By Dana O’Neil, CNN
Louisville, Kentucky (CNN) — In 2004, an old fraternity brother gave Ken McPeek a call, looking for a favor.
Bruce Casella went to Eastern Kentucky, a few minutes’ ride from McPeek’s University of Kentucky but they both were Sigma Alpha Epsilon brothers with a shared affinity for horse racing.
McPeek came by his naturally. His dad, Ron, owned and raced several thoroughbreds from their Lexington home base. Casella, a Philly kid, found his during his four years of college. When they weren’t playing pickup or trying to dunk on each other’s heads on six-foot rims, they’d head to nearby Keeneland.
By 2004, McPeek had ditched his business administration degree and a shot to be a stockbroker to go all in as a trainer, his highlight coming in 2002 when his horse, 70-1 longshot Sarava, won the Belmont and ruined War Emblem’s shot at a Triple Crown. Casella, meantime, had parlayed his love for horses into a TV career, moving from a Kentucky affiliate to ESPN and finally back home to Philadelphia, where he created and produced “Let’s Go Racing” out of what’s now called Parx Racetrack.
As a mainstay at the Philly track, Casella had the inside scoop on a three-year-old horse that had blazed through Kentucky Derby prep races, winning the Southwest Stakes, Rebel Stakes and Arkansas Derby in the three months leading up to the first Saturday in May. Casella thought it would be helpful if the horse’s jockey got acquainted with Churchill Downs, so he called McPeek to ask for an assist.
McPeek let Stewart Elliott gallop and work a bunch of his horses, making sure the jockey got on the track every day to familiarize himself with its famous surface and idiosyncrasies.
On May 1 of that year, Elliott rode Smarty Jones to a two-and-three-quarters length win in the 130th running of the Kentucky Derby.
Twenty-two years and one day later, Elliott’s son, Chris, will ride Right to Party in the 152nd Kentucky Derby, making the Elliotts a rare (less than 10) father-son jockey duo to earn a Derby ride in the race’s history. The horse’s trainer? Ken McPeek.
A family legacy
Philadelphia magazine recently ranked the 25 most “Philly” athletes of all time, considering not just wins, losses and stats but how much the athlete personified and resonated with the essence of the city. Smarty Jones came in 15th.
Stabled in the very unremarkable Philadelphia Park and owned by a local car dealer, Smarty was the perfect blue-collar horse with an equally perfect blue-collar name to suit a city that is slightly less than Derby refined. He also came along at just the right time; the city so starved for a winner of any kind that it hopped on the horse’s trailer-bandwagon.
By May 2004, the Philadelphia pro sports championship drought stretched for 21 years and not two months earlier, Saint Joseph’s, a quintessential Philly underdog, lost in the Elite Eight after rising to No. 1 in the nation. Started after the Kentucky Derby win, Smarty fever continued in Baltimore, where the horse won the Preakness by a record 11-and-a-half lengths. As the horse’s trailer made its way up Interstate 95 to try and win the Belmont and break the Triple Crown hex, people in cars honked their horns while well-wishers hung over overpasses to cheer him on.
Chris Elliott experienced none of that. He was born in 2006, two years after his father’s career highlight. As he grew up, he certainly wasn’t ignorant of his father’s success. His childhood home in Lambertville, New Jersey – a small town tucked on the Delaware River known more for its antiques and annual Shad Festival than its horses – was filled with Smarty trinkets and trophies.
It also sits only a short 30-or-40-minute ride to Parx and each year, Chris would join his family at the annual Smarty Jones Stakes, the race the track hosts in honor of its most famou