Valvano To Call Harness Race Sunday

Bob Valvano and Frankie Dettori

Broadcaster Bob Valvano is the radio color analyst for the University of Louisville men’s basketball and national games on ESPN as well as a sports-talk host on ESPN 680/105.7. But now he’s hot to trot to get behind a different microphone: Calling a harness race at Cumberland Run this Sunday.

Cumberland Run's 20-day meet continues this Sunday, Monday and Tuesday, (Oct. 27-29) then concluding Nov. 3, 4 and 5. Admission and parking are free.

Since Cumberland Run opened for its inaugural standardbred meet last year, Valvano has wanted to call a trotting or pacing race at the five-eighths of a mile track in southeastern Kentucky. It finally came together for Sunday for a yet-to-be-determined race at the track carved out of a foothill in the Appalachian Mountains.

“I’m pretty wired about this whole thing,” said Valvano, speaking with Kentucky Downs and Cumberland Run Vice President of Racing Ted Nicholson on his sports-talk show Thursday. “It should be a lot of fun. And whether I was doing a race or not, I’m really eager to see the place. I grew up on harness racing. I lived not more than 10 minutes from Roosevelt Raceway, which was the mecca of harness racing for a long time. Yonkers wasn’t far, and then The Meadowlands opened. I’m really looking forward to this.”

While the original plan was for Valvano was to call a race with a short field, every race Sunday has eight horses, a full gate in harness racing. When Valvano expressed some nervousness, Nicholson joked: "It's just eight horses. It's not like it's a 12-horse field."

To which Valvano responded: "That's like the definition of minor surgery: That's surgery performed on someone else. But it should be fun. At this stage of my life, when you get to do a Walter Mitty thing, I'm very blessed."

The New York-raised Valvano coached basketball for 19 seasons, the last four at Louisville's Bellarmine University before entering broadcasting full time in 1998. His “ESPN V Show” is heard weekdays noon-3 p.m. ET with streaming at espnlouisville.com and the ESPN Louisville app and on the TuneIn and iHeart apps.

Valvano, along with other shows on ESPN 680/105.7, annually broadcasts at least one weekday during Kentucky Downs' live meet.

Valvano also is active with the V Foundation for Cancer Research, founded by ESPN and his late brother Jim Valvano, and is co-founder and chair of the Louisville-based non-profit Kentuckiana Friends of V (KFOV), which raises money for cancer research and related projects in the region, including Monday’s Golfing Against Cancer fund-raising golf tournament at the University of Louisville Golf Club to benefit a pediatric oncology project with Norton Children’s Hospital.

(Cumberland Run)

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