Sunday, April 28, 2002
Derby should have full field
Story lines range from Bond to ageless Pincay
The Associated Press
LOUISVILLE Bond trainer H. James Bond is Derby-bound for the first time, with Buddha.
Laffit Pincay returns for his 21st Kentucky Derby ride, aboard Medaglia d'Oro, matching Eddie Arcaro for the second most mounts in America's greatest race.
In between, there's a Derby delight for racing fans around the world in what promises to be one of the most wide-open fields in 128 runnings:
The Irish are coming, with Johannesburg and Castle Gandolfo.
Sheik Mohammed is back again, this time with Essence of Dubai.
Racing's Phipps family returns for the first time since 1989 with Saarland, owned by the daughter of Ogden Phipps, who died this month.
Trainer Bob Baffert, a two-timer winner, saddles War Emblem for Saudi Arabian Prince Ahmed Salman.
And four-time winning trainer D.Wayne Lukas just made it with a Kentucky-bred named Proud Citizen.
Harlan's Holiday, trying to become just the second Ohio-bred to wear the blanket of roses the first did it in 1909 is the likely favorite in what looks to be a full field of 20 3-year-olds. But the odds could be the highest ever for a favorite Churchill Downs linemaker Mike Battaglia is considering making the favorite 5-1.
Harlan's Holiday is a little warrior, but once you get past him, they're all the same, said trainer Nick Zito, a two-time Derby winner who still has an outside chance of saddling a starter next Saturday. If there's ever a year to take a shot, this is it.
For those who don't like wagering on the biggest names in racing, consider some alternatives:
Blue Burner finished fifth in the Wood Memorial, yet his own er, New York Yankees boss George Steinbrenner, is sending the colt to the Derby.
Came Home, with six wins in seven starts, has been rejected by most handicappers, who swear the gutsy colt isn't bred to win at the Derby distance of 1 1/4 miles.
Ocean Sound, who broke his maiden last May, is riding a nine-race losing streak.
Perfect Drift, the Spiral Stakes winner, will be trying to win after a six-week layoff. The last horse to do that was Needles in 1956.
Private Emblem, the Arkansas Derby winner, will try to become the first New York-bred to win.
Buddha and Bobby Frankel-trained Medaglia d'Oro are the most unseasoned of the group. A victory by either would mark the first Derby win by a horse with just four previous starts since Exterminator in 1918. It'sallinthechase, on the other hand, would be making his 15th start.
There's a lot more questions this year because there's not one you look at and say, "He's got it all; he's got to be the favorite,' Lukas said. That's why you see everybody trying so hard and wanting to get in. Everybody thinks he has a shot.
Lukas' final Derby shot came through last Saturday, when Proud Citizen won the Lexington Stakes. Last year, Lukas' record streak of 20 consecutive Derby starts ended.
Though his colt will be a long shot, it's unwise to count out the Hall of Famer. In 1999, Charismatic, also a Lexington winner, took the Derby at odds of 31-1; in '95, Thunder Gulch won at 25-1.
I'm sure there's going to be a lot of handicapping going on as there always is, Lukas said. But we're lucky in that race. And we've got a very fresh horse that has not gone to the well yet.
Lukas isn't alone. Quite a few late developers are rounding into form, starting with Buddha and Medaglia d'Oro.
Buddha has a three-race winning streak after finishing out of the money in his only race as a 2-year-old. He won the Wood Memorial on April 13 in his stakes debut.
Medaglia d'Oro made a giant leap from winning at 6furlongs at Oaklawn Park on Feb.9, to winning the San Felipe Stakes at 11/16 miles March 17. In the Wood, the dark bay colt battled Buddha down the stretch before losing by a neck.
Both colts worked this week, and their trainers pronounced them fit. Buddha went 6furlongs in 1:14 2/5 at Belmont, Medaglia d'Oro 5furlongs in 1:01.40 at Churchill Downs.
After the Wood, Bond said Buddha's seasoning was a real concern. After the workout, he said: He worked good, his coat looked good, and all his blood work came back fine. We're going to go into the race doing what we've always done. He can't read the papers or the figures.
Frankel, a Hall of Fame trainer, tries for a third time to win the Derby. I didn't want to do too much, Frankel said of Medaglia d'Oro's work. He had a hard race the other day, so we'll just keep him happy.
At least he qualifies to run. Currently, there are more than 20 horses set for the Derby. If that continues, the field will be determined by graded stakes earnings.
Among those waiting for a change in the rankings are Sunday Break, trained by Hall of Famer Neil Drysdale, who won the 2000 Derby with Fusaichi Pegasus.
If it happens, it happens, Drysdale said. There seems to always be some horses drop out as the race draws near.
DERBY TRIAL: Sky Terrace took the early lead, then held off a late bid from favored Cashel Castle to win Saturday's Grade III, $100,000 Derby Trial on a sloppy track at Churchill Downs.
Steady rain fell on the opening day of Churchill's spring meet and turned the dirt track into a muddy mess. Three horses, including morning favorite Mayakovsky, were pulled from the 1-mile Trial by their trainers to avoid the adverse conditions.
Shah Jenan and Stephentown also scratched, reducing the field to six horses.
Sky Terrace, with Craig Perret aboard, burst cleanly out of the gate, gained the rail on the backstretch and had the lead by the first quarter-mile.
The Vickie Foley-trained colt built a 2-length edge before Ide Be Spencers challenged around the turn. Cashel Castle, unbeaten in five previous starts and the 4-5 favorite with Pat Day riding, sat in third around the turn, then moved to the outside for a final surge.
Perret urged Sky Terrace with the whip in the stretch for a finishing burst, and the colt responded, earning a 2-length win. Sky Terrace paid $16.80, $4.60 and $2.40. Ide Be Spencers finished third, a length behind Cashel Castle.
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