Showing posts with label 2013 Kentucky Derby Preview. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 2013 Kentucky Derby Preview. Show all posts

Thursday, May 2, 2013

2013 Kentucky Derby Preview Part III: The Top Half

We feel like we say this more often than not, but we think this is a pretty good crop of three year olds.  Most of the horses we're going to discuss today have been decent to good so far; there aren't a lot of stiffs in the top half of the pack.  Perhaps this is because this crop has been relatively injury-free this year so far - we can't think of too many of the chief contenders that fell to injury during the winter.  Of course, that happened last year as well and the class turned into a MASH unit by early August.

Let's get back at the countdown, starting with some of the horses that have accomplished a bit to date but we don't like on Saturday.

Prep Winners We're Against

10.  Java's War.  The winner of the Blue Grass Derby; his resume is a lot less impressive once it's scrutinized.  As we've said time and time again, the Blue Grass has become a fairly meaningless prep race because it's on polytrack, and the best finish we've seen out of a recent winner was Dullahan's non-threatening third last year.  Usually the winners do nothing of note on the dirt again - in fact, we're not sure that any of Dominican, Monba, General Quarters, Stately Victor or Brilliant Speed won another dirt race after the Blue Grass.  Even worse for this horse is his propensity to completely miss the break at the start of the race and spot the field several lengths.  That didn't hurt him in Keeneland where the field was smaller and the race played to a closer.  Neither is the case in the Derby.  He could clunk up for a piece of the superfecta but we think he's a great bet-against.

9.  Goldencents.  The only route for victory for this horse is to steal the race on the front end or just off of it, and he's shown no ability to rate more than a couple of lengths off the pace and his breeding (Into Mischief, a fairly obscure sprint-based sire we noted yesterday with Vyjack) suggests speed.  Sometimes that works - in his last race, the Santa Anita Derby, he sat just off little-hoper Super Ninety Nine and took over when he faded and nobody else could close.  Sometimes it doesn't - two races back, he dueled with Flashback and faded miserably in the stretch.  Now we get that people are speculating that this Derby has no speed and could be stolen on or near the front end, but we don't believe that, and Goldencents isn't a speed freak like Bodemeister who can try to make everyone catch him for 10 furlongs.  He's more of a conventional speed horse that shows no real desire to go beyond 9 furlongs under ideal circumstances, and is more likely to finish 18th than 1st.

8.  Overanalyze.
  In theory there's a ton to like here: solid breeding, Todd Pletcher, and a win in the Arkansas Derby.  But once you get past that initial blast of positive information, it's a lot less interesting.  He's run exactly one race with over a 90 Gowanus Speed Figure (last year's Remsen), where he was hanging on for dear life at the end.  His return to racing in the Gotham earlier this year was horrendous, which he followed up with his Arkansas Derby victory that looked good visually but yielded a paltry 88 speed figure, which looks worse when you consider that his main competition (War Academy) didn't finish the race.  He's going to need to take a huge step forward to compete on Saturday, let alone win.

The Price Doesn't Match His Chances

7.  Revolutionary. The one guarantee we can give you is that this horse will be overbet in relation to his chances on Saturday solely because 3-time Derby winning jockey Calvin Borel will be in the irons.  After guiding to victory a favorite (Street Sense), logical horse (Super Saver) and utter bomb (Mine That Bird) in the last six years, the public is convinced that Borel's touch is golden and bets him accordingly. Two years ago Borel rode the horrendous Twice the Appeal to a 10th place finish at 12-1.  Had any other jockey been on him, he would have been at least 40-1.  Last year, Take Charge Indy was 12-1 when he should have been about twice that price.  The only horse he beat was Daddy Long Legs, who pulled up.

This isn't to say that Revolutionary has no chance in this race, but he's likely to be around 8-1 and his chances of winning are a lot longer than that.  After three races Revolutionary was considered a titanic disappointment, having failed to break his maiden and losing at 1-5 in an Aqueduct maiden race.  Clearly some switch finally flipped after that race, as he's torn off three straight victories in closing style, but it's really difficult to be impressed by those wins.  The first was over maidens at Aqueduct in the dead of winter; hardly a vintage crop of horses.  Next up was the Withers Stakes, a prep for a prep for the Wood Memorial, which he won by a hard fought neck over a horse that has done nothing since.  He followed that up with a grinding victory by a neck in the Louisiana Derby over Mylute, who was 19-1 that day and figures to be even longer on Saturday.  (We'll concede that a couple of other nice horses finished behind him that race, including Illinois Derby winner Departing and someone further up on this list.)  Add to these middling victories breeding that's schizophrenic on getting 10 furlongs - his sire, War Pass, screams sprinter, while his dam, Runup the Colors, was an excellent router - and we're reluctant to put him in the top tier of horses.

