Description:

THE FIGHTING FINISH The fifty-ninth running of the Kentucky Derby in 1933 went down in history as the "Fighting Finish" Derby. The economy had plummeted over the winter of 1932/1933, the worst years of the Great Depression, and Americans needed to see a winner. "What kept the two horses running on such even terms through the last eighth of a mile may have been the fact that their riders (Donald Meade on Brokers Tip and Herbert W. Fisher on Head Play) were engaged in a hand-to-hand struggle which included leglocking, saddle-cloth-grabbing, bumping, and slashing with whips, and which did not terminate until the two riders engaged in a fist fight in the jockeys' room after the race. As soon as he had brought Head Play back to the stands, jockey Fisher climbed the steps to the stewards and made the first claim of foul against a Kentucky Derby winner in the recollection of most experienced racing men present. For all practical purposes the stewards were deaf. - The Blood-Horse, Saturday, May 13, 1933; vol. XIX, no. 19, page 556.

  • Dimensions: 17" x 19 1/2"
  • Medium: Watercolor with body color
  • Notes: Signed

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