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Zito looking to spoil another Triple Crown bid
"At the end of the day you look at it and say, 'How could you beat those horses?' Again, it's racing," Zito shrugged. "You've got to play the game and anything can happen in a race. That's why they have a word called 'longshot.' I don't understand why people can't get that in their head, but I'm glad I never listen to them. I'm glad I went forward. At least you made some history, you know? I like training horses for distance and this is a mile and a half. I think we've got a live longshot and I think we'll get a good piece of it. I'm hoping to get a good piece of it." Though their odds were similar, Zito said he was more surprised with Da' Tara's victory than he was with Birdstone, who went on to win the Travers S. (G1) for owner Marylou Whitney and her husband, John Hendrickson. Twice in the last and longest leg of horse racing's Triple Crown, Nick Zito has changed history. On Saturday, the 67-year-old Hall of Fame trainer will be making some history of his own in the $1.5 million Belmont S. (G1). Back in the Belmont for the first time since 2010, Zito will send out his modern-day record 25th horse in the 1 1/2-mile "Test of the Champion" in Grade 2-placed Frammento (Midshipman), who galloped over Belmont Park's training track for the third straight morning on Friday. Overall, Zito has finished in the top five with 16 of his first 24 starters, including two wins, seven seconds and three thirds. Both his victories spoiled bids for the Triple Crown that Kentucky Derby (G1) and Preakness S. (G1) winner American Pharoah (Pioneerof the Nile) is seeking, as well. "I think the one thing that we're proud of is our Belmont record is good," Zito said. "This horse is a live longshot and I think he'll get a good piece; that's all you can ask for. If anything crazy happens, that's what you think. I'm in the race because I've got a mile-and-a half-horse. He's got the pedigree, and you can see how cool he is.
"(American Pharoah) is a tremendous horse," Zito admitted. "I hope it'll be a dry track, because it is ridiculous the way he runs on an off track. It's a little scary. I've had horses win major races, one was the Kentucky Derby, on off tracks, but this horse is superior on a wet track. Superior. There's no question." Zito and Baffert are the only trainers in the Belmont field to win each Triple Crown race at least once. Zito captured the Kentucky Derby with Strike the Gold (1991) and Go for Gin (1994) and the Preakness with Louis Quatorze (1996). American Pharoah can become the 12th Triple Crown winner and first since Affirmed in 1978 with a Belmont victory. Affirmed was the third horse to sweep the series in six years, following Secretariat (1973) and the undefeated Seattle Slew (1977). "I know they're comparing him to 'Slew' and horses like that, but that's a long way off yet," Zito warned. "Still, if you win the Triple Crown, I guess it's not." Bet Horseracing Free Online at TwinSpires.com
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