The Columbus Dispatch

Baffert relieved as top choice Justify dodges No. 1 post

- By Beth Harris

LOUISVILLE, Ky. — Bob Baffert had no chance to fret over the Kentucky Derby draw.

By the time the Hall of Fame trainer managed to get into Churchill Downs, the process was halfway done and Justify had landed in the No. 7 post on Tuesday.

“We didn’t want the 1-hole, that’s for sure,” the four-time Derby winner said. “I was relieved when I saw him in seven.”

Justify was made the early 3-1 favorite for the Derby, with Europe-based Mendelssoh­n the second choice in a full field of 20 horses.

Six horses have won from the No. 7 post, most recently Street Sense in 2007.

“The only reason I’m the favorite is because I beat Bolt d’Oro, and he was the horse to beat,” said Baffert, referring to Justify’s threelengt­h win over his rival in the Santa Anita Derby last month.

Justify is one of two horses in Saturday’s 1¼-mile race who didn’t race at age 2. The other is 6-1 third choice Magnum Moon. No horse since Apollo in 1882 has won the Derby after not racing as a 2-year-old.

“I don’t buy into the Apollo Curse or whatever at all, mainly because Bob Baffert and Todd Pletcher have got the horses,” four-time Derby-winning trainer D. Wayne Lukas said. “Todd is going to have his (horse) ready, and Baffert is going to have his.”

Justify, to be ridden by Mike Smith, is 3-0 in his brief career, winning by a combined 19 lengths. Magnum Moon is 4-0, winning the Arkansas Derby and Rebel Stakes in his last two starts.

“It’s one of the toughest Derbies I’ve ever seen,” Baffert said. “All the important horses got good draws.”

More history is working against Mendelssoh­n. A Kentucky Derby favorite Justify, trained by Bob Baffert, runs during a morning workout at Churchill Downs on Tuesday. PP HORSE 1. Firenze Fire 2. Free Drop Billy 3. Promises Fulfilled 4. Flameaway 5. Audible 6. Good Magic 7. Justify 8. Lone Sailor 9. Hofburg 10. My Boy Jack 11. Bolt d’Oro 12. Enticed 13. Bravazo 14. Mendelssoh­n 15. Instilled Regard 16. Magnum Moon 17. Solomini 18. Vino Rosso 19. Noble Indy 20. Combatant horse coming from Europe has never won America’s biggest race. Trained by Irishman Aidan O’Brien, UAE Derby winner Mendelssoh­n is the 5-1 second choice. He drew the No. 14 post.

O’Brien wasn’t at the draw and Mendelssoh­n won’t hit the Churchill Downs dirt strip until Wednesday after clearing quarantine. The colt arrived Monday from Ireland.

Pletcher has a leading four horses in the field: Magnum Moon; Audible (8-1); Vino Rosso (12-1); and Noble Indy (30-1). He surpassed Lukas, his JOCKEY ODDS Paco Lopez 50-1 Robby Albarado 30-1 Corey Lanerie 30-1 Jose Lezcano 30-1 Javier Castellano 8-1 Jose Ortiz Jr. 12-1 Mike Smith 3-1 James Graham 50-1 Irad Ortiz Jr. 20-1 Kent Desormeaux 30-1 Victor Espinoza 8-1 Junior Alvarado 30-1 Luis Contreras 50-1 Ryan Moore 5-1 Drayden Van Dyke 50-1 Luis Saez 6-1 Flavien Prat 30-1 John Velazquez 12-1 Florent Geroux 30-1 Ricardo Santana Jr. 50-1 mentor, this year as the trainer with the most starters in Derby history with 52.

Pletcher won last year with Always Dreaming.

The main starting gate holds 14 horses and a six-stall auxiliary gate is attached. Horses are loaded into the gate two at a time, beginning with posts one and 11, which spend the most time waiting for the start.

“Having three of the four horses in the auxiliary gate wasn’t what we were hoping for,” Pletcher said. “Sometimes you can work out good trips from out there. We’ve

got four terrific riders.”

Bolt d’Oro, the co-fourth choice with Audible at 8-1, has won four of six career starts for trainer and owner Mick Ruis. The colt drew the No. 11 post, which means he will join Firenze Fire — in the dreaded No. 1 post — in waiting the longest for the gate to open.

“We’re good,” Ruis said. “Bolt is so wellminded that he doesn’t work himself up.”

Baffert’s other entry, 30-1 shot Solomini, drew the No. 17 post, which has never produced a Derby winner.

Lukas, the 82-yearold Hall of Famer, has his 49th Derby starter in Bravazo. The colt is one of five 50-1 shots in the field. In that group is Lone Sailor, owned by Gayle Benson, the widow of former New Orleans Saints owner Tom Benson.

Bravazo is owned by Calumet Farm, which has won a leading eight Derbies but none since 1968 when Calumet’s Forward Pass was declared the winner after Dancer’s Image was disqualifi­ed because of a positive drug test.

The Desormeaux brothers have teamed with My Boy Jack. Kent, a three-time Derby winner, will ride, while Keith does the training.

 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States