KENTUCKY DERBY REPORT
FEBRUARY 28, 2013
by James Scully
Saturday’s Fountain of Youth turned out to be a thriller, with a pair of
talented three-year-olds, Orb and Violence, battling to the wire at
Gulfstream Park, but any post-race excitement proved short-lived after it was
announced that Violence had sustained a career-ending injury. He will be okay,
with a future at stud, but it served as another brutal example of the highs and
lows in horse racing.
The Risen Star at Fair Grounds offered up its own drama, with the top five
finishers separated by only 1 1/2 lengths on the wire, but 135-1 upset winner
I’ve Struck a Nerve did little to flatter the Kentucky Derby prospects of
the next four finishers — Code West, Palace Malice, Oxbow
and Normandy Invasion. The vanquished can’t be dismissed from
consideration, but the immediate result was a head-scratcher.
The first leg in the championship portion of the new “Road to the Kentucky
Derby” scoring system began last weekend, awarding points on a 50-20-10-5 scale
to the first four finishers, and it continues this Saturday with the Gotham
Stakes. The 1 1/16-mile test over Aqueduct’s inner track will feature the 2013
bow of Remsen winner Overanalyze, whose rivals include unbeaten Jerome
winner Vyjack.
This weekend also marks the second pool of the Kentucky Derby Future Wager,
which runs Friday-Sunday.
Fountain of Youth
Orb appeared to be facing a steep task over the speed-favoring track at
Gulfstream, which features a short stretch run at the 1 1/16-mile distance, but
he received the ideal set-up for his ferocious finishing kick, with 3-5 favorite
Violence chasing speedball Majestic Hussar through splits of :23, :45 2/5
and 1:08 4/5. Orb circled rivals on the far turn and collared Violence in deep
stretch, edging his way to a half-length decision.
The runner-up surged to a clear advantage turning for home and proved game
when challenged, but the fast fractions eventually took their toll. It was still
a very encouraging performance, one which Violence figured to keep moving
forward from, and his injury came as a painful blow to the Todd Pletcher barn.
The trainer possesses incredible depth this year, but Violence will be missed.
Orb exited his stakes debut Saturday in high standing for the Kentucky Derby.
A maiden winner in his juvenile finale, he opened his three-year-old season with
a nice one-length allowance score at nine furlongs on January 26, but quality
concerns remained given the 89 BRIS Speed rating he received. That low number
was mostly due to a slow pace, but it represented a career-best for Orb in his
fifth career start.
He broke through in the Fountain of Youth, registering a commendable 102 BRIS
Speed, and Orb rates as a rapidly-improving type for trainer Shug McGaughey. The
Triple Crown is seldom a focus for the Hall of Fame trainer, whose prominent
stable is generally associated with late-developing horses, but he has an
exciting prospect to guide this year in Orb. McGaughey is winless in six
previous Derby attempts, with runner-up Easy Goer providing his best finish in
1989, and is poised to return for the first time since a 10th-place effort by
Saarland in 2002.
Orb is virtually guaranteed a spot in the Derby field with 50 points, so the
pressure is off in his final prep, and the 1 1/4-mile race could set up
perfectly if the late runner is able to navigate his way through traffic.
Distance appears of no concern for the well-bred son of the A.P. Indy sire
Malibu Moon; Orb hails from the mare Lady Liberty, a daughter of 1990 Kentucky
Derby winner Unbridled who won at distances up to 1 1/2 miles, and this is the
female family of Coronado’s Quest, Private Terms and the immortal Ruffian.
McGaughey suggested this week that Orb would likely remain at Gulfstream for
the March 30 Florida Derby, which makes sense given that John Velazquez should
be able to keep the mount. The jockey is also committed to Verrazano, who
likely will be favored a week later in the Wood Memorial if he wins the March 9
Tampa Bay Derby as expected, and Velazquez could have a difficult decision to
make after the final round of preps.
Risen Star
I’ve Struck a Nerve looked overmatched entering the Risen Star. His only
competitive efforts had come at six furlongs, including a runner-up in the
December 22 Sugar Bowl at Fair Grounds, and he showed little when finishing
fourth, more than 13 lengths behind the winning Oxbow, in the January 19
Lecomte.
But, as Hall of Fame conditioner and four-time Derby winner D. Wayne Lukas
likes to say, “You can’t win it if you’re not in it” and I’ve Struck a Nerve
rewarded his connections’ decision to enter, rallying wide into the stretch
before getting up late to score by a nose.
He paid $272.40 to win and $110.60 to place.
Give trainer Keith Desormeaux credit and James Graham excelled while picking
up the mount, but I won’t put much stock into the winner. A son of speed sire
Yankee Gentleman, I’ve Struck a Nerve may have been pushing the limits of his
effectiveness at Saturday’s 1 1/16-mile trip and needs to prove that his massive
upset wasn’t an aberration.
