Kentucky Derby Winner!!

Search

Banned
Joined
Sep 20, 2004
Messages
4,703
Tokens
Bob Baffert will have Wimbledon ready and will win this years Derby! His last race was run perfectly made a move on the outside and closed! If that race was another 50 yards he wins! Baffert don't need to over due his horse to win a prep race! He knows what his horse is capable of doing! Bet the top trainers in the Derby! Glad he lost a few now maybe he'll go off at 10-1 or better as alot of great horses that don't do well in prep races! BUT STILL WIN THE BIG ONES!! GO WIMBLEDON!!!
 

New member
Joined
Sep 21, 2004
Messages
542
Tokens
This is one race where IMO, it is the friek horse intead of the great trainer. Good luck with Baffert, if you are going with a trainer angle, you could do a lot worse.
 

Active member
Joined
Jun 20, 2000
Messages
71,780
Tokens
cliffs edge and Lion heart Exacta box
icon_biggrin.gif
 

Banned
Joined
Sep 20, 2004
Messages
4,703
Tokens
Good Luck Men,
I believe Lion Heart is a speed horse, right?? If sooo, then I'll pass! Read the Footnotes or Imperialism might surprise but I'm sticking with Mr. Bafferst to bring home the ROSES!!
 

Another Day, Another Dollar
Joined
Mar 1, 2002
Messages
42,730
Tokens
Hopefully a longshot will grab the derby. Im looking at Borrego for the 3rd leg.

Good luck
 

Member
Joined
Jan 20, 2002
Messages
39,612
Tokens
Guys,its good to be taking a long look at a particular horse,but don't lock into anything until you know who is in the field which will give you an idea how the race will unfold.With a big field and a trck most of these horses have not run on,and at a longer distance-Pace and trip mean everything.Good Luck.
 

New member
Joined
Sep 20, 2004
Messages
233
Tokens
<pre class="ip-ubbcode-code-pre">Pace and trip mean everything. </pre>
Well said Judge
Facing that 45 going 10 furlongs is quite different than 9 furlongs.!!! Pace is the overriding factor at CD come the first Saturday in May!!!...of course a good trip doesn't hurt!!!
 

New member
Joined
Sep 21, 2004
Messages
32
Tokens
Just finding the right combo of horses can pay big in the Triple Crown races. Look at the payoffs in the exotics over the last few years. These payoffs have come from horses that could have been reasonably identified. Funny Cide had the stalking style and the Beyers to figure. War Emblem had the Best Beyer coming in to the race. He was a huge overlay based on his frowned on front running style.
 

Professional At All Times
Joined
Dec 3, 2003
Messages
42,732
Tokens
Hope you are right, as I placed at future on Wimbledon at 12-1 before the Santa Anita Derby. Realize that Baffert did not have him fully tuned for that race and wanted him healthy and sound for the Kentucky Derby, but really did not like his stretch fade. Of all the Derby preps that impressed this oldman the most was Tapit's race. He was not fully tightened for the race, coming off illness, yet he loomed up easily on the far turn, while in hand, with plenty left and eventually caught M. David with something to spare. He has the running style that suits the Derby and the tracking ability to pick up the fading speed down the stretch. Of course, in a 20 horse field, which no doubt this will be, post position and a lot of luck to stay out of trouble is critical.
 

Member
Handicapper
Joined
Sep 21, 2004
Messages
22,529
Tokens
i love this DERBY chatter! Cant wait

while I personally dont thing Wimbledon has any chance (one run deep closers that can only win if the race totally falls apart up front with all the speed and stalkers falling apart do not win the Derby very often and this one has only won one race that was a perfect set up for him to win due to the pace) you can get MUCH better than 10-1 on him. He will be about 22-1 on derby day. Even now, if your sure he will start (which I think is 98%) sure you can log onto ehorsex.com and get this horse at 25-1 right now (thre is $196 ready for you to win $4900) so for it! No its not mine! Or offer a buy price of 30-1 maybe somebody will match it! EHORSEx.com is the best place to find fair prices Hell Lion HEart is now up at 16-1 !! and you can buy $200 worth!!
 

