Secretariat’s Preakness Stakes Time Under Review

The request for review came from Penny Chenery, Secretariat’s owner, and the Maryland Jockey Club’s president.
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Hold all tickets. The Maryland Racing Commission has agreed to conduct a hearing to consider "compelling" evidence based upon advances in modern video technology regarding the long-standing controversy surrounding Secretariat’s winning time in the 1973 Preakness Stakes (gr. I) at Pimlico Race Course in Baltimore.

The request came from Penny Chenery, Secretariat’s owner, and Thomas Chuckas, president of the Maryland Jockey Club. The meeting will be held June 19 at Laurel Park, in Laurel, Md., beginning at 1:00 p.m. (EDT) and is open to the public.

The electronic timer in use at Pimlico for the 1973 Preakness recorded a winning time of 1:55–a clocking that quickly became the source of controversy after two independent clockers from the Daily Racing Form had individually hand-timed the race at a much faster 1:53 2/5. In the days following the Preakness, the stewards at Pimlico, and later the commission, concluded that there were "extenuating circumstances" attendant to the electronic timer’s recording. As a result, the official time was subsequently changed to that reported by Pimlico’s official hand clocker–1:54 2/5.

Had Secretariat’s time been officially recorded as 1:53 2/5–the time still recognized today by Daily Racing Form–he would have beaten Canonero II’s track record of 1:54 for the 1 3/16-mile distance set during the 1971 Preakness. Instead, the Preakness wound up being the only jewel of Secretariat’s three Triple Crown race victories in which he did not establish a new track record

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The Blood-Horse is the leading weekly publication devoted to international Thoroughbred racing and breeding. Since 1916, the staff of The Blood-Horse has served the Thoroughbred community with the highest standards of journalistic excellence to provide comprehensive and timely editorial coverage and analysis.

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