Daily Racing Form National Digital Edition

Ortiz brings winning touch

- By David Grening – additional reporting by Steve Andersen

ELMONT, N.Y. – Jockey Irad Ortiz Jr. said it wasn’t easy to sit out the first two legs of this year’s Triple Crown. He had opportunit­ies to ride the Kentucky Derby but turned them down to ride in New York that day and won two stakes. He did not have the opportunit­y to ride the Preakness, even though he had ridden Cloud Computing, the Preakness winner, in his previous start.

“It was a little hard; you want to be in those races,” Ortiz said Monday at Belmont Park. “You never know what’s going to happen. Any horse can win [the Derby], but at the end of day, we made the right decision.”

Ortiz will be back in the Triple Crown picture in the 149th Belmont Stakes when he rides Lookin At Lee, the Kentucky Derby runner-up, in the “Test of the Champion.”

The last time Ortiz rode in a Triple Crown race, he won last year’s Belmont aboard Creator, giving the Steve Asmussentr­ained runner a sensationa­l ride and catching Destin in the final jump. Ortiz picked up the mount on Creator after Asmussen opted to go with a locally based jockey rather than sticking with Ricardo Santana Jr.,

who had ridden him in the Kentucky Derby.

Ortiz is once again the benefactor of that thinking as Asmussen, the trainer of Lookin At Lee, has tabbed Ortiz to replace Corey Lanerie, who rode the horse in the Kentucky Derby and to a fourth-place finish in the Preakness.

“I’m so excited. I can’t wait to ride in the Belmont,” Ortiz said. “I watched the Derby and the Preakness. He’s an honest horse. He ran good both times, so hopefully he repeats and stays at the same level. Hopefully, we can do a good job with

him, maybe improve. Who knows?”

Lookin At Lee has a running style similar to that of Creator, who was 10th early on in a 13-horse Belmont Stakes field before advancing along the inside down the backside, splitting horses in the stretch, and catching Destin at the wire.

A large field – possibly as many as 14 horses– is expected for this year’s Belmont. There figures to be speed, and Ortiz knows one thing about Lookin At Lee.

“He always comes running,” he said.

Lookin At Lee was originally scheduled to breeze at Belmont Park on Monday, but that workout was scrapped due to the wet tracks from morning rain. Asmussen, via text, said Lookin At Lee will now have just one workout leading up to the Belmont, presumably next Monday.

In other Belmont Stakes news:

◗ In Japan on Monday, Epicharis worked five furlongs in 1:04.90 over a flat woodchip course at the Miho Training Center, where the 3-year-old is quarantine­d. Epicharis is scheduled to arrive in New York on Thursday. His first day on the track likely will be Saturday.

◗ Owner Tom McKenna said Monday that Conquest Mo Money is being considered for both the Belmont Stakes and the Grade 2 Woody Stephens, a seven-furlong race on the same card.

◗ Hollywood Handsome and Irap have been removed from considerat­ion for the Belmont Stakes and instead will run in the $500,000 Ohio Derby on June 24, according to their respective trainers, Dallas Stewart and Doug O’Neill.

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