The track, at 4502 N. First Ave., hosts horse races for 8 weekend through March 30 2014. Gates open at 11 a.m. and post time is 1 pm. Admission is $8 for clubhouse seats and $5 for grandstand seats. Children under 12 get in free. Rillito Downs Park Racetrack is a five-eighths mile racing in Tucson, Arizona. This recently remodeled track offers Quarterhorse, Thoroughbred and on occasion, This famous track on the banks of the Rillito River was the birthplace of many racing innovations still in use today. The Southern Arizona Horse Breeders Association, the organization that pioneered Quarter Horse Racing in Tucson, had been hosting races at the Hacienda Moltacqua track since 1941. When Moltacqua was sold in 1943, J. Rukin Jelks volunteered to use the training track on his ranch.Under the direction of Melville Haskell, an American Quarter Horse Hall of Fame inductee, and Van Smelker, experimented with grading races, weighted handicaps, futurities, derbies and stake races, and photo-electric timers. World famous sprinters such as Shue Fly, Joe Reed II, Piggin String, Hard Twist, Queenie, and Miss Panama all ran at Rillito.
There are a lot of old buildings and ancient tracks of land around Southern Arizona that some people like to describe as historic. Americans love to call a 100-year-old anything "historic" while our European counterparts talk about buildings that are thousands of years old. Rillito Park having its 50th anniversary in 2013, is truly an historic location. After all, Rillito was designated a national historic landmark in 1988. Quarter horse racing has been around since the breed was established as early as 1665. Quarter horses were small, tough and able, and were generally used to bear the burdens of farmers and herdsmen. So tough were they that on their "day off" they provided their owners with "speed horses" which meant racing! In those days, thoroughbreds were solely the province of the very well to do. When Americans headed West, they brought with them the American quarter horse. The horse worked well on western cow ranges. Long before exotic licensing and promotional arrangements were established, the American promotional arrangements were established, the American quarter horse became the "official" horse of the West. In the late thirties, Tucson was growing and the University of Arizona was developing as one of the great institutions of the Southwest. A couple of University students, Ruken Jelks and Mel Haskell, were disappointed by the supply of good quarter horses in the area, so the the two began breeding their own. In 1943, Jelks, in need of a place to race horses, carved a track out of west desert land in his backyard on River Road. He was helped by his friend, M.H. Haskell. The racing expert in town was Bob Locke. He was asked to contribute his racing expertise, and they found a man names Jake Meyer to serve as starter. Rillito Park was born! Aside from establishing a place to run, Rillito Park became the talk of the Southwest, as it was the first regulated quarter horse facility in the Untied States. In its first season alone, Rillito set a number of standards that are being used in quarter horse racing to this day. Most important was the establishment of the "chute system." First appearing in 1943, the chute is a 3/8-mile straight stretch of prepared dirt track. It is 45 feet wide. At Rillito Park, it is the straight leg on the south of the current oval and extends west along the entry drive. To this day, quarters horses race on a straight track. The oval track was added at Rillito in the late 1950s to expand the use of the facility for trotters and thoroughbreds. Another of Rillito's contributions to the industry was the photo finish. Standardization of the races, a decision on the length of the race, and the introduction of a photoelectric tower became important. A high-speed clock was placed at the finish line, and the finish was filmed with a movie camera. Frame-by-frame examination of the photographs, which showed the horses and the time, enabled precise timing. Although crude by modern standards, the use of the photo finish was developed at Rillito. Mel Haskell's record keeping during the first season at Rillito led to the establishment of the American Quarter Horse Racing Association. Begun in 1945, both Haskell and Jelks became founding members of the young organization. One of the main purposes of the AQHA was to push rules that had been in use for races organized by Jelks and Haskell at Rillito. For all of his efforts Haskell was recognized as "the father of modern quarter horse racing" and inducted into the American Quarter Horse Race Association Hall of Fame. Many great stories of Rillito Park are not confined to its founders and administrators. Of course, with great quarter horses on hand, some of the best stories feature the horses themselves. The most remembered race happened on February 18, 1942, when four contenders went to the gates for the World's Championship Quarter. The purse was $1,000, and the four horse were Shue Fly, Clabber, Joe Tom, and Nobodies Friend. These four were easily the greatest sprinters of that season. Shue Fly was the favorite, as no horse in the race was conceded a chance to outrun her unless she fell down -- which is exactly what she did! As the gate flew open, the mare's owner, Bob Burris, was standing just behind her, and he hit her with his hat. This startled her so, that Shue Fly fell to her knees. But the jockey stayed on, hauled her to her feet, and took off, a full seven lengths behind the field! In the excited crowd were people from 14 different states, and all were shouting encouragement. And Shue Fly responded, as she began to level out and try to catch the three horses in front her. No one would have given her a chance, with everyone sure she was too far back to make it. But the little mare didn't give up, and she did make it, not only catching the pack but leaving it behind to come through on the rail, passing Nobodies Friend to win by a nose, equalling her record of the previous year. The crowd went absolutely wild! While Rillito experienced the gold days in the thirties, forties, and fifties, in the late sixties and seventies the track hit some hard times. Between the up and down nature of Tucson's economy and other forms of competition, Rillito sat closed for many years during that era. Threatened by housing and retail development, voters in 1984 overwhelmingly decided that Rillito Park was to remain a horse facility. A bulldozer would not be allowed to fell the quaint facility. Buoyed by that in the middle eighties, a real estate firm named JNC purchased the rights to operate the track. However, JNC was quite troubled and subsequently closed. The Pima County Horsemen's Association, led by Howard King, Bert Kinerk, Bucky Lovejoy and others raced to the rescue, and in 1988 opened the track for Pima County Fair racing. The success of the track that year was overwhelming. After the first year, an investor group opened the track for two years, hoping to establish full professional meets at Rillito. However, once again, economic circumstances did not contribute to success. Finally, King's group reached an agreement with the Pima County Fair Racing Commission and has signed a notice that will allow the Pima County Horsemen's Association to operate Rillito Park. Rillito Park Race Track's season lasts the months of February to March, with a live racing schedule on Saturdays and Sundays. The property has two restaurants, grandstand, barns, training area, All with the beautiful mountain foothills as the back drop.
Equibase Charts and Entries are available for 1 week.