Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

‘Bird’ rides rail to lore

(MAY 2, 2009)

- This published after Mine That Bird, ridden by Calvin Borel, stunned the field by capturing the Kentucky Derby with a dynamic stretch run through the mud at Churchill Downs. The win gave the 50-1 longshot one of the biggest upsets in the 135-year history

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OUISVILLE, Ky. — The 50-1 shot showed up at Churchill Downs in a trailer hitched to his trainer’s Ford pickup, after a 21-hour drive from a little racetrack in New Mexico.

In his last race at that same hardscrabb­le track, Mine That Bird came in fourth.

That’s all part of Kentucky Derby lore now, after jockey Calvin Borel, famous for his rides along the rail at Churchill, pulled it off again, winning the Run for the Roses for the second time in three years.

As Mine That Bird shot through a hole and bolted to the lead before the final furlong, few in the crowd of 153,563 even knew which horse it was. The second longest shot to win in Derby history paid $103.20 for a $2 win bet.

But leaving his odds and his tale behind, Mine That Bird decimated the 135th Derby field. He won by 63⁄4 lengths over Pioneerof of the Nile, traveling the 11⁄4-mile course in 2 minutes 2.66 seconds.

Friesan Fire left the gate as the 7-2 favorite but hurt himself right out of that gate. He got as close as sixth but faded to 18th in the 19-horse field. That field was one short after morning-line favorite I Want Revenge scratched.

Borel, who won the 2007 Derby by riding Street Sense up the rail, said Mine That Bird, a gelding, is so small, the horse just skipped along the sloppy track, and his size helped him squeeze through the holes he had to get through.

After being bumped out of the gate, Borel took Mine That Bird to the back of the 19-horse field, taking him to his favorite spot, the place that gave him his nickname, Bo-Rail.

Once at the rail, the horse only left it once, to pass Atomic Rain.

It was a terrific scene in the winner’s circle, full of cowboy hats and string ties, plus an exultant Borel, and nobody exults like Borel. Mine That Bird’s trainer, Chip

Woolley, a former bareback rodeo rider, was there on crutches. “I just laid a motorcycle down and broke a leg,” he said.

This wasn’t even the best horse Borel rode in the last 24 hours. The day before, he was on Rachel Alexandra, a fantastic filly who won the Kentucky Oaks by 201⁄4 lengths. Borel had said the filly was better than Street Sense and nobody doubts it.

Mine That Bird actually has a pedigree. He’s a son of Birdstone, who famously came from behind in the 2004 Belmont Stakes to deny Smarty Jones the Triple Crown. Mine That Bird’s grandsire, Grindstone, won the 1996 Derby.

He didn’t come cheap. His owners bought him for $400,000.

Despite his fourth-place finish in the unheralded Sunland Derby in his last start on March 29, Mine That Bird gained most of his graded-stakes earnings by winning the Grade III Grey Stakes at Woodbine outside Toronto last October. His first five races were at Woodbine, and he was named Canada’s champion 2-year-old.

 ?? DARRON CUMMINGS/AP ?? Calvin Borel reacts after riding Mine That Bird to win the 135th Kentucky Derby as a 50-to-1 longshot at Churchill Downs in Louisville, Ky., on May 2, 2009.
DARRON CUMMINGS/AP Calvin Borel reacts after riding Mine That Bird to win the 135th Kentucky Derby as a 50-to-1 longshot at Churchill Downs in Louisville, Ky., on May 2, 2009.

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