bowl win) by owners and Giants fans Jacqueline & Ted Gewertz and the Robbins. The requirement for the race winner to win two heats was dropped in the Hambletonian conditions. From 1927 to 1954, six monies were paid in the Hambletonian under the placing system. From 1955 to 1962 only the first four horses in the placing were awarded money. Some years the winner took home anywhere from 55% to 70% of the total purse. there were also breeders awards of 2%. From 1963 to 1990 five monies were paid out under the placing system. As of 1991, the placing system was dropped and the standard five monies are paid in each heat or dash. Field was limited to 10 with no trailers, before splitting into eliminations. If less than 10 are entered there will be one dash for the trophy and the $1,200,000 total purse. Giant Victory was voted Trotter of the Year. Jack Moiseyev won his first Hambletonian with his first drive, annexing his second $1 million purse in 22 days. He won the Meadowlands Pace with Precious Bunny earlier in the meet.

Champions | 1990-1999

Emerging From The Crowd

  • August 1, 1992

  • East Rutherford, NJ

  • The MeadowLands

  • Purse $1,288,000

A record 27 trotters dropped in the box for the 1992 Hambletonian, but the race was without a clear standout. Per Eriksson, who won the jewel the previous year with Giant Victory, had four sophomores entered. Of those four, King Conch had the most credentials. The eliminations went in three fields of nine. In the first, Valley Boss Bi won in 1:563 , the filly Armbro Keepsake was second, and Ships Watch third. Favorite Magic Lobell went on a break in the stretch while on the lead, and didn’t make the cut. The second division went to King Conch in 1:56.4, with Herschel Walker and Rising Light next in line. The third contest was captured by Baltic Sonata, with Alf Palema second and Sirocco Spur third. The nine lined up again for the final, with the winner of that dash capturing the coveted crown. King Conch turned back a challenge from Baltic Sonata, and then held off Armbro Keepsake at the head of the lane. Valley Boss Bi went on a break, and Herschel Walker was making a move. The one moving fastest of all, however, was Alf Palema, as driver Mickey McNichol found a slim opening on the rail. Eriksson had pulled the colt's shoes after the first heat, and the barefoot boy got up to score over his stablemate by a head in 1:56.3. King Conch held on for second, with Herschel Walker third.

Largest number of starters (27) in the Hambletonian which necessitated three eliminatin divisions for the first time. Alf Palema became the first starter to win the Hambletonian by winning only one heat - the final. Alf Palema was actually the lesser member of the Swedem Stable (Per Eriksson) entry. King Conch, the 1991 Breeders Crown and divisional 2-year-old champion, was the pre-race favorite. He cut the mile and was just beaten as his stablemate slipped up the rail. Trainer and co-owner Eriksson admitted that no one was more surprised than he at the result of the photo. Alf Palema may be the only horse ever to win the Hambletonian racing barefoot - without horse shoes. Alf Palema is named for a leading salesman in co-owner Bender's roofing company. Alf Palema was the last horse bred by George Alexander, whose Chestnut Farm raised and bred only trotters. It was the first Hambletonian winner bred by Alexander, who was a director of the Hambletonian Society and a member of its Executive Committee. The mare, Highland Bridget, was sold privately in foal with Alf Palema in the dispersal of Alexander's horses at the time of his death in 1988. Alf Palema was voted Trotter of the Year.

