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Merry-Go-Round Derby 128 One Of The Few That Didn't Live Up To The Hype
By, William F. Reed
May 5, 2002
LOUISVILLE, Ky. (May 5, 2002) -- The morning after the 128th Kentucky Derby (GI), War
Emblem
looked as if all he did on Saturday, May 4, was take an easy jog around
the
Churchill Downs track instead of running the most coveted mile and a
quarter
in the sport. Between nibbles on a bail of hay hung outside his stall
door,
the dark bay, virtually black, colt gazed quizzically, but calmly, at the
folks
who came by to snap his photo.
Only Jill Moss, fiancee of trainer Bob Baffert, was brave enough to
pet
the Derby winner on his nose, which is bisetced by a white blaze. The
colt
can be so onery sometimes that everybody in Baffert's barn gives him a
wide
berth. But he likes Jill, at least partly because she brings him carrots
and
mints, so he allows her to take liberties that others take only at the
risk
of being bit.
"He can be tough to handle," Baffert said. "He'll bite you if he
gets the
chance. Jill's the only one that he'll let mess around with him."
In the Derby, he and jockey Victor Espinoza didn't let anyone get
close
to them, much less mess around with them, going wire-to-wire in one of
the
rare Derbys that didn't live up to its pre-race hype. It was supposed to
be a
wide-open Derby, with any of 10 or 12 horses having a legitimate chance
to
win. Instead, it was as suspenseful as a basketball game between the
Harlem
Globetrotters and the Washington Generals.
It wasn't a horse race as much as a merry-go-round, with the top
three
horses - War Emblem, Proud Citizen, and Perfect Drift - pretty much
staying
in that order the entire race. D. Wayne Lukas, trainer of runner-up
Proud
Citizen, gave Espinoza credit for doping out the race perfectly.
"I said before the race that if War Emblem got loose on the lead, he
might not get caught," Lukas said. "I told my jockey (Mike Smith) to not
let
War Emblem get away from him and don't worry about anything coming from
behind. There were supposed to be a lot of 'closers' in this race, but
that
wasn't the case. They had been closing in very slow times and passing a
lot
of tired horses."
Lukas, who has won the Derby four times, also felt Baffert, his annual
rival
for "Most Quotable Trainer" honors, didn't deserve to be criticized for
winning
the Derby with a colt he didn't develop. After War Emblem's easy win in
the
Apr. 6 Illinois Derby (GII), owner Russell Reineman sold him for a reported
$1
million to Prince Ahmed bin Salman of Saudia Arabia, who gave him to
Baffert
with instructions to get him ready for the Derby.
"That might take a little of the shine off it," Lukas said, "but
I'll
take one like that anytime, under any conditions."
Indeed, buying players late in the season to help win pennants and
playoffs has been commonplace in most professional team sports for
years. In
the 1950s and '60s, the now-defunct Kansas City Athletics sold or traded
so
many good players to the New York Yankees that they said to be little
more
than a Yankees' farm team.
Even in Derby history, it's hardly unprecedented for a wealthy individual to
own to
buy all, or part, of a proven horse in a last-minute attempt to win the
roses. In 1978, for example, Hoist the Silver was turned over to trainer
R.J.
"Dick" Fischer three weeks before the Derby, where he finished eighth to
Affirmed.
The day before the 1981 Blue Grass Stakes (GI) at Keeneland, breeder John
Gaines and a partner shelled out $5 million for a half-interest in Proud
Appeal. That colt won the Blue Grass and, along with stablemate Golden
Derby,
went off as the favorite in Louisville. He finished 18th to Pleasant
Colony.
Gaines made another such move in 1998, when he bought a big part of
Indian Charlie just before the Santa Anita Derby (GI). That colt won the
Santa
Anita Derby so impressivlely that partner Hal J. Earnhardt insisted he
wear
Gaines' silks in the Derby. He ran credibly, but still finished third to
stablemate Real Quiet.
After Mister Frisky won his first 13 starts in Puerto Rico, owner
Jose
Fernandez sent the colt to California so Laz Barrera could train him for
the
Derby instead of Juan Rodriguez, the trainer who had developed him. The
colt
won his first three starts under Barrera, who had won the Derby with
Bold
Forbes in 1976 and Affirmed in '78.
At Churchill Downs, the Derby Day crowd sent off the unbeaten
"Puerto
Rican Comet" as the 6-5 favorite in the 15-horse field. Alas for his
backers, however, he staggered home eighth in the race won by Unbridled.
In the 1992 Derby, the favored Arazi finished eighth to Lil E. Tee.
The
previous fall, Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid al-Maktoum had paid $9 million
for
a half-interest in Arazi after that colt's stunning performance in the
Breeders' Cup Juvenile (GI) at Churchill.
Seventh in that same Derby was Dr Devious, who was sold for $2.5
million
to Sidney Craig in late April so he could give his wife, diet-salon
maven
Jenny, a Kentucky Derby entrant as a birthday present.
Then, in 1998, Jenny Craig was back on the Derby scene as half-owner
of
Rock and Roll, another colt who had a, um, slim chance. She and Madeline
Paulson purchased the colt after his third-place finish in the Mar. 22
Tampa
Bay Derby. In the Kentucky Derby (GI), Rock and Roll slow-danced to a
14th-place
finish in a 15-horse field.
When all this was mentioned to Baffert, he nodded and said, "Yeah,
it's
been done before, buying a horse to run in the Derby, but the difference
is
that we won it."
Baffert said he was thrilled with the way War Emblem trained at
Churchill
Downs, but didn't say much about it because "I didn't want to tip off
our
competition." That bit of secrecy succeeded as fully as his clandestine
plan
to enter Danthebluegrassman at the last moment backfired on him.
First, he was criticized for using Danthebluegrassman to knock
Windward
Passage out of the 20-horse Derby field on the basis of more earnings in
graded stakes races. Then, he was pilloried again when he scratched
Danthebluegrassman the morning of the Derby because of muscle spasms.
This morning, however, Baffert looked like the sharpest - or,
if
you prefer, the luckiest - trainer on the backside of Churchill Downs.
Now he'll take War Emblem to the Preakness Stakes (GI) on Sat., May 18, to
see if
he can get the second leg of racing's Triple Crown. You can bet that War
Emblem will go off as the favorite instead of a 20-1 longshot, that
his
rivals will see to it that he doesn't get an easy lead, and that Baffert
will
have to answer more questions about Prince Salman simply buying a Derby
winner.
But yesterday, in the warm afterglow of his third Derby victory,
Baffert
made an interesting point. The colt's previous owner, Russell L. Reineman, had said
War
Emblem would skip the Derby because he wasn't good enough.
"People ought to thank us for buying him and bringing him here,"
Baffert
said. "If it hadn't been for us, he wouldn't have even been here. We
just got
lucky we bought this horse. If anybody else - Lukas or Godolphin Stables
or
anybody - had known about it, they would have bought him, too."
Native Kentuckian William F. "Billy" Reed has been a sports writer in various capacities for 42 years and has missed covering the Kentucky Derby a mere two times since 1966. He has been a high-profile sports writer in Kentucky for the Commonwealth's two largest daily newspapers, the Louisville Courier-Journal and the Lexington Herald-Leader and was a national columnist for Sports Illustrated, covering among other sports, Thoroughbred horse racing and college basketball. Reed currently pens a column for the Louisville Sports Report , contrbiutes features to the Keeneland program and will be, among varied other assignments, filing Kentucky Derby installments on www.kentuckyderby.com.
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