By Steve Ginsburg
BALTIMORE (Reuters) - Unbeaten and still untested, Big
Brown followed up his convincing Kentucky Derby victory by
winning the Preakness Stakes in equally dominant fashion on
Saturday.
Big Brown, the overwhelming 1-5 favorite ridden by Kent
Desormeaux, grabbed the lead at the top of the stretch and
easily cruised away from the field for a 5-1/4-length triumph.
"Unlike in the Kentucky Derby where I had to start
knuckling on him to get him to go get the leaders, today I was
slowing him down not to pass the leaders," said Desormeaux.
"It was really a dramatic change from two weeks ago in the
Kentucky Derby."
The Kentucky-bred son of Boundary will run in the Belmont
Stakes on June 7 in New York with hopes of becoming the 12th
Triple Crown winner and first since Affirmed in 1978.
Big Brown trainer Richard Dutrow, Jr. did not feel the
exhausting mile-and-a-half Belmont would be a problem for his
colt, who remained unchallenged in his five career starts.
"I can't imagine we're going to screw anything up here," he
said. "We're going to go with the basic plan like we always
have, nothing special.
"I'm not afraid of a mile-and-a-half. I'm not afraid of
five weeks, three races. I'm not afraid of anything."
Big Brown's winning time of 1:54.80 was off the Preakness
record of 1:53.40 set in 1985 by Tank's Prospect and equaled by
Louis Quatorze in 1996.
Derby trial winner Macho Again finished second in the
12-horse, mile-and-three-sixteenths (1900m) race, while Tesio
Stakes champion Icabad Crane settled for third.
"Big Brown is a monster," said Riley Tucker trainer Bill
Mott, whose colt was in second place for much of the $1 million
race before tiring badly to finish last.
Big Brown, whose average margin of victory is nearly eight
lengths, broke cleanly from the sixth post before moving to the
rail to stalk early leaders Gayego and Riley Tucker.
Desormeaux moved Big Brown to the outside at the
three-eighths pole (600m from the finish) and grabbed the lead
from Racecar Rhapsody at the top of the stretch.
The bay colt, who won the Kentucky Derby by 4- lengths,
cruised to the finish line for a victory that could have been
much greater had Desormeaux urged Big Brown for more.
"I guess we know that Big Brown is the real deal now," said
Reade Baker, trainer of sixth-place finisher Kentucky Bear.
(Writing by Steve Ginsburg; Editing by Justin Palmer and
Greg Stutchbury)