Stanley Dancer
Stanley Dancer | |
---|---|
Occupation | Harness racing : driver / trainer / owner |
Born | West Windsor Township, New Jersey, USA | July 25, 1927
Died | September 8, 2005 Pompano Beach, Florida, USA | (aged 78)
Career wins | 3,781 |
Major racing wins | |
International Trot (1961, 1963) | |
Honours | |
United States Harness Racing Hall of Fame (1969) Little Brown Jug Wall of Fame (1989) | |
Significant horses | |
Albatross, Cardigan Bay, Keystone Ore, Most Happy Fella, Nevele Pride, Silent Majority, Su Mac Lad, Super Bowl |
Stanley Franklin Dancer (July 25, 1927 – September 8, 2005) was an American harness racing driver and trainer. He was the only horseman to drive and train three Triple Crowns in horse racing. In total, he drove 23 Triple Crown winners. He was the first trainer to campaign a horse to $1 million in a career, Cardigan Bay in 1968, and drove the Harness Horse of the Year seven times. During his career, he won over $28 million and 3,781 races and was called by the United States Trotting Association "perhaps the best-known personality in the sport".
Dancer was born in West Windsor Township, New Jersey on July 25, 1927, and grew up on a farm in the New Egypt section of Plumsted Township, New Jersey, living in the area for almost his entire life on a 160-acre (0.65 km2) farm with a half-mile training track before moving to Pompano Beach, Florida, in 1999. He dropped out of school after eighth grade.[1]
He borrowed silks for his first race, driving a horse he had bought for $75 using money he had won from a 4-H Club. He started driving horses at Freehold Raceway in 1945, winning his first race the following year. Dancer started his stable in 1948 with a trotter he had bought using $250 of his wife's college savings. That horse, Candor, took home $12,000 during the following three years.[1]
A spindly 5 feet 8 inches (1.73 m), and weighing in at 135 pounds (61 kg), Red Smith described him as not looking "old enough to be let out for night racing." Despite his size, he used an aggressive, all-out style right from the start, and retained his aggressive methods despite 32 racing spills — including a 1955 incident in which he broke his back — four car accidents, and crashes in both an airplane and a helicopter, as well as two heart attacks during his driving career. He had been given physician's guidance to quit racing, but declined to take the advice, noting that "There is nothing dangerous about harness racing. The worst crackup I ever had came in an auto accident."[1]
In a six-horse field at the 1961 International Trot at Roosevelt Raceway, Dancer drove Su Mac Lad, finishing in a time of 2:34.4 in driving rain and a sloppy track in front of 28,105 racing fans, with the French horse Kracovie in second by what The New York Times called "the smallest of noses" with American horse Tie Silk in third.[2] The victory made Su Mac Lad the first American horse to take the title.[3]
Dancer rode New Zealand horse Cardigan Bay to $1 million in winnings in 1968, the first harness horse to surpass that milestone. Dancer and Cardigan Bay appeared together on The Ed Sullivan Show.[4]
In 1995, in his final race, he rode Lifelong Victory to a win in the New Jersey Sires Stakes held at Garden State Park in Cherry Hill, New Jersey.[4]
He earned $1 million in purses in 1964, becoming the first driver to win that much in a single year, and drove Cardigan Bay, the first standardbred horse to win $1 million in career prize money. He drove his 3,781st and final winner in 1995, bringing in $28,002,426 during his career as a driver. He won the Triple Crown three times, with trotters Nevele Pride in 1968 and Super Bowl in 1972, and with pacer Most Happy Fella in 1970. He trained / drove the harness horse of the year seven times, with trotters Su Mac Lad in 1962 and Nevele Pride in 1967 through 1969, and with pacers Albatross in 1971 and 1972 and Keystone Ore in 1976. He won the Hambletonian four times and was inducted into the United States Harness Racing Hall of Fame in 1969.[1]
After surgery to treat an intestinal ailment his beloved horse Dancer's Crown died three weeks before the 1983 Hambletonian, a horse that would have been favored to win the race.[4] He reluctantly entered the little-known Duenna at the insistence of His family and friends, and won the race, the first filly to win the race in 17 years.[4] Arnold Palmer called the victory "one of the most dramatic moments in sports".[5]
Dancer died at age 78 on September 8, 2005, in his home in Pompano Beach, Florida, from prostate cancer.[4] He was survived by his wife Jody, whom he married in 1985; two sons (one of whom was New Jersey Assemblyman and former Plumsted mayor Ronald Stanley Dancer), two daughters, seven grandchildren and four great-grandchildren. His first marriage, to Rachel Young in 1947, ended in divorce in 1983.[1]
References
[edit]- ^ a b c d e Litsky, Frank. "Stanley Dancer, Harness Racing Champion, Dies at 78", The New York Times, September 9, 2005. Accessed February 22, 2011.
- ^ Effrat, Louis. "KRACOVIE SECOND IN $50,000 TROT; Su Mac Lad of U.S. Victor in International Race -- Tie Silk Takes Third SU MAC LAD WINS BY NOSE IN TROT", The New York Times, July 16, 1961. Accessed February 15, 2009.
- ^ via Associated Press. "SPORTS NEWS BRIEFS; Su Mac Lad Dies; Trotter Was 28", The New York Times, September 20, 1982. Accessed February 17, 2009.
- ^ a b c d e Christine, Bill. "Stanley Dancer, 78; Was Dominating Harness Racing Driver, Trainer", Los Angeles Times, September 9. 2005. Accessed February 19, 2009.
- ^ Mallozzi, Vincent M. "HARNESS RACING; At 68, Stanley Dancer Keeps Trotting", The New York Times, July 13, 1995. Accessed February 18, 2009.
External links
[edit]- 1927 births
- 2005 deaths
- American harness racers
- United States Harness Racing Hall of Fame inductees
- Deaths from cancer in Florida
- Deaths from prostate cancer in the United States
- Harness racing in the United States
- People from Plumsted Township, New Jersey
- Sportspeople from Pompano Beach, Florida
- People from West Windsor, New Jersey
- Sportspeople from Ocean County, New Jersey
- Sportspeople from Mercer County, New Jersey
- Burials at Maplewood Cemetery, Freehold, New Jersey