360 early Triple Crown nominations; get the past performances
Good Magic, eFive Thoroughbreds and Stonestreet Stables LLC’s champion 2-year-old Thoroughbred of 2017 and winner of the Sentient Jet Breeders’ Cup Juvenile, heads an international roster of 360 3-year-old Thoroughbreds made eligible during the early nomination phase to compete in the 2018 races of the coveted American Triple Crown: the 2018 Kentucky Derby, the Preakness and the Belmont Stakes.
The Chad Brown-trained Good Magic, a son of two-time Horse of the Year Curlin and the Eclipse Award winner as America’s champion juvenile of 2017, is joined on the list of early Triple Crown nominees by accomplished stars that include Ruis Racing LLC’s Bolt d’Oro, whose only blemish in four 2017 races was his third-place run behind the champion in the Breeders’ Cup Juvenile; and Solomini, the Breeders’ Cup Juvenile runner-up owned by Zayat Stables LLC and trained by Hall of Famer Bob Baffert, who teamed in 2015 to send American Pharoah to the first sweep of the Triple Crown races since 1978. One of Solomini’s three losses was a disqualification from first to third in December’s Grade 1 Los Alamitos Cash Call Futurity.
The 2018 Triple Crown will open Saturday, May 5, with the 144th running of the 1 ¼-mile Kentucky Derby at Churchill Downs in Louisville, Ky. The 143rd Preakness, its 1 3/16-mile second jewel, is set for Saturday, May 18 at Pimlico Race Course in Baltimore, Md. The 150th running of the Belmont Stakes, the series’ 1 ½-mile final leg, is scheduled for Saturday, June 9 at Belmont Park in Elmont, N.Y.
Early nominations to the 2018 Triple Crown closed Jan. 20. Each nomination was accompanied by payment of a $600 fee to make the individual Thoroughbred eligible to compete in any or all of the Triple Crown contests. A late nomination period, which requires a payment of $6,000 for each nominated 3-year-old, is now underway and will continue through Monday, March 19.
Last year’s early phase of Triple Crown nominations attracted 419 horses. An additional six Thoroughbreds were made eligible during the late nomination period to raise the overall total to 425.
Following American Pharoah’s celebrated 2015 Triple Crown sweep, each the past six Triple Crown races has had a different winner. Always Dreaming opened the 2017 series with victory in the Kentucky Derby, but the Preakness was won by Cloud Computing, a colt that had not competed in the opening Triple Crown jewel. Last year’s series was completed with a victory byTapwrit in the Belmont Stakes.
Both Always Dreaming and Tapwrit were trained by Todd Pletcher, who became the first conditioner to earn Triple Crown wins with different horses in a calendar year since Lukas achieved the feat in back-to-back seasons in 1995-96. Cloud Computing was the first winner of a Triple Crown event for Brown, the trainer of Good Magic who went on to earn a second consecutive Eclipse Award in 2017 that honored him as America’s top trainer. WinStar Farm LLC was the most recent owner to earn Triple Crown triumphs in the same year with different horses when it won the 2010 Kentucky Derby with Super Saver and took the Belmont Stakes with Drosselmeyer five weeks later.
After winning two Triple Crown events in 2017, Pletcher led all trainers by making 37 horses Triple Crown-eligible during this year’s early nomination phase. Pletcher, honored seven times with the Eclipse Award as America’s top trainer, now has five wins in U.S. classics that include a pair of Kentucky Derby triumphs and Belmont Stakes victories. Baffert, who has a total of 12 triumphs in Triple Crown races, was next with 32 nominations. Hall of Famer Asmussen nominated 17 horses and was followed by Romans (11) and Mark Casse (10). O’Brien led international trainers with six nominations, headed by Mendelssohn and U.S. Navy Flag, winner of the Dewhurst (Group 1) at Britain’s Newmarket.
Zayat Stables led all owners with 12 Triple Crown nominees and edged WinStar Farm by one for the top spot in that tightly-bunched category. Four owners tied at 10 nominations: China Horse Club International Ltd.; Charles E. Fipke; Michael Tabor, Mrs. John Magnier and Derrick Smith; and West Point Thoroughbreds. Calumet Farm – winner of a record 17 Triple Crown races that includes the historic sweeps by Whirlaway and Citation – tied with St. Elias Stable at nine nominees, one more than Winchell Thoroughbreds.
Fipke bred 11 of the early Triple Crown to lead all breeders, edging Gainesway Thoroughbreds Ltd., which bred 10 nominees. They were followed by Godolphin (9), WinStar Farm (9) and Calumet Farm (6).
Tapit, the sire of Belmont Stakes winner Tapwrit and Creator (2016), led all sires with 22 early nominees. Pioneerof the Nile, the sire of Triple Crown winner American Pharoah, was next with 12 nominees, and was followed by Candy Ride (ARG)and Curlin (11), Into Mischief (10) and Medaglia d’Oro and the late Scat Daddy (9).
The 360 nominated Triple Crown candidates include 324 colts, 20 geldings, 12 ridglings and four fillies.
Gary Barber’s Ontario-bred Wonder Gadot is the most accomplished of the foursome of nominated fillies. The Casse-trained daughter of Medaglia d’Oro has earned graded stakes wins against members of her gender in the Demoiselle (GII) at Aqueduct and the Mazarine (GIII) at Canada’s Woodbine.
Breeders’ Cup Juvenile Turf winner Mendelssohn, a $3 million yearling purchase at Keeneland’s 2016 September Sale, is the most expensive sales purchase among the early nominees. A group of seven nominated seven-figure auction purchases also includes Good Magic, who sold for $1 million during the same 2016 sale.
The nominees include 288 horses that were bred in Kentucky, which is 80 percent of the overall total. Florida was next with 14 nominees and was followed by Maryland (10), New York (9) and California (5). International nominees include seven bred in Canada, six in Ireland and two apiece from Great Britain and Japan.
Nineteen of the nominees are based outside North America, including 13 from Europe, three from Dubai and a trio of Japanese-based runners: Cattleya Sho winner Ruggero (JPN), Mominoki Sho winner Work and Love (JPN) and unraced Copano Kicking.