ROAD TO THE KENTUCKY DERBY AND KENTUCKY OAKS
I dread handshakes. I’ve got some problems with my hands, and everywhere I go, people want to impress me with their grip. To make it worse, now women are coming up with that firm shake. So I’ll say, “Gimme five!” If a boy wants a handshake, I’ll just give him a hug.
I grew up in the Fifth Ward of Houston— the Bloody Fifth, we called it. Every weekend someone got killed.
We couldn’t afford a TV. But my Aunt Leola let me watch hers. I’d watch The Donna Reed Show and Leave It to Beaver and wonder what it would be like to have my own bed. Shutting off a reading lamp next to your bed seemed like the height of luxury.
When there was no lunch to take to school, I blew up a brown paper sack to make it look full.
Sometimes my older brothers and sisters would tease me, call me Mo-head. I didn’t know why. Sometimes they’d say, “You’re not really our brother.” That would drive me crazy. Even before I outgrew them, they learned that the teasing wasn’t worth the consequences.
I left school in eighth grade, ninth grade—something like that.
In the 1968 Olympics, Tommie Smith and John Carlos raised black-gloved fists on the victory stand, and that’s all people were talking about. My gold medal didn’t have much luster when I went home to Houston, but it sure had luster to me. I wore that thing everywhere I went. Those were the days of Nehru jackets and medallions, so it just fit in. I wore it so much that after a while, some of the gold started to rub off. A jeweler made it look pretty again, and I didn’t want any more gold to rub off, so I put it in a safe-deposit box. That’s where it stayed for years. In the eighties, I moved to Marshall, Texas. I decided to put that medal in the historical society so the kids could see it and be inspired. The message was, you could come out of this small town and do big things. I want all the children in the world to feel like that medal is as much theirs as it is my children’s.
When I won the title against Joe Frazier, it was everything I ever worked for.
You don’t know what it is to be heavyweight champ of the world until you become the heavyweight champ of the world. It’s tough. You hear, “So-and-so became champ and he had five girls and five Cadillacs.” So you get five Cadillacs and five girls just because so-and-so had it. It doesn’t originate from you. It’s not desire or physical urgency. It’s all ignorance.
Most of us are just kids.
Sandy Saddler, the great featherweight champion, gave me some advice after I won the title. I said, “Man, this sex thing. How did you deal with this sex thing?” He said, “George, it’s real easy when you’re married and faithful to one woman. Because when you’re in the mood, she’s in the mood. It gets out of hand when you start messing with two or three people. It becomes unmanageable. Even you become unmanageable. Be faithful to one.” I just didn’t grasp it at the time.
I remember how people looked at me as I left the United States for Zaire. “Man, that’s George Foreman, going to fight Muhammad Ali.” Then they’d drop their heads. Fear. Nobody would give me a straight-on look. It was a funny kind of admiration. There were people too scared to even ask for an autograph.
The day after I lost to Ali, people came by and put a hand on my shoulder and said, “It’s okay, George. You’ll have another chance.” That was pity. From being feared to being pitied. Brother, that’s a long fall.
Imagine losing everything you think matters to you in ten seconds.
I’ll tell you how low a man can go. There was a B.B. King song that went, “Nobody loves me but my mother/And she could be jivin’, too.”
Evil lurks where disappointment lodges.
As an adult, I found out that my dad, J.D. Foreman, was not my biological dad. My mom and J.D. had broken up for a time, and that’s when I was conceived. That’s why my brothers and sisters called me Mo-head. What they were really saying was Moorehead. My biological dad was named Leroy Moorehead.
All my sons are named George Foreman. They all know where they came from.
Changing your nature is the hardest thing to do. But I discovered that you can be who you choose to be.
Winning the title for a second time from Michael Moorer was a special moment. But it was nothing beyond that. A week later, people were heaping praises on me, and it was hard because you’ve gotta act like it’s still important. But it was already over.
Preaching is the most original thing I’ve ever done. There’s nothing familiar about it. You have to be brave.
Losing your mother is the most mysterious lostness. You know how the astronauts walk in space, attached to the spacecraft by a line? The moment you find out your mother’s died, you feel like someone’s slipped the line off the craft. You’re just floating away. Floating … floating … I remember my daughter called and said, “Don’t you worry. I’m on my way.” All the sudden that line snagged and I was anchored again.
The first thing that came into my mind when I signed the grill contract for $137.5 million was, I’m going to make my sisters millionaires. After all these years, they’re finally going to be millionaires. And they did become millionaires—with the same old troubles as everybody else.
