Sentinel & Enterprise

Early Voting holds off Epicenter to win Preakness Stakes

- By Stephen Whyno

Early Voting held off hard- charging favorite Epicenter to win the Preakness Stakes on Saturday, validating the decision to skip the Kentucky Derby and aim for the second leg of the Triple Crown.

Early Voting stalked behind the leaders for much of the race before moving into the lead around the final turn. He finished 1 ¼ lengths ahead of Epicenter, who was second just like in the Derby.

“I was never worried,” Early Voting trainer Chad Brown said. “Once we had a good target, I actually preferred that. We were fine to go to the lead, but I thought down the back side it was going to take a good horse to beat us. And a good horse did run up on us near the wire and it was about the only one that could run with us.”

The Preakness was run without Kentucky Derby winner Rich Strike after his owner prioritize­d extra rest over the chance at winning the Triple Crown. Early Voting could have run in the Derby, but Brown, and owner Seth Klarman of Klaravich Stables, opted for some extra rest, too.

“That’s very hard to get an owner to pass on the Derby, and they did the right choice,” said jockey Jose Ortiz, who won the Preakness for the first time. “The horse, I don’t think he was seasoned enough to run in a 20-horse field and they proved that they were right today.”

Early Voting, who went off at 5-1, gave Brown his second Preakness victory. Cloud Computing, the champion in 2017, is also owned by Klaravich Stables.

“Cloud Computing was a once in a lifetime and now I have a twice in a lifetime,” said Klarman, who grew up three blocks from Pimlico Race Course and was celebratin­g his 65th birthday. “Really hard to believe it could’ve happened.”

Early Voting won the race in 1:54.54 and paid $13.40, $4.60 and $3.60. Epicenter paid $2.80 and $2.40, and Creative Minister was third and paid $4.20.

“Disappoint­ed,” Epicenter trainer Steve Asmussen said.

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