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11-06-2010, 10:18 PM
LOUISVILLE, Ky. -- Perfection eluded Zenyatta in the Breeders' Cup Classic on Saturday night when horse racing's superstar lost for the first time after 19 consecutive wins.
Blame won by a head in a thrilling finish with the 6-year-old mare, who threaded her way through traffic from last place while the crowd of 72,739 urged her on down the stretch under the lights at Churchill Downs.
Hall of Fame jockey Mike Smith blamed himself for the loss. He walked off the track with his head down, dirt stuck to his face.
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AP Photo/David J. Phillip
Jockey Mike Smith blamed himself after the race for Zenyatta's first loss, by a head to Blame.
"It was my fault," he said, sobbing. "She should've won."
It was so close, a matter of inches, the result had to be resolved by a photo -- a picture that broke the hearts of not only Zenyatta's owners and trainer but millions of fans around the world.
Blame went to the front in mid-stretch, then fought off another gutty run by Zenyatta, who lagged well behind 11 rivals -- all boys -- in her customary style.
Blame ran 1 1/4 miles in 2:02.28 and paid $12.40 to win at 5-1 odds. Fly Down was third, while Preakness winner Lookin At Lucky finished fourth.
Zenyatta was the sentimental even-money favorite, playing to the crowd at every chance on her way to the starting gate. She high-stepped her way to the paddock, playfully pawing the ground as they roared. Co-owner Ann Moss held her finger to her lips as a signal for the fans to quiet down.
Zenyatta proved she could beat the boys last year when she rallied from behind to win the $5 million Classic at Santa Anita. It was one of her 17 wins on synthetic surfaces in her home state of California.
This time, though, she was facing the deepest, most talented field of her career on a surface on which she had limited experience. Still, trainer John Shirreffs had said she preferred it to synthetic tracks.
It was her third time running on dirt; in her two previous races, she beat other girls at Oaklawn Park in Arkansas.
But Blame owned home-court advantage. He won twice before on dirt at Churchill, where Zenyatta had never raced.
"She ran an excellent race and just came up a little short," Shirreffs said. "She ran her heart out."
Zenyatta's 19 consecutive wins tied her for most all-time with Peppers Pride, who retired last year after running against much lesser competition. Peppers Pride never raced outside New Mexico and all her wins came against fillies and mares.
American horses earned 12 victories over the two-day championships, with Europe-based horses winning twice.
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Blame won by a head in a thrilling finish with the 6-year-old mare, who threaded her way through traffic from last place while the crowd of 72,739 urged her on down the stretch under the lights at Churchill Downs.
Hall of Fame jockey Mike Smith blamed himself for the loss. He walked off the track with his head down, dirt stuck to his face.
[+] Enlarge
AP Photo/David J. Phillip
Jockey Mike Smith blamed himself after the race for Zenyatta's first loss, by a head to Blame.
"It was my fault," he said, sobbing. "She should've won."
It was so close, a matter of inches, the result had to be resolved by a photo -- a picture that broke the hearts of not only Zenyatta's owners and trainer but millions of fans around the world.
Blame went to the front in mid-stretch, then fought off another gutty run by Zenyatta, who lagged well behind 11 rivals -- all boys -- in her customary style.
Blame ran 1 1/4 miles in 2:02.28 and paid $12.40 to win at 5-1 odds. Fly Down was third, while Preakness winner Lookin At Lucky finished fourth.
Zenyatta was the sentimental even-money favorite, playing to the crowd at every chance on her way to the starting gate. She high-stepped her way to the paddock, playfully pawing the ground as they roared. Co-owner Ann Moss held her finger to her lips as a signal for the fans to quiet down.
Zenyatta proved she could beat the boys last year when she rallied from behind to win the $5 million Classic at Santa Anita. It was one of her 17 wins on synthetic surfaces in her home state of California.
This time, though, she was facing the deepest, most talented field of her career on a surface on which she had limited experience. Still, trainer John Shirreffs had said she preferred it to synthetic tracks.
It was her third time running on dirt; in her two previous races, she beat other girls at Oaklawn Park in Arkansas.
But Blame owned home-court advantage. He won twice before on dirt at Churchill, where Zenyatta had never raced.
"She ran an excellent race and just came up a little short," Shirreffs said. "She ran her heart out."
Zenyatta's 19 consecutive wins tied her for most all-time with Peppers Pride, who retired last year after running against much lesser competition. Peppers Pride never raced outside New Mexico and all her wins came against fillies and mares.
American horses earned 12 victories over the two-day championships, with Europe-based horses winning twice.
http://www.espn.com
11-07-2010, 01:01 PM
Big Z, may go down as the best horse to ever race. I was pulling for her to win but unfortunately didnt happen but she is still unbelievable. Blame with this win could also beat Zenyatta in another way, for Horse of the Year in this win.
11-10-2010, 12:19 AM
Still a sad way to end it, I wish Zenyatta could have went 20 for 20 to retire. Sad, to see this horse retire off a loss.
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