New member
Joined
Sep 20, 2004
Messages
497
Tokens
Master David Ran A n Awfully Good Race Especially Off The Layoff But Until They Draw The PPs With The Final 20It Is Like Throwing Darts At A Board Which May Be The Case Anyway.
REad WEds DRF With Jockey Eddie D'S Comments On The Absurdity And Difficulty Of Riding A Racehorse In A 20 Horse Field
 

New member
Joined
Sep 21, 2004
Messages
16
Tokens
I think this derby is going to be awfully hard to handicap!
icon_smile.gif
I like about 10 of the horses, so a tri box is out of the question. I'll probably try to pick a key horse and wheel him 1st, 2nd, and 3rd with 5 or 6 others and hope for some big prices to get in there too. Last year (the first year, I ever cashed a ticket on the derby, I'm really horrible at picking the triple crown races), I keyed Empire Maker 1st, 2nd, and 3rd and it didn't pay too bad, I think I spent $60 and got back $400, but some of the past derby trifectas have paid so much money! I think the one with War Emblem on top paid $18,000! I want one of them!

I had originally planned to play a tri box of Smarty Jones, Castledale (if he goes), Read the Footnotes, and Lionheart. And I probably still will do that because that was the original plan and I'll feel stupid if it did come in, paid huge, and I didn't have it!

But now I won't get a good price on Smarty Jones! And Tapit and Master David were very game, and so was the Cliff's Edge!

I wonder how many horses are actually going to go. I'd love to see Smarty Jones win it, that colt is real game! To break from that 11 post, run so fast early, and finish in such good time on an off track is excellent. But I can't help comparing him with that horse from years ago, Mr. Frisky!

I can't wait for the Derby. I have a feeling it is going to be a really exciting one!
icon_smile.gif
 

Another Day, Another Dollar
Joined
Mar 1, 2002
Messages
42,730
Tokens
TOP 10

DERBY CONTENDERS


1. Master David (Bobby Frankel, trainer; Alex Solis, jockey) - Dug in gamely in Wood to hold on for second. ... Returns to Hollywood Park on Tuesday. ... Derby future wager odds (pool 3): 12-1.

2. Smarty Jones (John Servis; Stewart Elliott) -Will attempt to become first undefeated Derby winner since Seattle Slew in 1977 and second Pennsylvania bred to win Derby (Lil E. Tee in '92 was the other). Odds: 10-1.

3. The Cliff's Edge (Nick Zito; Shane Sellers) - Zito's third-stringer came through, collaring Lion Heart in the stretch to take Blue Grass for his first win of the year. ... Odds: 16-1.

4. Borrego (Beau Greely; Victor Espinoza) - Cracks top 10 at right time after finishing second in Arkansas Derby, colt's third straight runner-up finish. ... Was second to Wimbledon in Louisiana Derby and to Master Davis in Sham. ... Odds: 16-1.

5. Friends Lake (John Kimmel; Richard Migliore) - Worked five furlongs in very slow 1:04 3/5 at Payson Park in Florida on Saturday. ... Florida Derby winner will be off seven weeks entering Derby. ... Odds: 22-1.

6. Lion Heart (Patrick Biancone; Mike Smith) -Strong in Blue Grass stretch, losing by just a half-length. ... 3-for-3 last year, two runner-ups this year. ... Odds: 16-1.

7. Read the Footnotes (Rick Violette Jr.; Bailey) - Will be Violette's first Derby starter. ... Winner of five of seven races, including Fountain of Youth. ... Faded to fourth in Florida Derby last time out. ... Odds: 17-1.

8. Imperialism (Kristin Mulhall; Espinoza) - Won San Vicente and San Rafael before being cut off in the stretch in Santa Anita Derby and finishing third (moved up to second after runner-up Rock Hard Ten was DQ'd and placed third for interference). ... Odds 15-1.

9. Tapit (Michael Dickinson; Ramon Dominguez) -Overcame lung infection and ran down leaders to take Wood by half-length. ... Has won three of four career starts, and is trying to become first Derby winner off just two 3-year-old starts since Sunny's Halo in 1983. Odds: 23-1.

