November 20, 2024

McGaughey happy with Orb’s status as early favorite

Last updated: 5/1/13 9:10 PM











Orb is McGaughey’s second
favorite to win the Kentucky Derby


(Churchill Downs/Reed Palmer Photography)

Florida Derby victor Orb
returned to the racetrack Wednesday morning and jogged once around Churchill
Downs’ oval under exercise rider Jennifer Patterson in advance of Saturday’s
Grade 1, $2 million Kentucky Derby.

The son of Malibu Moon, who walked the shedrow Tuesday after breezing a half-mile in :47
/45 Monday, was scheduled to
school in the paddock during Wednesday’s 1ST race at Churchill Downs.

Orb’s effortless workout and strong gallop-out generated
speculation that the Shug McGaughey-trained colt could end up taking over the
favorite’s role for the Derby from undefeated Verrazano. That was born out after
the post position draw when oddsmaker Mike Battaglia made the bay colt the 7-2
morning-line choice.

“I’d love to be the favorite, because the favorite’s going
to have something under his name that makes him the favorite,” McGaughey
said. “I wish every one of my horses was favorite. They’re not all going to win,
I understand that, but I’m on board with that.”

Orb’s presence at Churchill Downs has attracted a lot of
media attention around McGaughey and Barn 43.

“I try to lay as low as I can, but I’m really enjoying
being here and every aspect of it. It hasn’t bothered me at all,” he said.

McGaughey was asked to compare his mind-set this year as
compared to 1989, when he was preparing heavily favored Easy Goer for the Derby,
in which he finished second behind the Charlie Whittingham-trained Sunday Silence.

“I think I have a lot more confidence in myself than at
that time — not that I didn’t have confidence,” McGaughey remarked. “When Easy Goer
came here, he couldn’t lose, so I had to go up against that. I knew who I was
going up against. I was 37 or something, and he (Whittingham) probably already
won that many Grade 1s that year. I feel good where we are and am glad we’re
here and hope down the road we’re here a lot more times.”

Mylute visited the track during the Derby and Oaks training
session, deviating from his usual 5:45 a.m. (EDT) routine, so he could school in
the starting gate Wednesday morning at Churchill Downs.

With jockey Rosie Napravnik watching intently from the half-mile gap, the
Louisiana Derby runner-up jogged and galloped under exercise rider Maurice
Sanchez.

“He went to the gate and practiced over there so that he’s
calm, cool and collected come Derby Day,” trainer Tom Amoss said. “He did his
normal gallop and his normal jog before and after that. It was a straightforward
day other than stopping at the gate and that went without event.”

Todd Quast, general manager of co-owner GoldMark Farm, was
also on hand for the work. Quast helped to pick out Mylute at the 2011
Fasig-Tipton July Sale.

“He was a very strong, imposing individual, even as a
yearling,” Quast said. “He had the most fluid walk that I had seen at that sale.
He was a first-year Midnight Lute and everyone’s thinking those are going to be
sprinters but I always felt he was a sprinter by default. He was by Real Quiet
and bred to be a route horse, the mare was a route horse, so that didn’t bother
me.

“That sale is about individuals and he was a standout individual. We paid
$150,000 for him but I thought it was a good buy and now it seems like a great
buy.”

Quast spent most of the 1990s working as an assistant
trainer to D. Wayne Lukas and broke Kentucky Derby winners Grindstone (1996) and
Charismatic (1999).

“These five weeks are so important,” Quast said of the
final days leading up to the Kentucky Derby. “You have to be as good as you can
be. If we lose it’s not because we didn’t have a good five weeks of training.

“From the Louisiana Derby forward this horse has been doing so well. He ran in
the Louisiana Derby on Saturday, shipped on Sunday, arrived at Churchill on
Monday, jogged Tuesday, galloped the next few days, and then that Sunday we gave
him a half(-mile breeze) because he was tearing the barn down. That was only
eight days after the race.”










Itsmyluckyday seems to be flying in under the Derby radar a bit

(Cecilia Gustavsson/Horsephotos.com)

Itsmyluckyday stood in the starting gate and galloped 1 3/4 miles under exercise
rider Peter Shelton Wednesday morning at Churchill. The Gulfstream Park Derby
and Holy Bull winner
finished second, 2 3/4 lengths behind, Orb in the Florida Derby on March 30.

