Ryan Reed

The Born to Run


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Andrew DePrisco, June Kikuchi EDITORIAL DIRECTORS
Amy Deputato SENIOR EDITOR
Jarelle S. Stein EDITOR
Jennifer Calvert ASSOCIATE EDITOR
Elizabeth Spurbeck ASSISTANT EDITOR
Véronique Bos SENIOR ART DIRECTOR
Karen Julian PUBLISHING COORDINATOR
Tracy Burns PRODUCTION COORDINATOR
Jessica Jaensch PRODUCTION COORDINATOR

      Photographs © 2010 by Ryan H. Reed

      Copyright © 2010 by I-5 Press™

      All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without the prior written permission of I-5 Press™, except for the inclusion of brief quotations in an acknowledged review.

      I-5 Press™

      A Division of I-5 Publishing, LLC™

      3 Burroughs, Irvine, CA 92618 USA

       www.facebook.com/i5press

      Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

      Reed, Ryan H., 1968-

      Born to run : the racing greyhound from competitor to companion / by

      Ryan H. Reed.

      p. cm.

      Includes bibliographical references and index.

      ISBN 978-1-59378-689-2

      eISBN: 978-1-62008-052-8

      1. Racing greyhound. 2. Greyhound racing. I. Title.

      SF429.G8R425 2010

      798.8'5--dc22

      2009050555

      Printed and bound in China

      16 15 14 13 12 11 10 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10

      Contents

       Acknowledgments

       Preface

       Introduction

       Chapter 1: Northeastern Style

       Chapter 2: Vision of Sunshine

       Chapter 3: Corn Belt Revival

       Chapter 4: Kansan Kaleidoscope

       Chapter 5: Sweet Home Abilene

       Chapter 6: Lone Star Rising

       Chapter 7: Rocky Mountain Mosaic

       Chapter 8: Northwest Tradition

       Chapter 9: Extraordinary Pets

       Dino & Abby’s Road Trip

       Glossary

       Greyhound Track Abbreviations

       Bibliography

       Special Thanks

      Dedication

image

      For my sweet Toolie.

      My lucky star fell the day you came to me. We did everything together, and how I adored you. Now, all these years later, if I could tell you just one thing, it would be that my chest became a vacuum the day you left.

       May 23, 1986 – January 5, 2000

      Acknowledgments

      Like most large-scale research projects, this book could not have been realized without the continued support of many friends and backers. Janice Mosher, an adoption volunteer with Greyhound Pets, Incorporated, and a close personal friend, helped in countless ways throughout the entire effort. Gary Guccione, executive director for the National Greyhound Association, made arrangements for me to visit breeding farms near Abilene, Kansas; explained the history of the sport; and assisted in a great many other ways, too numerous to list here. At the Greyhound Hall of Fame, Ed Scheele and Kathy Lounsbury helped supply historical information.

      The lion’s share of statistical background information for individual Greyhounds was provided by Greyhound-Data.com, a free Web site with information—including race history—compiled by teams of aficionados from Australia, New Zealand, Europe, and the United States. Without the Greyhound-Data Web site and the hard work put into its database by tireless volunteers, it would not have been possible to provide such detailed information about the racing and retired Greyhounds portrayed in this book.

      In August 2002, I had the great fortune to be befriended by Vera Filipelli, the director of media relations at Derby Lane racetrack in St. Petersburg, Florida. She and her husband, John, made a trip to Derby Lane feasible for me by insisting that I stay at their home for a week to offset some of the costs. Afterward, Vera continued to help in more ways than I can enumerate here. Simply put, without Vera’s unwavering support and friendship, this book would have been much smaller in scope and size; in fact, it might not have been completed at all.

      With Vera’s help, I got in touch with the Rhode Island Greyhound Owners Association (RIGOA), which generously awarded me a grant that allowed for a trip to Lincoln Park. While I was photographing matinee races at the racetrack, my camera body suffered a catastrophic failure, putting a halt to any further photography. In a near panic, I called RIGOA president Richard Brindle and vice president Dan Ryan, who immediately offered to pay for a new camera body. They are two of the most benevolent men I have ever met.

      Later, in December 2005, I received yet another generous grant for my work, this one from the Texas Greyhound Association (TGA). While in the famed Lone Star State, I had the opportunity to document the TGA-owned schooling