His regular jockey, Ron Turcotte, was a Canadian, as was trainer Lucien Lauren.
I think it was the one who rode Secretariat.
Sham, a horse who had already beat Secretariat one.
Canadian Intergovernmental Conference Secretariat was created in 1973.
Secretariat was owned by Penny Chenery, he was trained by Lucien Laurin and mainly ridden by Canadian jockey Ron Turcotte, along with apprentice jockey Paul Feliciano (first two races), and veteran Eddie Maple (last race).
Royal Line, Sceptre, and Deo Valente.
Best translation I can give is, “that boy doesn’t know who he’s spanking! I will have to work with this horse myself!” basically, Lucian was saying Paul, the jockey, is an inexperienced boy that should never be trusted to jockey Secretariat.
No horse won the Triple Crown in 1970. The closest to that year was Secretariat in 1973.
Ron Turcotte
The jockey on Sham in the 1973 Belmont Stakes was Laffit Pincay Jr. Sham finished in second place in that race, famously losing to Secretariat, who won by an impressive 31 lengths. This race is often remembered for Secretariat's remarkable performance and record-setting time.
Ron Turcotte
The main characters in the book "Secretariat" are Secretariat himself, a legendary racehorse, his owner Penny Chenery, his trainer Lucien Laurin, and his jockey Ron Turcotte. Other significant characters include various stable hands, horse racing officials, and competitors in Secretariat's races.
You can get a copy from the Jockey Club, which is the American Thoroughbred registry. There may be a small fee and may be able to download which will save time.