Champions | 1990-1999

Trots Off On His Own

  • August 7, 1993

  • East Rutherford, NJ

  • The MeadowLands

  • Purse $1,200,ooo

The often bulky Hambletonian field shrinks in a hurry when a dominant horse emerges in the three-year-old ranks. The 1993 Hambletonian produced just that scenario. American Winner, a homebred of Robert Key of Leechburg, Pennsylvania and Dr. John Glesmann of Bridgewater, New Jersey had reigned supreme throughout virtually every three-year-old stake race of 1993. American Winner, victorious in the Yonkers Trot, looked to be a serious contender for the trotting Triple Crown if he could win the Hambletonian and then the Kentucky Futurity at Lexington’s Red Mile in October. The colt, sired by the 1972 trotting Triple Crown, Super Bowl, had reeled off seven straight stakes wins prior to the final of the $414,500 Budweiser beacon Course, the Meadowlands' prep race just one week prior to the Hambletonian. In the final of the Budweiser Beacon Course, American Winner tussled with an emerging power, a bargain-priced ($17,000 as a yearling) colt named Pine Chip. The luck of the draw put Pine Chip and American Winner in the same elimination of the 14 horse Hambletonian field. American Winner, trained by retired navy Chief Milton Smith and drive by Ron Pierce, trotted out to grab the lead by the half mile mark. Pine Chip, with John Campbell aboard, had a tougher time of it, moving from sixth to tuck in behind American Winner at the three-quarters. Pierce and "Winner" trotted away from the field to win the first elimination by three and 3/4 lengths. Pine Chip moved along the outside to get into second position, a head behind "Winner" at the three-quarters. But Pine Chip lacked the brush to get by American Winner, was overtaken by Toss Out, and finished third. Pine Chip would have another shot at American Winner, though. In the final, American Winner gained the lead without challenge by the quarter mile mark, with Pine Chip going three wide from sixth to get behind that rival at the three quarters. But when it came time to trot for the lead, American Winner was the stronger of the two, as he trotted off by himself, winning by a comfortable two and three quarters lengths.

Bob Key became the first owner to win both elimination heats (with Hi Noon Star and American Winner) as well as the final. Milton Smith became the first African-American trainer to win the Hambletonian. Milton Smith was the second trainer to win both elimination heats as well as the final. Bill Haughton had previously accomplished that feat with Burgomeister and Final Score in 1980 at DuQuoin. The Medio maternal family produced a record ninth Hambletonian winner. American Winner also won the Yonkers Trot, the second leg of the Trotting Triple Crown, but was beaten by Pine Chip in the Kentucky Futurity. Anna-Lena Ljunggren, a 33-year-old native of Sweden, became the first woman to train a horse in the Hambletonian. She started Baltic Baby for fashion designer Oleg Cassini.

Champions | 1990-1999

Victory revisited

  • August 6, 1994

  • East Rutherford, NJ

  • The MeadowLands

  • Purse $1,200,ooo

Dream Provides ‘Victory’ Revisited Valley Victory looked to be a formidable force in the 1989 Hambletonian, and a match-up with fabulous filly Peace Corps promised a great race. Alas, Valley Victory came down with a virus just days before the contest and was retired from racing. With impeccable breeding, hopes were high for Valley Victory’s career at stud. His first crop of Hambletonian colts came of age in 1994. When the field went behind the gate on August 6, no less than five of his offspring were there looking to avenge their father. Victory Dream had won all seven of his races at the Meadowlands leading up to the Budweiser Beacon Course and was widely considered to be the pre-race Hambletonian favorite but he lost a bit of his luster when he was a flat fourth in the Beacon Course Final. Others that attracted plenty of attention coming into the trotting classic were Yonkers Trot winner Bullville Victory, another son of Valley Victory; Mr Lavec; and Two-Year-Old Champion Wesgate Crown. Victory Dream's driver and trainer, Mike Lachance and Ron Gurfein, had never won a Hambletonian, but his owners, the Antonacci clan of Connecticut, certainly had. Frank Antonacci, who bred the colt along with his brother, Tommy, bought back Victory Dream as a yearling for his wife and daughters. He, along with his cousin, Guy Antonacci, owned 1969 and 1971 Hambletonian winners Lindy's Pride and Speedy Crown. In the first elimination dash, Victory Dream was an easy two and a half length winner in 1:53.4. Bullville Victory edged Mr. Lavec in 1:54.4 in the other. In the final, driver/trainer Jimmy Takter fired Mr. Lavec off the gate and led the way to a :26.3 opening quarter, the fastest such fraction in Hambletonian history. Mike Lachance sent Victory Dream after the leader at that point and was in control at the half, which was trotted in :56.1. Mr. Lavec shadowed the leader to the three-quarters in 1:25.4, but Victory Dream had plenty in the tank to repulse the challenge. Lachance and Victory Dream sailed under the wire in 1:54.4. Mr. Lavec was second in spite of locking wheels with Bullville Victory in deep stretch. Bye Tsem was third, and Smasher was fourth. Smasher is owned by Arelene Traub, who also owned Valley Victory and, like the winner, is from that sire's first crop. The Meadowlands handled $4.9 million total for the Cadillac Hambletonian Day card, a world and track record.

