As the drama of Kentucky Derby 132 continues to unfold, one will find the stage filled with a refreshing cast of new characters seeking the glory that is the Run for the Roses. Jockey legends Jerry Bailey, Gary Stevens, and Pat Day, who, in the middle of them, own six Derby winning mounts, have left the scene to curtain calls; John Velasquez, an heir apparent to the void left by these giants of the sport, is sidelined with a broken shoulder. Rising stars such as Rafael Bejarano, Garret Gomez, and John McKee, and stalwarts such as Corey Nakatani and Alex Solis are poised to ultimately grab the brass ring. Perennial Derby trainers D. Wayne Lukas and Nick Zito have failed the audition, with no Derby mounts, supplanted by upstart stand-ins Michael Matz, Dan Hendricks, and Michael Trombetta who bring their respective horses Barbaro, Brother Derek, and Sweetnorthernsaint, fresh and primed to tackle the mile and one quarter slugfest. However, the most arresting of new faces on this Derby Day may well be the ones you wont see at Churchill Downs. Their impact may well rule the outcome of this wide-open affair. Their names are Benchmark, Sweetsouthernsaint, Point Given, Broken Vow, Aptitude, King Cugat, and Strategic Mission, sires whose progeny will be represented in the Kentucky Derby for the first time, and who stand to gain from earning the imprimatur of sire of a Kentucky Derby winner.
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Benchmark, the sire of Dan Hendricks trained Brother Derek, is himself a son of the great first-rate runner Alydar, who won the hearts of racing fans with his memorable duels with Triple Crown winner Affirmed. Benchmark was both a graded stakes winner at 1 1/8 miles and graded stakes settled sprinter, and, in his first four crops to race has been a beneficial sire of California breds and a handful of stakes winners. Brother Derek is by far his most impressive son and is for real the top class of this years West Coast contingent. As talented and seasoned as Brother Derek is, the Derby may be the place where his flaws are revealed. In his only race exterior of California and in a field larger than eight horses, the Breeders Cup teenage at Belmont, he finished a tired fourth. With a penchant for getting worked up in the post parade, jockey Alex Solis must help Brother Derek find a way to cope the large boisterous Churchill Downs crowd. Nevertheless, Brother Dereks meteoric rise to prominence is a hopeful sign that Alydars courageous blood has gotten a much needed revival.
Sweetnorthernsaint, a gelding son of Florida stallion Sweetsouthernsaint, has become a wild card of sorts in the Derby mix. It appears the supplementary the distance Sweetnorthernsaint runs, the better, and this should give anything handicapping the Derby something to think about. His jockey, Kent Desormeaux, has roughly declared the mile and a half Belmont Stakes his to lose. Considering the fact that the Belmont Stakes is more a jockeys race than a stamina test, hed better be ready to back up his bold words. Sweetsouthernsaint, with two crops to race, was a precocious two year old runner in Florida who never quite got on the Derby trail due to injuries. But, as a son of the prolific late Saint Ballado, the sire of reigning Horse of the Year, Saint Liam, as well as champion distaffer, Ashado, both of whom were grade 1 winners at a mile and quarter, and sporting a first-rate staying low dosage index of 1.22 himself, Sweetsouthernsaints offspring seem capable of getting the distance. Sweetnorthernsaints dosage of 1.33 suggests the fruit does not fall far from the tree, and, if the Michael Trombetta trained gelding gets a clean trip, the pickings might be good.
Point Given, Broken Vow, Aptitude, Strategic Mission, and King Cugat are all stallions represented in the Kentucky Derby by members of their first crop, which for real pleases their breeding farms, but also adds an element of the unknown to the handicapping calculus. Point thought about is a Maryland bred son of Preakness and Belmont Stakes winner Point Given, and is owned by The Bob and Beverly Lewis Trust, which has won the Kentucky Derby twice before, with Silver Charm and Charismatic. Point thought about has knocked heads with the likes of Brother Derek, A.P. Warrior, and Bob and John all winter in California, and enters the Derby without a stakes win to his credit. However, his driving second place quit in the Santa Anita Derby, a series of bullet works since then, and with Rafael Bejarano in the irons, he is a risky horse. Point Given entered the Kentucky Derby as the prohibitive favorite, and had he not been subjected to the torrid pace of that race, the subsequent Horse of the Year would have been a Triple Crown winner, a racing superstar, and worth considerably more than his ,000 stud fee. Bob Baffert, who trained Point Given, as well as Point Determined, may be a bit more subdued these days, but, with three live shots in this years Derby, along with Sinister minister and Bob and John, he is in Louisville loaded for bear. A Point thought about win would also be a poignant and fitting epitaph for the late Bob Lewis, one of racings true gentlemen, who passed away this February.
