Big Brown - On The Threshold Of Greatness

Axle

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Big Brown and The Belmont

I didn't play him in the Derby, but after that race I made the comment that he might be the real deal.

Again, as long as he stays healthy, I think he has a legitimate shot and just might do it. :SIB
 

Axle

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I heard a radio commentator this mornng saying that the most impressive thing about Big Brown's Preakness win, is that when he came back to the winner's circle there was not one drop of sweat on him, not on his face, neck, or body even after they removed the saddle blanket....

Now, that is one hell of an animal.

I know that there will be some gunslingers coming into town to try to knock him off...that usually always happens to all top guns, so it should make for a fun time during the next several weeks......:SIB
 
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Morris

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Above the Clouds....




I know that there will be some gunslingers coming into town to try to knock him off...that usually always happens to all top guns, so it should make for a fun time during the next several weeks......:SIB

What impressed me was the move coming out of the far turn when he was inside. Jock just pulled him up and went outside so he would have clear sailing in the stretch.

Jock looked back and no one around.

He's undefeated. I guess he's that good.
 

Axle

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Baffert likes Big Brown

Baffert likes Big Brown

By Pat Forde
ESPN.com

BALTIMORE -- The working premise for this column was that the smooth sailing is over for Big Brown. That winning the Belmont and the Triple Crown will be brutally difficult, no matter how easy he's made it look getting to this point.

Then I talked to Bob Baffert.

"I've never seen anything like him since I've been training," Baffert gushed Sunday. "Everyone's been waiting for the next Secretariat-type horse, and we got him. He's going to do it."


Nobody expected to wait 30 years for a Triple Crown winner after the run to glory of Affirmed, right.

This is the voice of Triple Crown authority. Nobody in thoroughbred racing knows better than Baffert the heartache the Belmont can inflict.

Three times in five years, Baffert brought a horse to that race after stirring victories in the Kentucky Derby and the Preakness. Three times he was denied on the cusp of racing immortality: Silver Charm in 1997, Real Quiet in '98 and War Emblem in 2002. He's come as close as humanly possible to saddling the 12th Triple Crown winner in racing history, and he's never finished the deal.

So when I got Baffert on the phone, I expected him to be full of cautionary tales for Rick Dutrow, the trainer of Big Brown. I expected him to talk about the delicate balance needed to keep a horse trained to a razor's edge for five weeks -- fit but not fatigued, ready but not over the top. I figured he'd talk about the mental drain from the three-week spike in attention, as mainstream America barges into a sport that normally plays to a niche audience. I presumed he would enumerate all the variables that can work against a horse: health, weather, jockey error, trainer pressure, being targeted by everyone else in the field, etc.

I was wrong.

"I had really good horses," Baffert said. "This is a great horse. If you have really good horses, a lot of things can beat them.

"Every time I see the names of those 11 horses [who have won the Triple Crown], I have more respect for them. Those are great, great horses. They didn't need any excuses. This one's the same way."

Suffice to say, Bob's a believer. He isn't even chalking up Big Brown's dominance to a lack of competition. He believes the colt is special and stacks up with the best 3-year-olds of all time.

"The [Preakness] field was suspect, but that doesn't matter," Baffert said. "Just the way he does it. The way [jockey Kent Desormeaux] shut him off, turned him on, shut him off, turned him on -- that was amazing.

"He doesn't get tired. His air capacity must be enormous."

The next three weeks will test the air capacity of everyone on the Big Brown bandwagon. There will be a great deal of held breath between now and June 7.

And as the pressure intensifies, the competition at last should improve. There appears to be a worthy challenger for Big Brown in Japanese import Casino Drive. He shipped to America and dominated the Peter Pan Stakes May 10, setting himself up as the prime Triple Crown spoiler.

"It's actually good [Casino Drive] is in there," Baffert said. "It makes it interesting. Big Brown hasn't had to lay his body down yet. He'll have to lay his body down for that race."

Big Brown won the Preakness on Saturday to finish the second leg of the Triple Crown.

