Kentucky Derby 2023: Derma Sotogake, Sun Thunder work
Two entrants for Saturday’s Kentucky Derby 2023 put in half-mile works on a sunny Tuesday morning at Churchill Downs.
First to work during the 7:30-7:45 a.m. EDT training window reserved for Kentucky Derby and Oaks horses was Derma Sotogake, who covered the four furlongs in 49.6 seconds under Masatoshi Segawa.
Following him was Sun Thunder. With jockey Brian Hernandez Jr. aboard, Sun Thunder was timed in 47.8 seconds.
Mandarin Hero, who is an also-eligible for the Derby, worked five furlongs in 1:05.6 with Yuji Horita aboard.
Angel of Empire, Hit Show, Jace's Road, Verifying. Trainer Brad Cox split up his four Kentucky Derby contenders for training Tuesday morning. Angel of Empire and Verifying went out at 5:15 a.m., and Hit Show and WestJace’s Road went out at 7:30 a.m. All four galloped once around. Cox said they will school in the starting gate Wednesday morning.
Albaugh Family Stables is returning to the Kentucky Derby for the first time since they were the co-owners of Thousand Words in 2020. They return as sole owner of Arkansas Derby (G1) winner Angel of Empire and co-owner of Jace’s Road.
“We were talking last night at dinner that since the Arkansas Derby, it’s been the longest four weeks of our life,” said Jason Loutch, the racing manager of Albaugh Family Stables. “It’s all you think about, the excitement and trying to get here. Now that that we are here, it’s really starting to hit us. We’re excited for Saturday.
“I’m really happy. To have two runners is a huge accomplishment for our stable. The way Angel came out of the Arkansas Derby, Brad (Cox) thinks he’s doing even better than before that race. Gives us a lot of optimism, but it’s all about getting the right trip. We like our post positions.”
Conficence Game. Confidence Game stayed in the barn and walked the shedrow Tuesday and then schooled in the paddock at 10:15 a.m., while his trainer Keith Desormeaux went to Keeneland to oversee his horses there.
Continuar. Continuar galloped a mile under Kazunari Yoshida after warming up in the mile chute during the first harrow break of the morning.
Continuar, who will be ridden in Derby 149 by Ryusei Sakai, drew post 20 for Saturday’s run for the roses.
“I’ve been getting the outside draw in a lot of big races lately,” trainer Yoshito Yahagi said. “I feel like I am cursed. It isn’t a good draw at all, but there is only so much we can do.”
Read more about Continuar here.
Derma Sotogake. Derma Sotogake warmed up in the mile chute during the first harrow break of the morning and then breezed a half-mile in 49.6 with Masatoshi Segawa aboard.
Trained by Hidetaka Otonashi, Derma Sotogake will be ridden in the Derby by Christophe Lemaire. Derma Sotogake drew post 17 for the Derby.
“I think from the outside he will be able to take a decent position keeping an eye on the whole field in the early stages. He broke quickly from the gate the other day, so I think it won’t be a problem,” assistant trainer Masanari Tanaka said.
Disarm. Disarm had a scheduled walk day at trainer Steve Asmussen’s Barn 38 Tuesday morning after his half-mile move in 49.2 seconds Monday.
Disarm will break from post 11 in Saturday’s Kentucky Derby.
“He’s a very durable horse and I think the best is yet to come from him,” Asmussen said. “I think it’s very obvious that the major players in this year’s race lack a lot of early speed. I see a lot of jockeying in the first eighth of a mile. So I’m very curious what will happen in the early stages of the race.”
Forte, Kingsbarns, Major Dude, Tapit Trice. The Todd Pletcher Derby trio of Forte, Kingsbarns and Tapit Trice went trackside during their usual exercise time as part of the Derby/Oaks training period from 7:30 to 7:45 at Churchill Downs on Tuesday morning.
Each of the trio galloped about a 1 3/8 miles with their usual exercise riders aboard. Hector Ramos handled Forte, Elder Flores was up on Kingsbarns and Amelia Green was aboard Tapit Trice.
Their Hall of Fame conditioner took it all in, then marched with them back to his Barn 39.
The threesome drew well at Monday’s Derby Draw session. Race favorite Forte, 3-1, will start from post 15 with Irad Ortiz Jr. in the tack. Second choice Tapit Trice, 5-1 drew post 5 with Luis Saez, and Kingsbarns, 12-1, and Jose Ortiz are right alongside in post 6.
“They’ll all paddock school this afternoon,” Pletcher noted. “They’ll be in with the horses from the sixth race.”
Lord Miles. Vegso Racing Stable’s Wood Memorial (G2) winner jogged one-mile Tuesday morning at Churchill Downs.
Lord Miles drew post 19 in Saturday’s Kentucky Derby.
Mage. Trainer Gustavo Delgado Sr. sent the Florida Derby (G1) runner-up to Forte out for a gallop with regular exercise rider J.J. Delgado. Javier Castellano will ride the son of Good Magic out of the No. 8 post position. He’s 15-1 on the morning line.
