No Triple Crown: Golden Tempo will not run in Preakness
There will be no Triple Crown winner in horse racing this year. There wonβt even be an attempt.
Trainer Cherie DeVaux on Wednesday announced Golden Tempo, the horse that made her the first female trainer to win the Kentucky Derby, would skip the Preakness Stakes next week at its temporary home, Laurel Park in Laurel, Md.
Just hours after Golden Tempo returned to the racetrack at Keeneland for the first time since his victory Saturday at Churchill Downs, DeVaux posted a statement on X.
βAfter much thoughtful discussion as a team, we have decided that Golden Tempo will bypass the Preakness Stakes,β the statement read.
βWe are incredibly appreciative of the excitement and support surrounding the possibility of a Triple Crown run. The enthusiasm from racing fans, our owners, and our entire team has meant more to us than we can properly express. Golden gave us the race of a lifetime in the Kentucky Derby, and we believe the best decision for him moving forward is to give him a little more time following such a tremendous effort. His health, happiness, and long-term future will always remain our top priority.β
The Preakness, set for May 16, is the second leg of the Triple Crown, followed June 6 by the Belmont Stakes, which for the third straight year will be contested in Saratoga, N.Y. Since 1978, the only horses to sweep all three races are American Pharoah in 2015 and Justify in 2018.
Golden Tempo is the second straight horse and third in the last five years not to run in the Preakness. Sovereignty, who did not participate last year, won the Belmont and later the Travers and was voted Horse of the Year.
Unlike in the past, trainers almost never run horses with just two or even three weeksβ rest. That has prompted talk that the Preakness β which has been run 14 days after the Derby since 1950 β and Belmont could be moved back to allow horses more time between races. Sports Business Journal reported last month that the Preakness was βset to make a historic shift to one week later,β though many trainers have said that wonβt make a difference.
DeVaux was asked the day after the Derby if having the Preakness four weeks after the Derby would make her decision easier.
βI mean, it would make anyoneβs decision easier, but thatβs not the Triple Crown,β she said. βSo, the Triple Crown is hard to win for a reason. And I appreciate the history of it.
βYou know, the horses are definitely different. Theyβre not built the same. Theyβre not trained the same as back then, but current times have shown that it can be done with the right horse.β
There is no shortage of horses aiming for the Preakness, which is limited to 14 starters. One of those β and the likely favorite if he runs β is Crude Velocity, who won the Pat Day Mile on Saturday at Churchill Downs in just his third career start. But trainer Bob Baffert, who has won the Preakness a record eight times, has yet to decide whether he wants to run the horse in two weeks.
βIβm still on fence,β Baffert said Wednesday via text. βTempted but Iβm not leaning yet.β
The Daily Racing Form reported Ocelli, the maiden who finished third in the Derby, is now expected to run in the Preakness. Trainer Whit Beckman told the Form he had Ocelli jog Wednesday and βhe looked better than great.β
Added Beckman: βYou wouldnβt know this horse ran Saturday. Heβs made of something different. Every indication heβs given me is to point to this race. β¦ Weβre having fun, the horse is having fun. If everybodyβs having fun, why stop the fun?β
According to a news release from the Preakness, other horses under consideration who didnβt run in the Derby are Chip Honcho, Corona de Oro, Crupper, Express Kid, Great White, Iron Honor, Napoleon Solo, Pretty Boy Miah, Silent Tactic, Taj Mahal, Talkin, Talk to Me Jimmy and The Hell We Did.
The Racing Form reported jockey Jose Ortiz, who rode Golden Tempo to his Derby win, will ride Chip Honcho in the Preakness.