Baffert could well be right -- Big Brown may be the horse that ends the 30-year Triple Crown drought, the longest period without a Crown since Sir Barton won the first one in 1919. But as dominant as Brownie has been -- undefeated in five lifetime races, winning by a total of 39 lengths -- recent history is littered with near misses.

Start with Silver Charm in '97, who was overhauled in the final 16th of a mile in the Belmont by Touch Gold. Silver Charm's flaw: He had a tendency to relax on the lead and needed to see his competition to race his hardest. When Touch Gold rolled past in the middle of the track, Silver Charm never saw him.

Then Real Quiet in '98, who was caught at the wire and lost by an agonizing nose to Victory Gallop. That one was so close, the stewards took forever looking at the photo finish before declaring a winner. Real Quiet's flaw: Baffert said the colt began looking at the infield photographers in the stretch and lost focus. Others will cite a questionable ride by none other than Kent Desormeaux, who will be on Big Brown's back this time around.

Charismatic, 1999. He finished third in the Belmont, beaten by Lemon Drop Kid and Vision and Verse. Charismatic's flaw: He just plain might not have been good enough, but he also was injured late in the race. Jockey Chris Antley pulled up Charismatic just past the finish line with a nonfatal leg fracture.

War Emblem, '02. He stumbled leaving the gate and finished seventh in a race won by long shot Sarava. War Emblem's flaw: He was a one-dimensional speedball who had to have the lead and couldn't relax when running behind other horses. Stumbling out of the gate instantly doomed his chances of winning.

Funny Cide, '03. He was beaten by Empire Maker and Ten Most Wanted, both of whom sat out the Preakness and were fresher horses. Funny Cide's flaw: Normally a stalker who chased the pace, he wound up on the lead and probably used himself up too much in the first mile; more importantly, he wasn't as rested as Empire Maker, and probably not as talented, either.

Smarty Jones, '04. Smarty was challenged early by opposing riders who seemed intent on ambushing the favorite, sapping his prodigious speed and softening him up for the final furlongs. Sure enough, Birdstone steadily reeled in Smarty down the stretch. Smarty Jones' flaw: He was too speed-oriented to relax early in races, Birdstone had skipped the Preakness to freshen up, jockey Stewart Elliott moved Smarty too soon and others in the race could be accused of riding solely to spoil the Triple Crown and not to win. (Smarty Jones' owner, the late Roy Chapman, was convinced Jerry Bailey's ride on Eddington was a purposeful attempt to stop his horse from winning the crown.)

Those are six good reasons why the Triple Crown has become the biggest tease and one of the toughest accomplishments in sports. In every case, the beaten favorite had just enough go wrong to derail history.

"If, if, if," Baffert said. "Great horses don't need if."

According to Bob Baffert, Big Brown's coronation isn't a matter of if. It's a matter of when.



http://sports.espn.go.com/espn/colu...41&sportCat=horse&lpos=spotlight&lid=tab1pos1
 

Axle

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Kentucky Derby and Preakness Stakes winner Big Brown, looking to become racing?s 12th Triple Crown winner in the $1 million Belmont Stakes on June 7, jogged once around the main track at Belmont Park Wednesday morning not long after 6 a.m.

?He went out and did his usual thing,? said his regular exercise rider, Michelle Nevin, of the colt?s return to the track for the first time since Saturday?s impressive 5 ?-length victory at Pimlico. ?He was very interested in the chickens today.?

Owned by IEAH Stables and Paul Pompa Jr., the undefeated Big Brown will be making only his sixth career start in the 140th edition of the Belmont, the oldest, and at a mile and a half, the longest leg of the Triple Crown. Seattle Slew, who was 9-0 when he swept the series in 1977, is the only horse to win all three races while undefeated.

Among those expected to challenge Big Brown in the Belmont are Casino Drive, who is undefeated in two starts, Tale of Ekati, the winner of Aqueduct?s Grade 1 Wood Memorial, Denis of Cork, third in the Kentucky Derby, Anak Nakal, Behindatthebar, Ready?s Echo, Macho Again, Ichabad Crane, and Tomcito.