6.  Verrazano. Sabermetric studies have shown that generally speaking, baseball position players develop along a predictable curve where they show talent early, peak at ages 26-29, then have a noticeable decline into their mid-30s followed by a collapse.  Starting pitchers, by contrast, by and large do not follow an aging curve.  Some starters take years to develop into good pitchers and reach their peak when they're in their late 20s (Greg Maddux, Tom Glavine, to name two).  Some start off fabulous and keep up a level of excellence for years (Roger Clemens, Andy Pettite, Felix Hernandez).  Some take forever to reach their apex (R.A. Dickey, Jamie Moyer).  And tons more start off like a house on fire and flame out for any number of reasons - fans of Mark Mulder, Dwight Gooden, Barry Zito and Mark Prior are nodding right now, while Chris Sale and Matt Harvey acolytes are covering their eyes.

Horses, we believe, develop a lot more like pitchers than hitters.  Some will take years to get good and peak at ages 5 or 6.  Others peak when they're 3 or 4.  And some are prodigious right out of the gate and actually have their best starts in one of their first three races, which is akin to a pitcher having his best season his rookie or sophomore year.  You can't assume a pitcher will get better just because he's young, and you can't assume a horse will simply get better because he did well when he was running in allowance company.

We mention this because Verrazano has all the looks of a talented horse that may have already peaked in his 4-race career.  (He has other issues as well that we won't focus on: the lack of a start as a 2 year old and being sired by a pure sprinter.)  His maiden race was great - he won by over 16 lengths - and his second start was absolutely electric, as he sat a length off a contested pace and pulled away under a hand ride.  That yielded a 105 speed figure.  Stretched out to two turns, he won his next two starts (Tampa Bay Derby and Wood Memorial) in a more professional manner, looking solid while never really dominating.  More importantly though, his speed figures have declined as the distances have gotten longer and he's faced more seasoned competition.

There's a good chance that the last two races were just consolidation races and he's ready to make a leap forward into greatness after getting the two-turn and stakes experience under the belt.  That's happened before.  But what we think is more likely is that he ran his best race in his second start and is on the decline.  We think he fades in the final furlongs and either retires or takes a break to return in shorter races.

Contenders for a Piece

5.  Black Onyx. We freely admit this is a little bit of a stab but there's a lot to like here on a horse that will be at least 30-1 (he's 50-1 on the morning line).  While his greatest success has come on synthetic surfaces, his breeding (Grade 1 winner Rock Hard Ten out of a Cape Town mare) is very dirt-oriented.  He isn't a dead closer and has enough tactical speed to be in the second or third flight of horses.  His speed figures, while slow, are on a definite path up.  And we love Kelly Breen with longshots - he did pull off Ruler on Ice in the 2011 Belmont.  We would be a bit surprised to see him on top, but not in triples or superfectas.

4.  Palice Malice. It's odd enough that a Todd Pletcher entry has already made 4 starts this year but this guy takes it to the next level by making the Derby his third start in 5 weeks. At some level we want him to win the Derby because it means Pletcher would have to run him 4 times in 7 weeks, which would be often of in harness racing, let alone Grade 1 thoroughbreds.

The reason this superbly bred colt is running so often is that he needed the points to qualify for the race.  Pletcher set up his schedule that the Louisiana Derby would be his big prep race but Palice Malice had a trip from hell where he was boxed in the stretch the entire time and never able to really run.  His connections - and in no small part, his owner, Cot Campbell of Dogwood Stables - decided to wheel him back two weeks later in the Blue Grass, where he wrested control at the top of the stretch but ultimately lost to the late-charging Java's War.  But that was a synthetic surface which we suspect wasn't his best surface and think he'll move forward off that race.  We also like the fact that he's going against the grain by running so often and think this may inure to his benefit. That said, this guy has only won once to date, so be careful about taking him in the win slot.

