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Funny Cide arrives at Pimlico
By DAVID GRENING
BALTIMORE, Md. - Kentucky Derby winner Funny Cide arrived in Baltimore for the Preakness just before 2 p.m. on Friday as trainer Barclay Tagg decided to ship him earlier than planned. The gelding left New York on a van at 9:20 a.m.
"With the weather the way it is I didn't want to take any chances," Tagg said in a Friday afternoon press conference in the Pimlico press box.
Heavy rains hit Baltimore Saturday morning and were heading to New York for late afternoon and evening. Originally, Tagg was planning to ship Funny Cide to Baltimore in the wee hours of Saturday morning.
Funny Cide is stabled on the backstretch in barn 3 with Mary Eppler's horses.
Tagg said it is likely he will send Funny Cide out Saturday morning for a jog.
When asked about the prospect of running over an off-racetrack, Tagg said: "He seems to have handled that kind of track in the morning. He'll either like it or he won't do it."
Funny Cide 9-2 in early betting
Funny Cide was the fifth choice in the early betting for Saturday's
Preakness Stakes at Pimlico Race Course in Baltimore as of Friday
evening, at 9-2. Peace Rules was the early favorite at 5-2.
Early betting is rarely indicative of the final post-time odds,
especially more than 24 hours before a race. In the Kentucky Derby,
eventual favorite Empire Maker lingered at 8-1 until several hours before
the Derby was run.
Pimlico officials said the odds only represent bets made in Maryland. The
Pimlico wagering system had not yet linked up with other wagering
networks across the country to record the bets made elsewhere in the U.S.
as of Friday evening, the officials said.
The second-choice as of Friday evening was the entry of Scrimshaw and
Senor Swinger, at 7-2. The co-third choices were Cherokee's Boy, a horse
who was bred and is owned and trained by Maryland connections, and Ten
Cents A Shine, both at 4-1.
Foufa's Warrior was 19-1, Kissin Saint was 12-1, Midway Road was 25-1,
and New York Hero was 18-1.
* Handles on Pimlico's three head-to-head wagers on Friday were moderate.
In the ninth race, the Very One Stakes, which matched favorite Forest
Heiress against Maypole Dance, handle was $12,134. The bet had a minus
pool of $240, mutuel officials said, and Forest Heiress paid $2.10.
The tenth race head-to-head bet had handle of $8,549, while the eleventh
race handle was $12,804. The eighth race head-to-head had to be cancelled
after one of the horses, Smok'n Frolic, scratched on Friday morning. The
head-to-head bets had a takeout of 11 percent.
Last year at the Breeders' Cup, average handle on the eight head-to-head
bets was approximately $110,000.
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