The New York Racing Association, Inc. (NYRA) mourns the passing of Pat Mahony, who spent more than 50 years in the racing industry, many leading NYRA's mutuels department, and was known nationally as a leading expert in wagering operations, protocols and rules, the track said in a Friday press release.
“New York's racing community is deeply saddened by the passing of Pat Mahony, whose contributions to the fabric of NYRA and Thoroughbred racing will be long remembered,” said NYRA President & CEO David O'Rourke. “As Vice President of Mutuels, Pat's love for the sport and unwavering commitment to integrity and excellence helped shape the industry. NYRA extends our thoughts and prayers to his family and loved ones during this difficult time.”
Mahony, who followed his grandfather and father into the pari-mutuel business, retired from NYRA in 2016. He died Thursday evening in Florida. He was 78. To honor Mahony's long and distinguished career, NYRA launched the Mahony Stakes at Saratoga Race Course in 2019.
Mahony once estimated that he spent 14,000 days at the track, watched more than 130,000 races and was responsible for more than $20 billion that moved through the betting windows at the tracks he supervised. As a member of racing's “First Family of Mutuels,” he followed his father Riggs and grandfather Mort into the mutuels business; together, the three generations worked at tracks across the country for more than a century.
“We were in the betting rings year in, year out through world wars and the Depression,” Mahony once said of his family. “That is something to be proud of.”
The patriarch of the family, Mortimer Mahony [1874-1949] got his start in the late 19th century working in the betting ring with bookmakers at Morris Park, Brighton Beach, Sheepshead Bay and the rest of the New York racing circuit during that era, which included Saratoga Race Course. He would go on to become the pioneer of modern pari-mutuel wagering and totalisator operations throughout much of the U.S. and Canada.
Mort Mahony was in charge when the first totalisator system in America [the Australian Tote] made its debut at Hialeah Park in 1932, and he was the mutuels consultant to Harry L. Straus, founder of the American Totalisator Company, helping to install their first system at Arlington Park in 1933. Along the way, his “Mahony Pari-Mutuel College” trained scores of people who went on to manage mutuel departments at many of the country's top tracks.
Prior to joining NYRA, Mahony managed mutuel departments at race tracks in Florida, New Jersey and Massachusetts. Shortly before his retirement, he reflected on why he chosen to devote his life to racing and the pari-mutuel business.
“I never wanted to do anything else,” Mahony said.
Plans for a memorial service have yet to be determined.
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