<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?>
<BODY.CONTENT>
<UID>
8601200594
</UID>
<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
860504
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Sunday, May 04, 1986
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
STATE EDITION
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
SPT
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1D
</PAGE>
<ILLUSTRATION>
Photo United Press International
</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>

</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>
SEE ALSO METRO FINAL EDITION
</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1986, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
THE HORSES WEREN'T NEARLY THIS BEASTLY
</HEADLINE>
<SUBHEAD>

</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
LOUISVILLE -- The beasts were pawing at the gates.

  "START THEM UP!" someone screamed.

  "WOOOH!" screamed someone else.
  Only the gates stood between them and mad glory. The beasts were  restless.
The beasts wanted to run.
  "IT'S TIIIIME!" someone screamed.
  "DO IT!" screamed someone else.
  A cop checked his watch. There were about 75 cops there, billy clubs by
their sides,  safe on the other side of the gates, away from these wild
animals. The cop with the watch looked up. He nodded.
  The locks were lifted. The gates swung open. And the beasts charged toward
the track.  They had been out there for hours, some all night long; they had
slept in cloth bags and blankets, on the sidewalk just a few feet away from
the white-spired grandeur of Churchill Downs -- where they  would run the
Kentucky Derby this afternoon for the 112th straight time.
  These were human beasts. The worst kind. The kind without tickets.
  They had begin arriving at 6 p.m. the night before.  They had come to claim
the infield, the Churchill Downs infield. Twenty dollars gets you a section of
grass as big as your rear end, where you can sit and bake in the sun and
shower with beer. It's the  only way in here for the regular guy who can't
pony up $127.50 for a lousy reserved seat.
  Many had spent the night in their cars or on the sidewalk. Their faces were
twisted, their eyes droopy, their  hair matted, their breath stale with sleep
and booze. But it was 8 a.m. Derby day, the gates had been opened, and so they
were sprinting toward the tunnel that went under the track and spilled onto
the infield grass, sprinting for the best spots before someone else got them.
And I started to run with them.
  I don't know why. It was just a sudden mass frenzy, like running with the
bulls through the  streets of Spain. Only here I was racing against two
long-haired bikers with shades and folding chairs and a cooler.  
  "Get the quarter pole spot!" yelled one.
  "Go left outta the tunnel!" yelled  the other.
  We were breathing hard, locked in a desperate 400-yard dash. Suddenly it
was all that mattered. That spot. It was me or them. Survival of the fastest.
Our legs pumped. It was early morning. The horses were somewhere in their
stables. The debutantes were home, picking out their outfits. The Kentucky
Colonels were enjoying their breakfasts.
  And there we were, two bikers, one journalist,  and thousands of footsteps,
charging down the concrete, panting and sweating like the very beasts we had
come to bet on. . . .  
  How exactly I ended up in the middle of this deranged race is fuzzy.  A
blur. There was something about a strip joint and a waitress and a street
party at 4 a.m., and mint juleps and motor homes and a lady who told me the
best way to sneak whiskey into the Derby was to  hide a flask inside a loaf of
bread, because "they never look there."
  I'm not sure how this all fits together, even now. But I figure that's one
of the side effects of the depraved illness they call  Derby Fever; a
euphemism for 48 hours of decadent, liquor-soaked behavior that gets ugly
every few hours, like clockwork.
  You might as well know right off that there are two sides to this most
famous of horse races. What you see on TV -- the lime green knickers, the hoop
skirts, Millionaires Row, the Derby breakfasts, the box seats, the cultured
talk about the fine breeding of horse No. 3 -- all  that is one side.
  And then there's the other side. Where the real beasts perform.
  I was on that side Saturday morning.  And the bikers were a step ahead of
me . . . 
  But wait. Let's back  up two days. The idea here was to witness the Derby
from the street up. Leave the horse details to our racing writer and just go
for the color. So naturally, when we blew into Louisville in the wee hours  of
Thursday morning ("we" being myself and Jimmy S., a friend who likes to
accompany me on these sick little jaunts) we asked the cab driver to
immediately recommended an action spot. He suggested a club called the Green
Light Lounge.
  Never ask a cab driver. The Green Light Lounge -- whose sign read "DERBY
FANS: CHECK OUT OUR FILLIES!" -- proved to be a seedy little strip joint that
charges  a dollar to walk in the door. You get 30 seconds for your eyes to
