Los Angeles Times

Kentucky Derby moves to September

Run for the Roses to be held Sept. 5. No decision on Preakness and Belmont Stakes.

- By John Cherwa

The Preakness and Belmont Stakes are expected to follow suit in a late Triple Crown season.

Churchill Downs announced Tuesday that horse racing’s most celebrated event, the Kentucky Derby will be held Sept. 5, the Saturday before Labor Day. But neither the Preakness in Baltimore nor the Belmont Stakes in New York have followed suit, leaving the status of the Triple Crown in flux as the country deals with the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Bill Carstanjen, chief executive of Churchill Downs, in announcing the postponeme­nt, indicated that details were being discussed to allow the other two races to be run in their traditiona­l order and timetable after the Kentucky

Derby.

“For the second time in the 145-year history of the event, the first time being at the end of World War II, we will move the date of the Kentucky Derby,” Carstanjen said. “We sincerely regret any inconvenie­nce this creates for our outstandin­g fans, who I’m sure will understand that there is no doubt that this must be done.”

If the details can be worked out, the Preakness would be held Sept. 19 at Pimlico and the Belmont on Oct. 10 at Belmont Park. All the changes would be subject to approval of the states’ regulatory agencies, which would be likely.

The Kentucky Horse Racing Commission is expected to give its approval Thursday.

“As the coronaviru­s pandemic continues to upend American life, decisions about large-scale public events must prioritize public health and safety above all else,” Dave O’Rourke, chief executive of the New York Racing Assn., said in a statement without naming a date of the Belmont. “NYRA will deliver an announceme­nt only when that process has concluded to the satisfacti­on of state and local health department­s. The Belmont Stakes is a New York institutio­n with widereachi­ng economic impact. We look forward to its 152nd edition in 2020.”

The Preakness is scheduled for May 16 and the Belmont on June 6. The Kentucky Derby was scheduled for May 2.

“We worked closely with Churchill Downs on this scheduling,” NBC said in a statement. “While we appreciate the traditiona­l sequencing of the Triple Crown races, these are uncharted waters. We will work with our partners who run the Preakness Stakes and the Belmont Stakes to determine the most appropriat­e timing.”

More races will be added to the schedule for 3-yearolds to build points leading up to the Kentucky Derby. Those races have not been announced.

Santa Anita and Del Mar do not have a strong stakes program for 3-year-olds after the Santa Anita Derby on April 4. So, it is expected that any additional Kentucky Derby points races would be held in the East. The Travers Stakes was scheduled for Aug. 29 at Saratoga, so that race will either be moved or made irrelevant.

The Breeders’ Cup, this year in Keeneland in Kentucky, will be held four weeks after the proposed new date for the Belmont, on Nov. 6-7.

The move also puts racing at the start of college football season, should it go on as scheduled.

 ?? Andy Lyons Getty Images ?? THE RUN for the Roses at Churchill Downs has been pushed back from the first Saturday in May.
Andy Lyons Getty Images THE RUN for the Roses at Churchill Downs has been pushed back from the first Saturday in May.
 ?? Andy Lyons Getty Images ?? CHURCHILL DOWNS was forced to postpone its marquee event, the Kentucky Derby, until September.
Andy Lyons Getty Images CHURCHILL DOWNS was forced to postpone its marquee event, the Kentucky Derby, until September.

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