BALTIMORE (AP) - Triple Crown post position draws haven’t been kind to Ride on Curlin.
He landed post 18 in the 19-horse Kentucky Derby. The colt dropped way off the pace, hit traffic trouble turning for home before passing 10 horses in the stretch to finish seventh.
Luck didn’t favor him in the Preakness draw on Wednesday evening.
In the 10-horse field, Ride on Curlin landed the outside post as a 10-1 shot.
“It’s OK, I’m an outsider anyhow,” trainer Billy Gowan said. “I don’t think it’s bad here. With the kind of pace we have in the field, I think it’s fine.”
Despite the run of outside posts, Ride on Curlin gives every indication he is sitting on a big effort.
He turned in a half-mile workout of 49.60 seconds on Wednesday morning, the fastest at that distance at Pimlico.
That came one day after he had a very aggressive gallop.
“He’s a tough horse and he can take a lot of work,” Gowan said. “He moves good over this track.”
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SHERMAN BACK IN CHARGE: Trainer Art Sherman liked what he saw when reunited with California Chrome, his Kentucky Derby-winning colt who is the 3-5 favorite in the Preakness.
Sherman returned to Southern California after the Derby, leaving the Preakness preparations to his son Alan. California Chrome flew into Baltimore on Monday. Sherman, the oldest Derby winning trainer at 77, hit town a day later.
The elder Sherman supervised the colt’s first gallop since the Derby on a foggy, overcast Wednesday, and came away satisfied.
“He looked around quite a bit, like he usually does. He’s a very inquisitive horse,” Sherman said. “But then he took a hold of the bit and was pulling pretty good. That’s his style, the way he gallops every day.”
Sherman’s main concern remains the two-week span between the Derby and the Preakness on Saturday
“It takes a horse about 10 days to really bounce out of a race good,” he said. “He’s holding his weight. That’s a big factor.”
Sherman estimates California Chrome has added 35 pounds since the Derby.
“He seems to be thriving in this type of training, so I’m sure not changing anything. Let’s go for it,” Sherman said.
California Chrome will spend some time on Thursday getting familiar with the Pimlico starting gate and the paddock area. More galloping also remains on the to-do list until race time.
And that suits Sherman just fine.
“I wouldn’t want to be in anybody else’s shoes right now,” he said.
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LOCAL ANGLE: Kid Cruz owns one advantage over his Preakness rivals - a winning effort over the track.
None of the other horses have run at Pimlico. Kid Cruz, a 20-1 long shot in the Preakness, closed strongly to take the Federico Tesio Stakes here last month.
He proved he could handle the track. Whether he can handle California Chrome and horses of that caliber remains a question.
“He’s stepping up in class considerably,” said Linda Rice, who is bidding to become the first female trainer of a Preakness winner. “His (speed) numbers aren’t as good as most of the horses in the field, so we know he’ll have to step up in this race. We’re excited to give him the chance. He deserves it.”
Rice, based in New York, is one of the leading trainers in the country. Her horses earned $1.5 million last year, ranking 22nd in the nation. She was the first woman to top the standings at the prestigious Saratoga meet, edging Todd Pletcher by a single victory in 2009.
Kid Cruz, Rice’s first Preakness starter, took a circuitous route to this point.
He debuted last November at Aqueduct for Hall of Fame trainer Bill Mott and ran poorly in a turf race.
Next time out, he switched to dirt in a claiming race. Rice pounced and took the colt for $50,000 from that winning effort for new owners Vina Del Mar Thoroughbreds.
A close second in his debut for Rice at Aqueduct, Kid Cruz won a pair of $100,000 stakes in Maryland in the next two outings, the Private Terms at Laurel and the Tesio.
“These are much faster horses,” Rice said of the Preakness field. “Hopefully, he can catch them.”
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IN THE CLEAR: The forecast for race day on Saturday looks ideal - mostly sunny skies with a high near 70.
There could be residual moisture in the track. A thunderstorm accompanied by heavy rain is expected to rumble through the area Thursday night.
The wet weather could linger through Friday, muddying the outlook for the $500,000 Black-Eyed Susan for 3-year-old fillies.
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