A lesson
confirmed: Triple Crown dreams are best expressed with caution. Street Sense
came to last Saturday's Preakness after a dominant Kentucky Derby victory so
resonant that his guileless Cajun jockey, Calvin Borel, was invited to a state
dinner at the White House. His trainer, Texan Carl Nafzger, was praised
effusively for his skillful conditioning. The racing game again readied itself
for history. "If he can get by this one, he looks like he can run all day
in the Belmont," said Hall of Fame trainer D. Wayne Lukas,
promisingly." � By scarcely the length of a colt's head, those expectations
were cast aside. A different Cajun jockey won the Preakness, and a different
Texan trainer as well. Five co-owners were rewarded for a deal hammered out
while the rest of the country watched Super Bowl XLI, and racing's Triple Crown
drought was extended to 29 years, since Affirmed edged Alydar.
An eighth of a
mile from the finish of the Preakness, Street Sense was clear by 1 1/2 lengths
as a record crowd of 121,263 brought itself to full throat in a cool drizzle at
Pimlico Race Course. "You take a lead in a horse race, you're expected to
finish it off," said Nafzger afterward. Instead, it was the precocious
Curlin, the third-place finisher in the Derby in just his fourth career start,
who ran down Street Sense for rider Robby Albarado and won at the wire. It was
the closest Preakness finish in a decade, and Curlin's time of 1:53.46 matched
the Preakness record set by Tank's Prospect (1985) and Louis Quatorze
(1996).
Curlin's victory
finished off a breakneck rush that began on Feb. 3, when the colt, who had sat
out his 2-year-old season with sore shins, won the first race of his life, at
Gulfstream Park, by 12 3/4 lengths. "We had 25 offers to sell him, and we
had to make a business decision," says Bill Gallion, who with fellow
Kentucky lawyer Shirley Cunningham Jr. make up Midnight Cry Stable. They had
bought Kentucky-bred Curlin for $57,000 at the Keeneland yearling sale.
The most
persistent bidder was Lexington bloodstock agent John Moynihan, who worked
throughout the next day, Super Bowl Sunday, to complete a deal. "My goal
was to finish by halftime," says Moynihan. His primary client was
Kendall-Jackson wine magnate Jess Jackson, 77, who in 2004 had tried
unsuccessfully to buy Afleet Alex, winner of the 2005 Preakness and Belmont.
Moynihan helped bring in software entrepreneur and Padua Stables principal
Satish Sanan and investment banker George Bolton during negotiations.
Together the three
men bought 80% of Curlin (31% to Jackson, 29% to Sanan, 20% to Bolton) for a
price that Sanan says was "in the ballpark" of $3.5 million. In the
days after the sale was agreed upon, Gallion turned down offers that he says
were "multiples higher," but none would have allowed Midnight Cry to
retain a piece of the horse. (Even Gallion and Cunningham's 20% ownership might
be at risk; they have been suspended from practicing law in Kentucky while
accused of misappropriating clients' settlement funds.)
From the
beginning, the new owners had only a vague idea of what they had bought.
"We hoped that Curlin would be good," says Jackson, "but we never
dreamed that he would develop so explosively."
That development
was left in the hands of trainer Steve Asmussen, 41, who regularly leads the
nation in starts and victories, though he doesn't rake in the purse money like
Eclipse Award--winning trainer Todd Pletcher. Asmussen's father, Keith, was a
jockey and his mother, Marilyn, a trainer. His older brother, Cash, was one of
the most successful jockeys in the world in the late 1970s and '80s, and Steve
had hoped to follow in his footsteps. But when he grew to nearly 6 feet, that
plan was scrapped. "My father is 5'4", my mother is a five-footer, and
I turned into this big, gangly kid," says Asmussen. "It was extremely
disappointing."
Curlin was flown
from Florida to Asmussen's winter training base at the Fair Grounds in New
Orleans. Right away Asmussen saw something special. "He reminded me of
Point Given or Barbaro--big, strong horses," he recalls. "He was the
kind of horse who was clearly capable of winning classic races." Curlin won
two preps at Oaklawn Park in Hot Springs, Ark., by a combined 15 3/4
lengths.
In the Kentucky
Derby, Curlin was trying to become the first horse in 125 years to win without
having raced as a 2-year-old. He ran commendably, closing to third after a
troubled trip. Said Nafzger five days before the Preakness, "Curlin is the
horse that's going to get better off the Derby."
Albarado, 33, who
was born in Lafayette, La., and raced on the same bush tracks as Borel, was
charged with making that happen. Then on Saturday, two races before the
Preakness, he was dumped on the Pimlico turf course when a horse in front of
his mount went down. Luckily, Albarado walked away unhurt. "I know how to
fall," he said, "and I know how to get up."