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Belmont at Saratoga includes Kentucky Derby, Preakness winners | Chattanooga Times Free Press

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Belmont at Saratoga includes Kentucky Derby, Preakness winners | Chattanooga Times Free Press

Horse racing history of all kinds will be made Saturday in the final Triple Crown race of the year.

The Belmont Stakes is taking place at venerable Saratoga Race Course for the first time in the upstate New York venue’s vaunted 161-year history. And while there is no chance at a 14th Triple Crown champion for thoroughbred racing this year, the third leg will include the winners of both the Kentucky Derby and the Preakness Stakes for the first time since 2013.

Five weeks since Mystik Dan finished a nose ahead of Sierra Leone at Churchill Downs in Lexington, Kentucky, and three weeks since he was second to Seize the Grey at Pimlico Race Course in Baltimore, all three are in the 10-horse field in the Belmont Stakes for a rematch showdown in front of a sellout crowd of 50,000 in Saratoga Springs.

Fox will televise the race, which has a post time of 6:41 p.m.

“The fans can relate to Mystik Dan, they can take a look at Seize the Grey, and we get a chance to see them both and determine probably which is the better of the two,” said D. Wayne Lukas, the 88-year-old U.S Racing Hall of Fame trainer of Seize the Grey. “I think that the Belmont this year could easily be — you could make an argument for it being — the best of the three: the Derby, the Preakness or the Belmont. I think that they have probably put together the best of the three.”

One reason for that is the shape of the Saratoga track necessitating shortening the race to 1 1/4 miles from the traditional 1 1/2-mile “test of the champion” distance, which typically is a significant deterrent because most 3-year-olds tend not to run that long.

Mystik Dan is a rarity as a horse not going for the Triple Crown after running the Kentucky Derby and the Preakness Stakes, the first to do that since War of Will in 2019. And trainer Kenny McPeek almost certainly would not have wheeled him back for this race at 1 1/2 miles.

“That would’ve been difficult for my colt: He’s not a really big horse, he’s a modest-sized horse,” McPeek said. “This race run a mile and a quarter should suit him.”

Suit, but not favor, because this race is extremely competitive. Sierra Leone, with a jockey change and an equipment adjustment, opened as the 9-5 favorite with undefeated, lightly raced, Todd Pletcher-trained Mindframe the second choice at 7-2.

    AP photo / Kentucky Derby runner-up Sierra Leone is washed after a workout on Wednesday at Saratoga Race Course in Saratoga Springs, N.Y. Sierra Leone is one of 10 horses entered in Saturday’s Preakness Stakes at Saratoga.

Sierra Leone might have won in Kentucky on May 4 had he not veered in and repeatedly bumped another horse down the stretch, and trainer Chad Brown is counting on jockey Flavien Prat to guide the colt in a clear lane as much as possible.

“As long as you are prepared for him and he runs straight, he should run big,” Brown said. “Just hoping for a good trip. Obviously, we have half as many horses to run down, so that should hopefully be a little easier on him. I just hope he runs the same race as in the Derby.”

McPeek would also take that from Mystik Dan, especially considering the route he got at Churchill Downs from jockey Brian Hernandez Jr. Also back from that 20-horse race are sixth-place finisher Resilience (10-1), eighth-place Honor Marie (12-1) and 10th-place Dornoch (15-1), who is owned in part by former Major League Baseball player Jayson Werth.

Seize the Grey, which did not run the Kentucky Derby, won an eight-horse Preakness Stakes on May 18 in Maryland, where the field did not include Sierra Leone.

  photo  AP photo by Julia Nikhinson / Preakness Stakes winner Seize the Grey stands on the track Thursday at Saratoga Race Course, which will host Saturday’s Triple Crown finale. The Belmont Stakes is being held at the upstate New York facility this year and next while Long Island’s Belmont Park undergoes a massive renovation.

Another attraction for owners and trainers is the setting at Saratoga. The Triple Crown’s finale is being run there not only this year but also in 2025 while Belmont Park on Long Island undergoes a massive reconstruction with an expected price tag of $455 million.

“Everyone’s really anticipating this being really a historic and exciting weekend,” said Brown, who grew up in nearby Mechanicville and got into racing going to the track in Saratoga Springs with his family. “For me, personally, the idea of possibly winning the first Belmont Stakes ever run at Saratoga would just be an incredible moment.”

Easier said than done given the depth of this field.

McPeek did not shy away from the challenge, though, despite knowing all the talent Mystik Dan must face to take two-thirds of the Triple Crown.

“How the race sets up is so unique,” McPeek said. “Mystik Dan is such a unique horse in that he’s got tactical speed, and I think that put him in a position to be able to win the Derby. Of course (there is also) the running style of Sierra Leone’s counter to Mystik Dan, and then Seize the Grey. We’ve got a speed horse, a stalker, and we’ve got a closer.

“It’s going to be an interesting race to handicap for players and for jockeys. … It gives us a chance to really prove ourselves again.”

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