JC / Railbird

Back to the Races

– Finally, a winner (I have not done so well with my TBA picks today). J Be K, pressured through a first half in :44.89, rebuffed dogged longshot True Quality at the top of the stretch, drawing away to take the Woody Stephens with a final time of 1:21.85 and paying $7.20 for the win. Silver Edition got up for second, True Quality finished third. It was second stakes win of the day for rider Garrett Gomez, who will be aboard Macho Again in the Belmont.
– The Manhattan is the deepest, most competitive stakes on today’s card, with the formidable Out of Control, second to Einstein in the Turf Classic last out, and 2007 Manhattan winner Better Talk Now among the starters. Coupled with his rabbit, Shake the Bank, Better Talk Now is 7-1 with 12 minutes to post. I went with Proudinsky, coming off a win in the Muniz Handicap over the yielding turf at Fair Grounds, and Dancing Forever, winner of the Elkhorn at Keeneland at April, in a small pick four I have going. I’m awfully tempted to take a flyer on Stalingrad, making his first graded stakes appearance, and now 12-1 on the board. The 4-year-old gelding has been dominant in his first two local starts this year, but whether he’ll appreciate the added distance or has the class are questions.
– What a terrific finish: five across, then three across, then two heads bobbing for the win, with 4-1 Dancing Forever on the inside beating Out of Control by a nose. Well done!
– Watching the walk from the barns to the paddock on ABC and I’m struck by Big Brown’s appearance — it could be the angle or the light, but he looks ribby and thin in the flank, although his coat is shiny and his haunches well muscled …
– With 20 minutes to post, maiden Guadalcanal is at an inexplicable 23-1 on the board. Big Brown is at 1-4.
– The Belmont field is on the track and Ed checks in with a report: “This crowd is electric … they’re all forgetting about the plumbing, etc. Amazing experience.”
– Kent Desormeaux: “I had no horse.” Big Brown, rank in the first turn, unresponsive to his rider’s urging on the far turn, eased at the top of the stretch. Not how anyone wanted this to end. Fortunately, Big Brown does not appear lame, but he did just become the first Triple Crown hopeful to finish last (that can’t be good for his future stud fee). Congratulations to Nick Zito and rider Alan Garcia, who pulled off a wire-to-wire upset with 38-1 Da’ Tara.
– Zito is all class while being interviewed by Jeanine Edwards in the winner’s circle. Asked whether he would have started a horse with a quarter crack in the Belmont, Zito gracefully refuses to question the decision to run Big Brown or Dutrow’s judgment and turns the conversation back to his winner. Garcia is bubbly and charming thanking owner Robert LaPenta for the chance to ride Da’ Tara. As for the Big Brown connections, here’s a comment from someone on the scene:

IEAH and Dutrow show their classlessness in defeat. The whole world is watching and they duck out and sulk. Desormeaux was the only one who took time to talk to media.

Good for Desormeaux. I’m sure the loss was crushing for him, coming so close to a Triple Crown for the second time, as well as for the trainer who called the Belmont “a foregone conclusion.” Dutrow may have fled the press this afternoon, but the questions about Big Brown’s fitness will persist, and he missed a chance to show sportsmanship and humility …
– 8:10 p.m. update: Attendance was 94,476, way off from the crowd that packed Belmont when Smarty Jones went for the Triple Crown. Total handle has been estimated at $99,850,000, about 13% less than 2004.


8 Comments

ABC didn’t show the Manhattan!! Can you believe it? They had yet another “human interest” story on Desormeaux and family. ABC sucks!

Posted by Valerie on June 7, 2008 @ 5:58 pm

Of course, Da’Tara, the horse NO ONE paid any attention to, wins. And Big Brown eases up. Woohoo, more great publicity for racing.

Posted by Clarice on June 7, 2008 @ 6:36 pm

This 3-year-old class is not shaping up very well, is it? And poor Big Brown. I played against him, although not with Da’ Tara, but this is not how I pictured his Triple Crown run ending.
ABC didn’t show the Manhattan! Outrageous. That was the best race of the day.

Posted by Jessica on June 7, 2008 @ 6:50 pm

So happy. 1st reason = Big Brown loses. 2nd = Zito wins as trainer. Didn’t see the sincere regret, ala Birdstone, that the Triple Crown wasn’t won. Those owners, that trainer, and the culture of “if it’s it’s legal it isn’t cheating” deserve no celebration or condolences. Would love to see Zito et al, forswear bute, lasix, and steroids. Let the horses run.

Posted by hooray on June 7, 2008 @ 7:45 pm

06/07/08 Triple Crown…guess it wasn’t mean to be. *sigh*
Is it just me, or has this crop cycled really dramatically between victories and flops? Think about all of these horses who seem impressive, but then disappointed miserably next time out: War Pass, Pyro, Harlem Rocker, Majestic Warrior, Big Brown…and then the giant high and low of Eight Belles.

Posted by Clarice on June 7, 2008 @ 8:59 pm

I thought he looked very thin and ribby, too.

Posted by fran on June 7, 2008 @ 9:04 pm

I think Ekati rode to beat Big Brown and not to run his race. Coa was at least 8 wide on the backstretch keeping BB outside.
ABC does suck. No Manhattan and they gave almost no attention to the winners. Everything was on how BB lost and OMG what now?
BB did look ribby.

Posted by Winston on June 7, 2008 @ 10:12 pm

Yeah, now that you mention it, BB did look extra lean and mean on the TV. I never gave a thought as to if he lost weight due to his hoof ailment.
You know what else? You all bring up a really good point about Zito, he was very gracious about not answering the would you have raced your horse with a cracked hoof question. This could have been worse i suppose, in hindsight this whole Triple Crown this year is a disaster.

Posted by libby on June 8, 2008 @ 7:09 am