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Justify in line for Triple Crown

Preakness success helps Baffert equal 19th century record

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Kentucky Derby winner Justify battled to a gritty victory in the 143rd Preakness Stakes on Saturday to keep the dream of a 13th Triple Crown winner alive.

Pressed early by Derby runner-up Good Magic at fogshroude­d Pimlico, the Bob Baffert-trained Justify, ridden by Mike Smith, surged in the stretch to triumph by half a length over the late-charging Bravazo. Tenfold was third as Good Magic faded to fourth.

“Oh man, it was a nail-biter,” said Baffert, whose seventh Preakness victory saw him tie 19th-century horseman R. Wyndham Walden for the all-time record.

Baffert also matched D. Wayne Lukas’s record of 14 victories in the three Triple Crown races — the Kentucky Derby, Preakness and Belmont Stakes. It was Baffert who saddled American Pharoah in 2015 when the three-year-old became the first horse in 37 years to complete the coveted treble.

“We’re going to make sure that he comes out of the race well and he trains well,” Baffert said of likely plans to point Justify at the June 9 Belmont — the 1 1/2-mile race dubbed The Test of the Champion.

Between Affirmed’s Triple Crown sweep in 1978 and American Pharoah’s in 2015, 13 horses won both the Kentucky Derby and Preakness but were disappoint­ed in the Belmont.

Justify, unraced as a twoyear-old, won for the fifth time in five races — all since February. And Baffert said Saturday’s race was his toughest challenge yet.

“It was a hard race today on him — probably the hardest race he’s had,” Baffert said. “But, you know, he’s getting fit. He’s just a wonderful, beautiful horse.”

Justify broke cleanly from the seventh post and quickly moved to the front on a Pimlico track rated sloppy after days of rain in Baltimore.

But Good Magic, trained by Chad Brown and ridden by Jose Ortiz, was right there, briefly taking the lead on the back stretch as they separated themselves from the rest of the field and making Justify work hard for the lead as they turned into the final straight.

“They put it to us,” Baffert said. “I wasn’t liking it down the backside,” he admitted.

“I was like, well, he’s not running there and they’re going to take their big swing. But luckily, this is what makes horse racing so great.”

Rigorous test

No sooner had Justify fought off Good Magic than Bravazo, a 15-1 shot trained by Lukas and ridden by Luis Saez, was challengin­g, along with Tenfold, a 25-1 shot trained by Steve Asmussen and ridden by Ricardo Santana Jr.

Justify, sent off a 2-5 favourite, held on, completing the 1 3/16 miles in 1:55.93 as a crowd of 134,487 erupted.

“A very good horse won the race, a very good horse,” Lukas said. “We ran at him. We kept him honest ... we’ll see what happens in the next one.”

Smith called it a “dream come true,” acknowledg­ing his mount “got a little tired”.

Baffert said the fighting finish showed Justify’s true mettle. “These great horses, they just define themselves when they get in that situation, and today, he just showed not only is he a big, beautiful, gorgeous horse, but he is all race horse,” Baffert said. “And that’s what it took to win today.”

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 ?? AFP ?? Justify, ridden by Mike Smith, leads the field into the first turn during the 143rd running of the Preakness Stakes at Pimlico Race Course in Baltimore, Maryland, on Saturday.
AFP Justify, ridden by Mike Smith, leads the field into the first turn during the 143rd running of the Preakness Stakes at Pimlico Race Course in Baltimore, Maryland, on Saturday.

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