Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Triple Crown dreams

Justify could make history, but will the world care as much as it did in 2015?

- Alan Foreman, Maryland Thoroughbr­ed Horsemen’s Associatio­n By Childs Walker The Baltimore Sun

It had been four years since the big red horse burned his way into the memories of American sports fans, his image becoming more indelible with each stride by which he pulled away in the 1973 Belmont Stakes.

As Seattle Slew approached his own Triple Crown destiny, there was no way for the ornery, greasy-fast colt to supplant or surpass Secretaria­t in the hearts of racing fans.

But as trainer Billy Turner remembers it, he didn’t have to. The contrast alone boosted Slew’s stature. This new champion — dark-coated and undefeated — was not more famous than Secretaria­t, but he was more famous because of Secretaria­t.

“Slew benefited from Secretaria­t bringing back the Triple Crown as a major sporting event,” the 78-year-old Turner said. “It created a fan base you wouldn’t believe. You had the defenders of Secretaria­t and the fans of Seattle Slew, and they were avid fans.”

More than four decades later, another undefeated colt has arrived at Belmont Park facing comparison­s to a recent, beloved Triple Crown winner.

Can Justify build on American Pharoah’s 2015 run, when he became the first horse since 1978 to win the Kentucky Derby, Preakness and Belmont?

Turner, for one, isn’t sure. And his skepticism has little to do with Justify’s talent or his chances of becoming the 13th Triple Crown winner this evening.

“I don’t think we’re dealing with quite the same

“I’m not sure why. But there’s just not the same sizzle.”

situation,” he said glumly. “The media and press coverage isn’t quite the same, so you don’t get the world crowding in the way it did with Slew and Secretaria­t back in the day.”

Turner hardly stands alone in perceiving diminished interest for Justify’s quest.

“It’s clearly not as big a story as Pharoah was,” said Alan Foreman, general counsel for the Maryland Thoroughbr­ed Horsemen’s Associatio­n and an industry veteran. “I’m not sure why. It’s clear there’s an appetite for these big event days, and he’s a super horse. But there’s just not the same sizzle.”

This lack of buzz is hard to pin down. But this week alone, Justify’s Triple Crown bid has generated fewer SportsCent­er segments or Twitter debates than the NBA Finals or the NFL’s ongoing national anthem mess.

Without the hook of a 37-year drought, he’s treated as just another excellent horse in a sport that has faded with casual sports fans.

It’s not as if Justify lacks distinguis­hing elements. He has a chance to become just the second undefeated Triple Crown winner, after Seattle Slew. And he’s packed all of those wins into four months after he began his career later than most of his 3-year-old classmates.

He’s a chestnut like Secretaria­t and a mountain of muscle, the LeBron James to American Pharoah’s Michael Jordan.

He shares a superstar trainer, Bob Baffert, with the last Triple Crown winner. His jockey, Mike Smith, is one of the most-liked people in the sport and seeking a career capstone at age 52.

As for the feat itself, no one says winning three pressure-packed races in five weeks has gotten any easier.

“Maybe for some people, it’s been there, done that,” said NBC racing analyst Randy Moss. “But it’s still a historical­ly tough task. For the most part, I think even the casual fan recognizes how difficult it is.”

Baffert said Justify is starting to build the kind of following that made American Pharoah’s 2015 season so important for the sport. Over the last few weeks, people have approached in the airport to wish him well at Belmont and to rave about Justify’s beauty.

The two champions are different, Baffert said, not so much in talent as in personalit­y. American Pharoah had unusual patience for the gawkers who wanted to get close to him. Justify tolerates such interactio­ns for “about four seconds and that’s it.”

But he’s confident that if the Derby and Preakness champion handles his business on the track, proper acclaim will follow.

“[As a sports fan] you want to see the Golden State Warriors, you want to see Steph Curry ... you want to see the superstars,” Baffert said, drawing one of the topical comparison­s he loves.

There’s some evidence to back his words. Television ratings for the Preakness were up from 2017, albeit down from American Pharoah’s victory in 2015. Online ticket brokers such as Vivid Seats report that prices have spiked 145 percent for reserved seats at the Belmont, more significan­t than the 132 percent increase in 2015.

New York racing officials cap Belmont attendance at 90,000, so they anticipate a sellout.

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