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Here are some of the reported contenders for the 150th Preakness Stakes as of May 10.

Enter Sandman



Sandman, who finished seventh in the Kentucky Derby following a troubled trip, will be entered in the Preakness, Hall of Fame trainer Mark Casse said Saturday.

"We wanted to see how he came back. He's an extremely happy horse right now. It looks like the race might set up nice for him. It looks like there's a fair amount of speed," said Casse, who saddled War of Will for a Preakness triumph in 2019 . "I always quote Allen Jerkens, 'Run 'em when they're good,' and he's good right now. We were planning on waiting for the Belmont, but a lot of things can happen in between. He's telling us he's happy, so we're going to go with it."

Sandman dropped far back after bumping with a rival shortly after leaving the starting gate in the Derby before rallying nine-wide to check in seventh.

"I knew when he went by us the first time that we were in big trouble. He obviously wasn't handling the track very well, and you just don't know how that affects them late in the race," Casse said in a statement. "He made a middle run but did flatten out a little bit. I think War of Will ran seventh in the Derby and won the Preakness, so we're going with that."

Sandman entered the Derby coming off a dominating 2 1/2-length triumph in the March 29 Arkansas Derby. The son of Tapit, who had previously finished second in the Southwest and third in the Rebel, finished third behind Derby-winner Sovereignty in the Street Sense last fall.

Sandman's jockey in the Preakness was undetermined Saturday. Sandman is scheduled to ship to Pimlico on Monday.

What about Journalism?



Although Eclipse Thoroughbred Partners President and CEO Aron Wellman was disappointed that Journalism ended up second by 1 1/2 lengths to Sovereignty as the 3-1 favorite in the Kentucky Derby, he was impressed with the way the colt ran under adverse conditions.

"Definitely an admirable performance that certainly validated any and all notions that he's an elite horse," Wellman said in a statement.

Journalism's Derby problems began moments after the gates opened when Citizen Bull, breaking from the rail, bore out as he sought to grab the lead and avoid being trapped on the rail.

"(It was) very unfortunate that Citizen Bull veered so severely to the right leaving from the rail," Wellman said in a statement. "He impacted several horses in the field, and it was sort of a domino effect that ultimately did have some impact two or three steps out of the gate. The domino effect sort of hit him as well where he got pinched so that we weren't as forward as we would have liked to have been. And then, he got shuffled down towards the rail, where it got pretty physical coming past the wire the first time. Even though it wasn't the position that we wanted to be in, he didn't relinquish any further and make a bad situation worse. I think he made the best of the hand that he was dealt."

Coming off the turn and into the stretch, the Derby turned into a match race.

"From there, two really, really exceptional colts, threw it down," Wellman said in a statement. "All credit to Bill Mott, Junior Alvarado, Godolphin and Sovereignty, (who) got the best of us on the day. But very proud of Journalism's effort under less-than-ideal circumstances, the track surface being included in that. Super proud of the colt. I thought Michael McCarthy had him prepared spectacularly and Umberto Rispoli made every right move. No complaints out of our camp."

American Promise



When Westminster-native jockey Nik Juarez rides American Promise at the Preakness on May 17, it will be his first mount in his home state's biggest race.

"It's a dream come true for every rider to ride the Derby," said Juarez, who comes from a longtime Maryland racing family. "For me, I'm super-excited to ride the Preakness, to be home at Old Hilltop, Pimlico; lots of good memories there. It's another dream come true."

Juarez, 31, shifted circuits over the years from Maryland to New Jersey\Florida and then to Arkansas for the past few winters. He began riding for seven-time Preakness winner D. Wayne Lukas at Oaklawn Park, which led to Juarez traveling to Colonial Downs to ride American Promise for the first time in the Virginia Derby. After a 7 3/4-length victory, Juarez was rewarded with his first Kentucky Derby mount.


But if his 16th-place outcome was disappointing, Juarez is undaunted going into the 1 3/16-mile Preakness.

"American Promise was able to show us he has the speed, that size, and he really won going away at Colonial Downs," Juarez said. "The Kentucky Derby was awesome. Just being here in Louisville, being around 'The Coach,' seeing him in his element, to be a part of his team was really amazing. And, being represented by Gary Stevens, it was a dream come true."

