Loser Races Into Record Book, Public’s Heart
TOKYO — Glorious Spring is the undisputed darling of Japan’s racetracks. Thousands pack the stands to watch the thoroughbred run, a pop song sings her praises and a movie is in the works.
The 8-year-old has earned all the attention with an ignoble feat: She has lost more than 100 races in a row.
Glorious Spring -- Haru-urara in Japanese -- was out doing what she does best last week, losing her 106th consecutive race, even with Japan’s top jockey on her back. More than 10,000 fans braved the rain to watch her come in 10th out of 11 horses.
A horse that has never won a race is an unlikely hero, but Haru-urara’s struggles have struck a chord with the Japanese fondness for the hopeless but determined underdog.
“It’s better if she loses,” said Noriyuki Fukui, 21, who came to the Shimbashi Wins off-track betting outlet in Tokyo to drop $9.30 on Haru-urara. “If she won, it wouldn’t be so interesting anymore.”
Haru-urara doesn’t disappoint.
Born in Japanese horse country in the northern island of Hokkaido in 1996, she first raced -- and lost -- at the Kochi Racecourse in southwestern Japan in November 1998.
She has repeated the defeat with remarkable consistency, winning second place only four times and earning a paltry $9,300 in prize money.
She was due for retirement when her losing streak started attracting attention last summer.
Since then, the horse has become Japan’s top four-legged celebrity. Her admirers are filling the Kochi Racecourse, travel agents are making a killing off “Haru” tours, and her chestnut face adorns shirts, cups and other tourist trinkets.
Her already legendary lack of speed has made betting tickets with her name on them talismans to guard against traffic accidents. And her face is being used as advertising space: she races with a pink “Hello Kitty” riding mask.
A pop song about her came out this month and a Tokyo film producer is planning a movie about her exploits.
Even top politicians are paying attention.
“I’d like to see Haru-urara win, even just once,” Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi said recently in Parliament. “The horse is a good example of not giving up in the face of defeat.”
Haru-urara was a clear draw at the Shimbashi Wins betting parlor March 22, which was packed with a mix of cigarette-smoking regulars and a younger crowd -- and even a few women -- drawn by the “Haru boom.” So many people bet on the horse nationwide that she ended up favored to win, with 1.8-to-1 odds.
Bettors pushed up to the screens when the race began, chuckling as Haru-urara started in the middle of the pack but quickly fell apart, despite the efforts of star jockey Yutaka Take. The results were flashed as urgent by Kyodo News service; she was the second-top story on two national TV networks.
Even regulars said they were touched.
Shinji Yoshida, 54, said the horse’s popularity shows that the Japanese, who grew overconfident during the roaring 1980s, had rediscovered their appreciation for the weak and the troubled during more recent economic hard times.
But there are limits to sentimentality, he said.
“I bet on Haru-urara to get the ticket as a memento,” he said. “But I still bet on a different horse in the same race -- and he came in third.”
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