adjust to the dark, and then the female dancers saddle up alongside you.
  "Buy me a ticket?" said a brunette in a red dress cut down to the
imagination.
  "Ticket to what?" I said.
  "That's how we work it here," she said. "You buy me a ticket, I can sit
with you."
  "How much is a ticket?" I asked.
  "They start at 12 dollars,"  she said.
  Jimmy and I exchanged glances. We figured neither of our bosses would mind
that little item on our expense accounts, considering the information we could
get. Right, boss? We bought the  ticket. She sat down.
  In five minutes we learned more about Derby week than was contained in all
those colorful books they stuff in your media packet. Nancy (that was the name
she gave us) said she  worked in a nursing home in eastern Kentucky most of
the year, but always came to Louisville during Derby Week. Said she could
clear $800 for five nights worth of smiling and dancing and wearing skimpy
dresses. That's hard paper to turn down.
  "I get all kinds," she said, lighting up a cigaret, "high rollers,
motorcycle guys. Friday night before the Derby is the busiest. It's nonstop.
The bar stays  open until 6 a.m. This is an unbelievable week."
  Nancy said tickets to sit with her -- and only sit with her -- ran up to
$50 a pop, depending on how much the Derby tourists felt like spending. I
asked her how many minutes you got for 12 bucks.
  She looked at her watch. "You're on overtime now, sweetheart," she said.
  Suffice it to say it was a late night. But in the interest of a fair
picture, we hit the track early on Friday morning. And I mean early. Like 6:30
a.m. I don't know why horsemen like to get up before the sun. Probably keeps
the reporters who come out from asking too  many questions, since most of them
are asleep standing up.
  Anyhow, it was worth seeing, because the difference between Churchill Downs
at sunrise and Churchill Downs in the middle of the fifth race  is like the
difference between Wisconsin and Beirut. In the morning hours, the horses
graze quietly, while the trainers talk softly about their chances. You hear
the occasional thundering of hoofs around  the track. And then it's quiet
again.
  It's here, along the backstretch, where writers fall in love with horse
racing. It's in the bleachers where they come to loathe it.
  When the gates open,  the whole scene changes. Especially on Derby Weekend.
The entire range of human condition comes through these doors, from the
down-and-out war vet in a wheelchair to Don Johnson of "Miami Vice."  That's
part of what the Derby is about, they brag. Everybody gets a peek. Everybody
gets to hunker down a wager on Snow Chief or Badger Land, and to spend five or
six hours in Derby glory.
  They just don't  spend it the same way.
  Friday went by quickly. The afternoon was the running of the Kentucky
Oaks, the filly version of the Derby. It was a prelude of things to come.
Churchill Downs was packed.
  Hats. Everywhere hats. Bowlers and Stetsons and big round things with
flowers and ribbons and pink veils hanging down. That's what I remember most.
And girls hawking mint juleps like they hawk programs  at Tiger Stadium. And
people waiting in line for the bathrooms, for water fountains, for wagers.
Every hotel room in Louisville was gone. Every decent restaurant was running
double shifts.
  We ate  that night at some rib joint that boasted five video screens. There
were horseshoes on the walls. I remember that. And a two-hour wait. When a
table cleared people who'd been standing began to fight  over the empty
chairs. A guy who said his name was Mister Wonderful got in a tug of war with
a young woman. "This chair stays here," he growled. I had a lousy feeling
about the night after that.
  Still, nothing, at least nothing short of a full scale nuclear alert, could
have prepared me for the streets outside Churchill Downs late Friday night.
How do you describe it? It was as if MTV, Hells  Angels, and "The Rocky Horror
Picture Show" had let out onto Central Avenue and multiplied by a thousand.
Teenage kids staggering on top of one another. Beer cans rolling across the
street. Old men rocking  on their porches with shotguns under blankets. An
auto body shop with a crap game being run inside. And screams. Screams that
rose like sudden smoke, rose out of nowhere, people just screaming to a
crescendo,  then stopping. In the daylight it would have been weird. In the
darkness of 2 a.m. it was a signal to head for cover.
  We were moving quickly back to the car when we passed a stocky cop from the
Louisville  sheriff's office.
  "Any trouble yet, officer?" I asked him.
  "Nah," he said, slapping his night stick. "Just some fighters, and some
boys trying to sell that Mary Jane You-Wanna stuff. Nuthin'  too bad."
  Just then a buddy of his came up and slapped him on the back. "HEY YOU
REDNECK!" the buddy yelled. "WHICH WAY TO FAIRYTOWN?"
  "Let's get out of here," I said to Jimmy. He didn't argue.
  On our way to the car we passed the now-locked entrance to the general
