In remembering Summer Bird, I am reprinting my recap of his Belmont Stakes victory.
The 141st Belmont Stakes (gr. I) proved one thing: you can crown two birds with one stone. The victory by Summer Bird in the 141st Belmont Stakes (gr. I), combined with Mine That Bird’s spectacular score in the Kentucky Derby Presented by Yum! Brands (gr. I), enabled Birdstone  
 to accomplish the extraordinary feat of siring two different winners of
 a Triple Crown race in the same year. That hadn’t been done since Count
 Fleet sired Kentucky Derby winner Count Turf and Belmont winner Counterpoint in 1951. The fact both colts came from Birdstone’s first crop made it all the more amazing.
The wild and 
unpredictable 2009 Triple Crown finally is over. Perhaps the most 
unusual aspect of the series is that it actually ended in relative 
sanity. Whether that’s good or not depends on how you look at it. If you were writing a book, and it certainly would make a compelling book, you’d have to feel the Belmont
 wasn’t a conclusion befitting the soap opera events that preceded it. 
There was none of the craziness, colorful characters, plots of 
collusion, auto break-ins, jockey follies, and all the other offbeat 
incidents that stamped the first two legs. There was no filly frenzy 
generated by Rachel Alexandra, and the Calvin Borel phenomenon fizzled under the spotlight.
Take nothing away from Summer Bird’s performance and Tim Ice’s superb training job, but the Belmont basically was just a good clean race that had a decent story, with nothing memorable to stamp it in the memory as did the Derby
 and Preakness (gr. I). Not that there’s anything wrong with it, but for
 those expecting more melodrama in the final chapter, it just didn’t 
happen.
Even
 after Rachel Alexandra departed the Triple Crown scene after barging in
 so abruptly, it still didn’t dampen the enthusiasm of those hoping to 
be part of “The Ponderosa Comes to New York.” There were so many cowboy 
hats (mostly black) at Belmont Park all that was missing was a herd of cattle. When was the last time a Belmont favorite’s trainer and owner met in a bar fight? By the time Chip Woolley arrived in New York his crutches had become as familiar an inanimate object as Archie Bunker’s chair and Columbo’s raincoat.
 
But from a racing standpoint, the 2009 Triple Crown was about a colt, a filly, and a gelding.
 
Ironically, both sons 
of Birdstone entered the Triple Crown picture on the same day when it 
was announced on April 17 that Summer Bird, trained by Tim Ice at 
Louisiana Downs, and Mine That Bird, trained by Bennie “Chip” Woolley at
 Sunland Park,
 would compete in the Kentucky Derby. The first reaction by most people 
was, “Who the heck are Tim Ice and Bennie “Chip” Woolley?
 
Well, seven weeks later, Woolley is a household name and Ice is on the verge of becoming one.
 
After the announcement,
 both trainers set off on their own road adventures, accompanied by an 
exercise rider and a little-known Thoroughbred, that would bring them 
fame and riches beyond their wildest imagination.
 
Mine That Bird’s New 
Mexico to New York odyssey, covering some 3,000 miles, most of it by 
trailer and pickup truck, read like a novel, becoming the most 
compelling human/animal travelogue since John Steinbeck’s cross-country 
journey with his French poodle in “Travels With Charley.” Like Charley 
and Steinbeck, Mine That Bird and Woolley’s relationship became, as the 
author wrote, “A bond between strangers.”
 
Receiving far less 
publicity was Ice, exercise rider Chris Trosclair, and Summer Bird’s 
33-hour journey by car and horse van from Shreveport, La. to New York in
 their quest for the third leg of the Triple Crown, a race Ice and 
Kalarikkal K. Jayaraman and his wife Vilasini, who own and bred the 
colt, had been pointing for since Summer Bird’s surprising third-place 
finish in the Arkansas Derby (gr. II). They were encouraged by Summer 
Bird’s sixth-place finish in the Kentucky Derby at odds of 43-1, in 
which he made a big run on the far turn, only to be fanned seven-wide by
 jockey Chris Rosier.
 
The trio left Shreveport at 4 p.m. on May 17 and arrived in Louisville, Ky.
 at about 4 a.m. the following morning, where Summer Bird was allowed to
 unwind for 10 hours and get some sleep. Then it was back on the road 
for the 11-hour drive to Belmont Park,
 with Ice and Trosclair going on ahead of the van to prepare for Summer 
Bird’s arrival. What made the trip special for Trosclair, a 19-year-old 
student on temporary hiatus from Louisiana State University,
 was that the horse was vanned by his father, Angelo’s, horse 
transportation company. The elder Trosclair had been a rider on the Louisiana circuit for many years.
 
