Famous Owners and their Horses

The Owners 

Nothing is more thrilling than standing at the finish line holding a ticket on the horse that is about to win the race. Wait a minute, nothing is more thrilling than OWNING the horse that is about to win the race. The ecstasy can be found on the faces of the connections in any winner's circle photograph, whether it's a maiden race (the horse's first win) or the Kentucky Derby.

Nowadays, folks with reasonable bankrolls who buy affordable horses own the majority of horses. However, racing is also full of partnerships in which several people pool their cash to purchase horses. People put their money together as a way of cutting down expenses and the risk if something does go wrong, but they still get all the thrills and excitement when the horse they "own" comes home a winner. Maybe the ultimate partnership success story, Seattle Slew, winner of the 1977 Triple Crown and one of the greatest sires of the latter 20th century, was purchased by a group of four people for $17,500, while earning the quartet more than $100 million in his racing and breeding careers. While this does not happen to everybody investing in the game, anyone can be a successful owner with careful management and sound planning. For more information on horse ownership, visit www.thegreatestgame.com 

Owners Silks
For the casual fan, finding your horse during a race can be difficult if the field is full of a bunch of "brown" horses that all look similar. Fans find their horse by the numbered, colored saddle towels, or the colored SILKS that the jockeys wear during the race. Every set of silks represents the owner; a design they created themselves. First incorporated in the early days of racing, the owners could pick out their horse and rider from the viewing stand by spotting their silks across the meadow from the racers. Back then, silks were simple - red, blue, gold, gray or black. Even today, race callers rely on silks to find each horse.


Celebrate the Preakness Stakes with a Free Bet!

Horse Racing News
Gayego joins Preakness lineup
Wednesday, May 14, 2008
Gayego, who finished 17th in the Derby on May 3, was added to the Preakness field Tuesday. He will be the only one of the 19 horses beaten by Big Brown in the Derby to seek a rematch Saturday at Pimlico Race Course.
[read full story]
Playing the odds with Big Brown
Wednesday, May 14, 2008
A short price in the Preakness could be good news for Big Brown. Post-time favorites have captured 68 of 133 runnings of the middle jewel of Triple Crown, a race run in two divisions in 1918.
[read full story]
Jockey Club creates safety committee to study equine health
Thursday, May 08, 2008
The Jockey Club has formed a committee to study equine health, including track safety and the rules of racing, five days after the death of the filly Eight Belles at the Kentucky Derby.
[read full story]