Durkin to Receive Eclipse Award of Merit

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Capping an extraordinary career as one of North America's premier race track announcers and one of the most popular personalities in Thoroughbred racing, Tom Durkin—longtime voice of the New York Racing Association tracks, the Breeders' Cup, and the Triple Crown—will be honored with the Eclipse Award of Merit for a lifetime of outstanding achievement in the Thoroughbred industry.

Durkin, 64, who retired Aug. 30 at Saratoga Race Course after a 43-year-career, will be presented the award at The 44th Annual Eclipse Awards dinner and ceremony Jan. 17 at Gulfstream Park in Hallandale Beach, Fla.

"This is quite an honor and quite a surprise," Durkin remarked. "The award has never been given to a track announcer before, and to be singled out when you consider all of the great announcers who preceded me like Fred Capossela, Joe Hernandez, Chic Anderson, and Dave Johnson, this is quite a distinction.

"Getting my first job calling races at Florida Downs was a dream come true, but I never imagined my career would take me where it did. A lot of people took a lot of chances to hire a guy named 'Tom Who?' I have them to thank and anybody whoever bet two bucks."

"Tom Durkin has been one of the most remarkable and dynamic voices in our industry for more than a generation," said Alex Waldrop, NTRA president and CEO. "His uncanny ability to tell a story and build it with drama, tension and excitement through his more than 80,000 race calls was a tremendous gift to all of us who treasure horse racing. On behalf of all of the Thoroughbred industry, we congratulate Tom on his outstanding career and for making our sport a much richer and brighter experience for all."

At early age Durkin set his career goal to become a track announcer. "I never really wanted to be anything else," Durkin said. "I was just a kid on the west side of Chicago. And it wasn't the least thing practical. It turned out far more than practical. How many people go to a job they really like?"

Born in the Austin District of Chicago's west side, Durkin idolized renowned Arlington International Racecourse track announcer Phil Georgeff, and the energy and excitement he brought to his craft. Years later, Durkin wrote the forward to Georgeff's autobiography.

A theater major at St. Norbert College, Durkin's career behind the microphone began at country fair meetings in Wisconsin in 1971 before his first job at Florida Downs, now known as Tampa Bay Downs. He worked stints at Balmoral, Quad Cities, and Cahokia Downs in the Midwest before moving east to call the harness races at The Meadowlands in New Jersey.

More big breaks soon came, starting with John Brunetti hiring him to call the races at Hialeah in 1981. Within three years, Durkin was tabbed by NBC Sports to call the Breeders' Cup in a four-hour broadcast.

"That first Breeders' Cup was surreal," Durkin said of the 1984 inaugural running at Hollywood Park. "Every race had a minimum of a $1 million purse. But the important thing was that for the first time championships were being decided on the racetrack. It crystalized when Chief's Crown crossed the finish line in the Juvenile and I said 'A champion is crowned, it's Chief's Crown.' "

A string of successes would continue into the next decade when on Aug. 29, 1990, Durkin became the track announcer for the NYRA venues: Aqueduct Racetrack, Belmont Park, and Saratoga. In a decade marked by expanded simulcast signals across North America, Durkin's calls could be heard on a more regular basis.

His work also included calling races on ESPN and NBC broadcasts throughout the year, including trips to the Irish Derby (Ire-I) and the Prix de l'Arc de Triomphe (Fra-I) When NBC grabbed the rights to the Kentucky Derby (gr. I), Preakness Stakes (gr. I), and Belmont Stakes (gr. I), Durkin became the television voice of the Triple Crown beginning in 2001 and held that position for 10 years.

"Tom is more than deserving of the Award of Merit," said six-time Eclipse Award winning trainer Todd Pletcher. "He's been such a mainstay in our industry for so many years and will clearly go down as one of the best race callers in history, if not the best. He's called most of my biggest career wins, including the 1998 Acorn Stakes (gr. I) with Jersey Girl, which was my first grade I win, and all three of our Triple Crown (race) victories. I would have to say the most memorable for me was his call of the 2007 Belmont Stakes when Rags to Riches triumphed to become the first filly in 102 years to win the race."

Durkin also has contributed time to some of the hardest working and unsung people in racing. For 17 years he has served on the board of the Backstretch Employee Service Team (B.E.S.T.) which provides medical care, counseling, and other services to backstretch workers at the NYRA tracks. Fans could hear Durkin call a race live from his booth in exchange for a donation to B.E.S.T. Approximately $200,000 was raised over a 10-year period. He also spent many Thursday evenings at Saratoga calling Bingo games in both Spanish and English for the backstretch workers.

In an emotional farewell retirement ceremony following his call of the Spinaway Stakes (gr. I) at Saratoga, Durkin stood before a rain-soaked audience in the winner's circle and said: "There is one person that is completely responsible for this wonderful life that I've had the privilege to live in horse racing. That person is here in Saratoga today. Right now he's in the backyard sitting at a picnic table under a pine tree looking at this image on the television. She's at top of the stretch leaning over the rail, and she's in a box seat or at a simulcast center in Syracuse or at a track in Ohio or in front of a computer in California. The person I owe an inexpressible gratitude is you, the racing fan, the horseplayer. Thank you."

The Award of Merit will be given for the 39th time since it was inaugurated in 1976 to honor Jack Dreyfus, owner of Hobeau Farm and former NYRA chairman. Subsequent recipients have included racing luminaries such as Ogden Phipps, John Gaines, Alfred Vanderbilt, Bill Shoemaker, D.G. Van Clief Jr., Paul Mellon, Joe Hirsch, James E. Bassett III, John Nerud, Penny Chenery, William S. Farish, Richard Duchossois, Marylou Whitney and last year's recipient, D. Wayne Lukas.