When Ice and Trosclair arrived at Belmont,
 they were informed Summer Bird would be stabled in the barn of Nick 
Zito, who trained Birdstone to an historic upset over Smarty Jones in 
the 2004 Belmont Stakes at odds of 36-1. That was the first good sign. 
Ice kidded with Zito, asking if he could keep Summer Bird in Birdstone’s
 old stall.
With the racing world 
still abuzz over Rachel Alexandra’s epic victory over a fast-closing 
Mine That Bird in the Preakness Stakes (gr. I), few took notice of 
Summer Bird’s arrival at Belmont Park three days later at 5:30 a.m. 
Ice had originally announced that Joe Talamo would ride Summer Bird in the Belmont,
 but when Hall of Famer Kent Desormeaux became available following the 
Preakness, Ice decided to go with the more experienced rider who had 
more familiarity with the sweeping Belmont oval. Of course, it didn’t hurt that Ice had once been an assistant to Desormeaux’s brother Keith. 
The first crucial test came on May 23 when Summer Bird had his first work over the Belmont
 surface. Unfortunately, the colt did not get high grades, breezing 
seven furlongs in 1:27 2/5 and didn’t appear to be handling the track, 
spinning his wheels a good part of the work. That was not what Ice had 
been hoping to see, and he expressed his disappointment. But he also 
knew the reason he decided to come to Belmont
 early was to get the colt accustomed to the track, which often takes 
some getting used to. Woolley had taken a different approach with Mine 
That Bird, shipping him back to Churchill Downs instead of heading up 
I-95 for the relatively short drive to New York.
 “This is why we’re here
 early, to give him three weeks over the track” Ice said following the 
work. “He’s just coming off a 23-hour trip up here, not counting the 10 
hours at Churchill. He trained for three days before the work and I 
thought it would take him five or six days to really get a hold of it.”
Meanwhile, everyone was waiting for word on the Belmont
 status of Rachel Alexandra. Finally, almost two weeks after her 
Preakness victory over an unlucky Mine That Bird, owner Jess Jackson 
made the expected announcement at 5 p.m. on Friday, May 29 that Rachel 
would not run because “she needed a vacation.” Did she not need a 
vacation on May 25, 26, 27, or 28th? Did she start showing signs of fatigue immediately after her May 29 photo-shoot for Vogue magazine? The timing just seemed very odd.
 Rachel’s defection left the Belmont Stakes without a horse trying for the Triple Crown or a rematch between the Derby winner and the femme fatale
 who defeated him in the Preakness. That sent the New York Racing 
Association’s marketing department scrambling to try to salvage some 
sort of advertising campaign to promote the race. 
No one knows how 
Rachel’s unexpected presence in the Preakness affected the Triple Crown,
 especially the Belmont Stakes, but as industrial tycoon Arthur Jensen 
said to mad newscaster Howard Beale in the movie Network, ‘You have meddled with the primal forces of nature, Mr. Beale.”
 But there was still a Belmont to be run. Following the Kentucky Derby, Ice had decided to put blinkers on Summer Bird for the Belmont, and he also had them on for the colt’s works.
 
“Dr. J. and I talked about it and we decided to put them on right after the Derby,”
 Ice said. “The first time around he was looking up into the grandstand,
 and we thought if we could get him focused a little bit more when he 
breaks out of the gate he could lay a little bit closer and not fall so 
far out of it.”
 
For Summer Bird’s 
second work, Ice added toe grabs to the colt’s hind shoes, allowing him 
to get a better hold of the track. On May 30, Summer Bird breezed five 
furlongs in 1:01 4/5 with Desormeaux aboard. This time he went over the 
track with more authority and galloped out strongly.
 
This was what Ice was 
hoping to see. Everything was now in place for a big effort. Ice already
 knew Summer Bird was doing fantastic physically, having seen him fill 
out since the Kentucky Derby. During his stay at Belmont the colt hadn’t missed an oat, was feeling good, and it was obvious he was thriving in his new surroundings.
 
On the Monday before the Belmont,
 Ice had Summer Bird out for his afternoon grazing. The colt’s coat was 
resplendent as he ripped into the grass with great vigor, barely finding
 the time to swallow.
 
“Nick’s gonna run me 
out of here before too long; he’s eating up all his grass,” Ice said. 
“He’s eating everything. Whenever he gets by the trees, he thinks he’s a
 giraffe and starts eating the leaves off them.”
 
It was quiet times like
 this that Ice, a former assistant to Cole Norman, was able to reflect 
on all that’s happened to him after only one year of training on his 
own. Here he was about to celebrate his 35th birthday on the 
day of the Belmont Stakes, in which he had a legitimate contender. The 
following day, he was scheduled to have a photo shoot from atop the Empire State building, his first visit to New York City.
 His wife Heather is expecting their first child on Sept. 29. And as he 
points out, his beloved Pittsburgh Steelers (he was born in East Liverpool, Ohio, about 25 miles from Pittsburgh) are Super Bowl champs.
 
