Riva Ridge

Riva Ridge
Sire First Landing
Grandsire Turn-To
Dam Iberia
Damsire Heliopolis
Sex Stallion
Foaled 1969
Country United States
Colour Bay
Breeder Meadow Stud, Inc.
Owner Meadow Stable
Trainer Lucien Laurin
Record 30:17-3-1
Earnings $1,111,347
Major wins

Champagne Stakes (1971)
Futurity Stakes (1971)
Laurel Futurity (1971)
Flash Stakes (1971)
Garden State Futurity (1971)
Blue Grass Stakes (1972)
Hollywood Derby (1972)
Brooklyn Handicap (1973)
Massachusetts Handicap (1973)
Stuyvesant Handicap (1973)

Triple Crown race wins:
Kentucky Derby (1972)
Belmont Stakes (1972)
Awards
U.S. Champion 2-Yr-Old (1971)
U.S. Champion Older Horse (1973)
Honours
United States Racing Hall of Fame (1998)
#57 - Top 100 U.S. Racehorses of the 20th Century
Riva Ridge Stakes at Belmont Park
Last updated on January 24, 2008

Riva Ridge (April 13, 1969 – April 21, 1985) was a Thoroughbred racehorse, the winner of the 1972 Kentucky Derby and Belmont Stakes.[1] A son of First Landing out of Iberia (by Heliopolis),[2] he was owned and bred by the Meadow Stable of Christopher Chenery. Secretariat, the U.S. Triple Crown champion in 1973, was owned and bred by the same stable.[3]

Riva Ridge's name came from Chenery's son-in-law, John Tweedy,[4] who was a soldier in World War II at the important strategic victory by the U.S. Army's 10th Mountain Division in 1945 at Riva Ridge on February 18 in the North Apennine mountains of Italy.[5][6]

Racing career

A winner of the Eclipse Award at age two and four, Riva Ridge was ridden mainly by Hall of Fame jockey Ron Turcotte, who would also ride stablemate Secretariat a year later. He did not run well on a muddy track, and was upset in the Preakness Stakes after rain made the going sloppy. In the 1½-mile Belmont Stakes, Riva Ridge defeated 9 other horses, running away to a seven-length victory.

At age four, Riva Ridge won five of the nine races he entered, set track records four times, and equalled the 118-mile track record at Suffolk Downs in winning the Massachusetts Handicap. His winning time of 1:5225 in the Brooklyn Handicap (raced that year at Aqueduct Racetrack) set a world record for 1316 miles on the dirt.[7] His mark was equalled by Farma Way in 1991 at Pimlico Race Course. As of January 2008, their record still stands.[8]

With much fanfare, the Philip Morris company (manufacturer of Marlboro cigarettes) sponsored what was to be a match race with stablemate Secretariat. After both horses were beaten in preparatory races for the match, it was changed to an invitational race which brought together top horses three years old and up. In record time, Secretariat (ridden by Turcotte) defeated Riva Ridge (ridden by Eddie Maple). During their careers, both horses wore the blue and white checks of Meadow Stable. In 30 lifetime starts, Riva Ridge won 17 races, finished second three times and third once, with earnings of $1,111,497. He was elected to the American Racing Hall of Fame in 1998.

Riva Ridge was retired at the end of the 1973 racing season. He stood at stud on Claiborne Farm in Kentucky for his entire breeding career until he died at age 16 of a heart attack on April 21, 1985.

In the top 100 U.S. Thoroughbred champions of the 20th century, Riva Ridge was ranked #57.

Pedigree of Riva Ridge
Sire
First Landing
Turn-To Royal Charger Nearco
Sun Princess
Source Sucree Admiral Drake
Lavendula
Hildene Bubbling Over North Star
Beaming Beauty
Fancy Racket Wrack
Ultimate Fancy
Dam
Iberia
Heliopolis Hyperion Gainsborough
Selene
Drift Swynford
Santa Cruz
War East Easton Dark Legend
Phaona
Warrior Lass Man o' War
Sweetheart

See also

References

  1. "Hollywood Unnecessarily Embellishes the Real Tale of Secretariat". AOL.Original. Retrieved 2012-05-24.
  2. Riva Ridge's five-generation pedigree and race record. Retrieved February 18, 2011.
  3. "Hollywood Unnecessarily Embellishes the Real Tale of Secretariat". AOL.Original. Retrieved 2012-05-24.
  4. Strine, Gerald (May 7, 1972). "Riva Ridge captures Derby". Sarasota Herald-Tribune (Florida). (Washington Post / Los Angeles Times). p. !C.
  5. Rice, Bill (February 17, 1995). "WWII ski heroes to re-enact historic climb". The Daily Gazette (Schenectady, New York). p. C5.
  6. Foster, J. Todd (March 3, 1995). "Making up for lost climb". Spokesman-Review. p. B1.
  7. Racing Hall of Fame. Retrieved February 18, 2011.
  8. Race records. Retrieved February 18, 2011.

External links