USA TODAY International Edition

Never dismiss Baffert again on Derby Day

- Dan Wolken Columnist

From now until he stops training horses, there’s only one thing you need to know on Kentucky Derby Day: Never bet against Bob.

You’d think we’d have learned our lesson by now. No matter whether Bob Baffert brings expensive horses to Churchill Downs or cheap ones, how they’ve run in the prep races or whether they look like they can get to the 1 1⁄ 4- mile distance, they show up on Derby Day. Goodness, do they show up.

A quarter century after Baffert’s first nibble at horse racing’s most coveted prize when his Cavonnier lost to Grindstone by a nose, there is only one incontrove­rtible truth in the Derby: Putting your money on anyone but him is probably the first step to lighting it on fire.

Baffert won his record- breaking seventh Kentucky Derby on Saturday with Medina Spirit, a horse whose breeding was so modest and physical attributes so unimpressi­ve that he drew a single bid, for $ 1,000, at a yearling auction and sold again last year for $ 35,000.

This spring, as he usually does, Baffert had several flashy- looking colts spread out across the country that seemed more likely to get him to the winner’s circle in the Triple Crown race at Churchill Downs. For one reason or another, his top prospects fell by the wayside.

By Derby week, Baffert’s only entry was Medina Spirit, who was pretty much an afterthoug­ht after running a non- threatenin­g second to Rock Your World in the Santa Anita Derby. Despite the Baffert factor, Medina Spirit was pretty much dismissed by bettors and went off at 13- 1.

Whoops.

“There were some Derbies I lost and thought I couldn’t lose, but this is the only Derby I came in thinking, I just don’t know if we’ve got the goods,” he said.

In retrospect, we all should have known. This is just what Baffert does.

It’s no accident.

Sure, Baffert’s success is, in a sense, part of a selfperpet­uating cycle. When he started to win the Derby again and again, owners with roses in their eyes started sending him more of their talented and wellbred 2- year- olds year in and year out.

That’s a huge advantage, but in horse racing it guarantees absolutely nothing. Todd Pletcher also gets a lot of great young horses in his barn, as do Chad Brown and Steve Asmussen. Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum, the owner of fourth- place finisher Essential Quality who was the favorite Saturday, has spent many tens of millions of dollars trying to win the Kentucky Derby and has never had a horse finish in the top three.

“I’m the luckiest guy in the world,” Baffert said after the race on NBC. “I told his owner ( Amr Zedan) maybe we have a chance. I’m so spoiled bringing

these heavy- duty horses in here, but that little horse has such a big heart and that guy made it happen.”

With Baffert, though, it’s way more than luck. You don’t win the Derby seven times without knowing how to get a horse fit to run the longest distance they’ve ever had to go against a huge field where anything can happen.

What separates Baffert from his peers is that he understand­s that frontrunni­ng speed is the most important characteri­stic in modern horse racing. The evidence? His last five Derby winners all did it either wire- to- wire or just off the early lead where they were clear of any traffic trouble entering the final turn.

Over the course of its history, that’s not the norm for the Derby. This is a race that was usually won by horses with stamina in their blood that were trained to make one big explosive move in the final quarter of a mile. Even as recently as the 1990s, it was somewhat rare for a front- runner to win the Derby.

But with the general breeding philosophy in America evolving to become more speed- oriented over the last few decades, Baffert has made a fundamenta­l bet that distance isn’t as relevant as it used to be. If he has a horse that can get to the lead and cruise at a high speed, they’ll be tough to catch because they’re all going to be tired coming home. In the Derby, particular­ly, getting to the front means avoiding a lot of the traffic troubles that horses encounter jockeying for position on the first turn and saving ground turning for home.

That paid off again in this one, as jockey John Velazquez got Medina Spirit out of the gate cleanly and hustled him to the front right away. The surprise was that he never got a ton of pressure on the backstretc­h, setting a reasonable pace of 23.09 seconds for the first quarter and 46.70 for the half- mile. In that sense, it was almost a carbon copy of Baffert’s win last year with Authentic, who was similarly overlooked at 8- 1 but ran comfortabl­y on the lead for most of the race and had plenty left to repel a challenge from Tiz the Law.

Every time you think Baffert has done the best training job of his career, he keeps one- upping himself. If it wasn’t breaking horse racing’s 37- year Triple Crown drought with American Pharoah or backing it up with another Triple Crown win a three years later with Justify, maybe it’s winning the Derby with a horse that could have been bought for $ 1,000.

Baffert’s massive success, of course, has come with some jealousy and controvers­y. Last year, Baffert had multiple high- profile horses fail postrace drug tests, including the filly Gamine and Charlatan, who both showed traces of lidocaine after running on Arkansas Derby Day last year. Baffert attributed it to a pain patch worn by an assistant trainer and eventually got the disqualification overturned by the Arkansas Racing Commission. Later in the year, Gamine was also disqualified from her third- place finish in the Kentucky Oaks after testing positive for betamethas­one.

All that came on the heels of a revelation that Justify had failed a drug test before the 2018 Kentucky Derby, which was blamed on jimsom weed contaminat­ion in his feed and not made public until more than a year later.

Last fall, Baffert said he was hiring outside oversight help to try to mitigate any oversights or mistakes.

For some critics, the very existence of those issues brings suspicion on his name every time he wins a big race.

But no matter which horse Baffert brings to the Derby next year and the year after that and the year after that, it will be hard to pick against him. In a notably fickle sport, it seems to be the surest bet there is.

 ?? JAMIE SQUIRE/ GETTY IMAGES ?? Medina Spirit, ridden by John Velazquez, crossed the finish line a half- length ahead of Mandaloun, followed by Hot Rod Charlie ( 9) and Essential Quality ( 14), to win the Kentucky Derby.
JAMIE SQUIRE/ GETTY IMAGES Medina Spirit, ridden by John Velazquez, crossed the finish line a half- length ahead of Mandaloun, followed by Hot Rod Charlie ( 9) and Essential Quality ( 14), to win the Kentucky Derby.
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 ?? SAM UPSHAW JR./ THE COURIER- JOURNAL ?? Medina Spirit trainer Bob Baffert celebrates his seventh Kentucky Derby win.
SAM UPSHAW JR./ THE COURIER- JOURNAL Medina Spirit trainer Bob Baffert celebrates his seventh Kentucky Derby win.

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