Guy "Sonny" Antonacci, a member of the Victory Dream Stable, has been a co-owner on a record four Hambletonian winners (Lindy's Pride, 1969; Probe, 1989; Harmonious, 1990; Victory Dream, 1994). His sons, Frank and Gerry, who comprise Lindy Racing Stable, have been co-owners on: Victory Dream, Harmonious and Probe. His cousin, Frank J. Antonacci, has been a co-owner of: Lindy's Pride, Speedy Crown and Victory Dream. Victory Dream was from the first crop of Valley Victory, who along with Mystic Park are th youngest sires (4-years-old) to produce a Hambletonian winner. The Minnehaha maternal family producted a record-tying ninth Hambletonian winner. Victory Dream was voted the 3-year-old Trotting Colt of the Year. Runner up Mr. Lavec, although trained in the U.S. by Swedish native Jimmy Takter, was a Swedish-sired and bred colt by 1978 winner Speedy Somolli. He was the first European-sired horse in the classic. (Speedy Somolli was exported and stood in Sweden since 1990). Mr. Lavec finished second in his elim and second in the final beaten 2 3/4 lengths - the best finish ever by a European-bred horse in the Hambletonian. The colt was raised at owner Johan Diedan's farm in Ireland. Amateur driver Mal Burroughs won the Oaks with Gleam.

Champions | 1990-1999

Campbell Bros Score Touchdown

  • August 5, 1995

  • East Rutherford, NJ

  • The MeadowLands

  • Purse $1,200,ooo

The 70th edition of the Cadillac Hambletonian provided a feeling of deja vu. Like the 1989 version of the Classic race, the two-year-old champions were expected to square off for the second jewel of trotting’s Triple Crown. But, like 1989, the script was subject to revisions. In 1989, Valley Victory, the dominant colt trotter, came down with an illness just days before the Hambletonian and never raced again. In 1995, Valley Victory’s son Donerail, the top colt trotter as a freshman, was not coming into the race as his trainer Stanley Dancer expected and he was retired just prior to the big event. Peace Corps, the champion two-year-old filly of 1988, raced in the Hambletonian but was not up to par, finishing third. However, CR Kay Suzie last year's brilliant filly champion, came tinto the 70th Hambletonian with all indications that she was ready to become the first female victor since Duenna to wear the Hambletonian crown. CR Kay Suzie was one of three horses racing for the Carl Allen family. Father Carl was aboard CR Trackmaster, son Mike would pilot Super Wally, and son Rod would be in his usual spot behind Suzie. CR Kay Suzie, who set world records on all three-sized tracks at two, had quite a following. members of the press often stopped by the Allen barn, and fans flocked to the races to see her.

The discussions among racing fans before the Hambletonian centered not on whether Suzie would win, but how fast she would go and how much she would win by. CR Kay Suzie drew into the first Hambletonian elimination, leaving from post six. She settled third through the first turn as Giant Hit took the lead, with Uma right behind. Rod Allen tipped her out past the quarter pole, and the filly picked up speed as she made a move for the front. Then, the unthinkable happened, Cr Kay Suzie went on a break in the blink of an eye, as Allen desperately tried to get her back trotting. John Campbell, steering Arlene and Jules Siegel's lightly-raced Tagliabue, was following Suzie's move but was not affected by the break. Tagliabue did however, throw in a few steps on the turn, when he attempted to pass Giant Hit who had held onto the lead. Campbell got the strapping colt back on stride quickly, but all eyes were on CR Kay Suzie, who had only to beat two colts to qualify for the final. It was not to be her day, however, as she struggled and finished sixth. Tagliabue swept by Giant Hit for the score, with that rival holding on for second, Uma third, Deliberate Speed fourth, and Climbing Bud fifth. The Allen family's luck didn't improve in the second elimination. Mike Allen sent Super Wally, who won the Dexter Cup earlier in the year, for the lead. But when King Pine challenged up the backside, Super Wally went on a break. Father Carl and CR Track Master had jumped off stride in the first turn as well.