Broken Vow, the sire of the Steven Asmussen trained incommunicable Vow, is a son of the memorable 1990 Derby winner Unbridled, who also sired Kentucky Derby winner Grindstone, Preakness winner Red Bullet, and Belmont Stakes winner Empire Maker. Although incommunicable Vow has run only twice this year, beaten by Lawyer Ron both times at Oaklawn Park, he remains a seasoned horse with a graded stakes win on the Churchill Downs strip and a recent bullet work there, to boot. Broken Vow was a late developing graded stakes winner with an impressive female family. His dam and grand dam, sired by Nijinsky Ii and Blushing Groom, respectively, were both stakes producers. When you add incommunicable Vows dam sire, foremost broodmare sire, Deputy Minister, you have a horse that, on paper, has a first-rate winning pedigree.
The sire of the late windup Steppenwolfer, Aptitude, finished second in both the Kentucky Derby and the Belmont Stakes, and is, himself, a son of the Horse of the Year and a producer of first-rate runner A.P. Indy. Armed with a most arresting of pedigrees, Aptitude delivers a variety of first-rate blood close up in his pedigree, including the aforementioned A.P. Indy, Derby winners Seattle Slew, Secretariat, and Northern Dancer, as well as inbreeding to Buckpasser. At four, Aptitude won two grade ones, the Jockey Club Gold Cup and the Hollywood Gold Cup, and a grade two, the Saratoga Breeders Cup, at a mile and a quarter. More anecdotal than anything else, Steppenwolfers great-great grand dam sire was the great Citation, a Triple Crown winner. Lawyer Ron may have had Steppenwolfers [named after the rock band Steppenwolf] number all winter at Oaklawn Park, but, if the Derby pace is as contested as expected, he may be the one on the magic rug ride to the winners circle.
Sailing his way into the Derby is Seaside Retreat, a stakes winner in Canada who also settled in the Grade 2 Lanes End on Turfway Parks Polytrack surface. Seaside Retreats sire, King Cugat, was a graded stakes winner on the grass going 9 and 11 furlongs, and graded stakes settled going 12 furlongs. A son of the impeccably bred Kingmambo, who sired Belmont Stakes winner Lemon Drop Kid, King Cugats offspring seem much better remarkable to running long on the grass. However, Seaside Retreats recent bullet work at Churchill Downs has convinced his Canadian based trainer, Mark Casse, and regular jockey, Patrick Husbands, to rendezvous at the Derby.
Showing Up, the lightly raced but gutsy winner of the Lexington Stakes, is a son of Strategic Mission, a New York stallion whose first crop consists of a mere 14 named foals. Barclay Tagg trains the undefeated Showing Up, the lesser half of Roy and Gretchen Jacksons Lael Stables two horse two instructor Derby delegation that includes an additional one undefeated colt Barbaro, a inherent morning line favorite who is trained by Michael Matz and will be ridden by the all the time risky Edgar Prado. Tagg, who caught lightning in a bottle with Kentucky Derby and Preakness winner Funny Cide, for real has his work cut out for him. Not only does Showing Up have only three occupation starts, but his sire, Strategic Mission, a son of Mr. Prospector, was a turf miler and only an okay one at that. Named for the old Woody Allen line that 80 percent of success is showing up, Showing Up will need to do much more than that if hes the one taking the Jackson house to the winners circle.
As difficult as the Derby trail is, just showing up is for real an achievement. Getting to the quit line first, though, is the Holy Grail, and, in this years edition, the fresh new faces may just be smiling in the winners circle.
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