New York Post

Pharoah remains Baffert’s ‘first love’

- By GREG JOYCE

Bob Baffert called American Pharoah his “first love,” but the Hall of Fame trainer was brought to tears again Saturday by his latest pride and joy.

Justify dashed into history by winning the 150th Belmont Stakes, joining American Pharoah in the laurels of Triple Crown winners. Both were trained by Baffert — just the second man in history to train two horses that captured the sport’s pinnacle — and the comparison­s immediatel­y began.

“They’re two different types,” Baffert said diplomatic­ally, shortly after his latest win. “It’s like comparing your kids, which one is faster.”

Baffert called the unbeaten Justify “one of the all-time great horses,” and after experienci­ng his share of heartbreak­s at Belmont, he didn’t have to pick between the two that won it all. History will for- ever link them as equals.

“I don’t have to really compare them because if they make this wall, that’s all you need to say,” Baffert said in a packed film room beneath the track, pointing to the walls where pictures of legends such as Secretaria­t, Seattle Slew and Affirmed were hanging.

Justify’s jockey Mike Smith had no doubt who was better.

“I think he’s the greatest of all time. I just won the Triple Crown, man, he’s my champion,” Smith said of Justify while beaming — but at least Baffert was breathing a little easier the second time around.

“With American Pharoah, it just looked like it wasn’t going to happen,” Baffert said of the horse that broke the 37-year Triple Crown drought in 2015. “I just felt more pressure because I felt — look, the Lord has given me another crack at it. … When he finally did it, I was like everybody else, I was just in awe of it.”

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