In a wide-ranging news conference outside the barn Wednesday morning, Dutrow exuded confidence in Big Brown?s ability to accomplish what no horse has done since Affirmed in 1978.

?It?s not a sure thing but he?s very live,? quipped Dutrow, adding that barring the unforeseen, he fully expected to be in the winner?s circle.

?I wish [the Belmont] were now because our horse is fit,? he said. ?Time is on our side because our horse is good.?

Dutrow, who said he has about 110 horses in training at Aqueduct, Monmouth Park, and, of course, at Belmont Park, admitted that virtually all of his attention has been focused on Big Brown since the colt made his first start for Dutrow in an allowance at Gulfstream Park on March 5.

?I?m glad he?s here, safe and sound,? said the trainer. ?Things just couldn?t be better with Big Brown and that?s great for me to say.

?I just want to be with him and see him. I?m not around my horses, but I know this is where I?m supposed to be. I don?t want to miss nothing here. I?ll never be able to do this again. He?s so much fun to be around.?

The other undefeated horse in the Belmont will be Casino Drive, who ran off to an impressive 5 ?-length victory in the Peter Pan on May 10 in his second start. The Japanese colt also galloped early Wednesday morning as his connections mulled over selecting a jockey for the race.

According to Nobutaka Tada, the racing manager for owner Hidetoshi Yamamoto, Japanese, European and American riders are under consideration. Favored are Yutake Take, Edgar Prado and Garrett Gomez.

?It?s up in the air,? said Tada, saying a decision would be made within a few days.

Casino Drive, who has the same dam (mother) as the last two Belmont Stakes winners ? Jazil (2006) and Rags to Riches (2007) ? is scheduled to breeze this weekend, weather permitting.

Although Spark Candle, a $1.5 million purchase who ran sixth in the Peter Pan, is listed as a Belmont possibility, Tada said he would likely run on Friday, June 6 in the Grade 3, $150,000 Hill Prince for three-year-olds at a mile on the turf. Equipped with blinkers for the Peter Pan, he helped create a solid pace in that race for his stablemate.

Trainer David Carroll was happy with Denis of Cork?s work at Churchill Downs on Monday, where he worked five furlongs in 1:01.00, breezing. The work ranked fifth of 31 at the distance on the fast main track.

?It was a nice five-eighths move,? Carroll said of the Harlan?s Holiday colt. ?It was his first breeze since the Derby, and he went very well. He was well within himself. He?s fit and we are looking forward to running in the race.?

Carroll knows about upsets in this historic race. In 1989, he worked as an exercise rider aboard Easy Goer for Hall of Fame trainer Shug McGaughey. That year, Easy Goer won the Belmont Stakes to ruin the Triple Crown hopes of Sunday Silence, one of 18 horses to lose the Triple Crown in the Belmont Stakes.

Carroll also was the exercise rider for Seeking the Gold, sire of 2006 Belmont Stakes winner Jazil.

Carroll said he would likely breeze Denis of Cork next Sunday or Monday and will likely arrive in New York on June 3 and stable with McGaughey.

Tomcito, who was seventh behind Casino Drive in the Peter Pan, galloped a mile and a half Wednesday morning and trainer Dante Zanelli reported the colt, who won four of five starts in Peru, including one at the Belmont distance of 12 furlongs, is recuperating from minor throat surgery well.

?He displaced his palate in the Peter Pan, and had a myectomy [May 13] so he would remain on target for the Belmont,? said the trainer. ?He returned to the track on May 16 and at this point we are training and going on a day-to-day basis. Hopefully, he gets his confidence back. Big Brown may be from another planet, but we will try to do our best.?

Tale of Ekati, the Wood memorial winner who was fourth behind Big Brown in the Derby, came out of Tuesday morning?s work in good shape, according to assistant trainer Robin Smullen. Under exercise rider Kristin Troxell, Tale of Ekati went a half-mile in 46.86, fastest of 38 works on the main track.

