Watch and Bet Harness Racing at TwinSpires.com
harnessracing.com
The Horsenman and Fair World
  • News Archive
  • Racing Reports
    • Sire's Progeny
    • Dam's Progeny
    • Single Horse
    • Leading Sires
    • Racing Recap
  • Sale Reports
    • Sire's Progeny
    • Dam's Progeny
    • Single Horse
    • Leading Sires
    • Sales Results
    • Sales Info
  • Calendars
    • Stakes Schedule
    • Sales Schedule
  • Entries/Results
    • USTA Entries
    • USTA Results
    • SC Entries
    • SC Results
  • Programs
    • TrackMaster® PPs
  • Guide Directory
  • Magazine Info
    • Issue Highlights
    • New Subscriptions
    • Renewals
    • Address Change
    • Advertising Rates
    • Send A Letter
« »
      1 2 3 4
5 6 7 8 9 10 11
12 13 14 15 16 17 18
19 20 21 22 23 24 25
26 27 28 29 30 31  
View all for this month

Click here for RSS

Harrah's Chester's Colonial Trot draws 21

Return Home
August 09, 2007 Send To A Friend  | Print View

Twenty-one 3-year-old colt trotters have been entered for the Colonial Trot at Harrah’s Chester on Sunday afternoon, divided into three $75,000 divisions. Among the entries is Primary As, Manfinity, Hitchiker, Bayside Volo, Don’t Blink Twice and Monkey Bones.

 

The competition figures to be as hot as this week's weather. The powerful trotting stable of Trond Smedshammer has entered Primary AS, already a winner of $129,625, who drew the four post in Sunday's first division. The colt owns a mark of 1:54, and will face six challengers. George Brennan will drive Manfinity from the one post, and the amazing Tim Tetrick will pilot Photo Maxx from the six hole. Tetrick's colt finished first and second in his only two lifetime starts.

 

Quite Easy, with $171,362 in the bank, heads the second division of the Colonial Trot against Daniel Dube's impressive Hitchiker and five trotters with lesser experience. The third group features Bayside Volo (Ron Pierce driving), Don't Blink Twice (Tetrick) and Monkey Bones (Steve Smith) from the Hambletonian field.

 

In the autumn of 1968, with Philadelphia's four major sports franchises struggling for success, Liberty Bell Park created a new event--the $100,000 Colonial Trot--to brighten the scene and bring a smile to the faces of harness racing fans.

 

"We hope this becomes a Philadelphia tradition, like the Penn Relays and the Dad Vail Regatta," said the late Ed Dougherty, Liberty Bell Park president, at an introductory news conference. "We're proud to say that the Colonial Trot will be Pennsylvania's first $100,000 horse race."

 

Liberty Bell Park is long gone now, and Franklin Mills Mall stands in its place at Knights and Woodhaven roads in Northeast Philadelphia. But the Colonial Trot, after many years at out-of-town venues, is returning to the Delaware Valley this Sunday at Harrah's Chester Casino & Racetrack.

 

"The Colonial is coming home, where it belongs," said Rick Kane, racing secretary at Harrah's Chester Casino & Racetrack. Sunday's field includes five trotters who entered the recent Hambletonian at the Meadowlands.

 

In 1968, world champion Nevele Pride, coming off a Hambo victory, was such an overwhelming favorite in the first Colonial Trot that he was barred from the betting. Stanley Dancer drove Nevele Pride to a 7 1/2-length victory in 1:59 before a crowd of 16,883. Eric B. finished second in the race for driver Del Cameron and paid a $10 "win" mutuel.

 

The Colonial was accepted quickly by Philadelphia sports fans because their favorite teams were fighting through an all-familiar down period. The 1968 Phillies finished fifth with a 76-86 record and replaced manager Gene Mauch with Bob Skinner in midseason. The Eagles, then owned by Jerry Wolman, were coming off a 6-7-1 campaign and lost their first 11 games. The Flyers were entering their second season and hadn't yet discovered their muscles, or Bobby Clarke. The Sixers, after blowing a 3-1 playoff lead against the Boston Celtics in the Eastern finals, had just traded the great Wilt Chamberlain to the Los Angeles Lakers.

 

Liberty Bell Park was then in its fifth season, and harness racing was growing fast in area popularity. The Colonial fit nicely into the national trotting schedule between two Triple Crown races: the Hambo (August) and the Kentucky Futurity (October).

 

"The best trotters in the world are looking for a big stakes event in September," Dougherty said.

 

 Lindy's Pride won the second Colonial as a 2-5 favorite in 1969 before a record crowd of 17,030. Triple Crown champion Super Bowl romped in the fifth year, with Dancer driving, and Hall of Famer Del Miller scored in 1975 with the filly Meadow Bright. Billy Haughton had his turn in 1977, with Green Speed. At that point, five of 10 Hambletonian winners had gone on to capture the Colonial.

 

By the time John Campbell won his first Colonial, with the great Mack Lobell in 1987, Liberty Bell Park had closed its doors and its signature event had hit the road. It was held at Rosecroft in Maryland, Woodbine in Canada, Freehold in New Jersey and Colonial Downs in Virginia before coming home this week to Harrah's Chester Casino & Racetrack. (with files from Harrah’s Chester)


« Back

Bookmark and Share
Home :: News Archive :: Racing Reports :: Sale Reports :: Calendars :: Guide Directory :: Contact The Staff
Advertising Rates & Information For: Horseman And Fair World Magazine :: HarnessRacing.com :: Harness Racing Weekend Preview
Website Design by eLink Design, Inc. A Lexington Web Design Company :: Hosted by Intelliwire, LLC, An Offsite Backup Company
Site contents may not be reproduced without the expressed written consent of the publisher.
© 2012 Horseman Publishing Co., Lexington KY, All Rights Reserved