Scarborough's Swan Song Prompts Look Back To 1969 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
November 27, 2020 |
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At around 3:15 p.m. on Saturday, we’ll know the name of the final winning
horse in the 90-year history of Scarborough Downs. With that in mind,
we thought we’d look back to 1969 and some of the harness racing firsts
at the seaside oval.
Scarborough Downs was built in 1950 as a one mile oval and hosted thoroughbred
racing until 1972. In 1969, the Downs was sold to the Odgen Corp, which
also owned Gorham Raceway. The new owners closed Gorham Raceway and
brought harness racing to Scarborough Downs.
Opening day for harness racing was scheduled for Monday night, May 12,
1969. Many familiar Maine names ran the new racing operation. Arthur
McGee was director of racing. Joining him were Tom Kiley (race secretary),
Faye Nichols (clerk of the course), Zillah Witman (program director),
Jim Flanagan (starter), and Dick Michelsen (announcer).
Drivers on the Downs’ first scheduled program included Dennis May, Don
Richards, Frank Woodbury, Arthur Nason, Russ Smith, Russ Wing Jr., Willis
Whittemore, Roy Gartley, J.D. Salley, George Fitch, Bobby Truitt, Irving
Foster, Dominic Watson, and Al Langile Jr.
The track was dubbed the “all-new” Scarborough Downs by the Biddeford-Saco
Journal, pointing to a $1.5 million renovation that included newly glassed-in
grandstand and clubhouse, new “bank style” parimutuel windows, upgraded
dining facilities, closed-circuit television, and air conditioning.
“It’ll be like a posh nightclub,” said the track’s PR man, who noted
that the new owners planned to add an “ultra-modern” hotel and golf
course to the track’s 12,000 acres.
Four thousand fans came to the track to witness the first night, only
to be disappointed when, 50 minutes before the scheduled 8 p.m. post
time, the horsemen voted not to race due to the condition of the sloppy
and deep track from major rains that, according to the Biddeford paper,
had prevented the track from putting down stone dust.
The track’s statement was bitter: “Scarborough Downs management tonight
felt our track was in condition to race. Horsemen who used the track
today made no complaint to management until after the public had arrived.”
The Bangor Daily News sports editor, Owen Osborne, took the horsemen
to task for the late cancellation, which didn’t sit well with Gerald
MacKenzie Sr. of Plymouth, who wrote to the paper: “If Scarborough Downs
was in such good shape, why was stone dust added to it? It looks as
if more time was spent on the grandstand and grounds than on the most
essential thing, the race track.”
It took four days to improve the track for racing and opening night
was moved to Friday, May 16, 1969.
Five thousand fans attended opening night and wagered $150,169, a record
for a 10-dash program in Maine. The first harness race in the track’s
history was won by SCOTCH ROCKATE, in 2:13.4, with Ken Gagne driving
and paying $23.60.
Track conditions plagued Scarborough during the first few weeks of the
meet. The fastest mile on opening night was 2:08.1 on the mile oval,
and it took three weeks to hit 2:05.0, recorded by BRILLIANT ROSE with
Al Langille, Jr. driving.
The final two weeks of the meet saw the race times getting faster. On
the next-to-last race night, TIGER HAL paced the fastest race of the
meet in 2:00.3 with George Maroun driving. Horsemen and fans were hopeful
of a sub 2:00 mile on closing night, June 14.
Those hopes were fueled by the Faro brothers, Angelo and Joseph. Their
horse, NIPPY DUE, had won two of the last three preferred handicaps
at Scarborough, and with the better track conditions, they were confident
in the win, bragging to anyone on the grandstand apron who would listen.
The Faro brothers' hopes were dashed as the Canadian import, AMORTIZER
DIRECT, driven by Rufin Barrieau upset the favorite in a classic stretch
drive, hitting the wire in 1:59.4, the first sub-two minute mile since
the Kite Track in Old Orchard Beach in 1942. . The Bangor paper reported
that the large crowd gave the winner a standing ovation.
At the height of Scarborough’s success in the 1970s and 1980s, the track
saw record attendance and mutual handles. Hall of Fame horses and drivers
along with celebrities visited the track. Scarborough was the fastest
half-mile track in New England for many years. Invitational races like
the President's Pace and the Legislator Trot brought huge crowds to
the track as some of the best horses in North America came to Scarborough
Downs.
The track has struggled since 1993 with attendance and mutual declines.
Hopes for a rebound were dashed when the track could not persuade politicians
and voters to allow a racino at the track. The grandstand fell into
disrepair, the track's lights came down and the stable area closed. The recent sale of the property
to a developer signaled that racing at the seaside oval would eventually
come to an end, which was announced publicly on Nov. 19.
The future of Maine harness racing is up in the air. There are
rumors of a new modern facility in Southern Maine, but nothing
official has been announced as of now. The Scarborough foggy
nights, when the backside couldn't been seen from the grandstand,
may be a fitting backdrop for the future of harness racing in
Maine.
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Jay Burns and Bill MacDonald contributed to this report. Additional material sourced from the Bangor Daily News, Portland Press Herald and Biddeford-Saco Journal. |