Oaklawn Park Records and Facts
1905 – On February 24, Oaklawn Park Race Track opened its doors to a crowd of some 3,000 race fans. The day was declared a half-day holiday by Hot Springs officials.
1907 – Due to political problems in the state, racing was suspended.
1916 – Racing resumed at Oaklawn. The track is now owned by Louis Cella.
1936 – The Arkansas Derby was born with a purse $5,000.
1945 – Racing throughout the United States ended for an indefinite period at the request because of WWII. A 30-day season was held on November 5 through December 8 for the lost Spring meet. On opening day, an estimated crowd of 4,200 attended, and $189,289 was wagered.
1952 – Oaklawn gained national attention when its handle rose from a daily average of $336,341 to $434,667. Attendance climbs from 7,057 a day to 7,739.
1959 – The Meeting reached two milestones when its averages reached 10,000 in attendance and $500,000 pari-mutuel handle.
1960’s – Par 3 golf course in the infield was used in the off season.
1965 – Arkansas Derby purse increased to $50,000.
1970 – Records continue to be broken. During the 50-day meeting, a total crowd of 556,000 attended and bet $43,366,921. The average attendance was 11,120.
1973 – The first running of the Fantasy Stakes, for 3-year-old fillies, took place.
1974 – The Racing Festival of the South was born.
1980 – More than 250,000 fans attended the Racing Festival of the South. Temperance Hill won the Arkansas Derby.
1983 – Largest Average Daily Attendance Record Set 23,271 (still stands)
1984 – The purse for the Arkansas Derby was increased to $500,000.
1986 – The standing record single day attendance of 71,203 was set.
1991 – The Oaklawn Club was completely renovated.
1996 – Oaklawn Park race track achieved a record handle of $10,653,518 on Arkansas Derby Day.
2000 – Instant Racing, a pari-mutuel electronic system which allows players to wager on previously-run races, was introduced and field-tested at Oaklawn Park race track.
2011 – The average daily attendance grew 3% in 2011 from 2010 levels to 11,649. Arkansas Derby Day saw an attendance of 62,364
There has never been a turf track at Oaklawn Park.
Horseplayers Association has ranked Oaklawn Park as the 9th best track in all of North America. And, in my opinion, should be a “must see” by all who love the sport of Kings.
Two Classics: Saratoga and Del Mar
.
Saratoga Race Course opened in Saratoga Springs, NY on August 3, 1863, and is the oldest organized sporting venue of any kind in the United States. It is typically open for racing from late July through early September. The race course has two well-known nicknames — The Spa (for the nearby mineral springs), and the “Graveyard of Champions” (for the upsets that have occurred there, including Secretariat).
The grounds at Saratoga Race Course contain several unique features. Patrons can get close up views of the horses being led to the paddock as the path from the stables runs through the picnic grounds. There is a mineral spring called the Big Red Spring in the picnic grounds where patrons can partake of the water that made Saratoga Springs famous. A gazebo is a prominent feature on the infield and a stylized version of the gazebo is part of Saratoga Race Course logo.
Saratoga Race Course is rich with tradition. A lake in the middle of the track contains a canoe that is painted annually in the colors of the winning stable for that year’s Travers Stakes winner. Also, prior to each race a bell is hand rung at exactly 17 minutes prior to scheduled post time for each race. This is to call the jockeys to the paddock.
The 2011 meeting will be 40 days long from Friday, July 22 to Labor Day, Monday, Sept. 5. Saratoga is the home of the 142nd Running of the Travers Stakes on Aug. 27, 2011.
Del Mar Racetrack is an American Thoroughbred horse racing track at the Del Mar Fairgrounds in the seaside city of Del Mar, California, 20 miles north of San Diego. Operated by the Del Mar Thoroughbred Club, it is known for the slogan: “Where The Surf Meets The Turf.” It was built by a partnership including Bing Crosby, the actor Pat O’Brien, Jimmy Durante, Charles S. Howard and Oliver Hardy.