3.  Normandy Invasion. We really like his form cycle coming into this race: an excellent second to close out his 2yo campaign, followed by a start off a layoff that was pretty meaningless and an excellent second to Verrazano in the Wood where he was closing late.  While we think his trainer Chad Brown is poised to make The Leap into fame and like his breeding for the distance, we have two major concerns.  First is the fact that this guy is a world beater at Aqueduct and squarely pedestrian elsewhere.  That could be coincidence but he could also be a horse for the course.  The second is the fact that he's only won one race lifetime.  Every year we get horses that are good closers but light on the victory tab that are heavily bet during the Triple Crown.  They're fair bets to finish in the money but never win - think of Nehro in the 2011 Derby.  He may be another one of those who menaces but can't close the deal and ultimately finishes a good third.

2.  Itsmyluckyday. The Forgotten Horse.  After a decent but pretty uninteresting 2 year old campaign (which had 7 starts!), the light switch turned on when he returned to the Gulfstream dirt, as he won an ungraded stakes on January 1 by open lengths.  He then went to the Holy Bull where he beat BC Juvenile champ Shanghai Bobby handily by showing good tactical speed and drawing away in the stretch.  These two races were good for speed figures of 102 and 104, respectively.  He then went off as the favorite in the Florida Derby where he ran a second that's better than it looks - there was no pace in the race, the track had a fluky bias, and he was collared in the final furlongs.  But it was also his first race off a by-design two month layoff, as his trainer decided to give him a breather before the Triple Crown and the prep race.  We think that was a good move and he jumps back into triple GSF territory again, which puts him near the top of this group.  Even better - he's 15-1 on the morning line, and we think he'll drift up to even a higher price as people focus on his last race and relatively unknown trainer and jockey.  That would be a mistake - this is a good horse in good hands.

The Pick

1.  Orb We know, a complete shock given Wednesday's post.  But putting aside our infatuation with Shug McGaughey, we simply think he's the best horse in the group.  His move in the Fountain of Youth to propel him from the back of the pack to second at the top of the stretch reminded us of Monarchos' huge move in the 2001 Florida Derby, which he replicated in winning the Kentucky Derby.  Orb's Florida Derby showed a new level of versatility as he sat close to the non-existent pace and pounced when they came to the stretch.  We think he'll be in a good spot in this race - maybe 5-7 lengths off a moderate pace - and in prime position to take over and hold off the closers down the stretch.  And give Mr. McGaughey his first Derby win, at long last.

How to Play the Race

Orb is currently 7-2 on the morning line, and we think he's going to be longer than that: closer to 9-2/5-1.  At those odds, just bet him to win, as there's nothing wrong with quadrupling your money.  And the same holds true for most of the other horses: we don't think too many will be single digit odds.  If you're looking to make a bit more than that, take a peek at the multi-race bets.  Wise Dan and Point of Entry tower over the field in the Woodford Reserve in the prior race, and doubles with them should be okay, especially if you're able to pick between the two.  (We can't.)  If you're interested in a Pick Three, check out closers Hierro, Pass the Dice and Unbridled's Note in the CD Handicap, a race that's loaded with speed.  And to make it official, the picks:

1st: Orb
2nd: Itsmyluckyday
3rd: Normandy Invasion
4th: Black Onyx

Good luck to all and enjoy the Derby!

UPDATE: Black Onyx has scratched, so move Palace Malice into the 4th slot.

2013 Kentucky Derby Preview Part II: The Bottom Tier

They've drawn the field, assigned post positions, make a morning line, and the field is set for the Kentucky Derby.  (Mostly - there's an also-eligible that we're ignoring.)  Let's jump right into this year's preview; as always, we're looking at the race under the assumption that it's being run over a fast track.

It's Been Real, It's Been Fun, But It Hasn't Been Real Fun.

20.  Giant Finish.  The first time we heard of this horse was when we checked the Racing Form's page Wednesday morning and saw that he had been entered from the Derby.  The second time we'll hear of him is when he's announced by Larry Collmus entering the far turn at the Derby.  The third time will be when he tries to rebound from his horrific Derby showing to compete in the Mike Lee Stakes.

19.  Golden Soul. A stone closer with a turf pedigree that's never run fast.  In the chart for the Louisiana Derby, where he finished a non-threatening 4th at 30-1, the commentary indicates that at various times he was carried 5- 7- and 8-wide, losing approximately 5000 yards of ground, and this happened while he had Calvin "Bo-Rail" in the irons.  That type of running style in a race with little early speed and a lesser jockey does not bode well for Saturday.

