Orlando Sentinel

Kentucky Derbywinne­r

Always Dreaming looks to capture the Preakness today.

- By Childs Walker

BALTIMORE — In the months before this year’s Kentucky Derby, jockey John Velazquez told his agent, Angel Cordero Jr., he might ride two more years and call an end to his Hall of Fame career.

Only one thing nagged at the man known around the thorwhen racing world as Johnny V.

“I would feel terrible if I retired and never won a Derby for Todd,” he told Cordero.

Todd is Todd Pletcher, the trainer whose own brilliant career has been inextricab­ly linked to Velazquez. The pair has won more than 1,600 races together in a working bond that hearkens back to the days each major American stable seemed to have a house rider.

“It’s very rare to have the same relationsh­ip that spans 20 years or 25 years,” said Hall of Fame jockey and NBC analyst Jerry Bailey. “Because trainers and jockeys go hot and cold. They both have to make livings independen­t of each other and when one goes cold, the rule is they’ll usually drift to somebody else. But both of these guys have been tremendous­ly successful all along the way, feeding off each other.”

For all their success together, however, Pletcher and Veoughbred

lazquez had never teamed up to win the Derby. Each had won the race once, Pletcher putting Calvin Borel aboard Super Saver in 2010 and Velazquez riding Animal Kingdom for Graham Motion the next year. But their disconnect in Derby timing seemed almost cruel.

At least until May 6, when Velazquez guided Always Dreaming on a perfect trip over the slop at Churchill Downs.

Now, the most enduring trainer-jockey duo in the sport will try to capture the Preakness, a race neither man has won. If Always Dreaming leaps that hurdle, Pletcher and Velazquez will head home to New York for their first shot at a Triple Crown.

Pletcher credits Velazquez as one of the foundation­al elements in his rapid rise to the top of the training world.

“As our stable grew, our relationsh­ip grew at the same time,” he said. “We were winning races together, and it was working out so well that I didn’t need to reach out to many other jockeys. For a trainer, when your operation grows and you don’t have to worry about who’s going to ride this one and who’s going to ride that one, if you have a go-to guy who’s going to ride most of them, it makes my job easier. Especially when it’s someone as talented as Johnny.”

The reverse equation is equally true, Cordero said. Velazquez, one of the kindest people in racing by all accounts, might not have soared to a Hall of Fame career if Pletcher had not put him on so many gifted horses.

“It’s been the major thing behind Johnny’s big success,” said Cordero, a Hall of Fame jockey in his own right.

Velazquez had won 1,621 races for Pletcher going into Friday, more than one-third of the trainer’s career total and more than one-fourth of the jockey’s. If you only count the $137,966,765 they’ve won together, the sum would make Pletcher eighth in history in career earnings.

“It’s a long time for him to still trust in me and give me the opportunit­y,” Velazquez said. “It’s not very often it happens in this business.”

Pletcher’s old boss, D. Wayne Lukas, marvels at the bond between his former assistant and Velazquez. Lukas had his favorite jockeys, including Cordero, but never a house rider.

“I always tell the agents we’re going to date but not get married,” he joked.

Lukas called PletcherVe­lazquez “a unique relationsh­ip and a great one.” He’d have liked to put Velazquez on more of his own horses.

“The problem with Johnny and me is I loved Johnny’s riding, I love him as a person. He’s a class act,” Lukas said. “But Todd’s stable and my stable clashed all the time. So every time I looked up and wanted Johnny, Todd had one in there so I’d get bounced.”

Velazquez, 45, went to jockey school in his native Puerto Rico and was building his career there when Cordero, the greatest of all Puerto Rican riders, heard about him from an agent friend.

Cordero was skeptical about the teenager, who did not speak English and did not come from a family of riders. His friend sent film of the sweet-natured kid.

“To be honest, I wasn’t impressed at all,” Cordero recalled.

But Dick Allen, the baseball star and avid racing lover, happened to stop by his house while he was watching Velazquez.

“You know, brother, he reminds me of you,” Allen told Cordero.

So Velazquez moved to New York and bunked on Cordero’s couch while Allen helped him get his career going. He learned English watching “The Little Mermaid” with Cordero’s daughter.

Cordero urged his wife, who trained horses, to give the young Velazquez a mount. He won his first race for her.

The next time she ran an intriguing horse, she said, “I think I’m going to put Johnny on him.”

“What about me?” said Cordero, who was still riding at the time.

The next great Puerto Rican jockey was on his way.

Velazquez said the relationsh­ip has endured because Pletcher is both brutally honest and graceful in defeat.

“He’s not a guy who’s going to come screaming at you when you don’t win a race,” Cordero said. “He doesn’t hold grudges, and he doesn’t have a single mean thing about him.”

If Pletcher doesn’t believe his horse can win a given race, he’ll sometimes tell Velazquez to switch to a more promising mount for another trainer.

They like and trust each other that much.

 ?? ROB CARR/GETTY IMAGES ?? Kentucky Derby winner Always Dreaming trains at Pimlico Race Course for today’s Preakness Stakes with exercise rider Nick Bush.
ROB CARR/GETTY IMAGES Kentucky Derby winner Always Dreaming trains at Pimlico Race Course for today’s Preakness Stakes with exercise rider Nick Bush.
 ?? JAMIE SQUIRE/GETTY IMAGES ?? Trainer Todd Pletcher hoists the trophy after Always Dreaming won the Kentucky Derby.
JAMIE SQUIRE/GETTY IMAGES Trainer Todd Pletcher hoists the trophy after Always Dreaming won the Kentucky Derby.

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