Ruffian
A Racetrack Romance
William Nack


On July 6,1975, a 3-year-old filly named Ruffian was loaded into the starting gate at Belmont Park for a televised match race against Kentucky Derby-winning colt Foolish Pleasure. Since winning her first race a little more than a year earlier, the unbeaten, unflappable Ruffian had literally raced her way into the hearts of a nation. One of those hearts belonged to Newsday turf reporter William Nack. As a boy in Illinois, Nack had carried in his pocket a trading card of his hero, Swaps, the winner of the 1955 Kentucky Derby. As a young soldier in Vietnam, Nack tuned out the midnight bomb blasts by listening to racetrack broadcasts from Santa Anita. Now, fresh off the publication of his astonishing biography of Secretariat—described by Seabiscuit author Laura Hillenbrand as “the gold standard of horse books”—he found himself smitten once again. But tragedy struck that summer’s day at Belmont Park. In a scene eerily similar to Barbaro’s breakdown at last year’s Preakness Stakes, Ruffian charged from the gate, then stumbled and shattered her right foreleg. She had to be put down. Nack’s heartbreaking run with thoroughbred racing’s most famous filly will soon be immortalized in a made-for-TV movie to be broadcast on ESPN and ABC. In this moving, lyrical memoir, Nack relives the afternoon that forever changed his love affair with the track.

 


 
About the Author
William Nack is the author of Secretariat: The Making of a Champion and My Turf: Horses, Boxers, Blood Money, and the Sporting Life. As a writer at Sports Illustrated, he won seven Eclipse awards for his coverage of thoroughbred racing. Nack has also contributed to GQ. He lives in Washington, D.C.