10. Wimbledon (Bob Baffert; Javier Santiago) -Looks like Baffert's only shot. ... Enters Derby off fifth-place finish in Santa Anita Derby. Odds: 16-1.

** Keep in mind: Birdstone, Castledale, Limehouse, Pollard's Vision, Preachinatthebar.

http://www.madison.com/captimes/sports/general/72092.php
 

The World Is My Playground!!
Joined
Sep 21, 2004
Messages
1,092
Tokens
Master David would have to improve tremendously off that very soft Beyer in the Wood to have any shot...can't see him being the #1 contender...and I have a ton of respect for Frankel, but I think he'll be overbet...

Also, I didn't think that Bailey had committed to Footnotes - thought he was still weighing his options...I know a few of the others (like Baffert) are definitely looking for jocks...

It $hould be a very exciting race with lot$ and lot$ of overlay$ thi$ year...
icon_wink.gif
 

Another Day, Another Dollar
Joined
Mar 1, 2002
Messages
42,730
Tokens
OK, so who's in the Kentucky Derby (gr. I), and who's out? Who will be the favorite? Who really are the fast horses and who are the slow horses? Who's going to ride whom? Oh, yes, who's going to win? The answer to all these questions: Who knows?

What did we learn from this past weekend's preps? First off, we learned that the horse the speed experts considered a slow plodder, coming off what they called the slowest race in memory, actually is one of the fastest 3-year-olds in the country. Yes, that was The Cliff's Edge who ran a 111 Beyer Speed Figure in the Blue Grass Stakes (gr. I), jumping 21 points from his tortoise-like number in the Florida Derby. Go figure.

But when you think of it, if Read the Footnotes' Beyer can plummet 27 points from the Fountain of Youth, turning the fastest 3-year-old in America into one of the slowest, why can't a horse go from being one of the slowest to the fastest? So, just who is fast and who is slow? In short, if horses are capable of dropping 27 points and jumping up 21 points, doesn't it indicate that maybe these speed figures shouldnt be taken as gospel, but just one of many handicapping tools?

We also learned that you simply cannot handicap a Michael Dickinson-trained horse with any of the conventional handicapping tools. Dickinson trains in a universe of his own, and it's just best to assume that if he sends out a horse, he or she has a big chance, regardless if it goes against all logic. Heck, even when Dickinson says he won't win, he wins, so how can you handicap his horses?

All Tapit did in the Wood Memorial, was go into a grade I race against 10 opponents only partially fit and just barely healthy; come from dead-last on a notorious speed-favoring track; go five-wide on the far turn, and still get up to win, despite spending half the stretch gawking at the grandstand. He even brought tears to the eyes of Dickinson, who dreaded running him in the Wood, knowing that the horse was so generous he'd give more of himself than he should. He said if something had happened to Tapit he never would have forgiven himself. "We love him to death," Dickinson said, "and I'm indebted to him."

The bottom line, however, is that Tapit, according to Dickinson, will improve five to seven lengths off this race. Is there anyone who is going to doubt him?

Another interesting aspect of the Wood is that Edgar Prado and Kent Desormeaux both turned down the mount on Tapit.

How about that itty bitty nose separating Master David and Eddington for second? Although it looks as if Eddington should get in the Derby, as long as one or two horses who are iffy drop out, it just shows how someone's Derby dreams can be decided by a measly inch.

Master David is a tough little horse who loves a good fight, and it doesn't matter who he tangles with, whether it's a big chestnut like Borrego in the Sham or an even bigger chestnut like Eddington. Both times, he came through on the inside of those colts, never flinched, and each time got the better of them. His grinding second-place finish fits the pattern of your typical Derby winner (Funny Cide, Monarchos, Real Quiet, Silver Charm, Grindstone, Go For Gin), and he did it coming off a two-month layoff.

