Chattanooga Times Free Press

Omaha Beach won’t run Kentucky Derby

- BY BETH HARRIS

LOUISVILLE, Ky. — Suddenly, the Kentucky Derby is wide open.

Omaha Beach, the horse favored to win the first leg of this year’s Triple Crown of Thoroughbr­ed Racing, was scratched because of a breathing problem Wednesday night, leaving a pair of Hall of Famers on the sideline — trainer Richard Mandella and jockey Mike Smith.

Churchill Downs oddsmaker Mike Battaglia revised the morning line to make Game Winner the 9-2 favorite for the 1 1/4-mile race Saturday.

Improbable and Roadster were installed as the co-second choices at 5-1, giving fivetime Kentucky Derby-winning trainer Bob Baffert the top three choices in the 20-horse field.

Mandella told The Associated Press that Omaha Beach developed a cough and a subsequent veterinary exam showed the colt has an entrapped epiglottis. It’s generally not life- or career-threatenin­g and is typically corrected with minor surgery.

“It’s been a devastatin­g thing, but we have to do what’s right for the horse,” said Mandella, who has never won the Kentucky Derby with six previous starters.

The trainer said Omaha Beach will have surgery in Kentucky in the next few days and

will be sidelined for two to three weeks. The ordeal will knock him off the Triple Crown trail, which continues with the Preakness Stakes on May 18 at Pimlico Racecourse in Baltimore and the Belmont Stakes on June 8 at Belmont Park in Elmont, New York.

“It’s such a disappoint­ment, but we’ll fight again,” Mandella told the AP. “We won’t be out a long time.”

The scratch was another blow to cancer survivor Rick Porter, the colt’s 78-year-old owner. He has twice finished second in the Kentucky Derby, in 2007 with Hard Spun and the following year with filly Eight Belles, who broke her ankles past the finish line and had to be euthanized.

“He’s a great sport,” Mandella said. “I’ve got very good support.”

Omaha Beach had been the 4-1 early favorite.

Mandella’s dry sense of humor came out when he said, “My wife has my leg tied down so I can’t jump out of the window.”

Smith had chosen to ride Omaha Beach instead of Roadster, and now he won’t have a chance to go for a second straight Kentucky Derby victory. He rode the Baffert-trained Justify to victory last year.

“I’m a little bummed out, but the horse is OK and we’re going to be all right,” Smith told the AP by phone. “The good news is it wasn’t anything that is life-threatenin­g.”

Smith has three mounts on Friday’s card at Churchill Downs and five Saturday.

“I’ll be rooting for Roadster’s connection­s big-time,” he said. “I’ll be a glorified cheerleade­r.”

Omaha Beach galloped Wednesday morning without problem and Mandella said everything was fine, but that changed by late afternoon, when the exam showed the cough was more than a minor irritation. The condition can indicate the start of a virus, a sore throat or a sore somewhere in the horse’s soft palate.

Omaha Beach’s scratch moved Bodexpress into the field in the No. 20 post.

Mandella said he would likely return to Southern California before the Kentucky Derby.

“I didn’t lose interest,” he said, “but I don’t want to be here and watch it.”

It’s not the first time the race has lost a favorite leading up to the first Saturday in May. In 2009, I Want Revenge became the first morning-line favorite to scratch the day of the race because of a hot spot on his ankle.

 ?? AP PHOTO/CHARLIE RIEDEL ?? Kentucky Derby entrant Game Winner is ridden during a workout Wednesday at Churchill Downs on Wednesday in Louisville, Ky. Game Winner is now the 9-2 favorite to win Saturday’s race with Omaha Beach out because of a breathing problem.
AP PHOTO/CHARLIE RIEDEL Kentucky Derby entrant Game Winner is ridden during a workout Wednesday at Churchill Downs on Wednesday in Louisville, Ky. Game Winner is now the 9-2 favorite to win Saturday’s race with Omaha Beach out because of a breathing problem.
 ?? AP PHOTO/CHARLIE RIEDEL ?? Omaha Beach trainer Richard Mandella, left, grooms the horse before a workout Wednesday. Omaha Beach was previously the favorite to win Saturday’s Kentucky Derby.
AP PHOTO/CHARLIE RIEDEL Omaha Beach trainer Richard Mandella, left, grooms the horse before a workout Wednesday. Omaha Beach was previously the favorite to win Saturday’s Kentucky Derby.

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