National Post

This year’s Kentucky Derby field is the fastest and deepest in years.

Could be event’s deepest since golden 1980s

- Andrew Beyer Beyer, who has been The Washington Post’s horse racing columnist since 1978, has written four books on racing, including “Picking Winners,” which introduced and explained the Beyer Speed Figures rating system.

Racing fans annually lament the low quality of the horses in the Kentucky Derby, and often their assessment proves to be correct. But few such opinions are being voiced before Saturday’s running of America’s greatest horse race. This is the strongest, deepest, fastest Derby field since at least 2007 (the year of Street Sense and Curlin), and it could conceivabl­y be the best since the great years of the 1980s.

The favourite, American Pharoah, is the defending 2-year-old champion and the winner of four straight races by a combined total of 22 lengths. Two of his rivals are undefeated: Dortmund (6 for 6) and Materialit­y (3 for 3.) Carpe Diem has won 4 of 5 and finished second in the Breeders’ Cup Juvenile. The speed figures earned by most of the top contenders confirm the quality of the field; eight starters have recorded tripledigi­t Beyer Speed Figures, and Materialit­y recorded the number in any Derby prep race since 2006.

Neverthele­ss, handicappe­rs should examine the horses in the 141st Derby just as they do in an ordinary race: with a healthy measure of skepticism. Bettors should always look for vulnerabil­ity in favourites (as well as hidden merit in long shots.) And the skepticism should begin with American Pharoah.

Yes, he has crushed his competitio­n. He won his last start, the Arkansas Derby, by eight lengths, while his jockey was applying a hammerlock. (Steve Haskin wrote in the Blood-Horse that he could have won by 15 if Victor Espinoza had let him run.) Fans and horsemen have started using the “superhorse” word. A clocker at Churchill Downs, after observing the colt’s last workout, said this might be the best racehorse he’s seen in 35 years.

Whoa! In his three victories on dirt, American Pharoah has had a perfect setup each time. Twice he took the lead against fields devoid of significan­t speed and set an easy pace. In the Arkansas Derby, he sat second behind a 38-to1 speedster and shot past him when the front-runner tired. This was the only time in his career American Pharoah has passed another horse.

He can certainly win the Derby, but he doesn’t deserve to be a short-priced favourite in a field of 20 where he’ll have to cope with other high-quality speed horses for the first time.

While I have doubts about American Pharoah, I strongly dislike the chances of three other well-regarded Derby contenders. ❚Carpe Diem has had a lofty reputation ever since he was sold at auction for $1.6 million, but all three of his stakes victories have come at the expense of weak fields. He’s never run fast enough to suggest that can finish in the money Saturday. ❚Materialit­y, a stablemate of Carpe Diem, delivered a stunning performanc­e to win the Florida Derby with a Beyer Speed Figure of 110. But the history of the Kentucky Derby suggests that he doesn’ t enough seasoning to win such a demanding race. He never ran as a 2-year-old, and he has made only three starts at 3. Trainer Todd Pletcher’s horses rarely deliver a peak effort in the Kentucky Derby, accounting for his 1-for-40 record. ❚Mubtaahij excited many bettors who watched his eightlengt­h runaway in the $2 million United Emirates Derby and he attracted considerab­le support in future wagering on the Kentucky Derby. But his winning time was slow, and horses coming from Dubai have had no success on the first Saturday in May.

In addition to American Pharoah, two colts in the field have never done anything wrong and come into the Derby well prepared. Dortmund and Upstart both offer significan­tly better value than the favourite.

Trainer Bob Baffert talks about American Pharoah in more glowing terms than his stablemate Dortmund, but the latter has proved himself under fire while the favourite has not. In two of his races, Dortmund was engaged in tough, head-and-head stretch duels with a formidable foe, Firing Line, and prevailed both times. The merit of these efforts was confirmed when Firing Line subsequent­ly won the Sunland Derby by 14 lengths.

Although Upstart has won just three of his seven starts, he has run well in every one of them. Once he was disqualifi­ed from a victory. In the Breeders’ Cup Juvenile he had a tough trip (wide, contesting a hot pace) before finishing a commendabl­e third. Twice in Grade I stakes he’s finished a close second behind a winner who delivered a monster performanc­e. That is what happened in the Florida Derby when Materialit­y beat him, fair and square, by 1½ lengths. Upstart finished a dozen lengths ahead of the rest of the field, but the loss caused his Derby stock to drop. However, he is much more likely to fire his best shot at Churchill Downs than the lightly raced Materialit­y. Upstart’s speed figure of 108 in the Florida Derby and his 105 in the Holy Bull Stakes indicate that he is as least as good as American Pharoah and Dortmund.

 ?? Garry Jones/ TheAssocia­ted Pres ?? Kentucky Derby hopeful Upstart, ridden by exercise rider Vicki King, has won just three of his seven starts but has run well in each of them, Andrew Beyer writes.
Garry Jones/ TheAssocia­ted Pres Kentucky Derby hopeful Upstart, ridden by exercise rider Vicki King, has won just three of his seven starts but has run well in each of them, Andrew Beyer writes.

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