“So far, so good,” said assistant trainer Gustavo Delgado Jr. “He definitely likes the cooler weather than it is in Florida.”
Mage will gallop each day heading into the Derby, with maybe a “higher-tempo” exercise on Wednesday. He’ll get some schooling in the starting gate on Thursday.
Practical Move, Reincarnate. Following a pattern he set from right after he shipped to Churchill Downs last Saturday from California, trainer Tim Yakteen split his Kentucky Derby workers into an early one, Practical Move at 5:20 a.m., and a later one, Reincarnate at 7:30 during the special Derby/Oaks training session. That split allows exercise rider Baltazar Contreras to pilot each horse.
Both trainer and rider were happy with the 1 1/4-mile gallops the horses put in.
Yakteen said his charges would visit the paddock during racing in the afternoon. That was scheduled to happen with the horses for Tuesday’s second race.
Raise Cane. Raise Cain jogged two miles under Rene Morales for trainer Ben Colebrook and schooled in the paddock after training hours.
Raise Cain arrived at Churchill Downs Monday morning from Colebrook’s main base at Keeneland. The Violence colt’s appearance on the track this morning was not his first beneath the Twin Spires.
“He had his debut here, if you could call it that,” Colebrook said of the eighth-place finish in a 6 1/2-furlong sprint. “He was so laid back and the light bulb had not gone on yet.”
Raise Cain, fifth in the Blue Grass Stakes (GI) in his most recent start, drew post 16 for the Derby and will be reunited with Gerardo Corrales, who rode him in his first three starts.
Rocket Can. The Into Mischief colt was back to galloping with regular exercise rider Guelser Cardona after Sunday’s five-furlong breeze for Hall of Fame trainer Bill Mott. Junior Alvarado will ride Rocket Can, listed at 30-1 on the Derby morning line.
Rocket Can drew the No. 18 post position, the same spot from which Mott trainee Country House left the starting gate in 2019. Country House was declared the Derby winner by disqualification.
“I’m fine with it,” Mott said the morning after the draw. “You never know what a good post really is. You can have a bad trip from a good post. So I’m happy to be out there.”
Skinner. As he did Monday in his first day on the track, trainer John Shirreffs took his Derby charge Skinner to the Churchill oval at 9 a.m. with a pony alongside and exercise rider Donnie Balthazar in the tack. They walked and jogged from the six-furlong gap to the paddock, where the bay Curlin colt took a tour then headed back to the track for a solid 1 1/2-mile gallop out in the middle of the big strip
“He’s settled in nicely and looked good galloping today,” his conditioner offered.
Skinner drew post 9 for Saturday’s $3 million Kentucky Derby and will be handled for the first time by California’s leading rider, Juan Hernandez.
Sun Thunder. Trainer Kenny McPeek had his colt breeze four furlongs Tuesday morning under jockey Brian Hernandez Jr., who will ride him in the Derby.
With blinkers on, after starting off in 24.0 seconds, the colt was clocked for the four furlongs in 47.8 seconds, before finishing up five furlongs in 1:01.4.
“It was just a maintenance half for him,” McPeek said. “Brian was happy with him. He was going evenly, that’s what we wanted.”
Sun Thunder and Hernandez will leave the Derby starting gate from post 13. He’s listed at 50-1 on the Derby morning line.
Since 1995, McPeek has had eight Derby starters, with his best finish coming home second in his first try. Tejano Run finished 2 1/4 lengths behind long shot Thunder Gulch.
“I finished second in that race. So if you had asked me how 28 years later I still hadn’t won it, you’d have to ask the question, how did that happen,” McPeek said. “It takes a certain amount of things lining up. You’ve got to have the right horse, the right luck, the right jockey. … A lot of things have got to come together.”
Two Phil's. Exercise rider Gonzalo Gonzales took Two Phil’s out for another spin on Tuesday, galloping 1 1/4 miles for the second straight day since arriving from Hawthorne.
“He was good,” Gonzales said. “He was a little nervous when we began, but once we got on the other side where there was more traffic, he was relaxed and liked his time standing there watching everything. He’s been steadily improving (throughout the winter and spring).”
Trainer Larry Rivelli and jockey Jareth Loveberry were on hand to watch the Jeff Ruby Steaks (G3) winner stretch his legs. Two Phil’s will break from post 4 in the Derby.
“It looks like the closers all drew to his outside, so as long as he breaks well, we’re in a good spot, and they can come down and get behind him,” Rivelli said.
“It looks like I’ll be able to find a good trip,” Loveberry said. “My horse has tactical speed. I don’t mind where we’re at at all. We’ll have a good shot to track behind the two speed horses who drew to each side.”
Also-eligibles
Cyclone Mischief, No. 21, Mandarin Hero, No. 22, and King Russell, No. 23, all officially entered the Kentucky Derby on the also-eligible list.
Mandarin Hero warmed up in the mile chute during Tuesday morning’s first harrow break and then worked five furlongs in 1:05.60 under Yuji Horita.
After the work, the Santa Anita Derby (GI) runner-up visited the gate and the paddock.
Mandarin Hero is trained by Terunobu Fujita.