1974 BELMONT STAKES Leader of the Pack-So now we apparently have a legitimate leader among the three-year-olds. Darby Dan's rangy chestnut Little Current, the seven-length winner of the Preakness three weeks earlier, duplicated his effort almost exactly in the 1 1/2-mile Belmont Stakes on June 8 to join such select company as Damascus, Nashua, Native Dancer, Capot, and Bimelech, each of whom failed to win the Kentucky Derby, but went on to win the other two Triple Crown races. He also became the first colt to win more than one of the 11 stakes with a value of $100,000-added or more in the division thus far this year; he became the second member of the division to account for three major stakes; he has soundly defeated the Derby winner, Cannonade, in their last two meetings, while the latter had no excuses in either race; and, when in the clear, he has blown past his opposition in both the Preakness and the Belmont with all the ease of a Learjet overtaking a Piper Cub. In short, he is currently the leader of the pack. Favored, of course, was Little Current, principally off his Preakness victory in the impressive time of 1:54 3/5. ... Next in favor of the crowd was Cannonade, the Kentucky Derby winner, albeit in 2:04. From an even start, Jolly Johu went to the front ... while Little Current dropped 11 lengths off the pace, where he was to remain throughout the first mile. Jolly Johu and Shady Character lumbered the first half in :49 3/5, the latter in front now; they dawdled the six furlongs in 1:14; they crept the mile in 1:39 1/5. Obviously, the riders were asleep, and the crowd was beginning to get that way. Fortunately, though, things began to happen. On the turn, Little Current began to accelerate, slipping through inside the fading Shady Character, Sea Songster, and Hudson County before Miguel Rivera smoothly took him to the outside to shoot at the leaders. At the quarter pole, Cannonade was on the lead after 1 1/4 miles in 2:04 1/5, with Jolly Johu second and Rube the Great third, while Little Current had clear sailing on the outside, and from here it was no horse race. He zipped past the leaders with no trouble and drew off to win by seven, with ease. Meanwhile, Jolly Johu, one of the longest priced horses in the field, rallied again to take second by a nose from Cannonade, while Rube the Great finished fourth. Little Current's final time of 2:29 1/5 elicited howls of anguish from trainers, the press, and other pundits. It was 5 1/5 seconds slower than the track record set by Secretariat in last year's Belmont, they said. And the track was fast, they said. Three races on the card had been run within three-fifths of a second of their respective track records, they said. It just goes to show what a group of louts this is, they said. But wait. Secretariat's times have made a lot of horses look bad, and, if there were a group of louts in the race, it was the jockeys who dawdled along at the incredibly slow pace-or the others who allowed them to-through the first part of the race. Furthermore, Little Current actually ran both the final quarter and the final half-mile faster than Secretariat had last year. The time for Little Current's final quarter was :24, while Secretariat had coasted home in :25, and the final half was two seconds faster, Little Current going in :47 4/5 as compared to :49 4/5 for last year's champion.-Arnold Kirkpatrick The Thoroughbred Record, June 15, 1974 http://www.thoroughbredtimes.com/tc99/history/hoofprints/1973/belmont/default.asp