“It’s nice to finish second to the horse that probably will
go off the favorite for the Kentucky Derby. I’m tickled to death that he’s
getting all the press and all the accolades now — and he deserves it,” trainer
Eddie Plesa Jr. said. “I wouldn’t trade my horse for any horse in the race. I
feel real good about our chances. He has the ability to win the
race, given a chance, I believe.”

Itsmyluckyday’s tactical speed has contributed to his
trainer’s confidence.

“It doesn’t matter how it unfolds for him. He’s not a horse
that needs the lead. He’s not a horse that needs a fast pace to come from
behind. He’s a horse that has tactical speed,” the South Florida-based trainer
said. “It will be put in the jockey’s hands to see what happens at the beginning
of the race. If it’s a fast pace, he’ll be a little farther back. If it’s a slow
pace, he’ll be closer to the pace. He’s got tactical speed, and that’s what you
like to have in this race.”

Thus, Plesa won’t give jockey Elvis Trujillo detailed
instructions on how to ride Itsmyluckyday.

“I’ll tell Elvis, ‘Take what they give you. Good luck and
have a safe trip,'” Plesa said.

Black Onyx galloped
a little more than 1 1/2 miles under exercise rider Aurelio Gomez during the Derby
and Oaks training session and came back looking “tremendous,” according to
trainer Kelly Breen. The Spiral winner has rapidly come into
his own since changing barns in January and Breen has seen this kind of progress
with Rock Hard Ten colts before.

“They start putting on weight and it’s like a kid going
through puberty,” he said. “You see it right in front of your eyes and it
happens in a matter of weeks. You really can see something change and hopefully
it’s not an awkward growth spurt.

“You see some horses that come into their own from two to
three. It looks visually like he’s blossoming and hopefully he runs the way that
he looks.”










Black Onyx arrived at Churchill early to prepare for his Derby run

(Cecilia Gustavsson/Horsephotos.com)

Black Onyx was the first major Derby contender to arrive at
Churchill Downs, rolling through the stable gate on March 27 just four days after
his Spiral win at Turfway Park.

“We’re hoping it’s an advantage,” Breen admitted. “To say what
the right way and what the wrong way is, though, there’s more than one way to
train a horse. You get in from the Spiral and it’s right down the road. To me
there was no sense in shipping to Florida and coming back. He got used to the
track, got used to the weather and he acclimated well.”

Breen has been especially impressed by the heart Black Onyx
has shown in two straight wins.

“You see it in his workouts,” the trainer said. “He puts it
out on the track. After he won his first race for us on the turf he came back
and he laid down for a couple of days. To me that showed what kind of heart he
has. He runs fast, he runs hard, gives it his all, and then he comes back and
rests and takes it easy.

“Then he comes back a few weeks later and it’s the same thing. He gives it
his all. We waited a couple of days to ship from Turfway to Churchill and it was
like he just needed to recharge his batteries. By the time we got here he was
ready to go again.”

In other Derby news:

The Kentucky-bred Lines of Battle arrived at Churchill Downs at 2:25 a.m. Wednesday after a trip from Ireland.

T.J. Comerford, assistant to trainer Aidan O’Brien,
estimated that the trip from O’Brien’s Ballydoyle training center to Churchill
Downs took 14 hours. Lines of Battle was flown by charter from Shannon Airport
in Ireland to Chicago and then on to Louisville.

Comerford said the trip went smoothly and that the colt
handled it well. Lines of Battle is scheduled to go to the track Friday morning
after clearing quarantine.

“It was quick enough,” Comerford said. “We’re used to
traveling our horses. There’s not a problem. He’s 100 percent.”

Lines of Battle won the UAE Derby on March 30 to earn
the points needed to qualify for a berth in the Derby. He will be O’Brien’s
fifth Derby starter and the third straight year he has sent the UAE Derby winner
to the Kentucky Derby.

“Aidan tries to have a go every year,” Comerford said. “Every horse we’ve brought here has won the same race in Dubai. Aidan would like
to win it because it’s a major race, one of the biggest races.”

