Father Patrick’s Faux Pas Trivial As Sire
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The following essay, titled “The case of the missing colt,” was posted on the TwinSpires Hambletonian Trail blog on Aug. 3, 2014, as reported from The Meadowlands. Though the huge Hambletonian favorite lost the classic trot and a spot in standardbred history, it meant little in the long run, since Father Patrick became a leading stallion in 2020, proving his biggest loss was an anomaly.
Father Patrick, driven by Yannick Gingras and trained by Jimmy Takter, was the 2014 Hambletonian early favorite [in 2013] when he was a two-year-old, winning a race at Mohawk from post 10.
On Saturday, Aug. 2, [2014] the sophomore Father Patrick was assigned post 10 in the 2014 Hambletonian at the Meadowlands. The post meant nothing to bettors; they made him 2-5 and were poised to collect their money when the best of the three Jimmy Takter-trained colts in the $1-million-plus race lined up with his foes behind the starting gate before more than 20,000 fans and industry members and a television audience over CBS Sports Network.
In the scant moments it took for the wings of the starting gate to open, Father Patrick resorted to galloping, surrendering his unique gait in a shocking display of movement that no one had ever seen him make. For Father Patrick and his many supporters, the race that was supposed to be his to make history, was history for him the moment he galloped.
10xo 11/57 3/4o 11/63 1/2o 11/63 1/2o 11/65 11/70
Those were the past-performance lines for Father Patrick’s [2014] Hambletonian effort.
Trainer Jimmy Takter never saw exactly what the audience saw when the starting gate swung open because he was driving another colt he trained, Trixton. “I was waiting for [Father] Patrick to come,” Takter said about the stretch drive after the race. “I had no clue. I didn't see him so I knew something must have happened to him.”
John Campbell, no stranger to the race as a winning and losing driver over the years, took charge of the race early with the third Takter-trained colt in the field, Nuncio. Trixton and Takter chased Nuncio. Trixton and Takter won; Nuncio and Campbell were second. The Takter-trained exacta pair was so fast that the rest of the field was far behind them.
Takter told press-box members later he was elated to come in first and second in the classic race and happy to be the winning driver but that he was convinced it would have been different if Father Patrick trotted in the race.
”If Father Patrick stayed flat,” Takter said, “he would’ve wound up behind me
and come up in that position and he would’ve blown by both of us
in the stretch.”
Trixton and Nuncio had a good deal of supporters in the win pool; both went off
at variables of 4-1. The non-Father-Patrick-involved exacta paid only $39.60.
For the best part of the season so far, Trixton was winning powerfully but
could not beat his stable mate Father Patrick. Trixton was clearly the
second-best in the division. And, as he trotted into history as the 89th
Hambletonian winner, everyone knew the second-best trotter was the real horse
that caught a break.
Many of us longed for the emotional punch we felt when we saw other special
horses come rolling down the stretch, grabbing the ground and gliding to
victory, almost laughing at foes. It is a special feeling we are only exposed
to when a special horse comes along. It allows us to witness a certain
greatness, which we long to adore. We were robbed of that rare moment at a
crucial time in the sport’s history.
It was certainly not the first time and won't be the last time that a revered
horse lost a big event. But to many of us following the impressive steps that
Father Patrick has taken to victory at two and at three, this is the one to
grieve over because he didn't win or lose—he just ran off. That left so many of
us feeling the same as Takter: Father Patrick would have won the Hambletonian.
He will win again, for sure, but the greatest moment of his career, no matter
where he marks victories again, is lost because Father Patrick just ran
off.
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