JC / Railbird

Next Year’s Fad

Two articles are out today about Tim Ritchey’s unusual training regimen for Afleet Alex: The colt is sometimes sent out twice in the morning, once to jog and another time to gallop. “They [horses] are athletes and they have to be fit,” Ritchey said. “You cannot baby them.” (Blood-Horse)
Ritchey got the idea from his days in steeplechasing, where the horses are given more daily exercise than are typical racehorses. Another former steeplechaser, trainer Barclay Tagg, approves of what Ritchey’s doing: “If it suits the horse, he’s doing the right thing, and it obviously suits the horse,” said Tagg. “It’s a type of interval training. You get them a lot fitter that way, and these horses need the ultimate fitness for something like the Triple Crown races. They’re very grueling.” (Daily Racing Form)
This seems like another good reason to love Afleet Alex as a top Derby contender. And if he does win the Derby, I’d be willing to bet that a lot other trainers come up with a similar program for their hot prospects next year, replacing this year’s fashion for long layoffs and lots of rest.
Related: Afleet Alex officially worked five furlongs in :59 at Churchill this morning, but Steve Haskin clocked him in :58.6. That wasn’t all Haskin saw:

By the time Alex hit the five-eighths pole, he was rolling at a pretty good clip. The clockers got him in splits of :12 2/5, :24, :35 2/5, and :46 3/5. For whatever it’s worth, I caught him closer to :47, with a final eighth in :11 3/5. But what’s a few ticks here and there. What was to be taken from this work was the way Alex cut the corner turning for home. Horses running that fast often naturally drift three or four paths off the fence, but Alex hugged the rail and switched leads right on cue. You don’t often see that kind agility, and when you do, you certainly take note of it.
Down the stretch, Rose’s hands barely moved and couldn’t have been any farther down on the horse’s neck, which is another important thing you look for. Alex flew home under a nice loose rein, doing everything on his own, and had his ears back and his mind on business. (Blood-Horse)