In 2011, the O’Brien-trained Master of Hounds was fifth.
Last year, Daddy Long Legs was pulled up and did not finish.

“It’s not easy,” Comerford noted. “We’ve come out here most
than most and we’ve tried. God loves a trier.”

Ryan Moore is scheduled to ride Lines of Battle in the
Derby.

Gotham winner Vyjack galloped 1 1/2 miles under trainer Rudy Rodriguez Wednesday morning. Although this is owner David Wilkenfeld’s first Derby
starter, he said he isn’t having any trouble handling the activity around
America’s biggest race.

“I’ve been here with a friend before, so I have a little
experience,” Wilkenfeld said. “I don’t find it overwhelming. I’m from New York.
There’s a lot going on there. I’m used to it.”

Vyjack is the first horse that Wilkenfeld, a longtime fan
and veteran horseplayer, has owned. He paid $100,000 for the two-year-old from the
first crop of Into Mischief at Fasig-Tipton’s Timonium, Maryland, sale in May 2012.

“I thought he would be a distance horse the way he worked
three-eighths,” Wilkenfeld said. “He had a long stride and was a big horse. It
was from a freshman sire, so you don’t really know.

“Into Mischief won at a mile and a sixteenth, but never
really got a shot. They were prepping him for the Derby, but he had some injury
issues. But he was a fast horse and the family was fast. I like fast horses.
That’s what I look for and then you figure out how far they go.”

Wilkenfeld said he was aiming high and had the Derby as a
goal when he bought Vyjack.

“I really wasn’t looking for a horse that would come out of
the sale and would be ready to run right away,” he said. “We took our time and
made a plan. So far it’s worked out great.

“To me, if you buy a two-year-old that’s the dream. I start
from there and then we told Rudy early on, ‘We’ll plan for the Derby and if the
horse disappoints, then he disappoints us. But I don’t want to think small. I
want to think big.’ That’s what we did. It worked out.”

Falling Sky stood in the starting gate and galloped 1 3/8
miles under Cassie Garcea Wednesday morning at Churchill Downs. The Lion Heart
bay has impressed trainer John Terranova with the
manner in which he strides out over the Churchill surface.

“He covers a lot of ground. I think this type of tighter
surface, he really appreciates — a surface he can get over the top of. This
surface shows him a little bit better. He just skips over this nice tight
surface,” Terranova explained. “Deeper tracks maybe take away from his stride a
little bit. This one he really seems to glide over. He just moves so efficiently
over this track.”










Normandy Invasion looks primed for his Run for the Roses

(Cecilia Gustavsson/Horsephotos.com)

Spiral third Giant Finish was scheduled to ship from the Fair Hill Training Center in
Elkton, Maryland, to Louisville, Kentucky, at 8 p.m. Wednesday and will be on the
grounds at Churchill Downs by Thursday morning.

“He has performed well for us,” trainer Tony Dutrow said. “He tries. His
effort is there. We like the horse and we’re happy to work with him. He’s been a
hard-trying boy that has done well for himself.”

Normandy
Invasion had a routine 1 1/2-mile gallop Wednesday morning during the time
reserved at 8:30 for Derby and Oaks horses.

After the Tapit colt returned to the barn, owner Rick
Porter of Fox Hill Farms explained that he decided to use the name Normandy Invasion because he
had been moved by visit in 1994 to the site of the D-Day assault on the beaches
of France in World World II.

“I went there for the 50th anniversary and was really
inspired by everything I saw there,” Porter said. “If you’re ever near there,
you’ve got to go to Normandy. You’ve got to put that on your bucket list.”

Trainer D. Wayne
Lukas, participating in his 27th Derby since 1981, said that he doesn’t see an
overwhelming standout.

“The reality of it is, it’s not an easy spot for anybody,”
Lukas said after watching Oxbow and Will Take Charge jog Wednesday morning. “I
think it’s pretty wide-open, like everybody’s telling you. I don’t think we’ve
got Secretariat in this bunch, even Seattle Slew. So, I think it’s going to boil
to trip and the pace and a lot of other things. I’m comfortable with where I’m
at with my horses. If they’re good enough, we’ll find out, but I’m comfortable.”




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