?It was a little faster than we wanted but he was bucking and squealing on the way back,? said Smullen Wednesday morning . ?He?ll work again Monday, then the following Sunday, and run in the Belmont.?

Smullen and trainer Barclay Tagg have an interesting perspective on Big Brown?s run at the Triple Crown. In 2003, Funny Cide, now Tagg?s stable pony, headed into the Belmont as the favorite following his impressive wins in the Kentucky Derby and Preakness, only to finish third.

?Big Brown is a pretty formidable character,? said Smullen. ?I?m hoping for us that we run well, and win. Both Smarty (Jones in 2004) and `Funny? looked unbeatable coming into it ? when they win the first two legs the way they did, they look unbeatable. Maybe Big Brown is ? but there?s a ton of people willing to try if he?s not.?

http://www.nyra.com/belmont/stories/Notes05212008.shtml
 

Cie

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I feel that Big Brown is a fraud based on the steroid use. The trainer is the cheesiest scumbag I have ever heard speak. He is a drug user and pusher, and has been repeatedly exposed as such. Horse racing used to be the sport of kings, but is now a cess pool. How can a horse which uses drugs that are illegal in the 3 triple crown states be allowed to run in these races? How can a repeat offender be allowed access to these horses. The owners who employ this trainer are disgusting individuals who deserve to be flooged. Ridiculous imo.......

Big Brown's Trainer Gives Horses Steroids
Dutrow Gives Horses Steroid That's Legal In Most States


POSTED: 12:29 pm EDT May 16, 2008
UPDATED: 1:02 pm EDT May 16, 2008


Big Brown's trainer Rick Dutrow Jr. gives his horses steroids every month, the New York Daily News reported.

"I give all my horses Winstrol on the 15th of every month," Dutrow told the Daily News. "If (the authorities) say I can't use it anymore, I won't."

Winstrol, a powerful steroid, is legal in 28 of the 38 U.S. states that feature horse racing, including the sites of the three Triple Crown races, Kentucky, Maryland and New York. The 10 other states allow four anabolic steroids, including Stanozolol (Winstrol's former name), to be used for therapeutic uses only, the newspaper reported.

An official at the Racing Medication and Testing Consortium told the Daily News that he expects all 38 states to adopt the steroid ban by the end of the year.

Questions about doping in horse racing surfaced after Eight Belles collapsed at the end of the Kentucky Derby. The filly was euthanized after suffering two broken ankles. Her trainer, Larry Jones, said Eight Belles was not on steroids and ordered drug tests to be done as part of her autopsy to put any rumors to rest. Results from the drug tests are still pending.

Big Brown, won recorded a decisive victory at the Kentucky Derby, is a 1-2 favorite entering Saturday's Preakness Stakes. He's trying to become the first horse since Affirmed in 1978 to win the Triple Crown.
 
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Axle

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How can a horse which uses drugs that are illegal in the 3 triple crown states be allowed to run in these races?

"I give all my horses Winstrol on the 15th of every month," Dutrow told the Daily News. "If (the authorities) say I can't use it anymore, I won't."

Winstrol, a powerful steroid, is legal in 28 of the 38 U.S. states that feature horse racing, including the sites of the three Triple Crown races, Kentucky, Maryland and New York. The 10 other states allow four anabolic steroids, including Stanozolol (Winstrol's former name), to be used for therapeutic uses only, the newspaper reported.

Per your post....May not be morally correct, but apparently it is currently legal.....
 

Axle

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I know what you mean....hell, the drug thing seems to be in all sports....there is no real way we will ever know if current athletes, human or animal, really are as good, or could have matched-up with the ones in the old days.
 

Axle

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No challengers from West for Big Brown
By JAY PRIVMAN


Sunday Silence vs. Easy Goer. Real Quiet vs. Victory Gallop. Alysheba vs. Bet Twice. Some of the most compelling Triple Crown chases in the past three decades were classic East vs. West confrontations, the best being the last time the Triple Crown was swept, 30 years ago, when Affirmed beat Alydar in three straight thrillers.