I love Joe Frazier. He’s been an original from day one. A few years back, Joe, Muhammad, and I did a video in England. After the taping, we were at a charity dinner with some of the royal family. They were serving lamb chops with mint jelly—beautiful food. The waiter asked, “Can I get you anything else?” And Joe said, “I want some more green jelly.” The waiter said, “Do you mean mint sauce?” And Joe said, “Same thing.” And I thought, Some people put on a face for you and a face for someone else. But this man has only one face. “Same thing.” If you understood what he said, why did you need to correct him?
Joe told me why he had that hate for Ali. Muhammad was calling him an Uncle Tom. Kids would go to school and taunt his children, and they’d come home and his wife would hear about it. What bothered Joe was that every morning he’d get up really early, when it was dark, to get the roadwork in. He always wore this big hood over his head when he ran. And he said, “Man, I don’t want my wife thinking I’m peeping into people’s windows.” The point is, at the time, Joe didn’t get what an Uncle Tom was. He hated Muhammad because he thought Ali was calling him a Peepin’ Tom. If someone would have explained to Joe what an Uncle Tom was, he might not have ever hated Ali.
Can’t retire from exercising.
After I lost to Ali in Zaire, I told everybody that I was robbed. The ropes were loose, the water was drugged…. Then, once I’d changed my nature, I realized what a blemish I’d put on this great man’s career. Why would I go out and spit on his victory to mess up this great man’s name?
I called Muhammad the other day. I said, “Muhammad, I think I can really get you now in a rematch.” And he said, “You crazy!” He doesn’t speak rapidly, but he said, “George, I’m coming to see you.” He said it with such love. No, I don’t have any regrets.
The seventies are the best years. That’s when you’re wise.
My mother used to tell me, “You live and learn. Then you die and forget it all.”
March 22
Louisiana Derby Fair Grounds GII $1,000k G1 9.5f 100 – 50 – 25 – 15 – 10
Jeff Ruby Steaks Turfway Park $700k GIII 1 1/8 miles 100 – 50 – 25 – 15 – 10
Cleaning your house while your kids are still growing up is like shoveling the walk before it stops snowing.
Phyllis Diller
Garden And Gun – Marco Goran Romano – Vote for the South’s Best Steak House
La Tete d’Or And The Revenge Of The American Steak House
Bloodhorse – ‘Burrito’ All Right After Stretch Stumble in Jeff Ruby
Phil has a question:
Was that the same spot where Burrito broke out from the starting gate wiping out half of the field.
Bloodhorse – Sean Collins – Connections Celebrate Flying Mohawk Derby Qualification
TDN – Final Gambit Overcomes Trouble at Start, Goes Last to First to Upset Jeff Ruby Steaks
Bloodhorse – Sean Collins – Final Gambit Makes Winning Move in Jeff Ruby
Phil has a question:
Was Luan Machado counting the poles on his fingers coming down the stretch.
Does Luan Machado have enough fingers for a 10 furlong race or will he switch to marbles.
“Most of these kids don’t know what horse racing is about,” Werth said. “They know there are races but they don’t know what goes into it. They see the behind-the-scenes stuff, then they see the race and me jumping around like a crazy person. They could feel the emotion, the excitement, and the electricity that horse racing brings.
…
“If he runs first or second here in the Ruby, I don’t know how we don’t take a shot at the Derby with him,” Werth said. “How many opportunities do you get? How many chances do you get in life to do something like this? Here we are heading to Cincinnati and running in the Jeff Ruby while Derby dreaming again—it’s crazy.”
Bloodhorse – Sean Collins – Werth Hoping for Derby Chance With Flying Mohawk
Phil has a question:
With Flying Mohawk earning 50 points and most likely on the way to the Kentucky Derby will Werth get a Mohawk.
In our every deliberation, we must consider the impact of our decisions on the next seven generations.
Iroquois Proverb
TDN – Tiz The Law’s Tiztastic Breaks Through In Louisiana Derby
Bloodhorse – Molly Rollins – Tiztastic Gets the Timing Right in Louisiana Derby
Phil has a comment:
The rabbit is alive and well in the Asmussen barn.
We do not want churches because they will teach us to quarrel with God, as the Catholic and Protestants do. We do not want to learn that.
