Baltimore Sun

Two elite trainers seeking their first Derby victory

Asmussen (Epicenter), Brown (Zandon) saddle the favorites

- By Childs Walker

LOUISVILLE, Ky. — When Steve Asmussen walked out of his barn on the afternoon of May 5, 2007, he knew, just knew, that he was going to win the Kentucky Derby.

He grasped the inherent uncertaint­y around a 20-horse field, but he had that much faith in Curlin, the contender he had trained for the moment.

Asmussen was right about the tough chestnut colt; Curlin would go on to win

Horse of the Year twice and make the Hall of Fame. “But not on that day,” his trainer said, reflecting on the third-place finish that dowsed his Derby dreams.

Fifteen years later, Asmussen will exit his barn at Churchill Downs with another contender, Epicenter, who has done everything right on his way to the first Saturday in May. In that span since Curlin’s Derby,

Asmussen has won two Preakness Stakes, the Belmont Stakes and six Breeders’ Cup races. Last year, he became the winningest trainer in North American history, with his total now approachin­g 10,000. But he still has not won the first leg of the Triple Crown series, the race he began fantasizin­g about in the 1970s as the younger son in a horse-obsessed family in Laredo, Texas.

After 23 unsuccessf­ul attempts, has his time come with Epicenter?

“I’m unbelievab­ly excited, I really am,” Asmussen said. “He has done everything that you would have wanted him to do, in his training and in his races, from last fall until now. He gives you very little to talk about because we’ve been seeing this for a long time: a confident horse who’s a great physical [specimen] that’s doing well.”

The only horse with shorter odds in the morning line, Zandon, also comes from a highly accomplish­ed trainer with no Derby victory on his resume. Chad Brown won the Eclipse Award for outstandin­g trainer every year from 2016 to 2019. His dominance on turf is unparallel­ed in North America. But he has not put as much focus on preparing 3-year-olds for the Derby as Asmussen, Todd Pletcher or Bob Baffert, his peers at the highest level of the profession. Though Brown won the 2017 Preakness with Cloud Computing and finished second in the 2018 Derby with Good Magic, he sees Zandon as his best shot so far at a Derby triumph.

“It just seems like everything’s lined up the right way for this horse,” Brown said.

The battle between Epicenter and Zandon, and by extension Asmussen and Brown, will headline a Derby packed with viable contenders. We have Pletcher-trained Mo Donegal, who impressed with a furious charge in the April 9 Wood Memorial. We have White Abarrio, who did nothing but win on the Florida prep circuit for fast-rising trainer Saffie Joseph Jr. We have the speedy West Coast duo of Messier and Taiba, who came up in the barn of the suspended Baffert and are now under the care of Tim Yakteen.

Rival trainers seemed most focused on Epicenter and Zandon, however, when handicappi­ng the field. “Those are the two that, I’m going to be watching where those two are,” said Kenny McPeek, whose Smile Happy finished runner-up to Epicenter in the Feb. 19 Risen Star Stakes and runner-up to Zandon in the April 9 Blue Grass Stakes. “Especially Epicenter.”

He was asked if Epicenter might get jammed up because he’s breaking from the No. 3 post with a crowd of 17 horses to his outside. “Yeah, but he’s tactical,” McPeek said. “He laid on the inside in the Louisiana Derby. He didn’t get all wrapped up in an early speed duel, and he kicked on home. He looks great out there right now; he’s the horse to beat.”

In recent years, the Derby has favored

horses that run on or near the lead. Epicenter has won from both positions.

Zandon, meanwhile, fell well back of the pace in his last two races after running much closer to the lead in the Dec. 4 Remsen Stakes.

Brown did not feel Zandon’s third-place performanc­e in the Risen Star, where he jumped up awkwardly at the break, reflected his ability. He also did not love the colt’s trip in the Blue Grass, where Zandon fell to last before fighting his way through traffic to catch Smile Happy.

The trainer acknowledg­ed he was worried watching the opening half of that final prep race. He left it wondering how good Zandon might be with an ideal trip in the Derby.

“He just doesn’t give up,” Brown said. “When he has horses in his sight, he’s eager to go get them.”

He’s not convinced his horse is the deep closer he appeared to be in the Blue Grass, predicting Zandon, a 3-1 morning-line favorite, could run in the front half of the field early in Saturday’s Derby. “If he gets a clean break and goes on with it in the first turn, I want him in that front 10, not in the back,” Brown said.

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