This year, however, the best horses from the West have hightailed it back to California, leaving the 140th Belmont Stakes on June 7 - in which Kentucky Derby and Preakness winner Big Brown will attempt to become the 12th Triple Crown winner - a match between the East (Big Brown) and the Far East (Casino Drive).

A little more than three weeks ago, conventional wisdom held that the California-based 3-year-olds were a formidable group. Form of the California runners had held up well through the spring. Sierra Sunset left California and won the Rebel Stakes, then Gayego invaded Oaklawn and won the Arkansas Derby. Colonel John ran so well in the Santa Anita Derby that he was sent off as the second choice to Big Brown in the Kentucky Derby.

In the Derby, though, Colonel John finished sixth, Bob Black Jack - the Santa Anita Derby runner-up - was 16th, and Gayego finished 17th in the field of 20. Only Gayego went on to the Preakness, where he finished 11th in a field of 12.

None of them is going on to the Belmont, nor are any new shooters - like El Gato Malo, the Lone Star Derby winner - diving in. All the horses currently certain for the Belmont - Anak Nakal, Big Brown, Casino Drive, Denis of Cork, Macho Again, Icabad Crane, Tale of Ekati, and Tomcito - have never raced in California. The only possible Belmont runner with any California connection is Lexington Stakes winner Behindatthebar, who was based in California during the winter, but his status is questionable after being withdrawn from the Preakness with a bruised foot.

Colonel John was unquestionably the most accomplished Derby runner based in California, but he took the first off-ramp from the Triple Crown trail. After a post-Derby freshening in Lexington, Ky., at the WinStar Farm of Bill Casner and Kenny Troutt, where he was born and raised, Colonel John only days ago returned to Santa Anita.

His trainer, Eoin Harty, on Friday said the Grade 2, $350,000 Swaps Stakes on July 12 at Hollywood Park is the next target for Colonel John, followed by the Grade 1, $1 million Travers Stakes at Saratoga on Aug. 23.
The 1 1/2-mile Belmont, Harty said, "was never part of the equation" following the Derby, in which Colonel John was beaten 14 1/4 lengths after getting bumped solidly at the start, then racing wide on the final turn.
"It's a mile and a half, and I'm not sure my horse wants to go a mile and a half," Harty said from Keeneland, where he was overseeing the runners he has there. "It's not like we were an unlucky second or third in the Derby. He was well-beaten, and he had a rough trip. We came up with an alternative game plan."

The first part of that plan was some downtime at WinStar. "He did some swimming and a little bit of light training," Harty said. "He ate a lot of grass. He got turned out in a small pen. He got to be a kid again. WinStar is so close to Churchill, it was a good opportunity to give him a rest."

The second part of that plan involved looking at Colonel John's career from a long-term prospective. Harty has always maintained that Colonel John, because he is light-framed, is best with plenty of time between starts. The Swaps is 10 weeks after the Derby, and then the Travers comes another six weeks later.

"Looking at the horse's future, we felt it was best to get him back to California, back on a synthetic track, get him ready for the Swaps, and then try Big Brown again in the Travers," Harty said.
Harty said the Grade 1, $1 million Haskell Invitational at Monmouth on Aug. 3 was ruled out "because of the timing in comparison to the Travers."
Harty said he "can't envision anyone beating Big Brown" in the Belmont.

Neither, apparently, can anyone else from California.

In other Belmont developments Friday:
* After visiting the Belmont Park paddock for the first time, Big Brown galloped once around Belmont's 1 1/2-mile oval shortly after 5:30 a.m. Regular exercise rider Michelle Nevin was aboard. As he usually does, Big Brown galloped with bell boots on his front feet.
"I don't want him to grab his quarter," trainer Richard Dutrow Jr. said. "He went good."

* At 6:30 a.m., Peter Pan winner Casino Drive also galloped once around Belmont's main track, a longer move than usual, racing manager Nobutaka Tada said.

