Veteran Hall of Fame trainer honored with a race and ceremony on Sunday at Laurel.
USA: The Maryland Jockey Club and 1/ST Racing will celebrate Hall of Fame trainer King Leatherbury’s 90th birthday with a race and ceremony in his honor on Sunday [March 26] at Laurel Park.
Laurel’s seventh race, a starter optional claimer for fillies and mares over seven furlongs, will be named for Leatherbury, who reaches the age milestone on Sunday. He will also be presented with a special award by Georganne Hale, vice president of racing development for the MJC.
“It’s an awful big number that I never got used to saying,” Leatherbury said of turning 90. “What can I do? I got there just by keeping on living.”
MJC racing analyst Tim Tullock, a former stakes-winning trainer in Maryland, sat down with Leatherbury to talk about his life and career.
A Maryland native, Leatherbury won his first race in 1959 at Sunshine Park (now Tampa Bay Downs). He once won six races in a day and has won five races in a day four times, registering 300 or more wins every year between 1975 and 1978 and leading the country in wins in both 1977 and 1978.
Leatherbury led all Maryland trainers in wins four straight years from 1993-96, and owns or shares 26 training titles at Laurel and Pimlico. He became just the third North American-based trainer to reach 6,000 career wins in 2003 at Timonium, and currently ranks fifth overall with 6,508 victories. He is tenth on the world list, which is led by Peruvian-based Juan Suarez Villaroel with 10,346 victories (before Saturday’s programme).
The best horse of Leatherbury’s career was Mid-Atlantic legend Ben’s Cat, whom he bred, owned and trained to 32 wins including 26 in stakes, and more than $2.6 million in purse earnings over eight seasons from 2010-17. Ben’s Cat died in 2017 due to complications from colic surgery and his remains are buried adjacent to Laurel’s historic paddock.
Other leading horses trained by Leatherbury include G1 winners Catatonic and Taking Risks, plus graded-stakes winners Ah Day, Thirty Eight Go Go, Learned Jake, Ameri Valay, Dynamic Trick, Thirty Eight Paces, I Am the Game, Do The Bump and Wait For The Lady.
Three times Leatherbury claimed and raced Port Conway Lane, who won 52 of 242 starts between 1971 and 1983, running until the age of 14.
In 2015, Leatherbury was inducted into the National Museum of Racing’s Hall of Fame in Saratoga Springs. Also a member of the Anne Arundel County Hall of Fame, he received a lifetime achievement award from the Maryland Athletic Hall of Fame in 2002.
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