San Antonio Express-News

No Baffert biggest storyline

- By John Cherwa

Much to the chagrin of Churchill Downs, one of the major topics of discussion before Saturday’s running of the 148th Kentucky Derby is not who is in Louisville, but the one person who is not.

All that could change once the gates open and up to 20 horses start their 1¼mile journey in the world’s most famous horse race.

Then again, if one of two horses previously trained by Bob Baffert wins the race, then his seeming vice grip on the conversati­on in horse racing will once again be evident, even in absentia. There’s certainly a chance that could happen.

Tim Yakteen, a former Baffert assistant, has taken over the training of Taiba and Messier, who finished first and second in the Santa Anita Derby.

“I use the analogy that I’ve had a lottery ticket dropped in my lap and I’m trying to go to the window and cash it,” Yakteen said.

The road to the Kentucky Derby is a long slog beginning last September with 48 races that are worth qualifying points. Yet that is mostly marketing with low points races that really don’t matter. The Derby trail starts in earnest in early March with races worth 50 points to the winner and early April with races worth 100 points to the winner and 40 points for second. The current cutoff for making the field is 30 points.

This year’s field is considered among the more competitiv­e, leaving handicappe­rs trying to figure out which strategies will work to find the winner. Among the things to consider are these five storylines that will come up this Derby week:

Why exactly isn’t Baffert here?

Picking the winner of three of the last four Kentucky Derby races has been easy: Bet the Baffert horse.

He won in the first September Derby two years ago with Authentic and then again last year with Medina Spirit. But his win last year was overturned by the Kentucky Horse Racing Commission some nine months after the race when the horse tested positive for a legal anti-inflammato­ry banned on race day. The case is on appeal and likely will spend a couple years in litigation.

As a result, the Kentucky Horse Racing Commission suspended Baffert for 90 days, which is honored by every racing jurisdicti­on in the country. The suspension ends July 2 after the Triple Crown races.

It’s almost routine that when a case is on appeal the suspension gets stayed, but in this case regulators and Kentucky courts ruled otherwise. However, even if he had been issued a stay, Churchill Downs has suspended Baffert for two years and made him ineligible to acquire Kentucky Derby qualifying points. That, too, is headed to litigation.

All of which means, through Taiba and Messier, betting Baffert is still a strategy, at least in spirit.

Who will be favored in the race?

All things being equal, the favorite likely will be Epicenter, who has won four of his last five and most recently won the Louisiana Derby by 2½ lengths.

He likes to go to the lead, but in the Louisiana Derby they rated him just off the lead and he came strong in the stretch, showing his versatilit­y. Recent history has shown that deep closers do not usually win the Kentucky Derby, so he will get a lot of attention.

“What do I not like about Epicenter?” asked owner Ron Winchell, part of the family that started the doughnut chain. “He just keeps moving forward. When you get to this stage before the Derby, you want them to move forward with every step and he’s done exactly that.”

Who’s a long shot to follow?

There has certainly been some buzz about Crown Pride, a Japanese-bred horse that qualified by winning the UAE Derby in Dubai.

Generally, one of the accepted rules of the Derby is to throw out the horse whose last race was in the Middle East. An example was Mendelssoh­n, who won the UAE Derby by more than 18 lengths in 2018. He went off as the third betting choice in the Kentucky Derby and, after a rough trip, was eased, finishing 70 lengths behind future Triple Crown winner Justify.

Yet Crown Pride seems to be riding a Japanese racing renaissanc­e. Horses from Japan won five of nine races at the Dubai World Cup and two Breeders’ Cup races. On Wednesday, Crown Pride had the fastest half-mile workout at Churchill Downs, so he seem to like the track.

How big a factor is experience?

It’s not as big as it used to be. When Secretaria­t won in 1973, it was his 10th race. When Affirmed won in 1978, it was his 14th. In Saturday’s Derby, of the horses currently projected to start, two (Tiz the Bomb and Barber Road) have eight starts, three have seven, five have six, three have five, four have four, three have two. Then there is Taiba, who has only started two times.

Leonatus is a name being bandied about lately as he is the only horse to win the Derby after only two starts. He did it in 1883. It was four years ago when another racing curse was smashed by Justify, who was the first horse to win the Derby after not having raced as a 2-year-old since Apollo in 1882.

Both Justify and Taiba have another thing in common, jockey Mike Smith.

 ?? Gregory Payan / Associated Press ?? Because he is serving a suspension, Bob Baffert, left, turned over the training of two Derby horses.
Gregory Payan / Associated Press Because he is serving a suspension, Bob Baffert, left, turned over the training of two Derby horses.

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