18.  Charming Kitten.  The only reason to back this horse is because he's trained by Todd Pletcher, but he's clearly the 5th worst of Pletcher's 5 entrants.  Like Golden Soul, he's also bred for the turf, but has even less success on the dirt, and appears to be a vanity entry made for the amusement of owner Ken Ramsey. 

17.  Falling Sky.  If you were curious about which horses are going to provide the pace in this race, here's your first answer.  Based on his last two starts, there's no indication he wants to run a foot beyond 9 furlongs, so the 10th furlong of the Derby should be problematic. 

16.  Frac Daddy.  Every year there's a Derby entrant that had a good ordinal finish in his prior race that earned him the right to enter the race, but completely belies his actual chances of winning the race.  Prior to his second place finish in a sloooooow Arkansas Derby, Frac Daddy finished a horrible 7th in the Florida Derby and a non-threatening 6th in the Holy Bull.  His second in the Arkansas Derby was pretty clearly by default after favorite War Academy pulled up lame and every other horse in the race was terrible.  So while his entry isn't offensive, the fact that he ran second in his last start is of little consequence.

We Find Your Resumes Lacking

15.  Line of Battle.  The 5 winners of the UAE Derby that have tried the Kentucky Derby have never finished better than 6th (China Visit, 2000) and have rarely been a pace factor.  The first horse that exits the UAE Derby and finishes in the money will come at our expense.  We're not exactly nervous here.

14.  Oxbow.  If you're unsure what's going to be the focus of NBC's soft-focus pre-race stories, we're pretty sure that jockey Gary Stevens' comeback from a long retirement to ride this guy in the Derby will be one of the stories.  Regrettably, Stevens has not picked a particularly fast horse to ride in Louisville, as Oxbow's speed figures first stagnated this winter, then declined in the Arkansas Derby.  We actually like his breeding a lot and would love to see trainer D. Wayne Lukas back in the Triple Crown picture, but we think the only way this guy wins is if he gets to set very slow fractions early in the race and can put the other 19 to sleep.  Unlikely.

13.  Mylute.  We're not exactly sure what this horse is.  In the Risen Star, he was close to the pace and faded badly.  In the Louisiana Derby, he settled well behind the rest of the field and closed decently to finish second in an oddly run race (several that finished behind him had horrendous traffic trouble).  What we can guarantee is that he'll be overbet simply because Rosie Napravnek is riding him.   While Rosie's an excellent jockey, she'll be hard-pressed to get this sprint-bred colt into contention deploying either running style, and since he'll be 15-1 or so, this guy will not be a bargain.

12.  Vyjack.  We think the line between pretender and possibility falls here. This is actually a fairly talented horse that was undefeated going into the Wood Memorial where he finished third behind Verrazano and Normandy Invasion.  While some are touting him as a sleeper, we see three big problems. First, both Normandy Invasion and Verrazano are in the Derby as well, and there's no reason to think they'll run worse than they did in the Wood or that Vyjack's trip was compromised.  Second, his breeding does not indicate 10 furlongs is his bailiwick - his sire's success came at under a mile and he was from a sprinter's family, while his dam is out of turf sprinter Stravinsky.  Third, his trainer, Rudy Rodriguez, has been in enough trouble with racing authorities that his stables are under 24/7 surveillance to make sure there are no shenanigans.  We're not saying that this horse's success are the product of Rodriguez's alchemy, but we don't love the horse being subjected to such an enormous disruption in his routine.  We see a back of the pack finish followed by some time off and a successful return to the races at shorter distances.

11.  Will Take Charge. There are some things to like about this horse: his breeding is quite good (Unbridled's Song out of Grade 1 winner Take Charge Lady, who was the dam of last year's Florida Derby winner, Take Charge Indy), and two good efforts this year on a fast track.  What we don't love is that Lukas decided to pass on the most recent round of prep races and train this horse up to the Derby off an 8-week layoff.  Not only has that been a path to failure, it's completely antithetical to Lukas' modus operandi, which is to run horses early and often.  We're guessing that there are some fitness or health issues with this horse and think the lack of recency leaves him well short of a top effort on Saturday.

Coming up on Friday morning: the top half and our Derby pick.

