Skip to content

Triple Crown run up in air

Canadian champion thoroughbred Mine That Bird stood regally, his ears pricked, his gaze fixed on the rows of clicking cameras.
C06_Kentucky-Derby
Calvin Borel rides Mine That Bird to a victory in the 135th Kentucky Derby horse race at Churchill Downs on Saturday

LOUISVILLE, Ky. — Canadian champion thoroughbred Mine That Bird stood regally, his ears pricked, his gaze fixed on the rows of clicking cameras. Then the 50-1 upset winner of the Kentucky Derby put his head down and began munching on grass, leaving his human handlers still in shock about his stunning 6 3/4-length victory a day earlier.

“It’s hard to believe we come in here and actually won this thing,” bareback rider-turned-trainer Bennie Woolley Jr. said Sunday morning. “Right now it’s a little overwhelming.”

As proof, Mine That Bird — Canada’s top two-year-old male champion last year before being sold by his Canadian owners to American interests for US$400,000 — wore a cream blanket with embroidered red roses proclaiming him as the Derby winner.

Whether he moves on to run in the 1 1-16-mile Preakness on May 16 will be decided in the next couple days, Woolley said.

“The Preakness tends to be a little more speed-biased and I don’t know that that’s going to fit our horse all that well,” he said.

If Mine That Bird skips the middle jewel of the Triple Crown, he’ll be pointed toward the Belmont Stakes in June. Woolley believes the gruelling 11/2-mile “Test of the Champion” would suit the gelding, whose father Birdstone won the 2004 Belmont.

The Derby winner hasn’t bypassed the Preakness since 1996, when Grindstone was injured between the two races and retired. The Derby winner has followed up by winning the Preakness seven times in the last 12 years.

Mark Allen wants to see the horse he and Leonard Blach purchased from Dave Cotey of Mississauga, Ont., and his partners before last year’s Breeders’ Cup run in Baltimore.

“If this horse is doing good, you bet we’ll run, but he’s going to have to tell us,” he said. “The horse will tell us. We don’t owe nobody nothing.”

Going into the Derby, Woolley, along with co-owners Allen and Blach, had the modest goal of finishing sixth or better with the gelding they vanned from New Mexico to compete against some of the sport’s priciest horses.

“The horse was training good, we knew that,” Allen said, “but we were going against guys like D. Wayne Lukas and Bob Baffert, so you got to be real about it.”

Under an expert rail-hugging ride by Calvin Borel, Mine That Bird came flying home in the mud to earn a victory that was worth $1.4 million. He’d never even run in a Grade 1 stakes race before Saturday.

Baffert and Lukas, both Hall of Fame trainers who own a combined seven Derby victories, later offered their congratulations to the self-described cowboys who came up the same way they did, owning and training quarterhorses.

Woolley, Allen and Blach didn’t bet on Mine That Bird, whose $103.20 win payout was the second-largest in Derby history.

“I figured he’d go off at 100-1,” Woolley said.

“Every playmaker in the Form and everything else said he had the biggest chance to run last of anybody.”