Another surprise, Abundance, took the second heat. With John Patterson, Jr. in the bike, Abundance shoot loose after being locked into win in 1:56.2. Earthquake was second, and King Pine, whom most considered the one most likely to dethrone Suzie, was third. Trustworthy and Super Star Ranger rounded out the final five. In the final, Giant Hit and Abundance carved the early fractions, while Deliberate Speed settled in the three hole. both Trustworthy and King Pine took themselves out of contention with a break in the first turn. Campbell moved Tagliabue first-over early at the quarter in :28, and nabbed the lead. They hit the half in :56.1, and when Uma made a move only to make a break, a locked-in Abundance and Bill Fahy were able to get racing room. Tagliabue by that point was some five lengths in front, and cruised under the wire a comfortable winner by more that two lengths in 1:54.4. Abundance was second, and Giant Hit third.

The victory wasn't an ordinary Hambletonian victory for John Campbell, even though his fourth Hambletonian crown put him in very lofty company with Bill Haughton, Ben White and Stanley Dancer as the only men to drive four winners. It was the fact that younger brother Jim trained the winner that gave Campbell such a thrill. "It's a tremendous feeling," he said, "It's even more special when it's with Jimmy." The Campbell's parents, Jack and Florence, joined the celebration in the winner's circle. Tagliabue, bred by John and Adelaide Skoglund and named after NFL Commissioner Paul Tagliabue, was purchased as a yearling for $55,000 by Arlene and Jules Siegel. The Siegels, who owned a chain of drugstores in New Jersey but now spend their time with their horses, tapped Jim Campbell to train their Fashion Farm horses just a year prior to their biggest victory.

Champions | 1990-1999

filly sets the standard

  • August 3, 1996

  • East Rutherford, NJ

  • The MeadowLands

  • Purse $1,200,000

As she muscled her way into the record book, Continentalvictory flicked her luxuriant black tail into the air and for the second time on Saturday, August 3, 1996, she crossed the finish line first to win the 71st Hambletonian. Next stop was victory lane where she would become the 13th filly to win the world’s most prestigious race for three-year-old trotters. Since the introduction of the companion filly stakes, the Hambletonian Oaks, in 1971, few have opted to challenge the colts. Continentalvictory did not only take on the colts, she obliterated the record book.

Her opening heat of 1:52.1 was the fastest mile in Hambletonian history and a standard for three-year-old trotting fillies. It also equaled Mack Lobell's mark for sophomore trotters. With her 1:52.4 finale, she posted the fastest double heat total of 3:45, more than a second off the previous record. Reduced to five starters, the second division participants, headed by Lindy Lane, were all assured a spot in the final. Bill O'Donnell, put the Lindy Farms homebred on top at the quarter pole and pulled away to a length and three-quarter victory in 1:53.2. Despite her brilliant first heat performance, Continentalvictory was the betting public's second choice to Lindy Lane in the final heat raced late that afternoon - nearly four o'clock - before a crowd of 28,229 and millions of others watching at simulcasting locations and via the live CBS-TV broadcast. The $1 million Hambletonian Final did not get off without a hitch. One of the finalists, Pine Man, was scratched sick. The Armbro Officer and Act Of Grace each caused delays by breaking at the gate. Tony Oaks, 80-1, fired up by the two recalls, charged out after Continentalvictory and Lindy Lane, who were sitting 1-2 to the quarter in 28.1 and a half in 55.4. But Lachance was not about to yield to the longshot, leaving him parked along side Lindy Lane. Continentalvictory got a bit of a breather to a three-quarters clocked in 1:23 before the all out battle to the wire unfolded. "I got within a head, and she just got away," O'Donnell noted. "(Lindy Lane) gave her a good run for the money. He thought he got to her and was going to get by her, and she shifted into an extra gear. What an athlete that filly is. She's like (Olympian) Jackie Joyner-Kersee." Continentalvictory stopped the teletimer in 1:52.4, last quarter in 27.3 seconds, to secure the victory over Lindy Lane. It was four lengths back to Running Sea in third. Into the jubilant winner's circle streamed the members of the Continentalvictory Stable: Deena Frost (Highland Beach, FL), Harvey Gold (Marlborough, CT), Rosalie and Jerry Silva (Oceanside, NY), Stix Inc. (Ken Orr of Saddle River, NJ and David Hauck of Conley, GA) and David Offenberg's Allister Stables (Marlboro, NJ). Continentalvictory, with victories in the Yonkers Trot and the Hambletonian, had two thirds of the Triple Crown for trotters. Her bid to be the first filly to win the Triple Crown was denied when she pulled a suspensory and was scratched from teh first heat of the Kentucky Futurity on October 4. She was voted Three-Year-Old Filly Trotter of 11996 to add to her divisional honors at two in 1995. The ultimate accolade was to come as she was voted 1996 Horse of the Year.

