Forego gets up on the wire: A Moment in Time
Since its inception in 1973, the Marlboro Cup had been as key a race as you could find in the huge races of the fall. Forego had twice attempted to win it, but was turned away with a third in 1974, and then a narrow head defeat at the hands of Wajima in 1975. Those previous losses meant little to an appreciative crowd of more than 31,000 who had come out despite the balky October weather. The big New York crowd pounded the great gelding down to 11-10 favoritism despite a couple of daunting factors. The Belmont Park track was sloppy that day, a surface that Forego generally struggled to get his big frame over smoothly, and with 137 pounds assigned by the racing secretary, it would mean Forego would be giving gobs of weight to a large and talented field.
Chief among his rivals on this day would be the previous year’s juvenile champion, Honest Pleasure. The beaten odds-on favorite in both the Kentucky Derby and Preakness had rebounded with an impressive front running romp in the Travers at the same 1 ¼ mile distance as the Marlboro, before finishing third to Forego in the Woodward. In that race he was in receipt of 14 pounds, this time it would be 18.
As expected, the Leroy Jolley trained three-year-old shot right to the lead under rider, Craig Perret. Forego, ridden by Bill Shoemaker, broke sharply but was allowed to ease well back off the early lead. As furlong after furlong went by, Honest Pleasure seemed to be as comfortable as could be on the lead, while Forego, in the familiar yellow silks of owner Martha Gerry, seemed to be left with too much to do, especially on this type of track.
As the eleven horse field turned for home, Honest Pleasure was still full of run well off the rail and Father Hogan, carrying only 110 pounds, was running a big one on the inside. Only one horse would have the fortitude to go after the leading pair. Forego was mustering every ounce of his amazing courage and fearless will to win, to unleash a furious closing rush out in the middle of the track. Still it looked like it would be too little too late, as Honest Pleasure was not coming back to the rest. With 50 yards left it still seemed hopeless, but Forego had a full head of steam. Gaining major ground with each enormous stride, Forego was reeling in his opposition fast. The large Belmont crowd went nuts. The only question would be if he could get up in the last stride.
Sure enough he did, by a head, in a famous photo. One jump before the wire it was still Honest Pleasure, but Forego had won it on the wire. In so doing, Forego had finally won the rich Marlboro Cup in the racehorse time of 2:00 flat for the ten furlongs. The final time was only 1/5 of a second off the track record he had set in winning the Brooklyn the year before. Not bad for a horse carrying 137 pounds in the slop.
The spectacular victory came in his final start of 1976 and marked the 21st stakes win for the 6-year-old son of Forli. It also undoubtedly was the clinching factor in securing his third and final Horse of the Year award. Forego would come back to win three more stakes in 1977 and win another Handicap Male Championship before finally retiring as an eight-year-old in 1978. For all of his accomplishments and endless list of victories, it was a seemingly impossible win in the 1976 Marlboro Cup that best encapsulates everything that Forego was as a racehorse.