I did a fairly exhaustive preview of the Kentucky Derby last year and plan on doing so once again this year, time willing. But before I start talking about some of the horses, I figured I'd talk a bit about bankroll strategy.
The Kentucky Derby is either the biggest crapshoot on the horse racing calender, or the biggest opportunity. With anywhere from 15 to 20 entries, a bad break from the gates or poor position around the first turn can ruin a horses chances. That's not all; if the pace is too fast, the speed horses that like the front are going to burn up and not last the 10 furlongs. If the pace is too slow, the horses in back are never going to catch the relatively fresh horses running double digit lengths in front of them, especially having to go the long way around the second turn. Despite being the most scrutinized race of the year, favorites have won only four of the Derbies since 1980: Fusiachi Pegasus in 2000, Smarty Jones in 2004, Street Sense in 2007, and Big Brown last year. Notice however that the race has become more "predictable" over the past couple of years; favorites have taken the last two, and Barbaro was the second choice in 2006.
Still, we're not that far removed from bombers like 2002 winner War Emblem at 21-1 and 50-1 Giacomo in 2005. Chaos is certainly possible, and there are a lot of unknowns. None of these horses has run longer than a mile and an eighth yet; they'll have to go a mile and a quarter. Some haven't raced on real dirt. Some are battling nagging ailments. Some are going to draw difficult posts.
That being said, the Kentucky Derby is the one race of the year where being a chalk-eater can be a good thing... if you use it to your advantage. Take last year for example. Big Brown was the prohibitive favorite at 2-1. Only four horses: BB, Colonel John, Pyro, and Eight Belles went off the board at better than 10-1. The favorite won and Eight Belles came in second, hardly an unforeseen possibility. Still, the exacta paid a little bit more than $141. Had you put $40 on BB to win you would have gotten $80 back. Had you played BB on top of every single horse in the race, you would have gotten $103 back, and that's without using any handicapping skill whatsoever to determine the second horse, and you would have only bet $38.
It'll be a bit of a different dynamic this year. There aren't going to be any prohibitive favorites, but five horses have separated themselves from the pack. Quality Road won the Florida Derby in rather impressive fashion. I Want Revenge has owned the New York Circuit after having left the polytracks of California. Friesan Fire won all three of the Louisiana preps rather convincingly against some classy competition. Pioneerof the Nile comes out of California with a string of graded stakes victories. Finally, Dunkirk, the relatively unraced mystery horse, came in second in the Florida Derby while closing strong and traveling the long way around the middle of the track. All five will be under 10-1, and a couple will be around the 3-1/4-1 range with the rest sitting from 5-1/8-1.
There's a quality second class of horses as well. Papa Clem looked much the best last out in the Arkansas derby, betting two graded stakes, including one-time "it" horse Old Fashioned. Musket Man isn't getting a ton of respect but did win two lower-end preps and looked good in the process; he's only lost once in his career. Regal Ransom and Desert Party have dueled out in the desert at Dubai; unfortunately, we don't have a ton to compare them to because of their international travels. Square Eddie looked solid as a 2 year old, was injured, and finished a decent third on polytrack in his last out;will he improve from the needed work off the layoff.
There's more, and I'll get through them all as we get closer. Offer up your thoughts and let's see if we can't win some money this year.
_________________ Fire Phil Emery
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