“It’s all 
unbelievable,” he said. “I’m just enjoying it one day at a time. It’s an
 honor to be in this position so early in my career. You dream about it,
 but very few people get to experience it. I might not be back ever 
again, but at least I can say I was there once.”
 
Ice then was shaken 
back to reality by a call from Dr. Jayaraman, a retired cardiologist, 
saying he and Vilasini, a retired pathologist, were nearing Belmont Park. The Jayaramans were on a road trip of their own, driving up from Ocala, Fla. and staying overnight near Baltimore to break up the 16-hour drive.
 
When they arrived, they
 walked up to Summer Bird as he grazed and loved what they saw. “See how
 much more weight he’s put on?” Ice said. “He’s filling out 
beautifully.”
 
“Tim deserves all the credit,” Dr. J, as he is known, said of his trainer.
 
But Ice also gives 
credit to Jayarman for giving Summer Bird, who is out of the Summer 
Squall mare Hong Kong Squall, all the time he needed when he was young. 
“Dr. J. wanted to let him mature and grow into himself,” Ice said. “He’s
 a pretty good size for a Birdstone, and he was one of the last ones of 
the 25 2-year-olds to be broken.”
 
 The fact that Ice still
 trains Summer Bird is amazing in itself. The colt originally was in the
 barn of John Sadler, who had him up to six furlongs in his works before
 telling Jayaraman in January to get him off the synthetic tracks.
 
“He was doing poorly in
 his works, so I encouraged (Jayaraman) to get him out of here and put 
him on dirt,” Sadler said. “I thought he was a lovely horse, and I could
 tell even then he was going to be a route horse. I really liked him, 
but if I had kept him here it wouldn’t have been good for him.”
 
Jayaraman then sent the
 colt to Ice. “He showed us a lot before he ever ran,” Ice said. “We 
stuck him in at six furlongs first time out (on March 1 at Oaklawn) just
 to get a race in him and he closed well to finish a good fourth. At the
 time, we certainly weren’t thinking Triple Crown. We were thinking we 
had a nice 3-year-old and we wanted to let him progress.
 
“After he broke his 
maiden impressively (on March 19), we figured we’d give him a shot in 
the Arkansas Derby. We were pointing him for the Lone Star Derby (gr. 
III), but when he ran so well in the Arkansas Derby, we started thinking
 about the Kentucky Derby. He’s always shown a lot of class and he’s 
such a determined horse, so I knew he’d give us a good effort and I was 
very happy how he ran coming from so bar back.”
 
There were other 
occasions where Ice nearly lost the horse. Bob Baffert tried to buy him 
for Bernie Schiappa after the Arkansas Derby and IEAH Stable came close 
to finalizing a deal for him after the Kentucky Derby, but both deals 
fell through because of a suspicious tendon that Jayaraman said the colt
 has had for a while and has never been a problem.
 
On the Wednesday before the Belmont, Mine That Bird finally arrived from Kentucky, this time by plane. The big story was Borel, who appeared on The Tonight Show with Jay Leno, the David Letterman Show, the Today Show, and Good Morning America,
 just to name a few. Although he was in New York for almost a week 
leading up to the race, he decided not to take any mounts, which many 
felt was a mistake, considering Borel’s lack of experience (only seven 
mounts) and success (his last victory coming 10 years ago) over the 
Belmont track. He also guaranteed “110%” that Mine That Bird would win. 
Borel, having won the Derby
 on Mine That Bird and the Preakness on Rachel Alexandra, was trying to 
become the first rider in history to sweep the Triple Crown on two 
different horses.
 
When asked about his inexperience at Belmont
 and not having a mount, Borel would reply, “It's not a big deal. You 
just break and then turn left.” As many feared, Borel fell victim to 
“Big Sandy,” committing the No. 1 cardinal sin of going very wide into 
Belmont’s turn of no return and then compounding it by moving early, 
while losing too much ground. These tactics usually spell sure defeat. 
You simply cannot get away with that around that big, sweeping turn. 
Horses who attempt it usually hit the proverbial brick wall by the 
eighth pole and that’s what happened to Mine That Bird, who ran his 
heart out even when fatigue set in.
 
This is not meant to 
detract from all the good that Borel accomplished during the Triple 
Crown, on both Mine That Bird and Rachel Alexandra, and as a 
spokesperson for racing. But it just seemed his priorities changed 
leading up to the Belmont. He spent most of the week in Manhattan sightseeing and making appearances. In his defense, he deserved some down time after an emotional Kentucky Oaks, Derby,
 and Preakness. He was taken out of his environment and placed in a 
spotlight that would have blinded most people. Overdosing on camera time
 has caused many “celebrities” to lose focus on what put them in front 
of the camera in the first place. This still was and always will be 
Calvin Borel’s Triple Crown.
 