admission infield section. It was six hours away from opening. There were
already dozens of people tucked into sleeping bags  against the bars, trying
to keep warm in the 48- degree night.
  "I been here six straight years," said a guy from Florida. "I ain't missing
this one." Across the street was an all-night drugstore.  It had a grill
going, and the sizzle of sausage and eggs mixed with cigar-choked
conversation.
  Under normal conditions, you wouldn't set foot in the place. Tonight it was
paradise. People nursed  their coffee and pie, hoping to stay warm and safe
for a few extra minutes before the waitress asked them to leave. It was, after
all, a long way until 8 a.m.
  Which sort of brings us back to where  we began this weird tale, the
footrace against the bikers. Let's just call the thing a draw. The three of us
burst out of the tunnel and into the infield and realized, panting, that there
was no big  rush. The place was massive.
  As the hours went by it filled up. Kids in football shirts. Old men in caps
and jackets. There were Port-O-Lets and betting windows and refreshment stands
out there.  The drinking began almost immediately.
  "Get started now," hollered some geek in a rose hat. "Gonna be a long day."
  That was the truth. The rest of it blends in and out of my mind in jump
cuts:
  There was, of course, the infield. And there was the paddock, where they
bring the horses before the races. By mid-afternoon, people are 10 deep all
around, and the horses can get pretty spooked, especially  when some drunken
fool screams "AWW RIIIGHT!" directly into their ears. Last year, something
like that happened, and a horse bridled and broke into a sweat. "Ruined him
for the race," said an observer.
  There are no official statistics on how many races have been lost at the
paddock. But you can bet that one wasn't the first.
  Above that is the Paddock lounge, which is a few hundred dollars and
several light years away from the infield. Here were white shoes beneath white
slacks beneath a white sports jacket and a white hat. Here were women with
shoulder pads beneath their silk dresses and  tall men who looked like they
should be on a fried chicken bucket, flagging down waitresses and saying, "How
'bout a few of those mint juleps, little darlin'?" This was the glitter and
romance they write  about. The exclusive corporate booths were not far away.
The air smelled of fine food, Derby pie and money.
  By 3 p.m. the infield was a drunken sea of humanity. The whole place
seemed to sway. People  were singing, rolling on top of each other. The lines
for the beer were only exceeded by the lines for the Port-O-Lets, both of
which were beyond sanity. It was Woodstock without music. Half-clad bodies
waving at clouds. Tents pitched 20 feet from the betting windows. And no rhyme
or reason to the cast. An old black man studying The Daily Racing Form sat
next to three teenage girls, whose blanket bordered  a motorcycle king with a
boom box. A bare-chested guy watched his wife reach into his wallet for
another wager.
  "Get out of there, woman!" he yelled. "You been in there enough." She took
the money  anyhow.
  Across the way in the exclusive boxes sat Walter Cronkite and Cornelius and
Marylou Vanderbilt Whitney. Nancy the dancer was probably on a bus back across
the state, with $800 in her pocketbook  that she didn't have last week.
  The contrasts were too much. The whole thing was too much. The only
sensible thing to do, it seemed, was head for shelter.
  Which is why they invented the press  box.
  From high above it all, safely inside the working media room, a cup of
coffee to the left, a TV monitor on the right, it was possible to actually get
a grip on this weird and greed- soaked affair.  Here were hundreds of
thousands of people, dressed up and drunk out and swollen like peacocks, all
there ostensibly for a two-minute horse race. But come on. That was garbage.
Maybe one in five knew  anything about horses. The others either knew high
heels or seersucker suits or how to puncture a beer can with a fountain pen.
For them, this was a party, and the horses were a convenient excuse.
  When the trumpets sounded, everybody rose. Then the bell. And the horses
were off! For two minutes everybody was together. But two minutes is still
only two minutes.  The horse named Ferdinand won.  An upset.  The lucky
winners waved their tickets and toasted their foresight. The rest ripped up
their stubs, dropped them on the ground and stomped on them as they made a
gigantic cattle run for the  exits.
  "Well, there you have it . . . " the TV announcers said. That's it for this
year. The Derby was over. The beasts had run again. But I knew better. I knew
some of them were still out there.  I took a sip on a warm cup of coffee. For
the moment, I was staying put.
CUTLINE:
Detroiters Barry McNealy (left) and Jim Johnson donned thinking caps before
the Derby.
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<DISCLAIMER>

</DISCLAIMER>
<KEYWORDS>
HORSE;RACING;KENTUCKY DERBY
</KEYWORDS>
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