SARATOGA SPRINGS, N.Y. (AP) — Two-time Kentucky Derby-winning jockey Chris Antley, thoroughbreds Lava Man and Xtra Heat, and trainer King Leatherbury have been elected to the National Museum of Racing’s Hall of Fame.
Antley, who died of a drug overdose in 2000, won the Derby in 1991 with Strike the Gold and in 1999 with Charismatic. In a career that spanned from 1983 until his death at 34, Antley won 3,480 races and had purse earnings of $92,261,894. He won 127 graded stakes races and 293 overall stakes and was the leading North American rider by wins in 1985 with 469. He also won the Preakness Stakes with Charismatic and ranked in the top 10 nationally in wins each year from 1984 through 1987.
On Halloween in 1987, Antley won nine races — four at Aqueduct and five at the Meadowlands — and in 1989 had a streak of 64 consecutive days with at least one win.
Leatherbury, 81, ranks fourth all time with 6,449 wins. He has won 52 training titles in Maryland (26 each at Pimlico and Laurel) and four at Delaware Park and has career purse earnings of $62,792,375. He also has finished in the top 10 nationally in wins 18 times and in earnings four times and has won 23 graded stakes races and 153 overall stakes.
In 1987, Leatherbury won the Grade 1 Hempstead Handicap with Catatonic and in 1994 won the Grade 1 Philip H. Iselin Handicap with Taking Risks. He also bred, owns and trains Ben’s Cat, a winner of $2.3 million. Ben’s Cat has won 22 stakes to date, including four graded events.
Lava Man posted a career record of 17-8-5 from 47 starts with earnings of $5,268,706 and won seven Grade 1 races, more than any other California-bred in history. Lava Man won the Hollywood Gold Cup three straight times (2005-07), matching a feat Hall of Famer Native Diver accomplished from 1965 to 1967, and won back-to-back runnings of the Santa Anita Handicap in 2006 and 2007. Other significant wins included the Pacific Classic, Californian, Sunshine Millions Classic, Charles Whittingham Memorial Handicap, Goodwood Breeders’ Cup Handicap and Sunshine Millions Turf. His victory in the Whittingham in 2006 made Lava Man the first horse since Vanlandingham 21 years earlier to win a Grade 1 on both dirt and turf in the same year.
Xtra Heat, the Eclipse Award winner for Champion 3-Year-Old Filly in 2001, was bred in Kentucky by Pope McLean’s Crestwood Farm and sold as a 2-year-old for $5,000 at Maryland’s Timonium sale to trainer John Salzman Sr. and partners Ken Taylor and Harry Deitchman. She compiled a career record of 26-5-2 from 35 starts and had earnings of $2,389,635. Xtra Heat won 25 stakes races, 10 of which were graded events.
The four will be inducted during a ceremony Aug. 7 at the museum in Saratoga Spring.
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