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5.4.2002
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Photo By: Jeremy Lyverse
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Starlight Stable's Harlan's Holiday and jockey Edgar Prado warmed-up prior to running in the 128th running of the Kentucky Derby (GI) on May 4, 2002 in Louisville, Ky. |
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McPeek's Dilemma: Press On Or Time Off For Harlan's Holiday?
By, William F. Reed
May 10, 2002
LOUISVILLE, Ky. (May 10, 2002) - You're a horse trainer who thought you had a
tremendous chance to win the Kentucky Derby (GI), yet, for some reason, your
horse
didn't run his race. So now your dilemma is this: Should you throw out
the
Derby and move on to the Preakness (GI)? Or is your horse telling you that
he's
tired, or overrated, and needs some time off to regroup?
That's the decision that trainer Kenny McPeek is pondering right
now.
Harlan's Holiday, the 6-1 co-favorite in the 128th Derby, finished
seventh, more than 15 lengths behind the victorious War Emblem. He
obviously
wasn't the same horse that dominated his fields in the Florida Derby (GI) and
Blue
Grass Stakes (GI).
But why? How could a colt that had never finished worse than second
in 10
career starts never even be in contention in the Derby? Was it that he
didn't
like the track or the raucous Derby mob? Or that jockey Edgar Prado made
a
mistake by holding him back instead of sending him after the
front-running
War Emblem? Or that he had some mental or physical problem?
Most likely, the answer is simply this: Strange things happen in the
Derby because it's the race everyone wants most to win. American jockeys
ride
in 1 1/4-mile races so rarely that the riders sometimes go out of character.
Aggressive jocks become conservative, and vice-versa. Their overwhelming
desire to win is balanced by the numbing fear of making a mistake in the
world's most-scrutinized race.
In 1957, Gallant Man lost the Derby because jockey Bill Shoemaker
misjudged the finish line and raised briefly in the irons at the
sixteenth-pole. In 1974, Little Current lost it because he and jockey
Bobby
Ussery became hopelessly trapped in the record 23-horse field. And in
1986,
Rampage and jockey Pat Day lost it because Shoemaker and Ferdinand beat
them
to a hole on the rail.
Many that were disappointing in Louisville have redeemed themselves
in
Baltimore, a fact that must figure into McPeek's thinking. In 1967, for
example, Damascus ran the worst race of his career in the Derby,
finishing
third to longshot Proud Clarion by four lengths, but rebounded to take
the
Preakness by 2 1/4-lengths.
In 1986, trainer Mel Stute recognized that the favored Snow Chief's
11th-place finish in the Derby was an aberration, so he sent him on to the
Preakness, where he was rewarded with a four-length win.
After favored Hansel's dismal 10th-place finish in the 1991
Derby,
trainer Frank Brothers was so disapppointed that he shipped the colt to
Arlington Park instead of to the Preakness. However, a good workout and
encouragment from trainer Jack Van Berg made Brothers change his mind. Hansel
won
in Baltimore by seven.
Holy Bull, favored in the 1994 Derby, stunned his fans with a
shocking
12-place finish at Churchill Downs. Trainer Jimmy Croll passed both the
Preakness and the Belmont, but Bull still won Horse-of-the-Year honors
by
capturing such prizes as the Florida Derby, Blue Grass Stakes,
Metropolitan
Mile (GI), Haskell Invitational (GI), Travers (GI), and Woodward Stakes (GI).
Finally, favored Point Given finished a dull fifth to Monarchos
in
last year's Derby, but rebounded to win the Preakness, Belmont, Haskell
and
Travers on the way to earning Horse-of-the-Year honors for what
became this year's War Emblem team - Prince Ahmed bin Salman of Saudi Arabia,
the
owner, and trainer Bob Baffert.
Although Baffert is now saying that War Emblem is the best horse he
has
ever trained, including Derby winners Silver Charm (1997) and Real Quiet
('98), he could be playing head games with his rivals, in the hope of
discouraging some to skip the Preakness.
If there's nothing physically wrong with Harlan's Holiday, and if he
has
maintained his zest for the fray, then he deserves a chance in the
Preakness
to become another Damascus, Snow Chief, Hansel, or Point Given. If he
looks
dull or sluggish, however, it might be better to give him a break until
the
Belmont on June 8.
There's no way Harlan's Holiday is as mediocre as he looked in the
Derby.
Maybe a change of scenery and a new track will do him some good. McPeek
said
the colt was "fine" after a workout on May 8 and that he was probably
leaning toward going to the Preakness. A final decision will be made
Monday (May 13)
or Tuesday (May 14).
This is good news for the Ohio-bred colt's many fans. The Derby, the
race
McPeek wants most to win, is history for Harlan's Holiday, but the
Preakness
isn't exactly chopped liver as a consolation prize.
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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