He was a big long-legged black animal. As he got bigger that ankle blended in to his size and it wasn't all that noticeable.
I went from a barber to cattleman, out of cattle into horses. The rest is history.
That was the most money we had ever seen in this house.
We'd have him here for two or three weeks. He always ate better when I went out there with him.
He stepped in hole as a baby. I ran cold water on it out of the well, but it never did go down.
We lost a friend, almost a person. He has helped make the track as popular as he is -- not only in Louisiana, but Texas people, Arkansas, Oklahoma and Mississippi. We want to name a race after him and we want to bury him on the track.