Wednesday, May 1, 2013

2013 Kentucky Derby Preview Part I: In Praise of Shug McGaughey

Ask most casual horse racing fans who they think is the best trainer and you'll most likely get Todd Pletcher or Bob Baffert in response.  We couldn't really argue with either of those selections.  Pletcher has won the trainer Eclipse award five times, has been the leading money trainer by money earned six times, and has won 40 training titles at premier meets up and down the East Coast.  He's also won two Triple Crown races, 7 Breeders Cup races, and approximately 6,000 graded stakes race.  Baffert has been equally impressive, winning 9 Triple Crown races, 7 Breeders Cup races, and a slew of other Grade 1 races while taking home 4 Eclipse Awards for best trainer.

A slightly less conventional but equally good answer would be any of Bill Mott, Dale Romans or Steve Asmussen.  Mott hasn't been that big a player in the Triple Crown (Drosselmeyer in 2010 was his only win) but has 8 Breeders Cup races to his name and won the training title at Saratoga 9 times.  Everyone knows that Mott can win with pretty much any type of horse on any surface.  Romans has been a little more of a recent revelation but his work with "underdog" horses like Shackleford and Tapitsfly lead him to last year's Eclipse title.  Asmusssen trained two of the best horses from the last decade (Curlin, Rachel Alexandra), won the most races in America 6 straight years, and has a pair of Eclipse Awards to his name.

You couldn't go wrong with any of these five men as your trainer.  But if we could pick anyone active to train our horse, without a question, we'd take Shug McGaughey.  Shug's work is a little less known to those who aren't hardcore racing fans, but the Kentuckyian is one of the most respected trainers in America.  He was elected to the racing Hall of Fame in 2004, having trained:
  • Personal Ensign, who went 14-for-14 and was on everyone's shortlist of greatest older females until Zenyatta came along;
  • Easy Goer, who we'll discuss more below, but is a Hall of Fame 3 year old.;
  • Lure, the winner of two consecutive Breeders Cup Miles;
  • My Flag, the daughter of Personal Ensign, who won the Breeders Cup Juvenile Fillies, three over Grade 1s, and finished in the money in the Belmont;
  • Storm Flag Flying, the daughter of My Flag who also won the BC Juvenile Fillies, making it three generations of BC winners;
  • Inside Information, who won the Breeders Cup Distaff over her highly accomplished stablemate Heavenly Prize by a dozen lengths;
  • Breeders Cup winners Dancing Spree and Pleasant Home; and
  • Several dozen Grade 1 races with horses whose names have largely been forgotten, such as Pine Island, Versailles Treaty, Glitter Woman, Finder's Fee, Strolling Along, Good Reward and Aldiza.
The best day of Shug's career was undoubtedly October 16, 1993, which was dubbed Super Shug Day by most Belmont denizens.  Belmont Park held its "Breeders Cup Preview" day with six races directly tied to Breeders Cup races to come in a few weeks.  Shug won five of them, as Heavenly Prize and Dispute dominated the filly races, Lure won the mile turf race, Strolling Along won the 3yo turf race, and Miner's Mark pulled off an upset in the Jockey Club Gold Cup.  When Richard Mandella won 4 Breeders Cup races on a single day in 2003, Super Shug Day was what most people compared it to.

There has been very little that McGaughey has done wrong.  His horses are never rushed, they're rarely spotted poorly, and always have good, classical breeding.  On top of that, we can speak from personal experience that he's an absolutely wonderful guy on a personal level - he has never hesitated to stop to talk about racing or Kentucky basketball with anyone and knows that fans and bettors are the fulcrum of the sport.
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There are two big reasons why Shug isn't well-known to the general public.  The first is that he essentially trains for two owners: the Phipps family and Stuart Janney (of Bessemer Trust fame).  Both are classic old-school owners that eschew auctions and publicity.  They're throwbacks to the days of the Vanderbilts and Calmuet Farms dominating racing, and they keep their lineage alive by keeping their mares, breeding them to blue-blooded stallions, not selling off their progeny, and only letting their horses run when they're ready.  You will not see Stuart Janney or Dinny Phipps holding a circus press conference like IEAH Stables or Jess Jackson, or having a vanity entry in the Kentucky Derby.  It's just not their style.

The second reason is that Shug has been extremely quiet on the Triple Crown trail, as much of his success in the last 20 years has come with females and older males. He's run six horses in the Kentucky Derby, and only one since 1989 - the extremely disappointing Saarland, who ran a lackluster 10th.  He hasn't had a memorable moment or entrant in the Preakness since 1989.  His only runner of note in the Belmont was My Flag's quasi-historic 3rd in 1995 - which is now 18 years ago.

