Bart Cummings: Legend
September 2nd 2008 07:16
To be a legend you need to be synonymous with a sport. Muhammad Ali and boxing; Sir Donald Bradman and cricket; Pele and football.
When the name Phar Lap is mentioned it links immediately with the sport of horseracing and history of our country. Would there be anyone in Australia who would not know something about the horse and the story? Even if an immigrant to Australia it would not take long for the story and symbolism to take root: a horse. A Melbourne Cup.
Phar Lap was the (obvious) inaugural legend of Australian racing. Last night James (Bart) Cummings was officially lifted to the status of (living) legend. And he is a worthy recipient.
The test of a legend comes in the knowledge of the broader community. Working (as I have) in areas other than horseracing at various times I have many times heard the name Bart Cummings mentioned in a Melbourne Spring. In an office; commuting in a tram or train or bus; or in the conversation of some FM DJ who knows nothing about racing - but knows enough to place a call to Bart Cummings in Spring. You will hear conversations everywhere that include the words: Melbourne Cup, horse, bet, winner, Bart Cummings.
Bart Cummings is synonymous with the Melbourne Cup, with ten mores successes than Phar Lap and a longevity denied our James Dean (die young and tragically) iconic horse. Bart has been a presence, physical and real, for several generations of Australians. His laconic voice; his Bob Hawke coif; his bushy eyebrows; his dry sense of humour - and his resounding and continuing success as one of our greatest horse trainers.
Bart Cummings was an inaugural inductee into the racing hall in 2001, almost 20 years after he was made a member of the Order of Australia for his services to racing, and a decade after he was added to the Sport Australia Hall of Fame.
His (to this time) 11 Melbourne Cup winners are:
Light Fingers 1965
Galilee 1966
Red Handed 1967
Think Big 1974 & 1975
Gold And Black 1977
Hyperno 1979
Kingston Rule 1990
Let’s Elope 1991
Saintly 1996
Rogan Josh 1999
Training methods for staying horses have changed in recent years. Australian trainers are now more inclined to take a European training program and not build slowly with frequent racing as Cummings has in the past. No longer is it deemed necessary to race on Derby Day before the Cup. Perhaps his training style is no longer suited - or perhaps it is just the right horse that he lacks?
JB Cummings may never train another Melbourne Cup winner. But he does not need to anyway: he is a legend.
ps
Bart started the long process of qualification for a Melbourne Cup start for (previously) ‘Australia’s best maiden’ Moatize when he gave the horse a ‘kill’ in a Sale Maiden. Step one of qualification for a horse with a 3rd placing (when favourite) in the Queensland Derby. Perhaps this is the next Cummings Cup winner?
The Bart Cummings story continues.
short video of Bart’s 10th Melbourne Cup victory:
When the name Phar Lap is mentioned it links immediately with the sport of horseracing and history of our country. Would there be anyone in Australia who would not know something about the horse and the story? Even if an immigrant to Australia it would not take long for the story and symbolism to take root: a horse. A Melbourne Cup.
Phar Lap was the (obvious) inaugural legend of Australian racing. Last night James (Bart) Cummings was officially lifted to the status of (living) legend. And he is a worthy recipient.
The test of a legend comes in the knowledge of the broader community. Working (as I have) in areas other than horseracing at various times I have many times heard the name Bart Cummings mentioned in a Melbourne Spring. In an office; commuting in a tram or train or bus; or in the conversation of some FM DJ who knows nothing about racing - but knows enough to place a call to Bart Cummings in Spring. You will hear conversations everywhere that include the words: Melbourne Cup, horse, bet, winner, Bart Cummings.
Bart Cummings is synonymous with the Melbourne Cup, with ten mores successes than Phar Lap and a longevity denied our James Dean (die young and tragically) iconic horse. Bart has been a presence, physical and real, for several generations of Australians. His laconic voice; his Bob Hawke coif; his bushy eyebrows; his dry sense of humour - and his resounding and continuing success as one of our greatest horse trainers.
Bart Cummings was an inaugural inductee into the racing hall in 2001, almost 20 years after he was made a member of the Order of Australia for his services to racing, and a decade after he was added to the Sport Australia Hall of Fame.
His (to this time) 11 Melbourne Cup winners are:
Light Fingers 1965
Galilee 1966
Red Handed 1967
Think Big 1974 & 1975
Gold And Black 1977
Hyperno 1979
Kingston Rule 1990
Let’s Elope 1991
Saintly 1996
Rogan Josh 1999
Training methods for staying horses have changed in recent years. Australian trainers are now more inclined to take a European training program and not build slowly with frequent racing as Cummings has in the past. No longer is it deemed necessary to race on Derby Day before the Cup. Perhaps his training style is no longer suited - or perhaps it is just the right horse that he lacks?
JB Cummings may never train another Melbourne Cup winner. But he does not need to anyway: he is a legend.
ps
Bart started the long process of qualification for a Melbourne Cup start for (previously) ‘Australia’s best maiden’ Moatize when he gave the horse a ‘kill’ in a Sale Maiden. Step one of qualification for a horse with a 3rd placing (when favourite) in the Queensland Derby. Perhaps this is the next Cummings Cup winner?
The Bart Cummings story continues.
short video of Bart’s 10th Melbourne Cup victory:
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