LOUISVILLE, Ky. - Early indications are that Golden Tempo came out of his victory in Saturday’s Kentucky Derby in good order and will be considered, but is not yet definite, to run in the Preakness Stakes at Laurel Park on May 16, trainer Cherie DeVaux said Sunday morning.  Shortly after 10 a.m. Sunday, Golden Tempo shipped from Churchill Downs to Keeneland, where he will train no matter where he makes his next start. Golden Tempo, who competed in a trio of Kentucky Derby points-scoring races at Fair Grounds - winning the Grade 3 Lecomte in January - did all of his major training at Keeneland leading up to the Kentucky Derby  “We’ll get him back there, assess how he’s doing, as long as he’s in tip-top shape, we’ll talk about [Preakness] and it is on the table, but it’s really up to him,” said DeVaux, who trains Golden Tempo for the Phipps Stable and St Elias Stable.  Golden Tempo, who rallied from last under Jose Ortiz to nip Renegade by a neck in the Kentucky Derby, has made five starts, all since Dec. 20 when he won a six-furlong maiden race at Fair Grounds. He came into the Derby having not raced in six weeks after a third-place finish in the Louisiana Derby.  “Obviously, this race is in two weeks, so it’s a lot different than what he’s done,” DeVaux said Sunday morning outside her Churchill barn. “He’s a horse that has a lot of constitution to him, so he can handle something like that. If one day he doesn’t look like he’s in tip-top shape we’ll pivot and come up with another plan.”  Golden Tempo gave both DeVaux and jockey Jose Ortiz their first victories in the Kentucky Derby. It made DeVaux the first female trainer to accomplish that feat.  “It’s amazing that I get to be that person and I never have to answer the question about what it would [mean] to be the first female trainer to win the Kentucky Derby,” she said.  Golden Tempo, who gave his sire Curlin his first winner in the Kentucky Derby, earned a 95 Beyer Speed Figure for the victory.  Though it was a little more than 12 hours after the race, it was not apparent that any other horses from the Kentucky Derby are targeting the Preakness. Trainer Bob Baffert, in a text, mentioned Potente, who finished 12th in the Derby, as questionable.  Renegade, who broke from the rail and took some hard bumps during the first part of the Derby, ran a terrific race to be second. Trainer Todd Pletcher said Renegade would ship to Saratoga on Tuesday and be considered for the Belmont Stakes on June 6.  “Thought he ran an incredible race, ended up getting a decent trip, but man the first 100 yards was pretty rough,” Pletcher said. “After that, he ran terrific. The horse was in good shape this morning. Thankfully, he came out of it unscathed.”  Ocelli, an 0 for 6 maiden who finished third beaten one length after making the lead in deep stretch, is going to target the Matt Winn Stakes at Churchill Downs on June 7 with the Travers in late August as an objective, trainer Whit Beckman said.  “He ran his heart out yesterday and I just feel like what we want to try to do through the year ... I don’t want to put him in a position now to burn him out completely,” Beckman said.   Chief Wallabee, who finished fourth, beaten three lengths, will ship to Saratoga and prepare for a spring/summer campaign, trainer Bill Mott said Sunday. Mott, who skipped the Preakness last year with Derby winner Sovereignty, said the Preakness was never mentioned by owners Katherine and Michael Ball. He will talk to them about the Belmont, which, for the third straight year, will be run at 1 1/4 miles at Saratoga.  Mott thought Chief Wallabee ran a terrific race, rallying to get fourth after getting bumped in midstretch by Further Ado.  “To get bounced around that late in the race and still come on, I thought he was very courageous, actually,” Mott said. “He picked himself up and he could have easily been fifth and he was still trying right to the wire. I really thought it was a very good race.”  The Japan-based horses Danon Bourbon and Wonder Dean finished fifth and eighth, respectively, in the Kentucky Derby. Wonder Dean, along with his Grade 1 Churchill Downs Stakes-winning stablemate T O Elvis, left Churchill by van Sunday for Chicago, where they will do a brief quarantine before returning to Japan. Danon Bourbon is not scheduled to leave until Tuesday at the earliest.  Emerging Market, the Louisiana Derby winner who finished 10th in the Kentucky Derby under Flavien Prat, lost a left front shoe in the race, trainer Chad Brown said. Brown said that, racing close to the pace and a bump at the three-eighths pole contributed to Emerging Market getting beat 7 3/4 lengths.    “In addition to wishing he was a little farther back after looking at how the race unfolded, [Prat] also reported to me that around the three-eighths marker he took a very hard bump and he said it knocked him off balance and he said the horse never really felt the same after that to him,” Brown said. “That added to him maybe flattening out a bit. I’m looking at the fractions thinking I wish he didn’t get hit, but was he going to be able to finish anyway?”  Plans for the Brad Cox-trained pair of Commandment (7th) and Further Ado (11th as the 5-1 favorite) were pending, but neither is scheduled to run back in the Preakness.  Crude Velocity, winner of Saturday’s Grade 2 Pat Day Mile, is the most intriguing of the non-Derby starters who is being considered for the Preakness. Baffert, his trainer, said it’s only 50-50 that he runs coming off a very fast race on Saturday. Crude Velocity earned a 100 Beyer Speed Figure for the Pat Day performance.  Baffert is planning to start Cherokee Nation, who is just 1 for 7 and coming off a sixth-place finish in the Santa Anita Derby, in the Preakness. Chip Honcho, who had been running competitively with Golden Tempo in the Louisiana 3-year-old preps this spring, skipped the Derby with the Preakness in mind, trainer Steve Asmussen said.  Others mentioned as potential Preakness starters are Crupper, Express Kid, Iron Honor, Napoleon Solo, Silent Tactic, Pretty Boy Miah, Taj Mahal, Talkin, and The Hell We Did.  :: Want to learn more about handicapping and wagering? Check out DRF's Handicapping 101 and Wagering 101 pages.