Thoroughbred writer Pete Denk shares his experience covering North American Thoroughbred auctions and racing.

Sunday, May 3, 2009

Kicking in the afterburners

One day later I'm still trying to wrap my head around Mine That Bird's improbable Kentucky Derby (G1) victory.

For a little historical perspective, the Birdstone colt ran his final quarter mile in about :23.80 according to the official race chart. My research indicates that was tied for the fourth fastest final quarter in the Derby's 135-year history.

Secretariat owns the fastest final quarter, kicking home in :23.20 in the 1973 edition. Runner-up Sham came home in about :23.80.

Rumbo ran his final quarter in :23.40 in the 1980 derby, but still couldn't catch Genuine Risk. And 1964 Derby winner Northern Dancer scooted home in 24 flat, with runner-up Hill Rise gaining two lengths on the leader for an estimated final quarter in :23.60.

Secretariat, Sham, Hill Rise, and Rumbo all competed on dry, fast tracks, and Secretariat's time of 1:59.40 still stands as the record. Mine That Bird finished in 2:02.66, winning by 6 3/4 lengths in the slop.

One thing is for sure, Calvin Borel's fearless, rail-skimming ride on Mine That Bird was one for the ages.

12 comments:

Julie C. said...

My only question is do I hold on to my win ticket on the off chance he wins the Triple Crown, or cash out now? ;)

Anonymous said...

I'm not an expert as far as collector's value goes, but at 50-1 I'm cashing now!

Would you care to share with us how you picked him? :-)

I've gone back and watched his race replays to see if some hint was there, and I just don't see it. That was a remarkable transformation.

rather rapid said...

Pete, did you watch those Canada races? Also, watch that last breeze by Borel!

Anonymous said...

No, I just watched the Sunland races. Will check out the Woodbine races now...

Anonymous said...

RR-

The stakes wins at Woodbine on 8/23 and 10/5 were nice runs, full of potential. WAYYY better than the Sunland performances. I had not seen those previously.

Anonymous said...

For some reason his win on 9/14 in the Swynford Stakes is not on my free replay service (calracing.com).

I'll post a link to replays of his three stakes wins at Woodbine later today.

Julie C. said...

The ticket is on my 'fridge for now, mainly just because it makes me happy to see it.

I will cash it soon though, and plan to have fun with the money.

No worries, I am not a genuis -- a close friend of the family, who is from the Great White North, was high on this horse and told me to bet him as a live long shot. Mine that gold, if you will. =)

Anonymous said...

A friend from the Great White North ... lol

Sounds like a betting conspiracy to me!

John said...

Hi Pete,

I'd say that was chaos theory in action, no way could anyone have confidently picked that horse to win, happens sometimes.

Dad

Dan Wever said...

I have not seen any one mention Calvin's getting up on the horse looking back and waveing bye bye to the field just past the 16th pole.

Am I the only one that saw it?

Dan Wever said...

Pete,
People seem to forget that Mind that Bird was the Canadian 2YO Champ and he was only beaten 9+ length in the BC and was wide the whole race.

In his 2 races at Sun the Jockey took hold of him both times he started to make his move. In the Sun Derby he would have had a 10 length lead if not held at the 3/8 pole. I thougt the Derby was a fluke but am changing my mind. He looks like he can run a 34 and change 3/8 any time he wants to you just have to let him keep going.

Anonymous said...

Dan-

Thanks for posting. The Woodbine races were fairly impressive (although not terribly fast). The day he won the Grey Cup, Van Lear Rose won the filly race with a time that was four lengths faster.

That being said, I agree with you. MTB's run in the Derby was no Giacomo clunk-up. That was very real acceleration. I don't care what his odds were or how unpredictable the outcome was going in, that was a serious move.

The big question is, can he do it again?