The favorite who was also the longshot won the 140th running of the Kentucky Derby.
California Chrome may have been
the 2-1 favorite entering Saturday's Run for the Roses, but his
appearance at Churchill Downs was nothing if not a minor miracle. He's
no Kentucky blue blood, born to an $8,000 dam; is trained by 77-year-old
Art Sherman, who never before trained a Derby horse; had never raced
outside of his home state of California; and is owned by a couple of
guys who call their stable Dumb Ass Partners.
And yet he won the Kentucky Derby going away, sprinting away from the field down the stretch, winning in a time of 2:03.66.
California Chrome wins 140th running of the Kentucky Derby |
Commanding Curve was second. Danza was third.
Chrome, with its reputation as a
speed horse, was the heavy favorite entering the race, with Wicked
Strong (6-1), Danza (8-1) – yes, named after actor Tony Danza – and
Intense Holiday (8-1) garnering attention, too. None presented Chrome
with any sort of challenge.
The biggest question mark regarding the favorite heading to post time: How would he break from the gate?
Chrome hasn't lost since
November, putting together four straight victories entering the Derby.
But in his last loss he bucked in the gate, leading to a slow start and
eventually a sixth-place finish.
That wasn't the case Saturday.
Chrome bolted from the gate with the field, running up front nearly the
entire way. As the horses entered the final turn, Chrome and jockey
Victor Espinoza made their move. By the time they got to the top of the
fronstretch, Chrome had the lead and only extended it as they headed
toward the pole.
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