What the past performances won’t tell you about Saturday’s Preakness Stakes
By: Mike Wilkening
Sportingnews
With a victory in Saturday’s $1.5 million Preakness Stakes at Baltimore’s Pimlico Race Course, California Chrome will become the 10th horse in 25 tries since 1989 to win the first two events of horse racing’s Triple Crown series (see chart below).
The 3-to-5 morning-line favorite, California Chrome is one of 10 entrants in the Preakness, which will be run at a mile-and-three-sixteenths on dirt.
Post time is 6:18 p.m. ET, with NBC beginning its coverage at 4:30 p.m. ET.
Below is a look at the Preakness field. The horses are listed in order of the number each will wear on Saturday, not their odds:
No. 1: Dynamic Impact (morning-line odds: 12-to-1)
Trainer: Mark Casse
Jockey: Miguel Mena
Assessment: This colt has started to show improvement with age and in longer races. Along with General a Rod, California Chrome and Social Inclusion, Dynamic Impact is one four Preakness entrants to have run a Beyer Speed Figure of 100 or greater in his career, earning a 102 Beyer in a nose victory in the 1 1/8-mile Illinois Derby on April 19. The No. 1 post could pose a challenge for Dynamic Impact — according to the Daily Racing Form, horses breaking from posts No. 1 or 2 are 0-of-34 at the Preakness distance of 1 3/16 miles in the last 10 years at Pimlico. Also, as of May 14, only one horse had won rallying up the rail at Pimlico this month, according to The Form. Dynamic Impact looks likely to be no closer than mid-pack when the horses settle in for the run up the backstretch.
No. 2: General a Rod (morning-line odds: 15-to-1)
Trainer: Michael Maker
Jockey: Javier Castellano (won 2006 Preakness on Bernardini)
Assessment: Of the 18 horses defeated by California Chrome two weeks ago at Churchill Downs, only General a Rod (11th) and Ride On Curlin (seventh) have returned to face the Kentucky Derby winner in Baltimore. General a Rod had far from an ideal trip in the Derby — he was well back in the field, had to deal with dirt in his face and was in tight quarters in deep stretch. He has shown a little less early speed as the races have grown longer, and like Dynamic Impact, he has to work out a trip from an inside draw. However, 13 of the last 25 Preakness winners were coming off Kentucky Derby losses.
No. 3: California Chrome (morning-line odds: 3-to-5)
Trainer: Art Sherman
Jockey: Victor Espinoza (won 2002 Preakness on War Emblem)
Assessment: Rolled to a 1 3/4-length victory in the Kentucky Derby and was not even asked for his best when the outcome was no longer in doubt inside the sixteenth-pole. He has special tactical speed — he’s fast enough to go to the lead if needed, as he showed in a brilliant performance in the San Felipe Stakes at Santa Anita Park on March 8. In the Derby, though, California Chrome sat third, took over around the quarter pole and left his challengers behind.
California Chrome has been dealing with a throat blister and coughed a little on Thursday, but assistant trainer Alan Sherman has indicated all is well with the colt, who has won five races in a row and does not face the second-, third-, fourth-, fifth- and sixth-place Derby finishers in Baltimore.
“The horse is completely fine,” Sherman said. “His blood work came back perfect. He coughed about four times today and we got him checked out right away. The blister isn’t going to affect him at all; the vet said there were absolutely no other problems, nothing else going on.”
In perhaps another positive sign regarding his fitness, California Chrome has gained 35 pounds after the Derby, Sherman estimated this week, according to Pimlico’s media notes.
No. 4: Ring Weekend (morning-line odds: 20-to-1)
Trainer: Graham Motion
Jockey: Alan Garcia
Assessment: Ring Weekend’s biggest win came in the March 8 Tampa Bay Derby, when he was sent to the lead, kicked away and held safe for a three-length triumph. However, he was a disappointing second, beaten 9 ¾ lengths, in the April 8 Calder Derby. Ring Weekend was removed from Kentucky Derby consideration because of a fever, but he returned to work three-quarters of a mile on May 10. Trainer Motion has had 2-of-5 Preakness starters hit the board (Animal Kingdom in 2011, Icabad Crane in 2008). Ring Weekend would be the first gelding to win the Preakness since the famous Funny Cide in 2003.
