Friday, May 06, 2005
Afleet Alex could be racing's next feel-good story
LOUISVILLE, Ky. - Afleet Alex is running for more than glory in the Kentucky Derby. The big bay colt is running to beat cancer, too.When the starting gate springs open Saturday for the Derby, Afleet Alex will be among the favorites. But he's already a champion off the racetrack. And if he wins, there can be no sweeter story.Looking for the next Funny Cide or Smarty Jones feel-good story? You're on the right track with Afleet Alex:The breeder has terminal cancer, but says the horse is helping him survive. The Philly-area owners are donating part of Afleet Alex's earnings to Alex's Lemonade Stand, a children's cancer charity. The horse was hand fed with a beer bottle full of milk at birth, overcame a lung infection two months ago and then won the Arkansas Derby to regain his stature as a top Derby contender with six victories in nine races. The trainer picked out Afleet Alex at a 2-year-old sale in Maryland for new owners at the bargain price of $75,000. The jockey was fired in favor of a more experienced rider, but will be back for his first Derby. "Just an amazing story, isn't it?" trainer Tim Ritchey said outside his barn at Churchill Downs. "We're just so fortunate to have a horse like this. Everything is just falling into place, plus we have an opportunity to help some that are less fortunate."John Silvertand, the 60-year-old breeder who lives in Lake Worth, Fla., said doctors gave him about three months to live because of colon cancer that had spread to his lungs and liver. It's been 2 1/2 years and counting."The horse keeps me going," Silvertand said in a telephone interview. "I truly believe he's helping me in my battle."Silvertand, a former pilot in Britain's Royal Air Force, plans to drive to the Derby with his wife, Carolyn, and 12-year-old daughter, Lauren. "Have to drive," he said. "Too many Afleet Alex hats to take on the plane."The hats are just part of the Afleet Alex merchandise also being sold to raise money for Alex's Lemonade Stand for Pediatric Cancer Research. Each hat has a small lemon image on the side, and Afleet Alex's saddlecloth also will have a lemon image.Alexandra Scott, the daughter of Jay and Liz Scott of Wynnewood, Pa., was diagnosed with cancer two days before her first birthday, in 1997. She opened the lemonade stand when she was 4, hoping to raise $1 million for her hospital.The touching story quickly gained national interest, and donations started pouring in. Alexandra was 8 when she died Aug. 1. Chuck Zacney, managing partner of Cash Is King Stable, owners of Afleet Alex, was so moved by the story that he pledged $30,000 to the charity. Then he e-mailed the Scotts, asking if they'd like to be part of the team, with a portion of Afleet Alex's earnings going to the cancer charity.On Tuesday morning at Churchill Downs, a breeding season to Afleet Alex's sire, Northern Afleet, was auctioned for $37,000 -- all of it going to Alex's Lemonade Stand. The winning bidder was B. Wayne Hughes, who owns two horses trying to beat Afleet Alex in the Derby, Greeley's Galaxy and Don't Get Mad.The charity so far has raised more than $1.6 million.The lemonade stand opened Tuesday on the backstretch, and Liz Scott was in awe of what's been happening."It's incredible. It's taken it to a different level for me," she said. "This will be the first year that she's not here, so this was a really important year for me."She loved horses, but she never actually met one. She had pictures of them and she read books. She would think this was really very cool and I'm sure if she was here on Derby day, she'd be all decked out with her hat and her outfit. She was really into that kind of stuff."Zacney and his four co-owners arrived at Afleet Alex's barn Tuesday, full of stories about how lucky they've been with the first horse they bought together. And they talked about how they named Afleet Alex -- three of the owners' children are named or nicknamed Alex."You can't dream this," the 43-year-old Zacney said. "All the owners, we all have a pretty positive spin on life, and we want to share this with everyone. Doing all this, and with the lemonade stand and with John being part of it, is just great."Afleet Alex, meanwhile, is coming into the race in fine form. He has won six of nine races, with two runner-up finishes, for earnings of $1,315,800. He worked a half-mile Tuesday morning in his final tuneup before the Derby.Afleet Alex won the Arkansas Derby by a record eight lengths on April 16, less than a month after finishing sixth in the Rebel Stakes. After the race, Ritchey said Afleet Alex had a lung infection.This was the same horse that went several days without his mother's milk after his birth in Florida in May 2002. With his mother unable to nurse her foal, Silvertand's daughter fed the horse out of a Coors Lite bottle with a nipple on top. A few days later, a nurse mare arrived and Afleet Alex was on his way to the races.Then there's the saga of jockey Jeremy Rose. He was aboard Afleet Alex for the first six races, but Ritchey retained John Velazquez for the Triple Crown trail. Rose was aboard for Afleet Alex's 3-year-old debut, a victory in the Mountain Valley Stakes, but Velazquez was the rider in the Rebel.However, Velazquez committed to riding Bandini in the Blue Grass on the same day as the Arkansas Derby, putting Rose back on Afleet Alex."It was put out of my hands," Rose said. "I'm just glad I got a horse to ride in the Derby."Two years ago, high school pals from upstate New York watched their gelding Funny Cide win the Kentucky Derby. Last year, it was Smarty Jones, who nearly died in a starting gate mishap, winning the Derby and becoming the "people's horse."Is Afleet Alex next?"He may be," Ritchey said. "He's going to have to prove himself, but he's a horse that had to overcome things. America seems to like a sports star that overcomes adversity and goes on and becomes successful
Thursday, May 05, 2005
Kentucky Derby Q & A
The Kentucky Derby is the world's most compulsively over-analyzed race, and there are many myths and half-truths associated with it. Here's a question-and-answer session that may clear up some of them:
Q. Does drawing an outside post in a large field create a significant disadvantage? A. No. Where horses start doesn't have a direct connection to where they'll finish in the Derby, though no one wants post 19 or 20. Among the Derby winners who came from the outside gate were Smarty Jones (post 15 last year); Monarchos (post 16, 2001); Fusaichi Pegasus (post 15, 2000); Charismatic (post 16, 1999); Grindstone (post 15, 1996) and Thunder Gulch (post 16, 1995).