Casino Drive goes out with his stablemates Spark Candle and Champagne Squall. Prior to galloping, the three walk the barn area for 30 to 40 minutes. After the gallop, the trio walk the barn area for an hour.
"We warm them up and then we cool them down," Tada said. "Circulation, muscles, tendons - it's good for everything."

Tada said an announcement on who will ride Casino Drive would most likely be made Monday. The leading candidates are Edgar Prado and Japanese jockey Yutaka Take.

- additional reporting by David Grening

http://www.drf.com/news/article/94819.html
 

Axle

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Just read one of those "Rumors"....

Big Brown has a quarter crack....

If true....that changes quite a few things....:shrug:

Might be officially announced today, Sunday 05/25/08...(so the rumor says)
 

Axle

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It's Official Big Brown with Quarter Crack

It's Official Big Brown with Quarter Crack

http://www.drf.com/news/article/94897.html

Big Brown battling quarter crack
By DAVID GRENING
Kentucky Derby and Preakness winner Big Brown developed a quarter crack in his left front foot that will force him to miss several days of training, but his connections are still confident he will make the Belmont Stakes June 7, when he will attempt to become racing's 12th Triple Crown winner.

Trainer Rick Dutrow noticed something amiss Friday afternoon and the horse did not train Saturday or Sunday. Dutrow called noted hoof specialist Ian McKinlay, who had previously worked on Big Brown's troubled feet. McKinlay said the quarter crack is not related to previous wall separations Big Brown suffered on both front feet earlier in career.

?Unless I make some bonehead move, this will be a walk in the park,? McKinlay said.

McKinlay said he hoped Big Brown could return to the track by Thursday.

Dutrow said he'd feel good if he could get Big Brown a work by Tuesday of Belmont week.
 

TouchdownJesus

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Music to my ears. I've got him NOT to win triple crown. Even odds, 5 units.

Who knows...I wish it would end up where I could easily hedge, but I doubt the odds would go that far...
 

Axle

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TDJ, not to rain on your parade, but just heard on a radio show this A.M?..Ian McKinlay, the noted equine hoof specialist, worked this morning to repair and heal Big Brown?s Quarter Crack...also that he stated that it was a minor instance. The procedure took about 10 minutes and the next 48 hours will tell the tale, but all things are very optimistic at this time? :SIB
 

TouchdownJesus

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No problem, we'll see how it goes. After the Preakness, it looked like my chances were pretty crappy. At least this gives me an outside shot. Thanks for the update as well...
 

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He will lose. It will be another disappointment for throughbred racing. All horse racing has been in decline for many years anyway.

They will blame the cracked hoof or some other nonsense. Usually there are a few horses really to run that mile & 1/2.

Probably some 25-1 shot will take it.


Rob
 

HurricaneEddy

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I feel that Big Brown is a fraud based on the steroid use. The trainer is the cheesiest scumbag I have ever heard speak. He is a drug user and pusher, and has been repeatedly exposed as such. Horse racing used to be the sport of kings, but is now a cess pool. How can a horse which uses drugs that are illegal in the 3 triple crown states be allowed to run in these races? How can a repeat offender be allowed access to these horses. The owners who employ this trainer are disgusting individuals who deserve to be flooged. Ridiculous imo.......

I hear that the recently linked Big Brown to BALCO and the authorities want to bring him in for questioning. But the problem is he isn't talking....
 

TouchdownJesus

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I had planned to bet Big Brown in the Preakness, then roll it over and bet the field in the Belmont. Problem was, the odds were way too big in the Preakness, so I just took him to lose one of them at even odds.

It will be interesting and fun to watch, and I'm sure I'll put a small amount on a longshot.
 

Axle

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Big Brown good enough to jog
By JAY PRIVMAN



In an apparent indication that a quarter crack injury to his left front hoof is responding well to treatment so far, Big Brown, the Kentucky Derby and Preakness Stakes winner, went back to the track for a jog at Belmont Park on Tuesday, at least one day earlier than expected.