As for Eddington, he's still a work in progress. As soon as his mind and his legs get together, it's going to be like detonating a stick of dynamite. Now, you can bet that won't happen in the Derby or you can bet that it will. In the Wood, once he got his blood up over the little horse outrunning him on his inside, he surged forward at the wire and just missed. Could it be that surge was the match being lit? That's what you'll have to decide. This colt has the running style, the strength, and the pedigree to sit in midpack in the Derby, then just start grinding his opponents into the ground. Horses who have trouble changing leads (Bailey finally got Eddington to change at the eighth pole), usually wind up changing much earlier in the Derby, because of the all the weaving, and bumping, and commotion all around. All this colt has to do for now is get in the race.

Turning to the "slow" time of the Wood, in comparison to the sizzling one-turn times most of the afternoon, it's really hard to tell what to make of it. Yes, if the track was playing the same going one turn as it was going two turns, you would expect a faster time. But Aqueduct at times can have a split variant, where sprint times have no bearing on route times. But even if there wasn't a split variant, what is important to remember about the Wood is that the first three finishers all are improving horses who just needed this race to move forward. And all of them got just what they needed out of the race. Not only should all three improve, they have the potential to improve dramatically.

Getting back to The Cliff's Edge, this was the Cliff of last year, when he was turning in eyecatching moves on the far turn. He has such big strides, that if he gets a clear run, he can mow down anyone, especially down that long Churchill Downs stretch, over which he already has scored a pair of graded stakes victories. Now, if you really believe in that 111 Beyer, you have to ask yourself if he can return to that kind of number. Then again, does he have to? Who says it's going to take a 111 to win the Derby? Normally, big speed numbers in the Blue Grass are attained by frontrunners and stalkers riding on the Keeneland conveyor belt. The Cliff's Edge is a big, powerful colt who came from 14 lengths out of it and only did his big running in the last three-eighths of a mile, which he negotiated in a solid :24 3/5 and :12 2/5. From a visual aspect, there is no reason why he can't duplicate this kind of effort on the first Saturday in May.

Credit must be given, once again, to Lion Heart for another courageous performance, but for Kentucky Derby purposes, it must be noted he went his fourth quarter in almost :26 after opening a clear lead at the three-eighths pole. But he did come home in under :13, so, all in all, it was a very good effort, especially finishing six lengths ahead of Limehouse in third, which is always very instrumental in determining how classy a performances was.

Of all the races this past weekend, perhaps the strongest pace-wise was the Arkansas Derby (gr. II). And that's not just talking about Smarty Jones, who continues to amaze with his brilliance and consistency. While Smarty Jones' fractions were a bit all over the place :)22 3/5, :24 1/5, :24 4/5, :25 1/5, and :12 3/5), you had to be impressed with the consistency of Borrego, and especially Pro Prado. Borrego ran fast early, with a :23 1/5 opening quarter, then tracked Smarty Jones down on the rail running fractions of :24, :24 4/5, and :25, then cut Smarty's lead in half with a final eighth in between :12 1/5 and :12 2/5, to be precise. That's a pretty strong race. Pro Prado, who will be ignored big-time in the Derby, ran as consistent a race as one could ask, with fractions of :24 2/5, :24 1/5, :24 2/5, and :24 2/5. Although his final furlong was a solid enough :12 3/5, he couldn't make up any ground on Smarty Jones, but did some heavy-duty running in this third and fourth quarters. From start to finish, this was a sneakily good effort, in case you're looking for a real bomb in the Derby, at least to play in the exotics.

But the most impressive part of the Arkansas Derby was Smarty Jones breaking from the 11-post, having to use himself to get position through a very quick opening quarter, then easily disposing of a horse (Purge) whom you'd expect to be a lot tougher in this race than he was in the Rebel. To blow open a race like this against a large field of classy horses, after having to be used early, and still come home in :12 3/5 is one heckuva performance. And he did it over a muddy track that had been playing slow all day.

Finally, Smarty Jones to stable at Keeneland? That may be the toughest of them all to answer.


http://tcm.bloodhorse.com/viewstory.asp?id=21859
 

Forum statistics

Threads
1,108,594
Messages
13,452,837
Members
99,426
Latest member
bodyhealthtechofficia
The RX is the sports betting industry's leading information portal for bonuses, picks, and sportsbook reviews. Find the best deals offered by a sportsbook in your state and browse our free picks section.FacebookTwitterInstagramContact Usforum@therx.com