Wiener
Dog Summer Nationals
2006 Weiner Dog Nationals
Hot Dog!
Dachshund Racing Is Sizzling Crowd Pleaser at Tracks
By BILL RICHARDS Staff reporter
of THE WALL STREET JOURNAL.
When the operators of Multnomah
Greyhound Park in Gresham, Ore., decided last month to hold the
Wiener Dog Summer Nationals - a race for dachshunds - they figured
they had a nifty little promotional idea. "We thought
we'd get maybe a couple of hundred entries," says Kristine
Levesque, the dog track's marketing director. Wrong.
In two weeks, more than 1,000 dachshund owners have signed up
their dogs for the 100-yard sprint down the track's front straight-away
July 9th. Hundreds more entries are piling up daily.
Dachshund racing has taken
off, in a manner of speaking, since a pack of the little low-riders
galloped for glory in a Miller Lite beer ad last year. The
ad touched off a "huge reaction" from dog enthusiasts,
says a spokesman for Miller. That prompted Miller to set
up a dachshund race last January at Gulf Greyhound Park in La
Marque, Texas. More than 2,000 dog owners sent in entries,
and the race drew a crowd of 17,000, breaking the track's attendance
record.
This year, between 30 and 40
dachshund races are scheduled across the U.S., according to the
Dachshund Club of America. At the club's annual convention
in May, about 100 dogs scampered down the middle of the Pale Alto,
Calif., Hyatt grand ballroom for the national championship.
The winner: Frank, a black-and-tan two-year-old from Eagle Point,
Ore., who "goes berserk" whenever he hits the starting
gate, says Mickey Perry, his owner.
Lawrence Swanson, president
of the Dachshund Club of America, says his organization is pleased,
if a bit mystified, at the interest in watching a group of dogs
with 3 inch legs run 100 yards in a minute and a half. "It's
not as big as greyhound racing - or as fast," he says, "but
it's getting very popular."
Multnomah officials plan a
lottery to pare down the dachshund field to 32 amateurs, plus
a separate race for eight race-seasoned "professionals,"
including Frank . Winners get a trophy, a year's supply of dog
food and a blanket.
Frank's major competition,
a 30-pound Portland, Ore., Dachshund named Max who lost by a nose
in Pale Alto, trains by chasing a garbage bag yanked across his
backyard, says David Niebur, his owner. Mr. Niebur says
the 100-yard dash at the Gresham track should be a piece of cake
for Max. "My dog can do that without breaking a sweat,"
he says.