Jockey Sonny Leon, trainer Eric Reed and owner Rick Dawson celebrate their first Derby win in their first Derby appearance with Rich Strike.
None of it made any sense. Even by the wildly unrealistic standards of previous long-shot winners like Mine That Bird (50-1 in 2009) and Country House (65-1 in 2019), this was much less plausible. Mine That Bird was at least ridden by Calvin Borel, a Churchill Downs hero for years. Country House at least was trained by Hall of Famer Bill Mott. Rich Strike’s connections? Come on.
“We came here on a prayer,” Eric Reed said.
The human stories are amazing, but start with the horse itself. Prior to Saturday, Rich Strike had won exactly one race in his life. He hadn’t even finished second in his previous five starts, coming in third three times, fourth once and fifth once. There was a grand total of zero people talking about him during morning workouts at Churchill leading up to the trace.
It began inauspiciously for Rich Strike. His first race as a 2-year-old was at Ellis Park, a low-level track in Henderson, Ky., just across the border from Evansville, Ind. The track’s nickname is “The Pea Patch,” for the soybeans that used to grow in the infield. Owned by Calumet Farm and trained by Joe Sharp at the time, Rich Strike was entered in a maiden special weight race on grass. He bombed, finishing 10th. “He ran terrible,” Reed said.
But after some fast workouts on dirt, Sharp targeted a race on that surface at Churchill Downs in September, a $30,000 claiming race. That means another owner and trainer can put in a claim to buy horses in the field.
Claiming races are the backbone of the sport, but they almost always are the province of cheaper horses with modest futures. You do not find Kentucky Derby horses in claiming races. Reed, who admitted that he never dreamed of having a Derby horse — much less a Derby winner — has made the majority of his living in the claiming ranks.
Given those pre-race workouts, Reed had his eye on Rich Strike and put in a claim. He lost a “shake” with another trainer for a different horse in the race, but got Rich Strike after he romped to a 17-length victory at 10-1 odds. (Say what you want about the horse’s career, but he’s had two great days at Churchill Downs.)
None of it made any sense. Even by the wildly unrealistic standards of previous long-shot winners like Mine That Bird (50-1 in 2009) and Country House (65-1 in 2019), this was much less plausible. Mine That Bird was at least ridden by Calvin Borel, a Churchill Downs hero for years. Country House at least was trained by Hall of Famer Bill Mott. Rich Strike’s connections? Come on.
“We came here on a prayer,” Eric Reed said.
The human stories are amazing, but start with the horse itself. Prior to Saturday, Rich Strike had won exactly one race in his life. He hadn’t even finished second in his previous five starts, coming in third three times, fourth once and fifth once. There was a grand total of zero people talking about him during morning workouts at Churchill leading up to the trace.
It began inauspiciously for Rich Strike. His first race as a 2-year-old was at Ellis Park, a low-level track in Henderson, Ky., just across the border from Evansville, Ind. The track’s nickname is “The Pea Patch,” for the soybeans that used to grow in the infield. Owned by Calumet Farm and trained by Joe Sharp at the time, Rich Strike was entered in a maiden special weight race on grass. He bombed, finishing 10th. “He ran terrible,” Reed said.
But after some fast workouts on dirt, Sharp targeted a race on that surface at Churchill Downs in September, a $30,000 claiming race. That means another owner and trainer can put in a claim to buy horses in the field.
Claiming races are the backbone of the sport, but they almost always are the province of cheaper horses with modest futures. You do not find Kentucky Derby horses in claiming races. Reed, who admitted that he never dreamed of having a Derby horse — much less a Derby winner — has made the majority of his living in the claiming ranks.
Given those pre-race workouts, Reed had his eye on Rich Strike and put in a claim. He lost a “shake” with another trainer for a different horse in the race, but got Rich Strike after he romped to a 17-length victory at 10-1 odds. (Say what you want about the horse’s career, but he’s had two great days at Churchill Downs.)