On Friday, American Promise went out for a spirited gallop as soon as the Churchill Downs track opened. Lukas said he's seeing what he wants from the son of 2018 Triple Crown winner Justify .

Lukas had decided that American Promise was headed to the Preakness Stakes by Sunday morning after the Derby. The Derby chart that showed American Promise had finished 38 1/2 lengths behind Sovereignty meant nothing to the 89-year-old Lukas. He had watched American Promise endure a brutal trip in the 19-horse Derby and figured the horse deserved another chance in Maryland's marquee race.

While the numbers 16 and 38 1/2 might deter other trainers, Lukas is well-known for sometimes going against the grain and running his horses in the top races in America. And, Lukas understands that a disappointing result in the Derby does not preclude a top performance in the Preakness. Three of Lukas' seven Preakness wins came after less-than satisfying finishes at Churchill Downs.

In the 55 runnings of the Preakness since 1970, there have been 13 winners – 23.% – that finished fifth or worse in the Derby and found glory at Pimlico.

Clever Again went out for a routine gallop Saturday at Churchill Downs in preparation for making his first graded-stakes appearance in the Preakness. Hall of Fame trainer Steve Asmussen plans to work Clever Again a half-mile on Monday and ship to Baltimore on Tuesday.

Clever Again was away from the races for 10 months after finishing second in a 4 1/2-furlong race at Keeneland's 2024 spring meet. He came back to win a 1 1/16-mile allowance race at Oaklawn Park, followed by a four-length victory in the $200,000 Hot Springs Stakes at a two-turn mile.

"He had a few issues and had to take some time off," co-owner Ron Winchell said before the Kentucky Derby, in which he had Louisiana Derby-winner Tiztastic. "We let horses tell us when they're ready to come back. Unfortunately, he got a little behind on the calendar. We were hoping to get (to the Derby), just like Tiztastic. Instead, the best path was to the Preakness."

Goal Oriented



Baffert said Friday morning that Goal Oriented's appearance in the Preakness will hinge on a workout this weekend but that it's "so far, so good" with the 2-for-2 colt who won an optional claiming allowance race on the Kentucky Derby undercard.

"We're going to see how he works," Baffert said after Goal Oriented came bouncing off the track following a routine gallop. "I've always had (the Preakness) in the back of mind, maybe. But after what I've seen, the way he came out of the race, he's a big strong horse that looks like he could handle it."

Goal Oriented debuted April 6 at Santa Anita with an off-the-pace 3 1/4-length victory in a six-furlong maiden special weight event. He returned last Saturday at Churchill Downs, where he registered a front-running three-quarter-length triumph.

"He's really come into himself. The race the other day, he won that with so much to spare," said Baffert, who has saddled a record eight Preakness winners. "I'm watching these horses closely. I don't want to go there unless he has a chance to win. He's going to breeze this weekend and then I'll know more, for sure."

Baffert said Goal Oriented could work Sunday. He said reigning Eclipse Award winner Flavien Prat would ride Goal Oriented in the 1 3/16-mile Preakness. Prat was aboard for Goal Oriented's victory at Churchill Downs.

Gosger



Gosger a 'go' for the Preakness Stakes after the 3-year-old colt worked five furlongs Saturday in 1:00.60 at Keeneland. Gosger worked side-by-side and finished on even terms with the 3-year-old filly Paris Lily, who is running in Friday's Black-Eyed Susan Stakes.

"He worked really well," said trainer Brendan Walsh. "He worked good; so, we're a go. I think he's ready to take a step forward again off the last race."

Jockey Luis Saez has been lined up to ride Gosger. Saez would be Gosger's fourth jockey in four career starts. After an initial second at Gulfstream Park, Gosger won a mile maiden race at the Florida track before winning his two-turn debut in the 1 1/16-mile Lexington.

Saez, who has won the Belmont Stakes twice, is seeking his first Preakness victory. He finished second on Bravazo by only a half-length in 2018 behind Kentucky Derby winner Justify , who would then complete the Triple Crown in the Belmont. Gosger would be Walsh's first Preakness starter.