Q. Since the Derby is a mile and a quarter, in such a long race what happens at the start isn't a big deal, right? A. Wrong. Very often, the first few strides can eliminate or severely hurt a horse's chances. You can't win the Derby coming out of the gate, but you can lose it there. In 1985, Eternal Prince broke badly and allowed the other front-runner in the field, Spend a Buck, to grab an immediate lead that he never gave up. In 1994, the heavy favorite, Holy Bull, and the highly regarded Brocco broke badly and never got involved in the race.
Q. How important is the quarter-mile run to the first turn? A. Very important. Often it's where the race can be decided, the place that dream trips and horrible trips start. Here's veteran Derby trainer Todd Pletcher's take on it: "The run to the first turn is the key to the way the whole race is going to unfold. It doesn't necessarily matter that much whether you're first, fifth or seventh. You want to get to the first turn with hopefully the least amount of congestion as possible. In a large field especially, there's so much bouncing around with one another going into that first turn that I think it takes away so much energy from the horses."
Q. Since 1947, only one horse, Sunny's Halo in 1983, won the Derby off only two preps as a 3-year-old. Is that a major negative for likely favorite Bellamy Road? A. Not necessarily, but I will not take a short-priced horse trying to overcome a trend that's stood up for so long. The Derby is the most grueling race a horse will ever encounter, coming as it does so early in a thoroughbred's career. You don't want a horse to be overraced heading into it, but being battle-tested is crucial, and Bellamy Road could be lacking in that department. He's had two very easy races this year, winning them by a total of more than 33 lengths. He could be a freak and a superhorse and win the Derby on the lead by five lengths, but many handicappers, including me, doubt he'll repeat his Wood Memorial romp.
Q. Since 1956, no horse has won the Derby off a layoff of more than 30 days. Since High Fly and Noble Causeway last ran April 2 in the Florida Derby, 35 days before the Derby, does that mean they should be automatically eliminated? A. No, I don't think so. First of all, very few horses have tried to win the Derby off layoffs of more than four weeks, mainly because all the major final preps (Wood, Blue Grass, Santa Anita Derby, Arkansas Derby) always are scheduled no more than a month before the first Saturday in May. So the sample size of the failures is very small. This year, the Florida Derby was pushed back from mid-March to early April for the first time, mainly to keep the major stables at Gulfstream for a few extra weeks. If High Fly and Noble Causeway come up short Saturday, it will be because they aren't good enough or encounter poor racing luck, not because they hadn't run in 35 days.
Q. Can you win the Derby despite a bad trip? A. It's been done, but not often. According to the 1977 chart, the great Seattle Slew "swerved sharply to the outside into Get The Axe after failing to break alertly, was rushed to the leaders . . . [and] continued through tight quarters through the opening quarter-mile. Along the backstretch, Seattle Slew dueled for the lead from the outside with For The Moment to the top of the stretch before disposing of that one and drew off with a rush." Had Slew not been an all-time great who was fortunate enough to face a relatively weak field, he would have been up the track with that horror trip. So many things can go wrong in a race, and only the great ones can overcome anything but one minor traffic problem. Two negative incidents in a race usually spell defeat.
Q. I've heard that some horses, even stars, don't handle the surface at Churchill Downs. Is that true? A. It is, and no one can say why. One example was Hall of Famer Skip Away, who ran the worst two races of his life, the 1996 Kentucky Derby and the 1998 Breeders' Cup Classic, at Churchill. His trainer, Sonny Hine, couldn't figure it out, because Skip Away shipped all over the country to win major stakes, but he was an overbet dud in Louisville. Most of this year's Derby runners have not raced before at Churchill, which is why assessing workouts is often valuable. Q. How much attention should I pay to Derby week workouts? A. You should factor them in but not talk yourself off a horse or onto one just because of a fast or a moderate workout. The speed of a work is not the key, but how a horse finishes and how it handles the track. Unless the animal looks terrific or really bad in a morning drill, don't get carried away. During the past 20 years, Derby winners Ferdinand, Sunday Silence, Unbridled, Grindstone, Silver Charm and Real Quiet announced their sharp form and liking for the surface by working well at Churchill. Of course, they wouldn't have won if they'd had bad trips; many also-rans trained brilliantly over the track but were undone by bad racing luck.
