Photo: Kevin Creative (Kevin House)
All trainer Michael
Matz wanted was a chance for Union Rags to show what kind of horse he is.
Saturday afternoon at Belmont
Park, the hard-luck colt
got that chance and the result was a thrilling victory over Paynter in the 144th
running of the Grade 1, $1 million Belmont Stakes.
Coming off a troubled-trip seventh in the Kentucky Derby, Union Rags
was brilliantly ridden by new jockey John Velazquez in the 1 ½-mile Belmont, which lost its
marquee horse on Friday when Triple Crown hopeful I’ll Have Another was
retired with an injured tendon. In the Derby and Preakness winner’s
absence, the crowd of 85,811 – the largest for a non-Triple Crown Belmont
and the sixth-largest in Belmont Park history – made Derby third-place
finisher Dullahan the slight favorite in the “Test of the
Champion,” with Union Rags a close second choice, also at 5-2.
Velazquez, newly elected to the Hall of Fame, settled Union Rags in
along the rail as jockey Mike Smith sent Paynter to the front to lead the field
of 11 3-year-olds through moderate fractions of 23.72, 49.23, 1:14.72, and
1:38.85 for the mile.
With Paynter unchallenged around the turn and into the stretch, it
appeared that Smith and Hall of Fame trainer Bob Baffert were about to gain
retribution for their narrow losses with favored Bodemeister in the first two
legs of the Triple Crown.
But with Smith going to a left-handed whip as Union Rags steadily
closed in, Velazquez boldly sent the long-striding colt up to the resulting
hole on the rail, and he charged through with 110 yards to go and won by a
neck. His time for the 1 ½ miles was 2:30.42.
“I waited for a hole to open up and I got lucky,” said
Velazquez, who won the 2007 Belmont
with the filly Rags to Riches. “The horse did it all.”
“It looked like we had it,”
said Baffert. “It looked like it was ours. I really felt like I was going
to win the Belmont.
It was snatched away again.”
Atigun closed for third, with Dullahan finishing a non-threatening
seventh.
“Paynter ran a big race, they all ran big. Union Rags ran big; we
just didn’t have a finishing kick,” said Dale Romans, trainer of
the beaten favorite. “I think it puts Union Rags in the picture for an
Eclipse Award. There’s a lot of year left, and with I’ll Have
Another out, it’s definitely in his own hands.”
Union Rags, who was both sold as a yearling and later bought back by
owner Phyllis Wyeth, won the first three races of his career, including the
Grade 2 Three Chimneys Saratoga Special and Belmont’s Grade 1 Champagne. After a
wide-trip second in the Breeders’ Cup Juvenile to Hansen, the eventual champion
2-Year-Old Male, Union Rags began his 3-year-old campaign as one of the
favorites for the Derby.
Winner of the Grade 2 Fountain of Youth, and third in the Grade 1 Florida
Derby, he was sent off as the 5-1 second choice in the Kentucky Derby but was
beaten 7 ½ lengths after a nightmare trip.
“We always thought this horse had
Triple Crown potential,” said Matz, who trained 2006 Kentucky Derby
winner Barbaro. “When we trained him, we gave him four races as a
2-year-old and gave him a rest and had a good plan. He never missed a beat. His
first race [this year] couldn’t have been any easier. He had trouble in
his second race and his third race. I do really think that this horse, when he
has a clean trip and can show himself, is one of the best 3-year-olds in this
crop. Whether he could have done something against I’ll Have Another, I
don’t know, but it sure would have been fun to see.”
Union Rags returned $7.50 for a $2 win bet
and earned $600,000 for the victory, lifting his earnings to $1,798,800 for
Wyeth, whose only other horse is a claimer. His record now stands at 5-1-1 from
eight starts.
“It
was my dream and he made it come true,” said Wyeth, who has been confined
to a wheelchair as the result of a 1962 car accident. “Nobody would have
gotten through on the rail other than Johnny. That was unbelievable. He just
said, ‘Move over, I’m coming.’ He believed in the horse, and
Michael got him there.”
Completing the order of finish behind
Atigun were Street Life, Five Sixteen, Unstoppable U, Dullahan, My Adonis,
Ravelo’s Boy, Optimizer, and Guyana Star Dweej.