New York Post

Lukas savors his protégé’s awesome run

- By DAVID GINSBURG

BALTIMORE — There once was a time when Hall of Fame trainer D. Wayne Lukas would feel awful about not having a horse in the Preakness.

Standing outside the stakes barn at Pimlico on Thursday, his signature cowboy hat planted squarely on his head, the six-time Preakness winner seemed genuinely comfortabl­e with the situation.

“I’d be awful selfish if I was kicking the dirt and saying, ‘Damn, I don’t have one,’ as good as this place has been to me,” Lukas said.

Though he doesn’t have a horse in the race, he does have a friend in it: former assistant Todd Pletcher, who will saddle Kentucky Derby winner and Triple Crown hopeful Always Dreaming on Saturday evening.

“I can relish that and enjoy that, too,” Lukas said.

That’s what happened at Churchill Downs, when Lukas had no entrant but was overcome with joy watching Always Dreaming approach the finish line.

“I went crazy when they were at the five- eighths pole,” Lukas said. “I was banging and tipping over chairs. My wife said, ‘I’ve never seen you that excited,’ and I said, ‘That’s our guy.’ ”

Pletcher worked under Lukas for well over half a decade before going out on his own in the winter of 1995.

“We had the strongest stable in the world, probably, and to leave a secure assistant job was a tough decision to make — and an intimidati­ng one,” Pletcher said. “I didn’t really know what to expect. I was just hoping to accumulate enough horses to get going and establish a reputation.”

As it turned out, Lukas and Pletcher are as successful individual­ly as they were as a team.

Lukas, 81, has won 14 Triple Crown races and owns 20 victories in the Breeder’s Cup. Pletcher has captured the Eclipse Award seven times as Trainer of the Year, won the Kentucky Derby twice and made millions of dollars.

“He’s created his own legacy and made some changes that he thought were right,” Lukas said. “I see a lot of our organizati­on in the way he runs his barn. It’s pretty obvious he had that discipline.”

Lukas knows his hard-working, success-driven protégé was bound to do well regardless of his schooling.

“I don’t want to take a lot of credit for his career, frankly,” Lukas insisted. “I think he’s his own person and he was going to be good if he never met me. And he probably helped me as much as I helped him.” Pletcher isn’t so sure. “If you work for someone for seven years, you certainly learn a lot of things from him,” the 49year-old said. “I always thought one of his many strengths was when he got a horse in form, his ability to maintain them in form for a long time.” —

 ?? AP ?? THE STUDENT AND THE TEACHER: Trainer Todd Pletcher (left), with his mentor, D. Wayne Lukas, will send out Kentucky Derby winner Always Dreaming in the Preakness Stakes on Saturday.
AP THE STUDENT AND THE TEACHER: Trainer Todd Pletcher (left), with his mentor, D. Wayne Lukas, will send out Kentucky Derby winner Always Dreaming in the Preakness Stakes on Saturday.

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