On Friday, Gosger had a routine gallop.

Heart of Honor



Heart of Honor, who finished second in the April 5 Lexington, arrived in the U.S. on Thursday following a Transatlantic flight from Great Britain. He's scheduled to clear quarantine at Churchill Downs on Sunday and is slated to van to Pimlico on Monday and take to the racetrack on Tuesday.

The 3-year-old son of Honor A.P. is scheduled to run in the Preakness.

Pay Billy



Pay Billy, who earned an automatic Preakness berth with his victory in the April 19 Federico Tesio at Laurel Park, returned to the track Saturday at Delaware Park, two days after putting in his final breeze for the Preakness. Raul Mena is named to ride Pay Billy, who is scheduled to ship to Pimlico on Tuesday.

"He galloped today and galloped nice," trainer Mike Gorham said on Saturday. "Everything looks good. He did everything right, cooled out good. We're pretty much on target."

The Preakness will be the first Triple Crown race for Gorham, a multiple graded-stakes winning trainer who has won 1,443 races since 1985. A former assistant to leading New England conditioner Bruce Smith, Gorham has been a fixture in the Mid-Atlantic region for decades.

"I've run in Maryland for a lot of years and the Mid-Atlantic for a long time," Gorham said. "To me, going to Pimlico is like a home game for us. We're there all the time and a few different times I've even been stabled there with horses. We know the area. It's great. We all try to get good horses and get into these big races. Now we're in one, so we'll try to make the best of it."

Pay Billy breezed a half-mile in 49 seconds on Thursday at Delaware Park in his final tune-up for the Preakness. Pay Billy had a walk day Friday and continues to please Gorham ahead of what will be the Improbable colt's most difficult test yet.

"He's great. He felt good, bright and alert. No worse for the wear after his breeze," Gorham said Friday. "He'll gallop tomorrow. Usually, after a breeze like that, we give them one day off and then gallop, and then just kind of gallop into the race. Maybe get a strong gallop one or two days and that's about it."

Minneapolis-based attorney Nate Nelson is the managing partner for RKTN Racing, which will have 31 people in attendance on Preakness Day.

"They're really excited, and they're new owners in the game, so they probably don't even know the extent of what's actually happening like (someone) that's been around the game forever," Gorham said Friday. "They probably don't know it's as big a deal as it really is."

River Thames



River Thames, who was withheld from the Kentucky Derby, has pleased Hall of Fame trainer Todd Pletcher with his preparation for the Preakness.

"He's doing well. He galloped well this morning and is scheduled to breeze on Saturday at Belmont," Pletcher said. "I'm happy with his progress."

River Thames kicked off his career by winning his first two starts by a combined 11 1/4 lengths before the son of Maclean's Music came up a neck short of holding off Sovereignty while finishing second in the March 1 Fountain of Youth.

River Thames again lost valuable ground in the Blue Grass, in which he finished third, beaten by less than a length by winner Burnham Square.

"He's run well in every start. The tough beat in the Fountain of Youth looks even stronger after Sovereignty's performance in the Derby," Pletcher said. "He's held his best form. He's run well every time. We're hoping maybe by bringing in a fresh horse, it will give us a little bit of an advantage."

Irad Ortiz Jr., who was aboard for the Blue Grass, has the return call on River Thames.

River Thames breezed a half-mile at Belmont Park on Saturday morning, working outside stablemate Trust Fund on his way to a clocking of 48.25 seconds, which ranked ninth of 38 recorded at the distance on the Belmont training track.

Rodriguez (out)



Rodriguez will not run in the Preakness. Hall of Fame trainer Bob Baffert notified Preakness officials on Friday that the Wood Memorial-winner would not run as planned.

Rodriguez was scratched from the Kentucky Derby due to a minor foot bruise a week before the first leg of the Triple Crown. The son of Authentic had remained at Churchill Downs to prepare for the Preakness.

Sovereignty (out)



Derby-winner Sovereignty is skipping the Preakness and "point toward the Belmont Stakes," trainer Bill Mott told 1/ST on Tuesday.

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