Runner-up Code West just missed in the photo finish, turning in a respectable
effort in his first start versus stakes foes. He pressed pacesetter Proud Strike
during the early stages, was confronted and passed by Oxbow rounding the far
turn, and despite appearing to be in serious trouble in upper stretch, continued
to slug it out all the way to wire, re-rallying in the final sixteenth of a
mile. I thought Code West may be a race or two away from a top showing at this
level before the Risen Star and expect further improvement down the road.
The Bob Baffert-trained colt needed four starts before breaking his maiden in
a slow time against suspect rivals at Santa Anita in late October. Code West
moved forward off of that effort when opening 2013 with a runner-up to
stablemate Super Ninety Nine in a one-mile allowance on January 31,
generating a career-best 99 BRIS Speed rating, and equaled that figure while
getting blinkers off in the Risen Star. The son of Lemon Drop Kid has been a bit
one-paced in all his starts, but Code West owns tactical speed and is bred to
relish longer distances. The Risen Star should provide him valuable seasoning.
Palace Malice was making his two-turn bow, and only his third career outing,
and I was surprised to see him near the back during the opening stages given his
BRIS Early Pace numbers. The Pletcher trainee began passing rivals on the far
turn and accelerated into contention in midstretch, threatening to run past his
rivals while four wide, and even though his momentum stalled slightly late,
Palace Malice wound up missing by only a half-length. The Curlin colt is bred to
improve with maturity and added distance, and the Risen Star served as a good
effort to build upon.
Oxbow sped away from the start of the Lecomte, running his rivals into the
ground en route to an 11 1/2-length decision, but he changed tactics in the
Risen Star and was caught five wide into the first turn from post 10, closely
stalking the front runners beneath Jon Court. He loomed a menacing figure when
advancing to challenge on the far turn and entered the stretch drive as the one
to catch, and even though he weakened late, the Lukas runner never quit trying,
missing the show by a nose. This race could toughen up the son of Awesome Again
for next time.
Normandy Invasion was never a serious factor as the 3-2 favorite following a
rough trip, bobbling at the start and traveling wide the entire way, and that
trouble likely compromised his chances. But there were some drawbacks to note
from a disheartening performance. He was side-by-side with the eventual winner
at the top of the stretch and while that rival displayed a closing kick to catch
the leaders and forge by, Normandy Invasion never threatened, passing tiring
opponents in the final furlong to be an inconsequential fifth.
It would be premature to give up on Normandy Invasion — this was just the
starting point of his three-year-old campaign and he displayed such promise last
fall, breaking his maiden by 9 1/4 lengths before recording an excellent nose
second in the Remsen (104 BRIS Speed rating in the latter) — but he finds
himself in a precarious position going forward, with only four points to his
credit, after whiffing in the Risen Star.
That puts a lot of pressure on Normandy Invasion, as well as trainer Chad
Brown, in the April 6 Wood Memorial, where the late runner will need a
much-improved performance to challenge against what could be a deep cast of
rivals. I wouldn’t put a massive rebound past him, but Normandy Invasion did
little Saturday to justify his standing as a leading Kentucky Derby contender.
Top 10
- Verrazano — Brilliant allowance winner looks very capable if he
handles distance; makes two-turn debut for Pletcher in the March 9 Tampa Bay
Derby - Flashback — Unbeaten colt exits easy tally in Bob Lewis and
merits serious respect for three-time Derby winner Bob Baffert; March 9 San
Felipe is next - Orb — Uncorked big late run to win Fountain of Youth and will
have no distance concerns at Churchill; March 30 Florida Derby is likely - Revolutionary — Talent is there if he can overcome maturity
issues; Pletcher is considering his options for final prep - Itsmyluckyday — Posted big numbers winning Holy Bull &
Gulfstream Derby for Eddie Plesa; the one to beat in Florida Derby - Super Ninety Nine — His stock rose greatly following Southwest
romp; he’s run big twice since stretching out to two turns for Baffert - Overanalyze — Ended last year on right note winning Remsen (104
BRIS Speed); threat to move up if he returns strong in Gotham for Pletcher - Code West — Risen Star runner-up is a candidate to keep showing
more for Baffert; could return to Fair Grounds for March 30 Louisiana Derby - Normandy Invasion — Risen Star turned out disappointing but late
runner will attempt to regain lost luster in the April 6 Wood - Oxbow — Changed tactics in Risen Star but wide trip hurt his
chances; still offers some appeal for Lukas and will return for Louisiana
Derby
Derby Future
I am seeking value in the Future Wager and made four plays in Pool 1 — Code
West (56-1), Dynamic Sky (54-1), Overanalyze (33-1) and Oxbow (26-1). In Pool 2
this weekend, I will avoid any horses at 15-1 or lower when making my wagers on
Sunday.
That probably eliminates a number of top prospects, including Flashback,
Itsmyluckyday, Orb and Verrazano, from consideration, but Revolutionary appears
likely to drift up from 12-1 morning line into a suitable price range.
Along with Revolutionary, I plan to support Delhomme (50-1) and Palace Malice
(30-1) in Pool 2.