Chief Joseph
TDN – Bless the Broken Answers the Call in Turfway’s Bourbonette Oaks
Bloodhorse – Frank Angst – Bourbonette Proves a Winning Fit for Bless the Broken
TDN – Good Cheer Keeps The Good Times Rolling In Fair Grounds Oaks
Redline, a 6-year-old gelding owned by Charles Garvey and trained by Robertino Diodoro, comes here on a roll. After an allowance win at Los Alamitos in the summer, he romped in two stakes here and is perfect in three local tries. He then ran a sharp second in a stakes at Sunland Park, beaten just a neck. He has the speed to utilize his rail draw. Orlando Mojica rides.
DRF – Mike Hammersly – Phoenix Gold Cup card set to go a week later than planned
The March 15 Turf Paradise card has been moved in its entirety to Saturday, March 22, 2025.
Rick Hedge and Lori Neyka’s Big Hug is entered in the redrawn Queen of The Green Handicap at Turf Paradise on Saturday, March 22, 2025 going 1 mile on the Saskatchewan cow pasture for $50,000US. Rick Hedge is shown as trainer of record with Jose Mariano Asencio scheduled to ride. Since she ran in the Santa Ana Stake GIII at Santa Anita Park on Saturday, March 15, 2025 going 1 1/4 miles on the turf for $100,000US she’ll probably be scratched.
Rick Wiest, Lana Wiest, Clayton Wiest and Todd Fitch’s Flame McGoon is also entered in the Queen of The Green Handicap. She’s trained by Robertino Diodoro with Orlando Mojica in the saddle.
On the same Turf Paradise card Robertino Diodoro has Norm Tremblay’s Wood Ceiling, a Gun Runner colt, in the Turf Paradise Derby going 1 1/16 miles on the dirt for $50,000US. Guillermo Rodriguez is in the saddle.
TDN – Steve Sherack – Louisiana Derby, Fair Grounds Oaks Go Through Cox Barn
Bloodhorse – Byron King – John Hancock Looks to Stretch Out as LA Derby Favorite
Bloodhorse – Frank Angst – The Road: Turfway Rivals to Meet in Jeff Ruby Steak
Paulick Report – Kevin Kilroy – Brad Cox Has ‘Two Big Opportunities’ In Louisiana Derby
America’s Best Racing – Noel Michaels – Noel’s Weekend Winners: Derby Dreaming Down on the Bayou
America’s Best Racing – Ellis Starr – Instant Replay Gets Top Billing in Competitive Louisiana Derby
Bloodhorse – J. Keeler Johnson – Building a Case for Built in the Louisiana Derby
“Most of these kids don’t know what horse racing is about,” Werth said. “They know there are races but they don’t know what goes into it. They see the behind-the-scenes stuff, then they see the race and me jumping around like a crazy person. They could feel the emotion, the excitement, and the electricity that horse racing brings.
…
“If he runs first or second here in the Ruby, I don’t know how we don’t take a shot at the Derby with him,” Werth said. “How many opportunities do you get? How many chances do you get in life to do something like this? Here we are heading to Cincinnati and running in the Jeff Ruby while Derby dreaming again—it’s crazy.”
Bloodhorse – Sean Collins – Werth Hoping for Derby Chance With Flying Mohawk
Phil has a question:
If Flying Mohawk makes it to the Kentucky Derby will Werth get a Mohawk.
If you win the Jeff Ruby Steaks do you get an after party at Jeff Ruby Steaks.
If a baked potato is $10US how many bags of gold do you need for an egg.
Phil has a question:
Is ICE going to put the Easter Rabbit in one of those prisons.
America’s Best Racing – Patrick Reed – 2025 Louisiana Derby Cheat Sheet
Bloodhorse – Sean C0llins – California Burrito’s Adjustability Key in Jeff Ruby
Bloodhorse – Sean Collins – Owen Almighty To Continue on Kentucky Derby Trail
Bloodhorse – Byron King – Scratched from VA Derby, John Hancock Heads LA Derby
Paulick Report – Godolphin Shares Race Plans For Three Kentucky Derby Hopefuls
Bloodhorse – Sean Collins – Remsen Winner Poster Likely Staying Home For Jeff Ruby
DRF – Marcus Hersh – Rapture to start in Virginia Derby; John Hancock rerouted to Louisiana Derby
TDN – Olivia Dunne And Jayson Werth To Host Oaks, Derby Festivities In Sports Illustrated’s Club SI
Bloodhorse- Louisiana Derby Will Help Decide Built’s Future
Phil M. Stockmen
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