Tennis
Horse sense: Zenyatta, Rachel in mix for AP award
Tennis

Horse sense: Zenyatta, Rachel in mix for AP award

Published Dec. 22, 2009 5:59 p.m. ET

Zenyatta loses!

Rachel Alexandra finishes seventh!

Not to worry.

The two female equine stars became part of the backstretch chatter - if the not the winner's circle - following Tuesday's vote for Female Athlete of the Year by members of The Associated Press.

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The undefeated Zenyatta ran second to tennis star Serena Williams and unbeaten-in-2009 Rachel Alexandra was seventh. Williams won easily, 66-18, with Rachel Alexandra receiving 10 votes.

``That's pretty darn good,'' Hall of Fame trainer Bob Baffert said Tuesday, adding: ``And hey, how did Serena finish ahead of Zenyatta?''

The results show that, in thoroughbred racing, this indeed was the year of the female, a lift that allows the sport to brag about having two of the top seven female athletes of 2009.

``We already knew it was an impressive year for the sport with not one but two females distinguishing themselves as all-time greats,'' National Thoroughbred Racing Association president Alex Waldrop said. ``With this vote by the AP, their historic campaigns transcended horse racing and captured the attention of sports fans around the world.''

After the Williams-Zenyatta exacta, the female vote was rounded out by Kim Clijsters (tennis), Lindsey Vonn (skiing), Diana Taurasi (basketball), Maya Moore (basketball) and Rachel Alexandra.

Horses have occasionally received support from voters for AP awards in the past. In the AP's Top 100 athletes of the century, 1973 Triple Crown winner Secretariat was No. 81, just ahead of Cal Ripken Jr.

The 5-year-old mare Zenyatta capped a 5-0 campaign in 2009 with a rousing last-to-first win over males in the Breeders' Cup Classic at Santa Anita, while 3-year-old filly Rachel Alexandra won the Preakness Stakes and then beat older males in the Woodward Stakes at Saratoga to complete an 8-0 season.

Baffert says year-end sports honors are ``wow'' awards, and horses deserve to be included.

``It's for doing something extraordinary and spectacular and these horses did that and deserve the recognition,'' Baffert said. ``They're about half human, anyway.''

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