Big Brown, who has won all five of his starts, on June 7 in the Belmont Stakes will attempt to become Thoroughbred racing's 12th Triple Crown winner, and the first in 30 years. But Big Brown's path to the Belmont had an unexpected detour put in his way last weekend, when he developed the quarter crack. Big Brown did not train on Saturday, Sunday, or Monday.

On Tuesday morning, Big Brown jogged once around Belmont Park's 1 1/2-mile main track - which was rated fast despite rain the previous night - under exercise rider Michelle Nevin. A jog is less demanding than a routine gallop.

"His foot was good enough to go jog," Richard Dutrow Jr., the trainer of Big Brown, said Tuesday afternoon. "I thought we'd try that and see. I didn't see that as a bad move. If the foot looks as good [Wednesday], I would look to gallop him."

Dutrow said Big Brown's left front foot was not carrying any heat after he was walked around the shed row at a Belmont Park barn on Monday afternoon. Dutrow then called Ian McKinlay, the hoof specialist who is repairing the quarter crack, and asked if he could jog the horse on Tuesday. McKinlay, who worked on Big Brown on Monday morning and had appointments at Monmouth Park on Tuesday, gave Dutrow the okay over the phone. McKinlay was expected to see Big Brown again on Wednesday.

"I felt the horse going to the track was not only good for his conditioning but also good for his mind," Dutrow said. "He's been kind of aggravated. He doesn't know why he's not going to the track. He just doesn't understand why he's not doing it. We can't explain it to him and we just let him go out there today and take the edge off him. He's getting too rough around the barn."

The quarter crack was officially announced on Sunday, after Big Brown missed a second day of training. For three days, he was limited to walking around the shed row twice a day. Big Brown's left front hoof, meanwhile, was treated with alcohol and iodine to make sure the crack stayed clean and does not get infected. On Monday, McKinlay used a set of steel sutures to bring the quarter crack together, a precursor to putting an acrylic patch over the crack later this week.

"Ian will do it [Wednesday] or Thursday or Friday, depending on what he sees when he's underneath Big Brown," Dutrow said.

Dutrow said the time off should not impact Big Brown's performance in the Belmont. He had originally scheduled a workout for Big Brown this weekend, but the delay to repair the quarter crack may push back that timetable.

"I don't know - it could be Sunday, Monday, Tuesday, or Wednesday depending on the weather," Dutrow said. "If I had everything I would want, I would like it Monday."

Michael Iavarone, the co-president of the IEAH Stables partnership that owns Big Brown, on Tuesday said, "We were concerned on Friday when the quarter crack was first discovered. But Ian McKinlay had told us then that this was a straightforward quarter crack. He has been on top of it ever since.

"Rick said he could breeze anytime up to Tuesday. We weren't concerned about the track today, even with the rain last night. The track wasn't that bad, and quite frankly, as aggressive as he's been, it was safer for him to be on the track than in the barn."

Expected to challenge Big Brown in the Belmont are Anak Nakal, Casino Drive, Denis of Cork, Icabad Crane, Macho Again, Tale of Ekati, and Tomcito, and possibly Ready's Echo and Spark Candle.

Casino Drive, the winner of the Peter Pan Stakes and the likely second choice to Big Brown in the Belmont, was scheduled to have a workout on Wednesday at Belmont Park, but possible wet weather might force a postponement by a day, according to Nobutaka Tada, the spokesman for the connections of Casino Drive.

"It will all depend on the weather and the track," Tada said. "If it is good, we will go out. If not, we'll wait another day or so."

No rider has yet been announced for Casino Drive. Kent Desormeaux rode Casino Drive in the Peter Pan, but he is the regular rider for Big Brown. Edgar Prado and Japanese jockey Yutaka Take are considered the leading contenders to ride Casino Drive, though Desormeaux would become a viable option if Big Brown were to suffer a setback and miss the Belmont.

- additional reporting
by David Grening
 
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