Shug's biggest moment in the Triple Crown came in 1989 when he brought Super Horse Easy Goer to the Derby.  Easy Goer's greatness was obvious - he was the champion 2 year old colt, won the Wood, and was a gorgeous animal.  Unfortunately, Easy Goer picked a tough year to compete and lost the Derby and Preakness to nemesis Sunday Silence, the latter producing arguably the greatest race of the last 30 years:
 

Easy Goer gained revenge in the Belmont winning by 5 lengths and running the second-fastest time ever behind Secretariat, then followed up with wins in the Whitney, Travers, Woodward and Jockey Club Gold Cup - a feat that has never been matched and will almost certainly never be tried, as the 4 races are in a span of less than 10 weeks.  He went to the Breeders Cup Classic to try for Horse of the Year...only to fall a length shy of Sunday Silence once again.

Sbug's other great opportunity for Triple Crown glory came in 1998 with Coronado's Quest, and while most people have forgotten about this horse, we'd bet that private Shug considers him the Great Horse that got away  After dominating the Aqueduct 2yo circuit by winning 3 stakes races, Coronado's Quest shipped to Florida with a ton of hype as the alternative to reigning Horse of the Year Favorite Trick.  While showing an immense amount of talent, he also showed a ton of immaturity, as he was impossible to handle during pre-race warmups, and couldn't be easily saddled before some races.  He tried the Florida prep circuit but his temperament lead him to become an uncontrollable speedball, at which point Shug essentially gave up on trying to get the horse in front of 160,000 people at Louisville and changed course to prestigious but not Triple Crown races.  What then followed was a stellar 5-race winning streak in the Wood, Riva Ridge, Dwyer, Haskell and Travers, where he beat every 3yo of note (except Real Quiet, who didn't race again after the Belmont).  He ended his career on something of a down note - a 5th place finish in the Breeders Cup Classic, after leading the entire way and meeting one of the best fields ever assembled, and a loss in the Cigar Mile when he was over the top.  But nobody ever doubted that this horse was talented and had the ability to stay a distance.  Had the horse's head been screwed on straight in early May, we're convinced he would have won the Derby and Real Quiet's name would be lost to trivia.

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As amazing as Super Shug Day was, Saturday stands the chance to be the best day of McGaughey's career.  After running his talented mare Hungry Island in the Distaff Mile, in the race before the Derby, the Woodford Reserve, a 1 1/8 mile race on the turf, Point of Entry is going for his second win of the year, having beaten Derby and Dubai World Cup winner Animal Kingdom in his last.  Point of Entry was one of the best horses to train last year, having won 4 straight Grade 1's on the turf only to fall short in the BC Turf mainly because of a horrible ride.  The Woodford looked like a walkover for Point of Entry until Monday, when Charles LoPresti announced that 2012 Horse of the Year Wise Dan would be running as well.  With all due respect to the Derby, this is the matchup that most racing fans have wanted to see, as these are the two best horses in training in America.  It's a fascinating race from many angles - it's a little longer than most of Wise Dan's successes, it's shorter than Point of Entry likes - but if POE knocks off Wise Dan, he immediately goes to the front of the line for 2013 Horse of the Year honors.  We honestly think the race is pretty much a 50/50 proposition between the two horses and can't wait to see them square off.

Then comes the Derby, where Shug has entered Orb.  As we've noted, this is the first runner he's had in the Derby in 11 years, and unlike Saarland, he has a big shot.  After taking 4 starts to break his maiden, he won a nice optional claiming race at Gulfstream, and was advanced into the Fountain of Youth.  There, he sat well off a hot pace and closed like a rocket on the far turn and got by 3-5 favorite Violence in the stretch to win.  He then returned in the Florida Derby against favored Itsmyluckyday - who had looked dominant at Gulfstream to date - and Breeders Cup Juvenile winner Shanghai Bobby.  This time, Orb sat fairly close to a moderate pace and took over in the final yards to win by almost 3 lengths.  While not a fast time against the clock, it was a slow-paced race and his stretch run left little doubt that he would relish 10 furlongs.  And it showed great versatility, as proved to be a horse that didn't need to close from the back of the pack to win.

While we're going to analyze the Derby field as objectively as possible over the next two days, we will admit here and now that we're rooting for Shug.  A Derby win would be the career validation that one of the nicest guys in racing deserves.  And a welcome tonic to a lot of the bad press that racing has received over the last couple of years.  If Orb comes through, one of the good guys and greatest trainers in the sport won the big race.  It would truly be something to celebrate.