Current:Home > MyChainkeen|Bobby Ussery, Hall of Fame jockey whose horse was DQ’d in 1968 Kentucky Derby, dies at 88 -NextFrontier Finance
Chainkeen|Bobby Ussery, Hall of Fame jockey whose horse was DQ’d in 1968 Kentucky Derby, dies at 88
NovaQuant View
Date:2025-04-10 07:37:59
Bobby Ussery,Chainkeen a Hall of Fame jockey who won the 1967 Kentucky Derby and then crossed the finish line first in the 1968 edition only to be disqualified days later, has died. He was 88.
Ussery died Thursday of congestive heart failure at an assisted living facility in Hollywood, Florida, his son Robert told The Associated Press on Friday.
The elder Ussery won his first race at the Fair Grounds in New Orleans on Nov. 22, 1951, and went on to major wins in the Travers, Whitney and Alabama at Saratoga by the end of the decade.
He retired in 1974 with 3,611 career victories and he was inducted into the National Museum of Racing and Hall of Fame in 1980.
Ussery won the 1967 Derby aboard 30-1 longshot Proud Clarion. He picked up the mount after his original Derby horse, Reflected Glory, couldn’t make the race because of sore shins.
Ussery and Dancer’s Image crossed the finish line first in the 1968 Derby only to become the first horse ever disqualified days later as the result of a positive drug test. They rallied from last to win by 1 1/2 lengths over Forward Pass even though Ussery lost his whip.
It was the start of a four-year legal odyssey by owner Peter Fuller, who spent $250,000 unsuccessfully fighting the disqualification.
Traces of the anti-inflammatory phenylbutazone, known as bute, were found in Dancer’s Image’s post-race urinalysis. It was legal at some tracks at the time, but not at Churchill Downs. Veterinarian Alex Harthill had given the colt a dose of bute six days before the race, seemingly enough time for it to clear his system.
Dancer’s Image was disqualified by the stewards and placed 14th and last; Forward Pass was declared the winner. The trainer of Dancer’s Image and his assistant each received 30-day suspensions.
Fuller sent the winner’s gold trophy back to Churchill Downs to be engraved, but the track never returned it.
Ussery kept the trophy awarded to the winning jockey.
“As far as I’m concerned, I won the Derby in 1968 because they made the race official,” he told The Associated Press in 2019. “What they did with Dancer’s Image was another thing. It had no reflection on me.”
The Derby media guide includes the official chart showing Dancer’s Image as the winner, with a two-sentence explanation about the DQ, but in other sections Forward Pass gets the credit.
Ussery’s best finish in the Belmont Stakes was in 1959 aboard Bagdad. That same year he won Canada’s most prestigious race, the Queen’s Plate, with New Providence, one of his record 215 winners in 1959.
In 1960, he won the Hopeful Stakes on that year’s 2-year-old champion, Hail To Reason. He won the Flamingo, Florida Derby and Preakness on Bally Ache that year after they finished second in the Kentucky Derby.
He was born Robert Nelson Ussery on Sept. 3, 1935, in Vian, Oklahoma.
At Aqueduct in New York, Ussery was known for guiding horses to the outside of the track, near the crown where the dirt was packed hard, then diving toward the rail and opening them up on the far turn. That path was dubbed Ussery’s Alley.
“He was running on the hard surface and all the other horses were running in the sand like at the beach,” his son Robert recalled. “He would be so many lengths in front and he was the only one who could do that successfully.”
In 2011, Ussery was inducted into the Oklahoma Horse Racing Hall of Fame.
Besides his son, Ussery is survived by four grandchildren and two great-grandchildren. His daughter, Debra Paramanis, died in 2010.
___
AP sports: https://apnews.com/sports
veryGood! (8384)
Related
- 'Most Whopper
- Global wishes for 2024: Pay for family leave. Empower Black men. Respect rural voices
- The US Tennis Association is reviewing its safeguarding policies and procedures
- Horoscopes Today, January 4, 2024
- Messi injury update: Ankle 'better every day' but Inter Miami star yet to play Leagues Cup
- Nikki Haley’s Republican rivals are ramping up their attacks on her as Iowa’s caucuses near
- UC Berkeley walls off People’s Park as it waits for court decision on student housing project
- Families in Gaza search desperately for food and water, wait in long lines for aid
- 'Malcolm in the Middle’ to return with new episodes featuring Frankie Muniz
- Chick-fil-A is bringing back Mango Passion Sunjoy, adding 3 new drinks: How you can order
Ranking
- A New York Appellate Court Rejects a Broad Application of the State’s Green Amendment
- Strike kills 12 people, mostly children, in Gaza area declared safe zone by Israel
- Kelly Clarkson Jokes About Her Weight-Loss Journey During Performance
- Federal appeals court denies effort to block state-run court in Mississippi’s majority-Black capital
- Bet365 ordered to refund $519K to customers who it paid less than they were entitled on sports bets
- New year, new clothes: expert advice to how to start a gentleman's wardrobe
- Bangladesh opposition calls for strike on election weekend as premier Hasina seeks forgiveness
- As Gerry and Theresa say 'I do,' a list of every Bachelor Nation couple still together
Recommendation
RFK Jr. closer to getting on New Jersey ballot after judge rules he didn’t violate ‘sore loser’ law
Why Pregnant Kailyn Lowry Is Considering Ozempic After She Gives Birth to Twins
Backers of an effort to repeal Alaska’s ranked voting system fined by campaign finance watchdog
Bomb threats prompt evacuations of government buildings in several states, but no explosives found
Kylie Jenner Shows Off Sweet Notes From Nieces Dream Kardashian & Chicago West
Georgia deputy fatally struck by Alabama police car in high-speed chase across state lines
President of Belarus gives himself immunity from prosecution and limits potential challengers
FACT FOCUS: Images made to look like court records circulate online amid Epstein document release