FLUSHING, N.Y. – There will be truth in advertising on Saturday at Belmont Park, as Justify, the number one 3-year-old in the land, will wear saddle cloth number one when he breaks from the rail in the Belmont Stakes in his bid to sweep the Triple Crown. Justify, winner of the Kentucky Derby and Preakness and unbeaten in five starts, drew the rail when posts were drawn Tuesday night at Citi Field for the 150th Belmont Stakes. Nine others were entered in the race, but all eyes will be in Justify as he attempts to become the 13th Triple Crown winner. :: Get Clocker Reports, PPs, news, analysis, and more for the 2018 Belmont Stakes The rail forces Justify to leave alertly, and any potential speed will be drawn outside of him, in position to press him. Bob Baffert, his trainer, was not exactly overjoyed with the draw. “I never do like to draw the rail,” Baffert said. “My horses seem to live in it. We have it, can’t change it, have to deal with it.” The Belmont is one lap around Belmont Park, which has a main track of 1 1/2 miles in circumference. Lined up outside Justify, in post position order, are Free Drop Billy, Bravazo, Hofburg, Restoring Hope, Gronkowski, Tenfold, Vino Rosso, Noble Indy, and Blended Citizen. Noble Indy will remove blinkers for this race. He is one of two horses trained by Todd Pletcher, who also sends out Vino Rosso. Pletcher after the draw said Noble Indy will “need to show a little speed to get into the flow of the race” after breaking from post 9. Baffert also has two runners, with his other the longshot Restoring Hope. Mike Watchmaker, Daily Racing Form’s national handicapper, made Justify even-money on his line for the race, with Hofburg the second choice at 5-1 and Vino Rosso next at 6-1. David Aragona, who makes the official morning line for Belmont Park, has Justify at 4-5, with Hofburg at 9-2 and then Bravazo and Vino Rosso the co-third choices at 8-1. The Belmont Stakes and Justify's bid for the Triple Crown anchors a blockbuster card at Belmont Park that includes nine other stakes, including the Grade 1 Metropolitan Handicap, Grade 1 Manhattan Stakes, Grade 1 Ogden Phipps Stakes, Grade 1 Acorn Stakes, and Grade 1 Just a Game Stakes. First post is 11:35 a.m. Eastern on Saturday, with post time for the Belmont set at 6:46 p.m. - additional reporting by David Grening and Nicole Russo From the rail out, the Belmont field, with riders and morning-line odds: POST HORSE / SIRE TRACK ODDS WATCHMAKER ODDS BEST BEYER DERBY FINISH, BEYER PREAKNESS FINISH, BEYER JAY PRIVMAN AND MIKE WATCHMAKER COMMENTS - designates Keeneland sale graduate 1 Justify  4-5 1-1 107 1st, 103 1st, 97 JP: Clearly best of this crop. Only question will be if cumulative toll of campaign finally wears him down.   by Scat Daddy         MW: I'm a big fan. Didn't care about his lack of 2yo foundation in Derby, but fear it could hurt him now.   Owner: WinStar Farm, China Horse Club, Starlight Racing, & Head of Plains Partners; Trainer: Bob Baffert; Jockey: Mike Smith   2 Free Drop Billy  30-1 30-1 90 16th, 43 ** JP: Just don't think he's made any advancement from 2-year-old form. Saved ground in Derby, retreated.   by Union Rags MW: The problem with his static form from 2 to 3 is his 2yo form looked better on paper than it really was.   Owner: Albaugh Family Stables; Trainer: Dale Romans; Jockey: Robby Albarado   3 Bravazo 8-1 8-1 96 6th, 91 2nd, 96 JP: Hearty sort only one beside Justify to compete in entire Triple Crown. Distance shouldn't hinder him.   by Awesome Again MW: Followed through on improved effort in Derby with an even better try in Preakness; has a chance.   Owner: Calumet Farm; Trainer: D. Wayne Lukas; Jockey: Luis Saez   4 Hofburg 9-2 5-1 94 7th, 90 ** JP: Had severe traffic when trying to rally on far turn in Derby. Benefits from five-week break. Dangerous.   by Tapit MW: He's my pick, and I know I'm far from alone on that. Fine try in Derby, primed for a big effort now.   Owner: Juddmonte Farms; Trainer: Bill Mott; Jockey: Irad Ortiz Jr.   5 Restoring Hope 30-1 20-1 90 ** ** JP: Still eligible to a first-level allowance. Better suited to that than again being thrown to the wolves.   by Giant's Causeway MW: I can forgive his flop in the slop last time. His Wood, though, makes me wonder if he wants distance.   Owner: Gary & Mary West; Trainer: Bob Baffert; Jockey: Florent Geroux   6 Gronkowski  12-1 15-1 n/a ** ** JP: Certain to take money due to name, but ran against far softer overseas. Local works have been fine.   by Lonhro MW: I guessed he'll be around 15-1. He could be lower. But I think his actual chances are around 60-1.   Owner: Phoenix Thoroughbred Limited, et al; Trainer: Chad Brown; Jockey: Jose Ortiz   7 Tenfold 12-1 10-1 95 ** 3rd, 95 JP: Like Justify, has come long way since February debut. Loomed up in Preakness, swapped leads late.   by Curlin MW: He ran okay in the Preakness and does have license to improve. Might be the main overlay here.   Owner: Winchell Thoroughbreds; Trainer: Steve Asmussen; Jockey: Ricardo Santana Jr.   8 Vino Rosso  8-1 6-1 98 9th, 88 ** JP: Took scenic route in Derby. This is Pletcher's signature move, skip Preakness to be primed for Belmont.   by Curlin MW: I just wish he showed a bit more life in the Derby. He was really out of gas through the stretch run.   Owner: Repole Stable & St. Elias Stable; Trainer: Todd Pletcher; Jockey: John Velazquez   9 Noble Indy  30-1 20-1 95 17th, 42 ** JP: Derby was first time on slop, gave way without a fight. Rider took care of him, didn't persevere late.   by Take Charge Indy MW: Even on his favorite surface and off his best race, he seems a decided cut below the best here.   Owner: WinStar Farm & Repole Stable; Trainer: Todd Pletcher; Jockey: Javier Castellano   10 Blended Citizen 15-1 20-1 90 ** ** JP: Had a made-to-order setup in Peter Pan, finished well to prevail, but don't think that field was much.   by Proud Citizen MW: No question he has improved with racing, in blinkers, but he needs a big step forward to contend.   Owner: Greg Hall and SAYJAY Racing; Trainer: Doug O'Neill; Jockey: Kyle Frey