New York Post

Good Magic may help Derby breakthrou­gh

- By GARY B. GRAVES

LOUISVILLE, Ky. — Chad Brown acknowledg­es he has lacked either the right horse or the right luck to win the Kentucky Derby. Until now. Brown almost gushes when talking about Good Magic, which might position him to finally break through in Saturday’s 144th Run For The Roses at Churchill Downs. If the chestnut colt’s name alone doesn’t suggest a positive vibe, then consider his résumé that includes last year’s Breeders’ Cup Juvenile and the Eclipse Award as the top 2-year-old male.

Good Magic is hitting stride at the right time entering horse racing’s marquee event, standing second in Derby points with 134 after claiming the Grade 2 Blue Grass at Keeneland on April 7. Five career starts have yielded two wins, two seconds and a third for Good Magic, allowing Brown to envision winning horse racing’s crown jewel after falling short four previous times.

Brown would like to remove himself from conversati­ons about which up-and-coming trainer is due to break through.

“We have to think that with all the opportunit­ies that keep coming our way, we have a good shot of doing this,” said Brown, 39. “Whether that happens or not remains to be seen.

“I’ll say this: For me this is our best chance. Seems that way, anyway.”

Brown earned his first Triple Crown series victory in last year’s Preakness with Cloud Computing before Breeders’ Cup wins with Good Magic and filly Rushing Fall helped claim his second consecutiv­e Eclipse award as top trainer. His success has stoked a belief that beating 19 other horses over 1 ¹ /4 mile is just a matter of time and opportunit­y.

Having a special horse is most important, and Brown’s bright outlook speaks volumes after previous entries have finished out of the money on racing’s biggest stage.

Practical Joke was fifth last May. Normandy Invasion led after a mile and in the stretch in 2013 before fading at the end and finishing fourth, leaving the trainer to ponder some what-ifs with his strategy.

“I think sometimes about our first try, some things I could’ve done a little bit differentl­y in the race and maybe got a little bit more out of him,” said Brown, from upstate Mechanicvi­lle, near Saratoga Springs.

Two other entries were forgettabl­e. Shagaf didn’t even finish in 2016, a day in which Brown’s other pupil, My Man Sam, was 11th.

Jockey Jose Ortiz, who won last year’s Belmont Stakes on the way to earning the Eclipse as top rider, will make his fifth consecutiv­e start atop Good Magic.

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