Continentalvictory became just the second filly to win the Hambletonian since the Oaks was inaugurated in 1971. First elimination heat won by Continentalvictory in 1:52.1 was a Hambletonian stakes record. The mile tied the existing 3-year-old world record (Mack Lobell) and was a world record for 3-year-old fillies. It also broke the track record at the Meadowlands for a three year old, regardless of gender, and was the fastest pari-mutuel race at the track by a trotter, regardless of age. Third of only three black trotters to win; Hoot Mon and Park Avenue Joe were the others. Hambletonian Oaks winner Moni Maker has a rich Hambletonian winner Speedy Crown, out of the 1988 Oaks winner, Nan's Catch. Nan's Catch is the only Oaks winner to produce an Oaks winner.

Champions | 1990-1999

Amateur Turned Pro

  • August 2, 1997

  • East Rutherford, NJ

  • The MeadowLands

  • Purse $1,000,000

Much was made of owner-breeder Malvern Burroughs status as an amateur driver in the 1997 Hambletonian . While the 56-year-old Burroughs may not drive for purse money [he donates it to charity, primarily the Seton Hall Seminary], he gave Malabar Man a perfect steer in the $1 million trotting classic. As one reporter, Sherry Ross of the New York Daily News, put it, Burroughs "drove like a chilly professional when he threaded Malabar Man through the eye of the needle to skim the rail inside of Bowlin for Dollars and win the Meadowlands race." Burroughs, who parlayed a single dump truck into a construction and real estate empire, was involved in building the Meadowlands racing strip in the mid 1970s. One this bright, sunny day he would win the track's most important race as only the second amateur (Harrison Hoyt was the first in 1948) to win the Hambletonian in the first 72 editions of the stakes. Malabar Man was unbeaten in the first six starts he had at three, coming tinto the Hambletonian with victories in 19 of 21 lifetime starts. Sent off as the 3-10 favorite in the $1 million final, he trotted the mile in 1:55, paying $2.60 as part of the three-horse entry. One of his stablemates in the care of trainer, Jimmy Takter, Take Changes, was one-length back in second. "I wanted to win the race for the horse." Burroughs said, wiping at the tears that mixed with sweat. "I would have felt bad if I goofed up and caused the horse not to win. I was happy the horse could show his greatness. "I just thank God for sending me this wonderful horse," said Burroughs, who lives in Flemington, New Jersey. Malabar man's season continued after the Hambletonian victory, with wins in 13 of 16 starts, including that $594,000 Breeders Crown on October 24, his final start. He retired to a career at stud at Perretti Farms in Cream Ridge, New Jersey, with a career bankroll of $2,143,903. In post season balloting, Burrough's homebred son of Supergill-Lady Love McBur won the Dan Patch Award as Horse of the Year, along with honors as Trotter of the Year and Three-Year-Old Trotter of the Year. The 1997 edition of the Hambletonian marked the first time eliminations were held the week prior to the final. Hambletonian Day was a betting bonanza with a total harness handle of $6,115,766 ( up from $5,819,226 in 1996) of which $3,167,323 (up from $3,139,833) was wagering at the Meadowlands. The crowd of 26,618 was off from the 1996 total of 28,299, but on-site betting (on the live and incoming simulcast signals) reached $4,343,416 versus $3,703,814 the previous year.

