Sunday Silence
racehorse
Sunday Silence, (foaled 1986), American racehorse (Thoroughbred) who in 1989 won the Kentucky Derby and the Preakness Stakes but lost at the Belmont Stakes, ending his bid for the coveted Triple Crown of American horse racing.
Sunday Silence was spurned twice at auction—first as a yearling and then as a two-year-old—by buyers who refused to pay the minimum bid set by his owner, Arthur B. Hancock III. Hancock then sold a half interest in the colt to his trainer, the venerable 78-year-old Charles Whittingham, and placed Sunday Silence in his care in California. As a three-year-old, the colt ran off four wins in as many starts before the Kentucky Derby, including a victory at the Santa Anita Derby in California, which he won by 11 lengths.
The Derby favourite in 1989 was Easy Goer at 4–5 odds; Sunday Silence went off at 3–1 odds. Fifteen horses started the race. There was plenty of bumping, and Sunday Silence ducked sharply when his jockey, Pat Valenzuela, applied the whip to him down the stretch. Easy Goer, for his part, had trouble with the muddy track and the slow pace. Those problems notwithstanding, Sunday Silence scored a major upset, winning by two and a half lengths over Easy Goer.
The two colts faced each other again in the Preakness. Easy Goer was the 3–5 favourite. They raced neck and neck until the final few yards, when Sunday Silence, in a dramatic last effort, won by a nose.
Sunday Silence was then made the favourite at the Belmont Stakes in a field of 10 horses. He raced close to the pace but was shadowed by Easy Goer. As Sunday Silence started to inch up to take the lead at the top of the homestretch, Easy Goer flashed ahead and raced to an eight-length victory. Sunday Silence was inducted into the National Museum of Racing’s Hall of Fame in 1996 and died in 2002.
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