Fri, 05/14/2021 - 10:36

Preakness 2021: Marcus Hersh's picks and analysis

MEDINA SPIRIT probably just is too much for this moderate Preakness bunch – “probably” enough that I can’t quite get to legitimately trying to beat him even at the expected price, which is going to be much, much, much lower than the 12-1 at which those sharp enough to tab him in the Derby cashed. It seems impossible the two Bob Baffert-trained colts, Medina Spirit and Concert Tour, wind up dueling with one another.

Fri, 05/14/2021 - 10:36

Preakness 2021: Brad Free's picks and analysis

MIDNIGHT BOURBON can upset the Preakness, assuming he gets a different trip than his better-than-looked sixth in the Kentucky Derby. Midnight Bourbon runs best when he is forwardly placed, but he was unable to establish a forward position in the Derby. He raced in the back half of the field, lost ground most of the race, and missed by slightly more than eight lengths. Under compromising circumstances, he actually ran very well.

Fri, 05/14/2021 - 10:36

Preakness 2021: Mike Beer's picks and analysis

Perhaps the most important thing to do when sitting down with the past performances for the 146th Preakness is to put the controversy and subsequent distractions surrounding the Kentucky Derby winner aside. Once that is done, it quickly becomes clear that MEDINA SPIRIT, whether he wins this race or not, holds a significant edge over his nine rivals in both form and speed.

Fri, 05/14/2021 - 08:30

Hegarty: Baffert needs to beware of the man in the mirror

Barbara D. Livingston
Bob Baffert

After the infamous Derby DQ two years ago, after the disruptions caused by the coronavirus last year, the sport of racing seemed set to enjoy a panic-free Triple Crown run this year.

How wrong that notion turned out to be.

Thu, 05/13/2021 - 10:10

Diodoro hoping Preakness experience not just a one-off

Emily Shields
Keepmeinmind, who runs in Saturday's Preakness, is the first Triple Crown starter for trainer Robertino Diodoro.

BALTIMORE – With Keepmeinmind, trainer Robertino Diodoro is enjoying his first Triple Crown experience. He doesn’t expect it to be his last.

“I haven’t left here and I’m already itching to get back,” Diodoro said Thursday morning at Pimlico where on Saturday he planned to start Keepmeinmind in the $1 million Preakness.

Diodoro, who made his reputation as a claiming trainer, said he is getting better stock and has 2-year-olds by top sires such as Into Mischief and Medaglia d’Oro that he hopes can get him back on the trail next year.

Thu, 05/13/2021 - 10:00

No shortage of new faces in this year's Preakness

Barbara D. Livingston
Concert Tour, training Wednesday at Pimlico, is among seven Preakness starters who did not run in the Kentucky Derby.

BALTIMORE – Once was, a whole lot of Kentucky Derby runners would run back two weeks later in the Preakness Stakes. But with modern-day horsemen preferring more time between races, it has become increasingly common for just a handful of Derby starters – if not fewer – to resurface in the second leg of the Triple Crown at Pimlico Race Course.

Thu, 05/13/2021 - 09:50

Velazquez embraces roles as winner on track, mentor off track

Justin N. Lane
Jockey John Velazquez (left), aboard Malathaat, is congratulated by jockey Irad Ortiz Jr. after the Kentucky Oaks.

They had just crossed the finish line in the $1.25 million Kentucky Oaks, with John Velazquez and Malathaat outfinishing Irad Ortiz Jr. and Search Results by a neck. The vanquished Ortiz, the three-time reigning Eclipse champion jockey, patted Velazquez multiple times on the back and then reached for his hand to congratulate him.

“I had to congratulate him,” Ortiz, 28, said this week. “I told him, ‘You are our teacher.’ It came from my heart, honestly. I respect him.

Thu, 05/13/2021 - 09:50

Baffert-Medina Spirit controversy looms over Preakness

Barbara D. Livingston
Medina Spirit visits the track Tuesday morning at Pimlico ahead of Saturday's Preakness Stakes.

BALTIMORE – So much for a return to normalcy.

After being run in October as the third leg of the Triple Crown and in front of an empty grandstand in 2020 due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the Preakness has been restored to its rightful place on the calendar – the third Saturday in May. There will be fans allowed on-site, albeit just 10,000 on a day when typically more than 100,000 are in attendance.

Thu, 05/13/2021 - 09:46

Preakness reliable predictor of champions

Barbara D. Livingston
Last year's Preakness, won by the filly Swiss Skydiver, was run in October.

BALTIMORE – Over the last quarter-century, the Preakness has been the most accurate predictor of which 3-year-old will wind up being named the divisional champion – even more than the Kentucky Derby. Since 1996, 16 of the last 25 Preakness winners have been voted the top 3-year-old that year, and that doesn’t even include Rachel Alexandra, the 2009 Horse of the Year and top 3-year-old filly, and Swiss Skydiver, the top 3-year-old filly of 2020.

Wed, 05/12/2021 - 13:26

Brothers Rombauer and Treasure Trove represent Fradkins in stakes

Barbara D. Livingston
Rombauer (above) runs in the Preakness, one day after his half-brother Treasure Trove runs in the Pimlico Special.

One day before Rombauer runs in the Preakness Stakes, his older half-brother Treasure Trove will contest the Grade 3 Pimlico Special.

The 3-year-old Rombauer, by Twirling Candy, and the 5-year-old gelding Treasure Trove, by Tapizar, were both bred in Kentucky by John and Diane Fradkin. They are third-generation products of that program, which began when John Fradkin purchased the Afleet mare Ultrafleet for $10,500 as a yearling in 1993.