The Peterborough Examiner

Fresh horses await Derby winner Always Dreaming in Preakness

- BETH HARRIS THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

LOUISVILLE, Ky. — Always Dreaming is headed to the Preakness in two weeks, when the Kentucky Derby winner is likely to face several fresh horses that skipped the first leg of the Triple Crown.

A majority of the 20-horse field that ran on a sloppy Churchill Downs track in Saturday’s Derby won’t go on to Baltimore.

Trainer Todd Pletcher said Sunday that Always Dreaming will head to Baltimore on Tuesday so the 3-year-old colt has plenty of time to adjust to his new surroundin­gs ahead of the race to be run May 20.

“At Pimlico, there’s generally not a lot of horses training there,” he said. “It will be a quiet environmen­t, give us time to get him settled in and if we have to make any adjustment­s, we’ll have time to do that.”

Always Dreaming will take up residence in stall No. 40, which traditiona­lly houses the Derby winner in the Pimlico stakes barn.

The dark bay colt was difficult to train in the days leading to the Derby, forcing Pletcher to adjust his equipment. Eventually, Always Dreaming settled down and won by 2 3/4 lengths, equaling the longest streak of favourites to win since five in a row did so in the 1890s.

“He’s really got some spring in his step this morning,” Pletcher said.

The 49-year-old trainer and jockey John Velazquez won their second Derbies. Pletcher was still sorting through hundreds of congratula­tory text messages, including ones from Hall of Fame basketball coach Lute Olson and Dallas Cowboys coach Jason Garrett.

No horse asserted his dominance in the winter prep races leading up to the 143rd Derby. As the winner, Always Dreaming certainly commands respect. However, the colt isn’t scaring away the competitio­n in the Preakness.

The field for the second leg of the Triple Crown is capped at 14 — six fewer than the Derby.

“There’s not that much separation from this bunch of 3-yearolds right now, from what I can see, other than maybe the winner yesterday,” said trainer Ken McPeek, who is pointing Lexington Stakes winner Senior Investment toward the Preakness.

Among Always Dreaming’s Derby rivals, second-place finisher Lookin At Lee and 13thplace Girvin are possible for the Preakness. If an issue with fourthplac­e Classic Empire’s right eye clears up, he could join them.

OTTAWA — According to postgame lore, Chris Neil’s feisty presence provided the spark that breathed new life into the Senators’ playoff chances. But in reality it was Ottawa’s best players who pushed the club to within one win of a long-awaited Eastern Conference final berth.

“Our top guns definitely took the bull by the horns and contribute­d in all kinds of ways,” head coach Guy Boucher said.

Start with Erik Karlsson, the team captain who exited Game 4 after 40 minutes in obvious discomfort and played the first round with two hairline fractures in his left foot. The 26-year-old posted three assists and 12 shot attempts while leading all players with more than 31 minutes in the Senators’ 5-4 overtime win Game 5.

Ottawa had control of the puck 68 per cent of the time at evenstreng­th when he was on the ice.

Karlsson played all but one minute and two seconds of the final six and a half minutes of regulation, meanwhile, firing the crossice feed which eventually led to Derick Brassard’s game-tying goal with 86 ticks left. He then fired the bullet pass out of the defensive zone which led to Kyle Turris’ game-winner.

The Swede has a team-leading 11 points in 11 games this spring.

Boucher thought the team’s decision to hold Karlsson out for the third period of a 4-1 loss two nights earlier had paid off. Not only did Karlsson save his energy, but his injury wasn’t allowed to get worse in an obvious defeat. Then there was Turris. His shot between Henrik Lundqvist’s pads capped the victory six-plus minutes into overtime. The B.C. native also dished out nine hits in almost 25 minutes (tops among forwards), fired nine attempts on goal and won 65 per cent of his 23 draws. He finished with a puck possession mark of 57 per cent despite matching up most against Rangers captain Ryan McDonagh.

“I guess that was our horse tonight,” Boucher said with a nod to the Kentucky Derby. “Definitely somebody who came out with the max character and pushback that we can expect from him.”

Boucher also lauded the Game 5 performanc­e of Mark Stone, who cut the Rangers 2-0 first period lead in half, as well as Brassard, a “gamer” who’s up to nine points in the post-season.

The former Rangers centre batted Clarke MacArthur’s rebound attempt off a number in bodies in front before it finally beat Lundqvist to tie the game at four.

“We’ve been talking about all the rebounds with Lundqvist — everything high it’s coming in front,” said Brassard, the Sens extra attacker in the waning moments of regulation. “I was just coming from the bench with some speed and I just went in the slot there and I just batted it out of the air and I got lucky.”

Stone had maybe his most effective game (69 per cent possession) of a relatively quiet post-season which has seen him post only four points. He pointed to his Game 5 goal as a measure of continued learning that “scoring in the playoffs is tough.”

He had to outmuscle Dan Girardi for a rebound that just trickled across the goal-line. All three of his career playoff goals (19 games) have come this spring.

“If you’re not getting to those nitty-gritty areas you’re not going to score,” said Stone, who’s scored at least 22 goals in each of the past three seasons.

Neil, a team legend who’s been with the club since 2001, was playing for the first time in these playoffs and second time in more than two months. He got credit for sparking the Sens because of his urgent defence of Dion Phaneuf following a hit from Tanner Glass early in the second period.

But it was Karlsson that actually ignited the rally which led to Ottawa’s first lead. He pushed the puck up from the defensive zone and dropped to MacArthur who found Mike Hoffman — he of 26 goals during the regular season — for the goal which knotted the game at two.

Tom Pyatt put the Sens in front 33 seconds later.

Neil, meanwhile, earned a twominute infraction for roughing in the mix-up with Glass as well as a 10-minute misconduct. He didn’t play again after that and finished with two minutes and 26 seconds of ice-time — a game-low.

His effect, beyond inspiratio­n, was negligible.

In the end, it was the best Ottawa had to offer which pushed it to the brink of a first Eastern Conference final appearance since 2007.

 ?? SEAN KILPATRICK/THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Ottawa Senators centre Kyle Turris (7) celebrates his game winning goal against the New York Rangers with teammates Fredrik Claesson (33) and Tom Pyatt (10) during in Game 5 on Saturday.
SEAN KILPATRICK/THE CANADIAN PRESS Ottawa Senators centre Kyle Turris (7) celebrates his game winning goal against the New York Rangers with teammates Fredrik Claesson (33) and Tom Pyatt (10) during in Game 5 on Saturday.

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