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Brownout at Belmont won't doom sport

Horse racing no longer year-round obsession, but Triple Crown still endures

Image: Big Brown
Denis Paquin / AP
Kent Desormeaux, Big Brown's jockey, removes his helmet after the horse finished last in the Belmont Stakes on Saturday.
Video
  Reactions to Big Brown's loss
June 8: Kent Desormeaux, Richard Dutrow, Nick Zito and others talk about the Belmont Stakes.

NBC Sports

Slide show
Exercise rider Michelle Nevin and a groom walk Triple Crown hopeful Big Brown in the paddock before the 140th running of the Belmont Stakes horse race at Belmont Park in Elmont, New York
  No crown for Big Brown
Big Brown fails to capture Triple Crown as long shot Da' Tara goes on to win the 140th running of the Belmont Stakes

more photos

Special feature
SECRETARIAT TURCOTTE
Triple Crown winners
Only 11 horses have won the Kentucky Derby, Preakness Stakes and Belmont Stakes in the same year.

NBCSports.com

OPINION
By Mike Celizic
NBCSports.com contributor
updated 2:38 p.m. ET June 8, 2008

Mike Celizic
Don’t worry about what Big Brown’s swoon in the Belmont did for the future of horse racing. And stop speculating what it would have meant if the big horse had won the Triple Crown for the first time in 30 years.

The answers are nothing and nothing. Next year at this time, we’ll probably be all ga-ga again about some horse going for the big prize again. It will be a beast we will not have known existed back in March, but his — or, perhaps, her — name will be on every tongue and lead every sports page. A huge crowd will pack Belmont again, and television ratings will soar.

And, win or lose, at the end of the race, the sport will go back to the fringe it’s occupied for more than a generation.

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As far as the general public is concerned, this is horse racing: three races that begin in early May and end in mid-June. It’s an event, a celebration, a rite of spring that’s deeply embedded in the culture. It has a life of its own, powered by habit that’s downloaded into our consciousness at such an early age that it’s part of our mental operating system.

The rest of the year is important to the sliver of the public who are true believers. They can get all cranked up about the Breeders’ Cup, but the rest of us aren’t. The only way more people are ever going to go to the track is if the industry installs more slot machines and gaming tables there, not because some horse won three races for the first time in 30 years and then retired to stud.

Horse racing once was a major sport, but now it’s like gymnastics or table tennis or figure skating — something that has its own fervent band of fervent followers but that is ignored by the general public until the Olympics. Soccer’s like that, too. It has a dedicated fan base and even gets mainstream coverage, but for most Americans, it exists during the World Cup, then fades back into its own niche.

  Brunker calls it right

NBCSports.com's Mike Brunker picked Big Brown to win, but in his handicap he advised against betting on the heavy favorite and instead suggested a four-horse $2 exacta box that included long shot winner Da' Tara and runner-up Denis of Cork. Bettors who played along, wagering $24, collected a $659.00 payout.

Horse racing is lucky in that it doesn’t have to wait four years to have its moment in the sun. Every spring — and you can set your calendar by it — the Kentucky Derby ushers in the season. The Derby lives because it has been part of America’s common culture for more than a century, a social event built around a horse race.

The Triple Crown itself exists more because it always has. It’s like Christmas. Even atheists and agnostics and Buddhists put up trees and exchange gifts, because it’s a fun thing to do. Christianity could disappear tomorrow, and we’d still have Christmas on Dec. 25. That’s the way it is with horse racing and the Triple Crown. Come May, there’s the Kentucky Derby, and why would you want to pass on a day like that? Ladies play dress-up, gentlemen wear straw hats, everybody drinks mint juleps, and tens of thousands of kids guzzle beer and run around the infield with their shirts off. It’s an excuse to engage in a ritual of fun and frolic.

And when a horse wins, the automatic circuits start firing. Can it win the Triple Crown? People who couldn’t even name the three races that comprise it ask the question as if it’s of cosmic significance.

Horse racing the sport — the part that exists out of the public’s consciousness — can get hurt when horses die in public. But the Triple Crown keeps drawing attention and crowds. It would be the same if Big Brown had won the Belmont. Everybody would say it’s a big boost for horse racing, but darned few of the people who tuned in would be running to the track the next weekend for more action. They might tune into the Breeders’ Cup if Big Brown was running, but it wouldn’t mean that much, because the race isn’t part of our cultural circuitry.


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