With the fluid ease of a seasoned journalist, Thornton uses the 2000 racing season (January through June) at Boston's Suffolk Downs as the foundation of a condensed history of the track. It is a story about the harsh economics of horseracing told by a track media relations director who must balance candor with diplomacy; affection with logical consequences. In recounting a piece by reporter Steve Myrick about the racetrack suspensions of trainer Bobby Raymond, Thornton notes: “...the story struck a raw nerve with many in the backstretch community simply because it violated the cardinal racetrack rule of keeping the truth out of the public spotlight 'for the good of the game'.... “[It] is based on the strangely insular logic that outsiders can never truly understand what really goes on behind the scenes in day-to-day backstretch life....Like a blinkered racehorse, they are too embedded in their own world to glimpse it clearly, and it is in this vein that racing has always preferred to stomp the messenger rather than expose and eradicate the root causes of its problems.” (p.176-177) Thornton goes on to relate his discomfort with this position. He sees the problems but is not only impotent to effect change, but forced to watch the pretense of reform by politicians and their backers while they haggle and procrastinate. Many have praised NOT BY A LONG SHOT for its “behind the scenes” honesty, but it is this tenuous balance that gives Thornton's story added emotional resonance.
It is a little known fact that the vast majority of thoroughbreds earn their keep at modest tracks like Suffolk Downs. Likewise the track employs a wide swathe of people: 400 track employees, 1600 trainers, jockeys, grooms, hot walkers, and exercise riders, and thousands of suppliers such as drivers, vendors, printers, journalists, and local businesses. These tracks are a gateway for scores of neophytes, and the final stop for many at the end of their careers.
Thornton's narrative encompasses many stories. He demystifies the logic of the claiming race. He tracks the preparations for “Rudy Day,” a welcome-back celebration for former jockey Rudy Baez, who is wheel-chair bound due to an accident during the previous season at Rockingham. He follows the ups and downs of trainer Michael Catalano Jr. who is married to Abigail Fuller (her father Peter Fuller owned Dancer's Image, the winner of the 1968 Kentucky Derby, disqualified in a highly controversial ruling). He recounts the glory days of the track when such equine celebrities as Whirlaway, Seabiscuit, and Cigar raced at Suffolk. He recounts the darker days when race fixing scandals engineered by the infamous Winter Hill gang plagued the track. He follows the career of hardworking Saratoga Ridge, a descendant of Alydar and Riva Ridge. And he relates his father Paul Thornton's connection to Suffolk through a contentious horse named Blackwater.
Suffolk Downs is still a “hard-luck horse track.” The last time the MassCap was run was in 2008 (won by Commentator). No decision on a casino has been made yet. Occasionally, there is a bright spot, revealing the human side that Thornton captures in his book. Stan Grossfeld reported recently that trainer John Botty aided in the rescue of Our Revival, a brood mare who once raced at Suffolk, from auction to a Mexican slaughter-house (BOSTON GLOBE, Sept. 25, 20120). Men like Botty are the unsung heroes of horse-racing.