Journalists cried. Strangers high-fived. Many waved winning tickets that never will be cashed. On that glorious afternoon last June, American Pharoah took millions of people somewhere over the rainbow. It felt like first love, without the anguish. Pure joy.
After 37 years, the unicorn finally arrived at Belmont Park, and the most exclusive club in sports had a 12th member. Pharoah's Triple Crown run made racing mainstream news, lured newbies and inspired hope for a carryover. Skeptics argued that once their hero was retired, most of the Pharoahites would disappear, too.
Trainer Bob Baffert admitted feeling low when his horse of a lifetime went to Ashford Stud in November.
"We all fell in love with him, and it was sad because it was like watching your child leave," Baffert said recently. "We went through maybe 60 days of being depressed about it, but at the same time we have some great memories."
Hangover effect?
Will they overshadow no matter what may happen this spring? Even if undefeated Nyquist swept the Kentucky Derby, Preakness and Belmont, would it come close to having the same impact? It was suggested to Baffert recently that Pharoah's breakthrough created a hangover effect. He disagreed.
"I think what Pharoah did, he created more interest in the sport and brought in a lot of new fans," Baffert said. "And I think it will be bigger. I think people are really following it right now to see if they can watch another horse like that, and we're riding that wave.
"And Nyquist, he's been perfect. So everybody's thinking maybe we're going to get another horse like that."
Maybe he's right, and that 2016's classics won't have a "been there, done that" vibe. Three races totaling almost 4 miles in five weeks is a brutal grind for a fragile breed, but Nyquist has the potential to launch the fourth Triple Crown bid in five years.