The first Bing Crosby Handicap was held at Del Mar in 1946 and that same year the Sante Fe Railroad began offering a racetrack special bringing spectators, bettors and horses to Del Mar from Los Angeles. Throughout the late 1940s and 1950s the track became the Saratoga of the West for summer racing. The track had large purses for many stakes, over half of which were won by the legendary jockey, Bill Shoemaker.
The track has a one-mile main dirt track and a seven furlong turf course. The track runs during the summer at the Del Mar Fairgrounds and can stable more than a thousand horses. Del Mar is known for its tan stucco grandstand located directly on the Pacific Ocean.
The first race of the meet on opening day (this year July 20th) starts at 2 pm when track announcer Trevor Denman begins each racing season with his trademark call: “And there’s the roar from the Del Mar crowd as the Del Mar meet is underway.” An estimated crowd of 40,000 plus will be in attendance.
Your Bucket List
If you enjoy the sport of kings and love to spend a summer afternoon at the track then put these two venues on your bucket list and get planning. Weather it’s at “The Spa” or “Where the turf meets the surf” you will be in for a special treat indeed.
Let It Ride – the Oaklawn Park Connection
Reprinted from Anonymous Source
Believe It or Not….. Found on a Site Named ouachitabeer
—————–
“Let it Ride” comes from a Rambunctious Road
Posted on May 9, 2013
“Let It Ride,” the 1989 horse racing movie starring Richard Dreyfuss, has a winner’s circle spot in Hot Springs history.
A little-known fact is the cult classic comedy is based on a book called “Good Vibes” by Jay Cronley. The prolific Tulsa World columnist wrote it after an epiphany at Oaklawn racetrack in Hot Springs in the late 1970s.
Released in 1978, “Good Vibes” is out of print now. So it’s both hard to find and expensive when you find it. But the movie is just like the book, minus a few continuity errors, Cronley says. So, unless you have about $400 for a copy of “Good Vibes,” it will be a lot faster and easier to rent it for a few good laughs.
“My favorite scene is still when Trotter is asking all the jokers around the place who they like, and he draws a big line straight through it on the program. I laugh at that every time,” Cronley said. “Oh my god, you should’ve seen the bars across from Oaklawn back then.”
After playing several races at Oaklawn that fateful day, Cronley returned to his cabin at Shangri-La Resort on Lake Ouachita. Being a horseplayer, it wasn’t long before he picked back up his Racing Form to scan the late races. He saw a horse he had to bet. He jumped back in his car and drove as fast as he could back to the track, down a curvy, two-mile stretch to Highway 270, speeding 30 miles due east to 2705 Central Ave. At times, he said, he was “passing cars on the right like a madman.”
He got to the track just in time to place a bet on, no joke, a horse named Rambunctious Road. The gamble paid off. He was in the money. Rambunctious Road– born, 1971, sired by Ramblin’ Road with quarter horse Joy San — paid $200, and a novel idea: A book about horse racing like no one has ever seen.
“I thought to myself, there’s gotta’ be an easier way to make money than this,” Cronley said by phone from his home in Tulsa. “That’s when I said I’ll write about it.”
The book “Good Vibes” has been through at least three publishers since hitting out-of-print status. The movie producer and ex-hockey player Ned Dowd (“Slap Shot” with Paul Newman) found a copy of “Good Vibes” though and together with his screenwriter sister,Nancy Dowd, made a movie out of it.
The night before they started filming “Let it Ride,” Cronley said he and the cast all went to Hialeah Park and Race Course near Miami to get into the spirit of things and bet on the dog races.
“There was this old lady feeding Dreyfuss tips on which dogs to bet, and he made a fortune,” Cronley said. “He was over there hiding his notes like a school boy in class!”
“Let It Ride” may have not received great reviews when it came out, but it soon became obvious those reviewers were idiots. Popularity for the film picked up after a lengthy run on HBO in the early 1990s. Today, one can find clips on YouTube with a list of comments describing it as the “greatest horse racing movie ever,” to “literally, one of the most under-rated comedies of all time.”