notes
Always Dreaming has spirited early workout
Team hoping Gunnevera has chance to use late kick
For just a moment Monday morning, the old anxiety rose inside
As he had been in his first days at Churchill Downs, the willful colt was so excited that he seemed ready to launch into a full-on breeze rather than the planned easy gallop. Exercise rider
“He actually scared me a little bit, because he was feeling so good when he went out that in his first couple strides, he went to try to buck Nick off and kind of stumbled a little bit,” Pletcher said. “But he got right back on his feet and after that, it was a very smooth, energetic and good gallop. Obviously, you don’t want any stumbles at this stage of the game. So it gave me a little bit of a fright.”
It seems Always Dreaming simply enjoys living on the edge in the run-up to big races, an approach that worked for him at the Derby.
“That was every morning at Churchill,” Pletcher said, chuckling. “It’s good that he’s feeling this good. We’re just trying to keep him healthy, and we don’t want him to make a mistake.”
Pletcher contrasted his experience with Always Dreaming to the relatively listless gallops his previous Derby champion, Super Saver, delivered at Pimlico in 2010.
“He was very easy to gallop, wasn’t putting a whole lot into it, wasn’t pulling the rider around there,” Pletcher recalled. “So with Always Dreaming, we came in here wanting him to be relaxed, but we don’t want him to be too relaxed. That might be the wrong sign.”
Pletcher has generally gotten exactly what he wanted from the Derby champ’s extended stay at Pimlico, which began last Tuesday. Always Dreaming has thrived in the relative tranquility, even when he had to gallop over a sloppy track Saturday.
The colt is so perceptive that his extra energy Monday was likely the result of several stablemates arriving in advance of Saturday’s Preakness card, Pletcher said.
“I think he picked up on that little bit of change in atmosphere and that’s why he came out a little more fired up than he has been the last few days,” he said.
Pletcher will take a hyped horse over a tired one, nervous moments and all.
Mud and a wide trip made it difficult for the late charger to make a run in the Derby. But if some horse steps forward to push the pace early, Gunnevera could give Always Dreaming a scare at Pimlico.
“You have the old analogy, the hare and the tortoise,” said
Kelly was thrilled with Gunnevera’s energy after he jogged Monday in his first exposure to the dirt at Pimlico. He arrived in Baltimore on Saturday afternoon. Trainer
Gunnevera’s ideal race scenario took a possible hit on Sunday when Royal Mo, one of the early speed horses in the field, suffered a career-ending fracture. Sano and jockey
“He’s got a phenomenal kick, and we just haven’t had a chance to really prove it or show it,” Kelly said. “If he fires, he’ll join them up there [near the lead] and then, let the chips fall where they may.”
He added that Smith, who’s replacing
“I don’t think we could go to anybody who’s better at judging pace,” Kelly said.