The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

Spa Stunner! American Pharoah loses

Keen Ice upsets Triple Crown winner, who may retire after loss

- By Richard Rosenblatt

The day after American Pharoah won the Belmont Stakes and became the first Triple Crown winner in 37 years, trainer Bob Baffert already was leery of Saratoga in the summer.

He had every reason to be and now, American Pharoah may have run his last race.

The track lived up to its reputation as the “Graveyard of Favorites” when 16-1 long shot Keen Ice held off American Pharoah by three-quarters of a length in a result that seems almost unfathomab­le. “I feel bad for the horse getting beat like that,” a disappoint­ed trainer Bob Baffert said. “You can tell he wasn’t on his ‘A’ game. Pharoah tried very hard. He didn’t have the power he usually has.

“But we saw the last threeeight­hs was just guts and glory.”

Ahmed Zayat, the outspoken owner of American Pharoah, was emotional after the loss and made strong hints this may have been his brilliant colt’s final race.

“You have to comment to yourself, OK, is the show over?” Zayat asked about 20 minutes after the

race. “Is it the time?”

Then, he said, he told his family, “My gut feeling right now, without being outspoken, is to retire. It’s to say we had a Triple Crown champion.”

American Pharoah made a clean break at the start, but was stalked, then passed, by Frosted with about a quarter-mile to go. That’s when Keen Ice and jockey Javier Castellano swept into the lead. American Pharoah fought back, but was unable to muster the extra energy he usually finds and was beaten to wire.

“He put in a brave run, but it wasn’t good enough,” Zayat said of his colt’s first loss after eight straight magnificen­t victories. “We are very accustomed to him running incredibly good.”

Only one of 12 Triple Crown winners has been able to go on and win the Travers — Whirlaway in 1941.

North Haven’s Ralph Durante and John Buckley, part owners of Keen Ice, watched from the clubhouse at Saratoga.

“Everything played out perfectly,” Durante said. “Early in the race the other frontrunne­rs made American Pharoah run hard at the beginning and that softened him up a bit. Castellano had him run closer to the leaders than he has in the past and I think that helped when he made his late move.

The Spa has been the scene of many racing upsets, including losses by two other Triple Crown winners — Gallant Fox to 100-1 shot Jim Dandy in the 1930 Travers and Secretaria­t to Onion in the 1973 Whitney Handicap. In addition, Upset handed the great Man o’ War his only loss of his 21race career in the 1919 Sanford Stakes.

“Oh my God, this is really so unbelievab­le,” Durante said. “John and I haven’t come down to the ground yet. This horse has never embarrasse­d us and he gives you 100 percent every time.”

After sweeping the Kentucky Derby, Preakness and Belmont, American Pharoah toyed with his opponents and easily won the Haskell Invitation­al on Aug. 2. But whether it’s the travel — about 19,000 miles by air and horse van, and over 10 miles of racing — or the curse of the Spa, the future of the 3-year-old colt has a different look.

“Have I pushed the envelope too much?” Zayat asked. “I really wanted it for the sport, and my doing it was absolutely — and I shouldn’t be apologetic — of any financial gain or any nonsense like that.”

Before the Travers, the plan called for American Pharoah to close out his career in the $5 million Breeders’ Cup Classic on Oct. 2 at Keeneland in Lexington, Kentucky. And then on to retirement to Coolmore’s Ashford Stud. There could even be another race before the Classic.

Keen Ice, a three-time loser to American Pharoah entering the Travers, was given a perfect trip by Castellano, who won a recordsett­ing fifth “Mid-Summer Derby.” Each time, though he got closer — seventh in the Derby, third in the Belmont and second in the Haskell.

“This was very exciting, an experience we’ll never forget,” Buckley said. “It really hasn’t sunk in yet. Coming down the home stretch I didn’t know he would pull off the win until the final two jumps before the finish line.”

Trained by Dale Romans, Keen Ice ran 1 ¼ miles in 2:01.57 and returned $34, $6.50 and $3.80. American Pharoah paid $2.40 and $2.10 as the 1-5 favorite in the 10-horse field.

“He’s OK,” American Pharoah jockey Victor Espinoza said. “Maybe just a little too much for him with the three weeks flying back and forth. He was running pretty comfortabl­e there, but not like he used to before.”

 ?? HANS PENNINK — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Keen Ice, left, with jockey Javier Castellano, moves past Triple Crown winner American Pharoah, with Victor Espinoza, to win the Travers Stakes Saturday at Saratoga Race Course in Saratoga Springs, N.Y.
HANS PENNINK — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Keen Ice, left, with jockey Javier Castellano, moves past Triple Crown winner American Pharoah, with Victor Espinoza, to win the Travers Stakes Saturday at Saratoga Race Course in Saratoga Springs, N.Y.

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