For the first time, eliminations for the Hambletonian and the Hambletonian Oaks were contested the prior Saturday (August 2). For the first time, the elimination races were seeded by formula to balance the fields with pre-race favorites Malabar Man, Bowlin for Dollars and Yankee Glide drawing in separate eliminations. For the first time, the post positions for the finals were determined by an open draw. Malabar Man won from post four. He won his elimination from post three. Owner-breeder Malvern Burroughs became the second amateur diver to win the Hambletonian. Harrison Hoyt won with Demon Hanover in 1948. According to 87-year-old Hoyt, who was present in his first visit to the Meadowlands, Burroughs handling of Malabar Man was "Exactly the way I would have taken him." Malabar Man was the 20th homebred to win the Hambletonian. It was actually Burrough's second Hambletonian drive; he drove Climbing Bud (5-x-5) in 1995. Amateur driver Burroughs donatedhis 5% diver's fee to Seton Hall Seminary. Thirty winners, including Malabar Man, traced their paternal line directly to Volomite (second to Walter Dear in the 1929 Hambletonian). Volomite was a great-great great-grandson of Hambletonian 10. Malabar Man was the 60th of the 73 winners to trace their paternal line directly to Peter The Great, a great-grandson of Hambletonian 10. John & Adelaide Skoglund's Must Be Victory set a stakes record in the Oaks winning in 1:53 3/5. Must be Victory is by Valley Victory, sire of three Hambletonian winners and two Oaks winners from his first five crops. The purse for the final of the Hambletonian Oaks was increased from $300,000 to $500,000.

Champions | 1990-1999

Muscling To Victory

  • August 8, 1998

  • East Rutherford, NJ

  • The MeadowLands

  • Purse $1,156,800

Hall of Fame driver John Campbell earned his way into the record books yet again as he claimed his fifth Hambletonian victory with Muscles Yankee in 1998. The powerful colt with a quick turn of speed also provided trainer Chuck Sylvester with his third win in the trotting classic. Campbell eased the three-year-old colt up second-over, claimed the lead past the half and confidently sailed to a three-length victory. "And when I asked him [Muscles Yankee] to step to the front, he responded very well, and he was really on the muscle and felt great," Campbell said after the race. "Coming around the last turn he was real strong, and I felt real confident. As Chuck said, he doesn't quit. He's never shown any quitting in any of the starts of his life. It was just a great performance." The time of 1:52.2 was only a fifth of a second off of Continentalvictory's stakes and track record. David Raymond, also trained by Sylvester and driven by Cat Manzi, secured second place for Sylvester. Kick Tail, with driver Berndt Lindstedt, made two strong bids for the lead and ended up three and a half-lengths back in third. Sylvester teamed with Campbell to win the 1987 Hambletonian with Mack Lobell. He also won the 1989 race with Park Avenue Joe in a unique deadheat with Probe. "Muscles is the horse I said he was," said Sylvester, who was inducted into the Hall of Fame in July of 1998. "He trotted home great and won easy. When Kick Tail was first up, I knew that unless something was wrong with Muscles, he would trot away. This is the one race if you ask any trainer the race they want to win, this is the ultimate race." Muscles Yankee's victory in the Hambletonian was the first for each of his owners: William Perretti of Saddle River, New Jersey, Irving Liverman of Montreal, Quebec and David French of Boca Raton, Florida. "This was fantastic," Perretti said. "I've waited 20 years for this." Hambletonian Day realized a total harness handle of $6,503,202, (up from %6,115,766 in 1997), a record for the Hambletonian and second only to the $6.7 million of the 1997 Meadowlands Pace. The crowd of 25,873 included Beth Pritch of Clinton, New Jersey, honored as a the 500,000th guest to attend the Hambletonian since its debut at the Meadowlands in 1981.

John Campbell won his record fifth Hambletonian, just 15 years after driving in his first (Joie De Vie 1-4dh in 1983). Chuck Sylvester is only the seventh trainer to finish first and second in the final: Jimmy Takter (1997); Per Eriksson (1992); Bill Haughton (1980); Ralph Baldwin (1959); H.M. "Doc" Parshall (1934); Walter Cox (1929, Cox's entry in all captured the first four monies). Sylvester's other two horses, Silver Pine and Armbro Rotary, made breaks and finished ninth and tenth respectively (last and next to last). Muscles Yankee was a $200,000 yearling purchase at the Kentucky Standardbred Sale Co., a record yearling price for a Hambletonian winner. Valley Victory was the sire of the winner for the third time in five years, with only five crops of age to race in the Hambletonian. Kick Tail, owned by Arden Homestead Stable (E.T. Gerry family), was their 32nd starter in the Hambletonian. It is by far the record for any single ownership, which raced the entry of Cinema and First Choice in the inaugural 1926 race and has won the classic on two occasions: Titan Hanover (1945) and Flirth (1973). In 1996, the Hambletonian Oaks trophy was named for Elbridge T. Gerry Sr, in recognition of his nearly 50 years of service to the Hambletonian Society. Berndt Lindstedt drove in Arden Homestead's historic orange and blue colors.

