The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

Triple Crown moves to Baltimore for Preakness

- By Gary B. Graves

Medina Spirit surprised even trainer Bob Baffert with his half-length victory in the Kentucky Derby. He and the colt’s connection­s now must decide whether his next stop is the Preakness on May 15.

Medina Spirit’s surprising Kentucky Derby victory gave Bob Baffert a good problem to have — figuring out where to hang another sign on his barn’s already crowded wall of glory.

As Baffert digests a record seventh Derby win that even caught him off guard, the Hall of Fame trainer and the horse’s connection­s must determine whether the dark brown colt will turn around quickly for the 146th Preakness on May 15 in Baltimore, where a collection of rested horses and revenge-minded competitor­s await.

“He came out of it well,” Baffert said Sunday morning at Churchill Downs. “It takes about a week to determine, so I’m going to come back next weekend and see. I don’t see anything that would discourage me right now.”

Similar wait-and-see decisions loomed on the backside a day after the 147th Derby returned to its traditiona­l first Saturday in May date.

Shorter than the Derby at 1 3/16 miles, the Preakness sets up well for horses that skipped Churchill Downs for the sprint at Pimlico Race Course. Not to mention a chance for redemption for competitor­s that fell short to Medina Spirit.

Trainer Doug O’Neill said third-place finisher Rock Your World would not be among them, looking instead to run the 1 1/2-mile Belmont Stakes on June 5 in New York. Todd Pletcher, whose quartet of entrants finished no higher than ninth (Known Agenda), planned to return to New York to regroup and then “think about some major decisions with those horses.”

Meanwhile, Brad Cox planned to talk with connection­s for runner-up Mandaloun and 5-2 Derby favorite Essential Quality, who finished fourth. Though disappoint­ed with falling short in his first Derby, the Louisville-born trainer was encouraged by both finishing in the top four of the 19-horse field.

After a head-scratching sixth in the Louisiana Derby, Mandaloun provided a pleasant surprise on Saturday by chasing Medina Spirit down the stretch before falling half a length short. Cox insisted Essential Quality was the Derby’s best horse and just created extra distance for himself in the turns trying to contend.

“He ran a huge race, very proud of his effort, he and Mandaloun,” Cox said. “He was fourth-best at a mile and a quarter. He lost a lot of ground around both turns.”

Asked if he wanted to run the Preakness, Cox said: “I have a desire if I feel like my horses are doing really well. I just really have to base it off of them.”

Baffert might throw another one of his pupils into the Preakness mix.

He preceded his availabili­ty with reporters by working Concert Tour, who finished third in the Arkansas Derby. A decision by owners Gary and Mary West looms for the colt with three wins.

In the meantime, Baffert basked in the afterglow of Medina Spirit’s biggest victory.

His lone Derby entrant was somewhat under the radar at 12-1 odds following consecutiv­e second-place finishes, including one against Rock Your World in the Santa Anita Derby. Medina Spirit quickly set the line behind him, covering the 1 1/4 miles in 2:01.02.

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 ?? JEFF ROBERSON — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? John Velazquez rides Medina Spirit to win the 147th running of the Kentucky Derby May 1in Louisville, Ky.
JEFF ROBERSON — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS John Velazquez rides Medina Spirit to win the 147th running of the Kentucky Derby May 1in Louisville, Ky.

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