No. 5: Bayern (morning-line odds: 10-to-1)
Trainer: Bob Baffert (won 1997 Preakness with Silver Charm, 1998 Preakness with Real Quiet, 2001 Preakness with Real Quiet, 2002 Preakness with War Emblem and 2010 Preakness with Lookin At Lucky)
Jockey: Rosie Napravnik
Assessment: Baffert has been outstanding in the Preakness, with 7-of-14 starters hitting the board and five winning outright. However, all seven of those horses had contested the Kentucky Derby as well, whereas Bayern last raced in the April 26 Derby Trial. Though Bayern finished first in the Derby Trial, he was disqualified to second after drifting toward the middle of the track. Baffert will remove the blinkers for this start, which seems a sound move; Bayern has good early speed, but it all comes down to how far he can carry it. Bayern has never won beyond a distance of a mile, and his worst finish (third, beaten 5 ¼ lengths) came in the 1 1/8-mile Arkansas Derby on April 12.
No. 6: Ria Antonia (morning-line odds: 30-to-1)
Trainer: Tom Amoss
Jockey: Calvin Borel (won 2009 Preakness on Rachel Alexandra)
Assessment: The only filly in the race, Ria Antonia was moved from Baffert to Amoss after a sixth-place finish in the Kentucky Oaks. Ria Antonia will run without blinkers in the Preakness, and she gets the services of Borel, who’s known for his work on late runners, so she could be farther back than in other races. Ria Antonia will carry 121 pounds, five less than the nine male horses in the race. Amoss has had two Preakness starters, and both ran respectably, with Mylute finishing third in 2013 and Hot Wells running fourth in 1998. Five fillies out of 53 starters have won the Preakness, including Rachel Alexandra five years ago.
No. 7: Kid Cruz (morning-line odds: 20-to-1)
Trainer: Linda Rice
Jockey: Julian Pimentel
Assessment: Looking for a closer? This is your horse. Looking for a horse with a win at Pimlico to his credit? Kid Cruz also fits the bill. However, this is Kid Cruz’s first graded-stakes race, and his propensity to lag behind early could leave him in a challenging position if the pace is slow, leaving those close to the lead with more late energy. Note that Pimentel is the only jockey in the race who has regularly ridden at Pimlico this spring.
No. 8: Social Inclusion (morning-line odds: 5-to-1)
Trainer: Manuel Azpurua
Jockey: Luis Contreras
Assessment: Social Inclusion emerged as a three-year-old to watch with a 10-length win at Gulfstream Park in March, earning a 110 Beyer, the career-best of any horse in the Preakness field. In the Wood Memorial on April 5, Social Inclusion had the lead in the stretch but was passed by Wicked Strong (fourth in the Derby) and Samraat (fifth in the Derby), losing by 3½ lengths as the 8-to-5 favorite. Social Inclusion scratched out of a small stakes race on May 3 at Gulfstream with a foot issue. However, he soon resumed training and drilled a half-mile in a quick 47 seconds at Pimlico on May 12. Social Inclusion figures to be on or near the pace, and his early speed and outside post position could give him a nice clean trip. The question is, how will he fare in the final three-sixteenths?
No. 9: Pablo Del Monte (morning-line odds: 20-to-1)
Trainer: Wesley Ward
Jockey: Jeffrey Sanchez
Assessment: Finished a solid third in the April 12 Blue Grass Stakes at Keeneland, beaten 3½ lengths and finishing behind Dance With Fate (sixth in Kentucky Derby) and Medal Count (eighth in Derby). Like multiple runners in the race, he has shown he has the speed to be near the pace. Has never won on dirt or at a distance of longer than 6½ furlongs, and Ward’s previous two Preakness entrants finished no better than 11th.
No. 10: Ride On Curlin (morning-line odds: 10-to-1)
Trainer: William Gowan
Jockey: Joel Rosario
Assessment: Finished seventh, beaten 6 ¾ lengths, in the Kentucky Derby. Had one of the more memorable trips of a Derby also-ran of recent years, diving to the rail to begin the race, getting caught in traffic when making a nice run up the inside with a quarter mile left in the journey, then finishing the race widest of any horse in the field. After all of that, Ride On Curlin has a new rider for the Derby, with Rosario replacing Borel. Ride On Curlin is an honest, try-hard sort who’s been competitive throughout his three-year-old campaign, but he has yet to win a stakes race.