Houston Chronicle

Yet another change made ahead of this year’s race

- By Beth Harris

LOUISVILLE, Ky. — Change is slow in coming to the Kentucky Derby. From being run on the first Saturday in May to the playing of “My Old Kentucky Home” since 1921, tradition rules America’s most famous race.

Custom is getting a swift kick in 2020.

The coronaviru­s pandemic forced the 146th Derby to be pushed back to Labor Day weekend, the first time since 1945 that it won’t be held on its usual May date.

The 17-horse field will break from a new starting gate on Saturday, one to be used only for the Derby. It fits 20 horses, the typical size of the field, which is slightly smaller this year.

Derby horses have previously been loaded into two gates — a main gate for the first 14 runners and an auxiliary gate for the rest. Churchill Downs began using starting gates in 1930; the first electronic­ally operated 14-stall gate was introduced in 1941. The track has used the auxiliary gate for the past 22 years.

“In the horse world, anything new no one wants to try,” said starter Scott Jordan, who presses the button that springs the gate simultaneo­usly in the Derby. “They don’t like change.”

Most American racetracks use 14-horse gates because there’s rarely more than that in a given race. Overseas, it’s common to have fields of 20 or more.

The new Derby gate, designed by an Australian company, was modified slightly to make room for an assistant starter in the gate with a horse after loading.

The partitions between the horses are narrower in the new gate, which puts the horses standing closer together.

Tiz the Law, the early 3-5 Derby favorite, and 5-1 second choice Honor A. P. have stood in the new gate this week to familiariz­e themselves with it. Other Derby runners will visit the gate before Saturday.

Perhaps the biggest change with the new gate is that horses in the No. 1 and No. 20 posts would move in about 10-15 feet on each end, Jordan said.

The Derby field was reduced to 17 after King Guillermo

was scratched Thursday because of a fever. As a result, posts No. 1, 2 and 20 will be vacant. However, the horses still keep their same post position numbers.

Finnick the Fierce drew the No. 1 post, but will move in two spots. The chestnut gelding is missing his right eye, the result of a congenital cataract, so he won’t see the rest of the field on his right.

Authentic drew the No. 20 post, but he’ll move in one spot, giving him less ground to make up as the field sprints away from the gate.

 ?? Michael Clevenger / Associated Press ?? The new starting gate will allow 20 horses to be loaded for the Kentucky Derby, which is Saturday.
Michael Clevenger / Associated Press The new starting gate will allow 20 horses to be loaded for the Kentucky Derby, which is Saturday.

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