From ‘fair’ to great
War of Will proves worth after Derby controversy
BALTIMORE — Mark Casse completed a lifelong quest two weeks after the scare of a lifetime.
Since he was a child, Casse wanted to win a Triple Crown race, and the well-respected trainer got that victory when War of Will bounced back from a bumpy ride in the Kentucky Derby to win the Preakness
on Saturday.
Casse, 58, was more relieved than anything that his prized 3-year-old colt didn’t go down in the Derby, which could’ve been a multihorse catastrophe, and could finally take a deep breath after the Preakness.
“This is even, I think, probably more special given everything that we’ve been through,” Casse said. “I’m not even calling it redemption. I didn’t feel like he got his fair shot, and that’s all I
wanted — a fair shot. And he showed what he had today.”
War of Will was unfazed starting from the inside No. 1 post for the second consecutive race, even though that contributed to his rough run at Churchill Downs. Rising star jockey Tyler Gaffalione guided the horse along the rail in the Preakness and made a move into the lead around the final curve, holding off hardcharging late addition Everfast, who was a nose ahead of Owendale for second.
All the while, Bodexpress — after ejecting Hall of Fame jockey John Velazquez — kept running around the Pimlico track and did an extra lap. An outrider tried to swoop in at the top of the stretch and corral Bodexpress, but the horse sped up and passed a few competitors near the finish line and kept going. Technically, Bodexpress gets a did-not-finish.
It was yet another bizarre scene in a Triple Crown season full of them.
Two weeks ago at the Kentucky
Derby, apparent winner Maximum Security was disqualified for interfering with War of Will, and Country House elevated to first in the only on-track disqualification in the race’s 145-year history. Casse was just thankful War of Will was healthy and decided to take his shot in the Preakness even though Maximum Security and Country House didn’t run.
It was the first Preakness run without the Kentucky Derby winner since 1996, but the 13-horse field was the largest since 2011. Go back to 1951 for the last time the Preakness was run without the top-four finishers from the Derby.
“This is the Preakness,” Casse said. “We just won the Preakness. I really don’t care who was in it.”
Bob Baffert-trained Improbable was in it as the 5-2 favorite and finished sixth. The Kentucky Derby and Preakness are the only races of Improbable’s career that he didn’t finish first or second. He finished second in the Arkansas Derby to Omaha Beach in April.
“He just got mad and reared
up,” Baffert said of Improbable’s antics in the starting gate. “After that, he was in a good spot. He just didn’t kick.”
War of Will had plenty of kick and put himself in position to become the first horse since Afleet Alex in 2005 and 19th alltime to fall short in the Derby but win the Preakness and Belmont. Winning the $1.5 million Preakness by a 11/4 lengths over Everfast, who wasn’t entered until Wednesday, was another illustration of War of Will’s mix of talent and grit.
“He’s got so much heart,” Gaffalione said. “We always knew he had the ability. We just had to get a little bit lucky, and today was our day.”
Casse had plenty of words after the contentious situation at the Kentucky Derby that spurred a lawsuit from Maximum Security owner Gary West and a 15-day suspension handed down to jockey Luis Saez. He took issue with West blaming War of Will and Gaffalione.
“I’m just very happy for Mark to get his first Classic win,” Gaffalione said. “Very happy for the horse. He deserved it more than anything.”