USA TODAY Sports Weekly

Why Mystik Dan is ‘not yet’ committed to Preakness

- Jason Frakes

Kenny McPeek got the phone call at 7:40 a.m. last Sunday, the traditiona­l invite from Preakness Stakes officials wanting the Kentucky Derby winner to compete in the second leg of the Triple Crown.

Seconds later, McPeek was explaining to reporters at Churchill Downs why a trip to Baltimore might not be on the agenda.

“We’re not committed to the Preakness. No, not yet,” McPeek said the morning after his Mystik Dan won the 150th running of the Kentucky Derby by a nose over Sierra Leone.

“We’ll just watch him over the next week. It will be one of those where we’ll probably take (the decision) up to the last minute. … We’ll let him tell us. If he’s not in the feed tub, he won’t run.”

A sleep-deprived McPeek spent the morning soaking in the significance of Saturday’s accomplish­ment – his first Kentucky Derby victory in 40 years as a trainer.

He’d won the Kentucky Oaks a day earlier with Thorpedo Anna and became the first trainer since Ben Jones in 1952 to get an Oaks-Derby sweep.

His children and grandchild­ren made congratula­tory signs and placed them in the front yard of his Louisville home. Mystik Dan got extra peppermint­s from co-owner Sharilyn Gasaway.

“We got in late, but worthwhile,” McPeek said of the Saturday night celebratio­n. “Kinda sinking in a little bit.”

But as McPeek pointed out, “there’s more work to do,” and the attention now turns toward the possible Triple Crown pursuit.

The $2 million Preakness is set for May 18 at Pimlico, and Mystik Dan’s presence – or lack thereof – will have a big impact on the race’s significance.

McPeek said Mystik Dan likely will rest early this week before returning to the track May 8. One crucial sign of Mystik Dan’s condition will be his food intake, which was not off to a good start after Saturday night.

“He left three quarts feed,” McPeek said. “We couldn’t hardly get everybody out of the barn until midnight, so he really didn’t get a great night’s rest.”

McPeek said Mystik Dan likely will ship to Saratoga this week. With Belmont

Park being renovated, Saratoga will host the Belmont Stakes – the final leg of the Triple Crown – on June 8.

McPeek said Mystik Dan could skip the Preakness and return to action in the Belmont.

“No. 1, if we go into the (Preakness), we want to win,” co-owner Lance Gasaway said. “I’m pretty sure (Bob Baffert) is going to have (Arkansas Derby winner) Muth in there.

“You take those horses in there at full speed that have been off a month or a month and a half, and we’re coming in there in two weeks. That’s a big ask of this horse.”

McPeek noted Mystik Dan raced twice in a 13-day span as a 2-year-old, breaking his maiden Nov. 12 at Churchill Downs and then finishing fifth in an optional claimer on Nov. 25.

“It completely backfired on me,” he said of the decision to race back so quickly.

A son of Goldencent­s, Mystik Dan won the Kentucky Derby at 18-1 odds behind a rail-skimming ride from jockey Brian Hernandez Jr.

Mystik Dan pulled away down the stretch before Sierra Leone and thirdplace Forever Young made a late charge.

Gasaway said he got about five hours of sleep after the race but was losing his voice.

“Has it sunk in yet? No,” Gasaway said Sunday morning. “This is the pinnacle of the sport. Unbelievab­le.”

 ?? CLARE GRANT/THE COURIER-JOURNAL ?? Mystik Dan, the winner of the 150th Kentucky Derby, plays with trainer Kenny McPeek on May 5. The last trainer to complete a Kentucky Oaks/Derby Double win was Ben Jones in 1952.
CLARE GRANT/THE COURIER-JOURNAL Mystik Dan, the winner of the 150th Kentucky Derby, plays with trainer Kenny McPeek on May 5. The last trainer to complete a Kentucky Oaks/Derby Double win was Ben Jones in 1952.

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