Houston Chronicle Sunday

A GOOD MUDDER

Desormeaux takes the inside straight to win, ends Nyquist’s Triple Crown bid

- By Richard Rosenblatt

Exaggerato­r splashes past a fading Nyquist to ensure no Triple Crown repeat.

BALTIMORE — Despite the fog, the rain and an undefeated Kentucky Derby winner with which to contend, Hall of Fame jockey Kent Desormeaux knew the best route to the Preakness winner’s circle with Exaggerato­r — stay inside and wait.

The rider who started his career in Maryland, guided Exaggerato­r to a 3½-length victory over Cherry Wine in Saturday’s $1.5 million Preakness, ending any chance for a Triple Crown followup after American Pharoah accomplish­ed the rare feat last year. Nyquist finished third.

Just call Pimlico Race Course home-track advantage, Desormeaux.

Stride by stride, Exaggerato­r made up ground along the rail as Nyquist and Uncle Lino dueled for the lead. Desormeaux was watching.

‘Dream trip’

“I had a dream trip,” he said. “To me, it looked like Nyquist was trying to establish an outward position, maybe in the four path. He was jockeying for position all the way down the back side. And Exaggerato­r just kind of slid up the fence to the far turn where I actually got to slow him down and say

‘whenever I’m ready.’ ” He was ready with

3⁄16ths of a mile to go, and splashed his way past Nyquist to finally beat his nemesis after four losses, including a runner-up finish in the Derby.

“It was an amazing race and Exaggerato­r is an amazing horse,” Desormeaux said.

The day began on a somber note. Two horses died and a jockey was injured in the first four races, one of the horses bred and owned by Gretchen and Roy Jackson — the owners of the ill-fated Barbaro.

Favorite falters

Nyquist was the 3-5 favorite in the 11-horse field, with Exaggerato­r the second choice at 5-2. But this day was all Exaggerato­r — no kidding.

The 3-year-old son of two-time Horse of the Year Curlin trailed by 13 lengths at one point but kept gaining ground along the rail. Desormeaux saw an opening around the final turn, angled outside and Exaggerato­r took over.

“I was actually trying to slow him down, asking him to wait,” Desormeaux said. “And he just blew up and felt like King Kong. And when I pitched him out, he did what he can do. He exploded.”

Stradivari was fourth,

followed by Lani, Laoban, Uncle Lino, Fellowship, Awesome Speed, Collected and Abiding Star.

Exaggerato­r, the 5-2 second choice, returned $7.20, $3.20 and $2.40. Cherry Wine returned $9.80 and $4.20, and Nyquist paid $2.20 to show. Winning time for the race was 1 minute, 58.31 seconds.

Nyquist broke well under Mario Gutierrez,

and he and 34-1 long shot Uncle Lino went back and forth on the lead. The duel was costly. When asked for his usual winning burst, the son of Uncle Mo just didn’t have it for the first time in his career.

“Hats off to Exaggerato­r and Team Desormeaux. What a great run,” Nyquist’s trainer Doug O’Neill said. “I didn’t think we could get beat, to be honest with you.”

Trained by Kent’s younger brother, Keith, Exaggerato­r showed his talent in the slop once again. He won the Santa Anita Derby over a sloppy track. It was the first Preakness winner for the trainer who also began his career in Maryland, and third for the Hall of Fame rider.

Last year, American Pharoah became the first Triple Crown winner in

37 years, and there were many who thought Nyquist would make it two in a row and become the 13th horse to sweep the Derby, Preakness and Belmont.

Exaggerato­r earned $900,000 for the win, improving his career bankroll to $2.97 million. The powerfully built bay colt has won five of 11 starts, with three runner-finishes. He was beaten by Nyquist twice last year — in the debut race for each last June, and then in the Breeders’ Cup Juvenile.

“I did what I could to get him happy and fresh and strong,” Keith Desormeaux said. “I’ve always said he’s had a great ability to recover and he showed it today.”

Brotherly fist pump

The Desormeaux brothers have different personalit­ies and seem to enjoy ribbing each other. There were no family hugs and no special celebratio­ns.

“I looked at him and he looked at me, and I got a fist pump,” Kent said. “That’s all we did.”

A drenched record crowd of 135,256 saw Exaggerato­r end his losing streak in a big way.

“It wasn’t like we felt we could grind him down,” Keith said. “We always felt we had an exceptiona­l talent.”

And now, it’s on to the Belmont Stakes for Exaggerato­r.

“We can’t wait to run in that race,” Keith said.

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 ?? Patrick Smith / Getty Images ?? On a track only a mudder could love, jockey Kent Desormeaux guides Exaggerato­r (5) to a 3½-length victory in the 141st running of the Preakness Stakes at Pimlico.
Patrick Smith / Getty Images On a track only a mudder could love, jockey Kent Desormeaux guides Exaggerato­r (5) to a 3½-length victory in the 141st running of the Preakness Stakes at Pimlico.
 ?? Matt Slocum / Associated Press ?? Kent Desormeaux took Exaggerato­r around Pimlico Race Course in a shade less than two minutes for a 3½-length victory over Cherry Wine.
Matt Slocum / Associated Press Kent Desormeaux took Exaggerato­r around Pimlico Race Course in a shade less than two minutes for a 3½-length victory over Cherry Wine.

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