Champions | 1990-1999

The Tone For The Milennium

  • August 7, 1999

  • East Rutherford, NJ

  • The MeadowLands

  • Purse $1,000,ooo

The final Hambletonian of the 20th century set new standards for the sport as two industry records were shattered on an electric August afternoon. In a blistering performance, Self Possessed posted the fastest trotting mile in harness history in the $1 million final, and the total handle of $7,132,583 set the mark as the highest in the sport. The charismatic colt commanded the lead at the half and drew off to an effortless five and a half-length victory in 1:51.3, a stakes, track and world record. Self Possessed gave the team of driver Mike Lachance and trainer Ron Gurfein their third Hambletonian in six years. Lachance and Gurfein won in 1994 with Self Possessed's sire, Victory Dream, and in 1996 with the filly Continentalvictory. "I can't take credit for it," Lachance said. "He did it on his own, and it was very easy for him. It's a very special day for me." Though the end-result was a dream come true, Gurfein admitted the race did not start out as he imagined while drifting off to sleep the night before. "I was picturing Secretariat," Gurfein said. "Watching Secretariat in the Belmont Stakes, well that's a dream race for a trainer. I pictured Self Possessed going right to the top and just drawing off. Mike had a lot of decisions to make from the start to the quarter-pole. That was one of the greatest drives for $1 million you'll ever see in your life." Self Possessed became the first sone of a Hambletonian winner to win the Hambletonian at the Meadowlands. His victory solidified Victory Dream's status as a top stakes producer and added another laurel to the Valley Victory lineage. As a member of the Self Possessed Stable, George Segal's Brittany Famrs earned its first owner's credit, and its second breeder's, in the Hambletonian. Brittany, which also bred Continentalvictory, sold Self Possessed at aution as a yearling for $100,000, but later joined the ownership team through a private purchase.

All of Self Possessed's three-year-old starts prior to the race (five for a purse and two qualifiers) were at the Meadowlands. There of the last five winners (Victory Dream, 1994; Tagliabue, 1995; and Malabar Man, 1997) used the same course to the winner's circle. Self Possessed's five and a half length margin of victory in the Hambletonian was surpassed only by Mack Lobell's six and a quarter record margin (1987) and possibly Peter Astra's "half a dozen lengths" (1939) in the days before the photo finish. It equaled Nevele Pride's margin of victory (1968). Self Possessed also won the Kentucky Futurity, but did not start in the Yonkers Trot. Self Possessed was the 33rd Hambletonian winner to be honored as a USHWA/USTA divisional champion since 1952. John Sokul, the Gurfein Stable's assistant trainer, was also the caretaker for Victory Dream, the sire of Self Possessed. It was Jerry & Rosalie Silva's second trip to the Hambletonian winner's circle, as they were also partners on Continentalvictory (1996). Nineteen Hambletonian winners, including Victory Dream, are owned wholly or in part by New York connections, the most of any state. Seventeen winning owners come from New Jersey; fourteen from Pennsylvania. Owners David Scharf and the Silvas are both from New York. Self Possessed is one of only eight Hambletonian winners produced in their sire's initial crop. The seven others: Hoot Mon (Helicopter, 1953); Speedster (Speedy Scot, 1963); Ayres (Timothy T, 1970); Green Speed (Duenna, 1983); Mystic Park (Mack Lobell, 1987); Crowing Point (Harmonious, 1990); and Valley Victory (Victory Dream, 1995). Victory Dream is the tenth winner that subsquently sired a Hambletonian winner: Titan Hanover (1945); Hoot Mon (1947); Speedy Scot (1963); Ayres (1964); Nevele Pride (1968); Speedy Crown (1971); Super Bowl (1972); Green Speed (1977); Speedy Somolli (1978) and Victory Dream (1994). Carl Allen, 69, was the only trainer/driver programmed in the final. CR Commando was the 2-year-old Breeders Crown and divisional champion the previous fall. John Campbell, who is the winning driver of a record five Hambletonians, won his first Oaks with Oolong.

Champions | 1990-1999

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