Chattanooga Times Free Press

New shooters set sights on Justify

- BY DAVID GINSBURG

BALTIMORE — Half of the participan­ts in the eight- horse field for the Preakness Stakes have yet to experience the sensation of chasing Justify to the finish line.

Perhaps one of the new shooters in Saturday’s race can find a way to leave the Kentucky Derby winner in his wake.

Diamond King, Quip, Sporting Chance and Tenfold skipped the Derby to focus on earning a chunk of the $1.5 million Preakness purse, and history just might be on their side at Pimlico Race Course.

A new shooter — a horse that runs in one of the two remaining Triple Crown races after passing up the Derby — has won the Preakness four times since 2000. Just last year, Cloud Computing paid $13.40 in an upset over Derby winner Always Dreaming. Then again …

“Derby runners have done well over the course of time,” insisted W. Elliott Walden, president and CEO of racing operations for WinStar Farm, which owns Justify and Quip. “Now, is it because they’re the better horses? Quite possibly that’s the case. They’re just the best horses of the crop, and that’s why they run in the Kentucky Derby.”

The finest of the newcomers this year appears to be Quip, who has three wins and a secondplac­e showing in five career races. Trained by Rodolphe Brisset and ridden by last year’s Breeders’ Cup Classic winner, Florent Geroux, Quip won the Tampa Derby in March before finishing second in the Arkansas Derby. While unbeaten Justify comes in with just two weeks’ rest — the quickest turnaround of his career — Quip enters the Preakness coming off an extended break.

“Quip is a horse that has shown quality at the highest level,” Walden said. “We feel like he could have run in the Kentucky Derby, but we wanted to give him a chance to catch up to himself. He’s a slight-made horse we felt like would do better with the five weeks’ rest.”

Quip won twice last year before staggering to a seventhpla­ce showing in the Grade 2 Kentucky Jockey Club at Churchill Downs in November. In retrospect, that might have been a turning point.

“He’s changed a lot,” Brisset said. “After the Kentucky Jockey Club, we gave him a couple of weeks off, and you could see the maturation. You still have to be a little careful when he’s around too many horses, but he’s way more profession­al.”

Well, Quip — the third choice at 12-1 — will have only seven other horses to contend with Saturday. Two of them will be saddled by Hall of Fame trainer D. Wayne Lukas: Bravazo, who finished sixth in the Derby, along with Sporting Chance. Unlike the rest of the first-time Triple Crown participan­ts, Sporting Chance (30-1) is no fresher than the Derby horses, having also run May 5 at Churchill Downs, where he was fourth in the Pat Day Mile.

Tenfold ( 20-1) began racing this year. Sired by 2007 Preakness winner Curlin, the dark brown colt won his first two races before fading to third in the Arkansas Derby last month.

Trained by John Servis, Diamond King (30-1) won the Federico Tesio Stakes at nearby Laurel Park in April. While Diamond King probably doesn’t have the speed and stamina of Justify, he does have a trainer who has won the Kentucky Derby and jockey Javier Castellano, who guided Cloud Computing to victory at last year’s Preakness.

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