San Diego Union-Tribune (Sunday)

PREAKNESS: IT’S ROMBAUER

Mccarthy’s Rombauer storms down stretch to score in the Preakness

- BY JOHN CHERWA

With a late charge, Rombauer sprints past Medina Spirit to win the Preakness Stakes at Pimlico.

All the attention last week at the Preakness Stakes was directed at the Santa Anita trainer who wasn’t there. But the race was won by the one who was there.

Michael Mccarthy, hidden amid the all the controvers­y surroundin­g the positive drug test by Medina Spirit in the Kentucky Derby, just went about his business prepping Rombauer for the second leg of the Triple Crown. It appears he did a pretty good job.

“Stunned,” Mccarthy said of Rombauer’s win. “(But) not totally surprised. Not sure if that makes any sense.”

The race devel- oped as expected with Medina Spirit on the lead and Midnight Bourbon back a half-length. Midnight Bourbon was able to draw even on the far turn and it appeared as if the two would fight to the wire. But, quietly Rombauer had been picking off horses on the turn and by midstretch was moving with energy on the outside and blew by the leaders to win by 3½ lengths.

It’s the first time in seven tries that a Bob Baffert-trained Derby winner didn’t win a Preakness held in May. Baffert chose not to come to the Preakness amid the controvers­y surroundin­g the failed drug test that puts Medina Spirit’s Kentucky Derby win in jeopardy. On Saturday, Medina Spirit finished third and stablemate Concert Tour ran a disappoint­ing ninth.

“I had to come out running and get my position,” said Medina Spirit’s jockey, John Velazquez, who used the same approach to lead the Kentucky Derby gate to wire. “I knew he was going to be pressed today and was hoping he wouldn’t overdo it — he did.”

Velazquez said Medina Spirit never stopped fighting, but he knew the race was lost when Rombauer pulled up on his outside.

It was the second Triple Crown win for Santa Anita-based jockey Flavien Prat but the first time he

won by crossing the finish line first. In 2019, Prat won the Kentucky Derby aboard Country House after Maximum Security was disqualifi­ed for interferen­ce.

“Well, of course it’s a lot different when you cross the wire first,” Prat said. “You get that feeling where it’s a lot of joy. … But I’m really proud of both races anyway.”

Rombauer paid $25.60 to win. Midnight Bourbon was second followed by Medina Spirit, Keepmeinmi­nd, Crowded Table, Unbridled Honor, France Go De Ina, Risk Taking, Concert Tour and Ram.

Mccarthy recalled watching Rombauer moving well early in the race.

“He seemed like he was traveling awfully well,” Mccarthy said. “First time underneath the wire, Flavien had a snug hold. When he turned up the backside I thought he might be doing a little too much at that point. At the half-mile pole he still looked comfortabl­e. … At the eighth pole, it was like an outof-body experience.”

Mccarthy got his trainer’s license in 2006 and studied under Todd Pletcher, who races mostly in New York and Florida. Mccarthy went on his own in 2014 and his biggest success had been winning the Pegasus World Cup in 2019 with City Of Light.

Rombauer came to this moment after winning the El Camino Real Derby at Golden Gate Fields, a race run on a synthetic surface. By winning, he was guaranteed an all-expenses trip to the Preakness as part of a promotion by the Stronach Group, which owns Golden Gate, Pimlico, Santa Anita and other tracks.

But he had his eyes on running the horse in the Kentucky Derby first and took the colt to the Blue Grass Stakes at Keeneland, where he finished third.

John and Diane Fradkin, of Santa Ana, had other ideas about what to do with the colt they not only own but also had bred.

“I was bullish on running in the Kentucky Derby,” Mccarthy said. “Jack and Diane thought this was the better route.”

The trainer and the owners still don’t agree on the issue of the Kentucky Derby.

“I believe in running him in the easier spots if possible, and I didn’t think that the Kentucky Derby really suited him,” John Fradkin said. “I thought there was a pretty good chance we would not hit the board just because of his running style.”

So, the trainer and owner worked it out about not running in the Derby?

“We had a pretty heated discussion about that,” Fradkin said. “Let’s just leave it at that.”

The convention­al thinking is that Rombauer now will head to New York and run in the Belmont Stakes.

“It would have been nice to have (wife Erin and daughter Stella) here,” Mccarthy said. “We’ll get them to New York. Actually, you know what, maybe we better not get them to New York.

We don’t want to jinx it.”

Fradkin isn’t as sure as Mccarthy.

“Now that we’ve won this one it kind of takes the pressure off to do that,” Fradkin said. “That race is three weeks out and the spacing isn’t superb to go a mile-anda-half with just three weeks of rest. … I’d say it’s a possibilit­y, but it’s probably less a possibilit­y than if we had run a good third or something.”

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 ??  ?? Michael Mccarthy
Michael Mccarthy
 ?? PATRICK SMITH GETTY IMAGES ?? Jockey Flavien Prat, riding Rombauer, celebrates as he wins the 146th running of the Preakness Stakes.
PATRICK SMITH GETTY IMAGES Jockey Flavien Prat, riding Rombauer, celebrates as he wins the 146th running of the Preakness Stakes.

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