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What a Finish! Afleet Alex Nearly Falls, Wins Preakness
"He picked himself right up, and after that I knew he had it won," Rose added. "He's an amazing horse. I've never seen a horse stumble like that and then win a race like this. "I'm sorry for the incident," Dominguez said. "He (Scrappy T) caught me off guard. I felt like he was kind of easing back on me and looking around some. I decided to hit him left handed and it completely, I think, caught him off guard." Once Rose got Afleet Alex righted, he just jumped right back in the race, and it was as if the episode took nothing out of him. He won drawing away by 4 ¾ lengths, and it was another five lengths back to Giacomo.After a mile in 1:36.04, Afleet Alex completed the 1 3/16 miles in 1:55.04. He paid $8.60, $5, and $3.20, while Scrappy T returned $11.20 and $5.80. Giacomo paid $4.80 to show.The complete order of finish was: Afleet Alex, Scrappy T, Giacomo, Sun King, High Limit, Noble Causeway, Greeley's Galaxy, Malibu Moonshine, Closing Argument, High Fly, Hal's Image, Wilko, Galloping Grocer, and Going Wild."Jeremy has absolute, complete confidence in this horse," winning trainer Tim Ritchey said. "He thinks his horse is from the planet Krypton. He thinks he's 'Superhorse'.""Over 30 years, I've seen some horses take some bad steps in races and still win," Ritchey said. "I've never seen a horse stumble that badly and lose his momentum that much to come back on and win in a grade I race like this." There are several key stories to Afleet Alex. One is that he has been connected to Alex's Lemonade Stand, which raises money for juvenile cancer research and has been one of the heartwarming stories of this Triple Crown season.The other is that Ritchey has sent Afleet Alex to the track twice each morning, a very unorthodox style."Believe me, it's the horse," he said. "Horses make trainers, trainers don't make horses. He's the star. I was fortunate enough to come across this horse. He did something that champions do today." Afleet Alex was the first horse to arrive at Pimlico and, obviously, he thrived on the local surface and with the amount of training he received. He was full of run throughout the Preakness.It was a very good betting race. Afleet Alex was the favorite, but at 3-1. There were five betting interests at less than 10-1, and the longest price in the field was 27-1.The attendance was announced as a record on-track crowd of 115,318. The day prior to the Preakness was a nasty weather day with wind and rain but Preakness day was sunny and mild. The previous record was the 112,668 that watched Smarty Jones romp last year.This was the first classic win for any of the connections of Afleet Alex, and first Preakness starter for any of them. The Cash is King Stable is headed by Chuck Zacney, who is the founder and president of The Sirrus Group, a regional medical billing company based in Norristown, Pa.The other members of Cash is King Stable are Robert Brittingham, Joseph Lerro, Joseph Judge, and Jan Reeves.Afleet Alex is a great advertisement for the Fasig-Tipton Midlantic sale, which is held every year the week following the Preakness, just about 10 miles from the racetrack. He was purchased at that sale two years ago for $75,000 and became the first horse under the Cash is King banner. The group now owns seven horses.It is reminiscent of two years ago, when Derby/Preakness winner Funny Cide was the first horse owned by the Sackatoga partnership group headed by Jack Knowlton.By Northern Afleet out of the Hawkster mare Maggy Hawk, Afleet Alex was bred in Florida by John Martin Silvertand.Ritchey resides in Newark, Del., but races in Maryland, Delaware, and Pennsylvania, while wintering in Arkansas.Rose, just 26 years old, also is a regular on the Midlantic circuit and resides in Center Hall, Pa. He won the Eclipse Award as the nation's top apprentice in 2001.Rose has ridden Afleet Alex in all but one of his 11 starts, replaced by John Velazquez in the Rebel Stakes (gr. III), in which the horse finished last of six. Following the race, he was diagnosed with a lung infection and came back under Rose to win the Arkansas Derby (gr. II) by a widening eight lengths.Afleet Alex was a top 2-year-old last year when he won four of six starts and became a grade I winner, taking the Hopeful Stakes at Saratoga. He closed his juvenile campaign by running second, beaten a half-length, in the Champagne Stakes (gr. I) and third, beaten three-quarters of a length, in the Bessemer Trust Breeders' Cup Juvenile (gr. I).Now, Afleet Alex has won seven of 11 starts, with two seconds, and a third. The victory put his career earnings at $2,165,800.(Chart, Equibase) |
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