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Danthebluegrassman's Connections Throw Last Minute Curve
By William F. Reed
May 3, 2002
LOUISVILLE, Ky. (May 3, 2002) - The surprising last-minute entry of
Danthebluegrassman
in Saturday's 128th Kentucky Derby (GI) meant that Thursday (May 2) trainer
Bob
Baffert, no stranger to controversy, had to spend most of his time
explaining
and defending the decision, which knocked Windward Passage out of the
20-horse field.
The sharp-eyed watchdogs of the media were totally unaware that
Baffert
was training Danthebluegrassman at Churchill Downs, and Baffert didn't
say
anything about it because he wanted to wait until owner Mike Pegram's
arrival
Tuesday (Apr. 30) night.
When Baffert told Pegram that the chestnut son of Pioneering, out of
the
mare Stay With Bruce, liked the Churchill track much better than he did
the
one at Santa Anita, where he finished eighth and last in the Apr. 6
Santa
Anita Derby (GI), Pegram agreed with Baffert's assessment that "We might as
well
take a shot."
At no time did Baffert give fellow trainer Steve Asmussen, the trainer of Windward
Passage, an inkling of what he was thinking. So Asmussen proceeded for
days
on the theory that Windward Passage, who has earned $100,000 in graded
stakes
races, would make the Derby field. Some of the owners from Team Valor
had
even flown in to attend the draw.
But when Baffert dropped Danthebluegrassman and his $108,750 in
graded
stakes earnings into the mix, Windward Passage was blown out of the
Derby
starting gate, meaning that Asmussen's only Derby horse will be Private
Emblem, winner of the Arkansas Derby (GII).
Asmussen didn't say much publicly, but he had to be seething inside.
He
felt that Windward Passage, who won a 1 1/16ths-mile race last year at
Churchill, had a legitimate chance to win a Derby that has no
intimidating
"super horse." Besides that, he and Team Valor had the unenviable task
of
canceling airplane, hotel, rental-car, and restaurant reservations for
those
who didn't want to come in for a Derby without Windward Passage.
In his defense, Baffert said he felt no ethical obligation to
apologize
for not tipping off Asmussen to what he was thinking. Had Assmussen
known
earlier than Wednesday (May 1) afternoon what Baffert was considering, he and
the
owners at least could have prepared themselves for the blow that came
just
before entries were taken and the post positions drawn.
"Every trainer needs to be on top of his business," Baffert said.
"He
(Asmussen) could have looked at the earnings list and figured out the
possible scenarios. It's his responsibility, not mine."
The truth be told, a lot more probably will be bet on
Danthebluegrassman
than would have been wagered on Windward Passage -- not necessarily
because
he's the better horse, but because he's named for Dan Chandler, a son of
the
late A.B. "Happy" Chandler, a two-time governor of Kentucky who also had
stints as a U.S. Senator and commissioner of baseball.
In the early 1950s, Kentucky basketball coach Adolph Rupp gave Dan a
scholarship, mostly because of his close friendship with Happy. As a
sophomore, he was a member of the unbeaten (25-0) Wildcat team of
1953-'54.
The next season, he supported Rupp when several players threatened to
quit
because the coach took away their complimentary tickets for a game
against
DePaul.
"He said quite positively that he was concerned over what appeared
to be
a lost set of values," Chandler said years later. "He told the players
that
we didn't have winning on our minds, and that our punishment would be
the
loss of the DePaul tickets."
At the end, it was the team, not Rupp, that blinked. But once that
problem was settled, Chandler found himself in the middle of another
brouhaha. Before the Alabama game in UK's Memorial Coliseum, Tide
substitute
Jim Brogan dared Dan to step over the center line during warmups. He
did,
touching off a free-for-all that involved several players from both
sides
before the police restored order.
It still ranks as the only time in UK hoops history that the
Wildcats got
into a fight BEFORE the game began.
After his graduation, Dan decided to follow his famous father into
politics. But everytime he ran for office, he was soundly beaten. In
early
1972, Chandler's luck was running so badly that he lost his wife
(through
divorce), his money (through an ill-fated fast-food chicken scheme),
and
even some of his good name (through what Dan calls "an accidental brush"
with
the IRS).
His life began to turn around in 1974, when an old friend, Cliff
Perlman,
called and asked Dan if he would like to come to work for him as an
executive
with Caesar's Palace. At first, Dan wasn't sure. After all, he was the
son of
a God-fearing, law-abiding, scripture-quoting politician who didn't
believe
in drinking, smoking, or gambling.
Yet Chandler took the job because he had few other prospects, and
moved
to Vegas with the idea of returning to Kentucky when he had made enough
money. Today, however, he's still very much a part of the Vegas scene.
Often
flashing the famous Chandler smile and remembering the names of both
billionaires and busboys, Chandler has glad-handed and back-slapped his
way
through life. He came to love Vegas because he's accepted for what he is
instead of what his father wanted him to be.
"There is no question that my philosophy of life is 100 per cent
from
Daddy's thinking and teaching," Chandler says. "Daddy used to say, 'I
hope
you have all my friends and don't inheirit any of my enemies.' Well,
I've
made friends in Vegas that he didn't have. You've got to earn your own."
When Dapper Dan (as he's known in Vegas) met Pegram and Baffert, who
had
won the 1998 Derby with Real Quiet, it was inevitable they would bond.
Pegram
has an unquenchable thirst for Coors Light beer, gambling and living the
good
life. Knowing a high roller when he saw one, Chandler made sure that he
became Pegram's main man in Vegas, and Pegram expressed his gratitude by
naming a horse after Chandler.
After making their decision, Pegram and Baffert enlisted the
services of
jockey Kent Desormeaux, who was left mountless for the Derby when U S S
Tinosa failed to make the field because of insuffient earnings in graded
stakes races. Desormeaux won the Derby for them with Real Quiet.
They also invited Chandler to come in and do the honors of hanging
Danthebluegrassman's name on the board below his selected post position,
which is No. 17. They either didn't know or care that since 1900, no
horse
has won the Derby from that post. Yet Dan flashed that famous Chandler
smile
as he waddled -- he's gained a lot of weight since his playing days at
UK --
to and from the post-position board.
The "experts" give Danthebluegrassman no more of a chance than they
would
have given Windward Passage. In his eight-race career, Pegram's colt has
three wins and three seconds, including a graded-stakes win in the Jan.
12
Golden Gate Derby under jockey David Flores, who'll ride Essence of
Dubai
Saturday.
"His credentials are at least as good as half the field," Baffert
said.
"He's been training well here and he likes the track. There are some
wierd
things in this Derby, so you might as well take a shot."
Even if that shot puts to death another colt's once-in-a-lifetime
chance
of running in the Kentucky Derby.
Native Kentuckian William F. "Billy" Reed has been a sports writer in various capacities for 42 years and has missed covering the Kentucky Derby a mere two times since 1966. He has been a high-profile sports writer in Kentucky for the Commonwealth's two largest daily newspapers, the Louisville Courier-Journal and the Lexington Herald-Leader and was a national columnist for Sports Illustrated, covering among other sports, Thoroughbred horse racing and college basketball. Reed currently pens a column for the Louisville Sports Report , contrbiutes features to the Keeneland program and will be, among varied other assignments, filing Kentucky Derby installments on www.kentuckyderby.com.
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