Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Preakness

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Authentic (above), the winner of the Kentucky Derby, is the 9-5 morning line favorite to win today’s Preakness at Pimlico Race Course in Baltimore. The Preakness will be the final race in the Triple Crown for the first time in its 145-year history.

BALTIMORE — Trainer Tommy Drury and Art Collector get another chance at Triple Crown glory this weekend.

Drury will start his first horse in a Triple Crown race when he saddles Art Collector in today’s Preakness, which will be the final leg of the Triple Crown for the first time in its 145-year history. And now that Drury’s wait is over, Art Collector looks like the biggest threat to Kentucky Derby winner Authentic at a mostly empty Pimlico Race Course.

Drury was poised to make his Triple Crown debut at the Kentucky Derby until he discovered something was wrong with Art Collector, arguably the best horse he has ever had in his barn. Drury made the difficult decision to scratch him, a move he called a no-brainer.

“The Kentucky Derby’s a race of a lifetime for a horse trainer, but at the end of the day, the ultimate responsibi­lity that we have is to put our horse first,” Drury said. “It just wouldn’t have been fair to him to leave him over there, especially at that level of competitio­n, and ask him to run his very best race knowing that there was an issue going on.”

Now Art Collector is set to race — four weeks after Drury took no risks with his impressive colt.

“We’re certainly going to stand by that decision and there’s no looking back at this point,” Drury said. “We’re focused on the Preakness and what we can do down the road. … Our horse is good right now.”

Art Collector is the 5-2 second choice on the morning line after 9-5 favorite Authentic, who if he wins would make trainer Bob Baffert a perfect 6 for 6 taking the Derby winner to the Preakness. There will be no fans on-hand, only select owners, trainers and other essential personnel because of the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Nonetheles­s, Baffert — who also has Thousand Words in the 11-horse field — is looking for his record-breaking eighth Preakness victory.

Baffert and Drury shared a golf cart ride at Churchill Downs prior to the Derby, and that’s about all they share. The two had never met before, and while Baffert has swept the Triple Crown twice and won 16 races in the series, Drury has never even started a horse in a Triple Crown race until now.

Art Collector, a popular pick to win the Derby before getting scratched, is finally putting Drury in the spotlight after more than 30 years in the business.

“He’s taken my career to places that I never dreamed it would go, and he’s just a member of the family,” Drury said. “I’ve not had anything like him ever before.”

Art Collector’s performanc­e in a race at Churchill Downs in June caught Eddie Olczyk’s eye.

“He just looked like a monster,” said Olczyk, an NBC Sports analyst who questioned why former trainer Joe Sharp didn’t try Art Collector in twoturn races on the dirt last year. “I just think, for me, what has happened is this horse is running the distance and running on the surface that he was bred to run on. I think the sky’s the limit for this horse.”

Art Collector is looking to beat Authentic 20 years after a similar upset of a Kentucky Derby winner by another contender, when Red Bullet defeated Fusaichi Pegasus in the Preakness. Jockey Jerry Bailey knew he had to make his move aboard Red Bullet before Fusaichi Pegasus did and figured he’d need a better 1 3/16-mile trip to win.

It’s a recipe Brian Hernandez could follow with Art Collector.

“If I were riding the race, I would certainly know that you cannot let Authentic get away with anything easy early in the race,” said Bailey, who’s now part of the NBC broadcast team. “You’ve got to challenge him at some point, earlier than he was challenged in the Derby or you’re probably not going to beat him.”

John Velazquez will have a more difficult task in the Preakness with more speed in the field, after so many in racing watching the Derby were baffled by NY Traffic jockey Paco Lopez sitting back and not pressing Authentic. Like many of Baffert’s top thoroughbr­eds, Authentic prefers to be on the lead and a fast pace could set up for a stalking horse like Art Collector to go by him, especially with Belmont Stakes winner Tiz the Law skipping the Preakness.

Trainer Steve Asmussen, who has three horses in the Preakness with Max Player, Pneumatic and Excession, is just glad the 2020 Triple Crown happened amid all the turmoil in sports and the world.

“These horses are 3 once,” he said. “They deserve this opportunit­y and very glad that the racetracks came together and made sure that the races were run. I think that it’s no fault of the horses involved, this year’s 3-year-old crop, and they deserve this opportunit­y.”

 ?? (AP file photo) ??
(AP file photo)
 ?? (AP/Stephen Whyno) ?? Preakness contender Art Collector, ridden by exercise rider Annie Finney, walks on the track Thursday at Pimlico Race Course in Baltimore. Art Collector looks to be the greatest challenge to Kentucky Derby winner Authentic in today’s race.
(AP/Stephen Whyno) Preakness contender Art Collector, ridden by exercise rider Annie Finney, walks on the track Thursday at Pimlico Race Course in Baltimore. Art Collector looks to be the greatest challenge to Kentucky Derby winner Authentic in today’s race.

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