While all the attention
 was on Mine That Bird, Summer Bird was becoming more on the muscle each
 day, and Ice had him blow out down the lane earlier on Wednesday to 
take some of the edge off. The following morning, Ice wasn’t happy 
having to jog Summer Bird a mile and a half on the sloppy track. “I wish
 I would have jogged him three miles the way he felt,” he said back at 
the barn. “He came back feeling way too good.”
 
On the morning of the Belmont,
 Woolley’s travel companion, exercise rider and groom Charlie Figueroa, 
said he was sorry to see their magical journey nearing an end. 
“Everybody says ‘I bet you’re ready to go home,’ and I tell them, ‘Do 
you want to wake me up from my dream?” he said. “I’ve read about these 
races and these places all my life.’”
 
Later that morning, 
Woolley stood next to Mine That Bird’s stall holding out his hand for 
several minutes while the gelding continuously licked his palm.
 
With the rain long 
gone, giving way to bright sunshine and temperatures in the 70s, the 
track dried out quickly, producing fast times all day.
 
Summer Bird at first 
didn’t handle the detention barn very well. He was wound up after 
entering the old stakes barn and Ice had to walk him, as the colt tried 
to buck and rear.
 
“Twice I thought he was
 going to bust out of his stall,” Ice said later. “He was running at the
 webbing pretty hard. After he settled down he went to sleep.”
 
He obviously had a good
 nap, judging by the way he woke up, looking to kick some butt. In the 
paddock, he bounced around on his toes, coiled and ready to strike. We 
all know what happened after that.
 
Summer Bird, under a 
picture-perfect ride from Kent Desormeaux, blew by everyone and drew off
 to win by 2 3/4 lengths in a respectable 2:27.54 (2:27 2/5) for the 1 
1/2 miles. In another bit of irony, the only other horse to ever win the
 Belmont in 2:27 2/5 (2:27.50 to be exact) was none other than Birdstone.
 
Desormeaux, a veteran of big races at Belmont, saved ground all the way, and then found a seam and moved out at the five-sixteenths pole. It was a flawless Belmont Park ride.
 
Mine That Bird, who had probably run close to 1 3/4 miles, was on empty and a gutsy Dunkirk was able to fight back and beat him by a neck for second, preventing a Birdstone one-two finish.
 
Desormeaux, after six attempts and several heartbreaking defeats, finally had his first Belmont
 victory, completing his own personal Triple Crown. “I can’t tell you 
how it feels to have that contentment and to be able to go home and rest
 at ease knowing I’ve won the three American classics,” he said.
 
Woolley handled Mine 
That Bird’s defeat graciously and congratulated Ice on his victory. 
“It’s been a great run and we had a wonderful time,” he said. “We’ll be 
back. We’ll be scratching and trying to get back here again.”
 
Ice was flushed with 
excitement as he headed to the track. “I’m losing my voice,” he said. “I
 was just yelling, ‘Come on Bird! Come on Bird!’ He did it. I knew he 
would.”
 
Also choked up with emotion was Trosclair, especially after convincing his father to make the trip for the race.
 
“This is surreal; it’s 
like a blur,” he said. “It made it all worth it that we came up three 
weeks in advance. I put in all this time galloping him, and it’s just 
amazing how it worked out after driving here for 23 hours.”
 
When Trosclair met up 
with Ice near the tunnel leading to the backstretch, the two embraced. 
All Trosclair said was, “Heckuva gallop boy.”
 
Watching the race in 
the boxes with his family made it all the more special. “Originally, 
they weren’t supposed to come,” Trosclair said. “I told my father, ‘Dad,
 he’s training awesome, he feels great, and he’s progressing every day. I
 have a great feeling about him. He said, ‘You know what, I’m gonna take
 a little trip to New York.’
 He brought my mom, my little sister, and his brother. Being in their 
box for the race was an unbelievable experience. I still can’t believe 
it.’”
 
Summer Bird took care 
of business in the test barn quickly and was back in his stall when Ice 
and Trosclair arrived. Ice fed him mints, after which the colt tore into
 his hay rack and still seemed raring to go. “He looks like he wants to 
go out and do it again,” Ice said. Then, directing his comments to the 
horse, added, “You need to hold your head high, boy.”
 
So ends one of the most
 wild and (pardon the expression) “Woolley” Triple Crowns in history. 
The leading players started out as mere stand-ins, but became overnight 
stars.
 
Ice was happy about one
 thing regarding his horse. “He finally has his own name,” he said. 
“People from now on will call him Summer Bird. He’s no longer ‘The other
 bird.’”