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Red Bullet on target in Preakness upset
Associated Press
Results
BALTIMORE -- Joe Orseno decided not to send Red Bullet after
the Kentucky Derby roses. The black-eyed susans must have smelled
just as sweet.
| | Jerry Bailey, aboard Red Bullet, reacts to winning the 125th running of the Preakness Stakes. |
Red Bullet upset Fusaichi Pegasus at the Preakness on Saturday,
meaning the Triple Crown drought will extend at least 23 years.
Orseno, Red Bullet's trainer, decided to skip the Derby after
the chestnut colt finished 4½ lengths behind Fusaichi Pegasus in
the Wood Memorial on April 15 at Aqueduct.
"It just seemed like the right thing to do for the colt, and it
paid off today," Orseno said.
With a crowd of 98,304 watching on a dismal, damp day at
Pimlico, Red Bullet finished 3¾ lengths ahead of Fusaichi Pegasus,
the 1-5 favorite.
"The strategy worked," said Frank Stronach, Red Bullet's
owner.
Fusaichi Pegasus was an impressive winner in the Derby, his
fifth straight victory, and he was trying to become the fourth
consecutive Derby-Preakness winner. The 11th and last Triple Crown
winner was Affirmed in 1978.
"Red Bullet is a very talented horse. I said that all along,"
said Neil Drysdale, Fusaichi Pegasus' trainer.
While the ultimate goal was the finish line, Red Bullet's
jockey, Jerry Bailey, had another target in his battle with
Fusaichi Pegasus.
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What They Said
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Red Bullet
"My biggest concern was to get the jump on Fusaichi Pegasus. I was inside of him and I felt if we could beat him to the
quarter pole, we could beat him to the wire."
-- Jockey Jerry Bailey
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Fusaichi Pegasus
"It was a greasy kind of track and he just couldn't go with it."
-- Trainer Neil Drysdale
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Impeachment
"I thought he was home at the quarter pole. He kicked it in and he really came on. We had a good trip and it
turned out he was just the third best horse."
-- Jockey Craig Perret
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Captain Steve
"We tried something different today. We took him back, and he didn't run all that badly. But this is really too far
for him."
-- Trainer Bob Baffert
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Snuck In
"I had so much horse under me, and when Red Bullet came within three-quarters of a length of us, my horse responded
beautifully. The difference was Red Bullet kept going and we didn't."
-- Jockey Cash Asmussen
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Hugh Hefner
"I wanted to go to the lead, and I was hoping I was going to have it by myself. That was our only hope. Maybe we
could have stolen the race. But High Yield came to me and put on a lot of pressure."
-- Jockey Victor Espinoza
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High Yield
"He was in the game early, maybe a little more than we wanted. The winner went by me with complete authority, but my
horse hung in there until the eighth pole, and then he got late."
-- Jockey Pat Day
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Hal's Hope
"We made our big move down the backside. He felt good doing it, but then he just flattened out."
-- Jockey Roger Velez
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"I thought if I could beat him to the quarter pole, I probably
could beat him to the wire," Bailey said. "And it turned out to
be just that way."
Red Bullet was the first Preakness winner not to have started in
the Derby since Deputed Testamony in 1983.
"We made the switch to Jerry because we knew Jerry knew how to
rate," Orseno said. "And we had five weeks to school this horse
to do just that. Everything turned out right for us. Give Frank
Stronach all the credit you can.
"It was a tough decision to pass on the Kentucky Derby, but we
knew we had a horse with a lot of talent and we knew to pick our
spot and point for the 3-year-old championship," Orseno said.
Fusaichi Pegasus was the first Derby winner to be favored in the
Preakness since Go for Gin finished second in 1994. He was the
first odd-on favorite in the race since Easy Goer finished second
at 3-5 in 1989. The last odds-on favorite to win was Spectacular
Bid at 1-10 in 1979.
The winning time on a wet track rated as good after a misty rain
during much of the day was 1:56 for 1 mile and 3-16.
"Actually, the last time against Pegasus, we had a similar
track -- it also rained that day," Stronach said.
But it wasn't the same track for Fusaichi Pegasus -- at least in
Drysdale's opinion.
"He couldn't handle the track," Drysdale said. "That's the
way I saw it, and that's the way Kent Desormeaux saw it.
Red Bullet, winning for the fourth time in five starts, all of
them this year, paid $14.40, $3.20 and $2.80 and earned $650,000 to
boost his career bankroll to $963,800.
Fusaichi Pegasus returned $2.60 and $2.20 and Impeachment,
ridden by Craig Perret, paid $3.60.
"This horse really showed what he is made of today," Bailey
said. "He just exploded on the turn. He was the better horse."
Bailey also paid tribute to Fusaichi Pegasus.
"I knew he was a good horse, and he probably still is a good
horse, but it's hard to win two tough races like this," he said.
Bailey, however, added: "I was surprised that he couldn't keep
with me to midstretch."
Hugh Hefner broke on top and led the field around the first turn
and into the backstretch, where he surrendered the lead to High
Yield briefly before regaining it. The longshot still left with a
half-mile to go.
At this point, Fusaichi Pegasus was third and Red Bullet was
sixth.
Fusaichi Pegasus began moving for the lead on the turn, but so
did Red Bullet. He beat the Derby winner to the quarter pole just
as Bailey had hoped he would.
Red Bullet held the lead all the way through the stretch.
Fusaichi Pegasus was third with an eighth of a mile to go and
couldn't get any closer than second. And it wasn't a close second.
Completing the order of finish after Impeachment, who also
finished third in the Kentucky Derby, were Captain Steve, Snuck In,
Hugh Hefner, High Yield and Hal's Hope.
Orseno said he and Stronach would wait a couple of days before
deciding on whether to run Red Bullet in the mile-and-half Belmont
Stakes on June 10.
"If the horse comes out and feels great, we'll probably run him
back in three weeks. The horse will truly tell me."
The Belmont could set up a rubber match between Red Bullet and
Fusaichi Pegasus.
"We'll have to see how he comes out of the race," Drysdale
said. "If he comes out OK, we'll press on.
"Am I disappointed? I'm disappointed for the horse. I like to
see him do well with everything he can," he said.
While Drysdale might be second-guessing his decision to run
Fusaichi Pegasus back two weeks after the Kentucky Derby, a concern
he expressed, Orseno was rejoicing in his decision to skip the
Derby.
"With the classics, you are kind of rushed, and you don't
follow your head," he said. "Most times, you follow your heart."
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