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What More Can You Say About Calvin Borel?

Staff Writer 06.05.2010 16:49
Calvin Borel and Mine That Bird win Kentucky derby.

Calvin Borel and Mine That Bird win Kentucky derby.




He's the jockey who set the world alight with his daring ride to win the Kentucky Derby three years ago on Street Sense. He then uncorked perhaps the greatest ride in the 135-year history of America's premier classic to win it last year on the incomprehensible longshot Mine That Bird, and he did it all over again yesterday on Super Saver, the 7-1 second choice, before a shouting, roaring crowd of 155,000 at Churchill Down.

What's going on here? Who is this Calvin Borel? Three Derby winners in four years, a feat that not even the immortals of the business Eddie Arcaro, Bill Shoemaker, Bill Hartack could accomplish. Not even the great Pat Day, who owned Churchill Downs for more years than we care to remember, ever came close to doing what Borel has done.

It defies explanation, but I'll take a shot Borel is a man of destiny.

At 43, when most jockeys are contemplating retirement from their dangerous profession, Borel has soared to uncharted heights, a face with that incomparable smile and exuberance, that is becoming more familiar than the president's.

He gave Super Saver the rail-skimming ride that is his trademark, leaving every other jockey in the race to gape with wonder and astonishment. How the does he do it? Why do other jockeys give him the garden path to victory?

There isn't a jockey in the land who is more fearless, and more pertinently, more skilful at riding the rail. It's not a matter of simply steering the horse to the inside and letting him do the work.

Borel has turned rail-race riding into a work of art, the best any of us have ever seen.

Super Saver, in my opinion, was the underlay of the Derby. He should never have been so short as 8-1, but put Borel on a horse in the Derby and it seems the whole country dives in and shovels a fortune on him.

The Borel factor cut his odds in half. What other jockey in the past 25 years has exhibited such power at the parimutuels?

Borel earns every penny. He got Super Saver out of his nifty gate 4, eased him back behind the break-neck speed horses out front, and just rode Super once around the big oval. He made it look so easy. Then, always a superb judge of pace, Borel moved him around one horse, shot him to the lead, opened daylight and it was roses,. Ice Box came flying, but he was not going to get past Borel.

"I had him where I wanted him," Borel said. "I got him off the pace and he relaxed good. I learned a lot about him when I rode him last out in the Arkansas Derby . When I worked him the other day, I felt he was peaking, just at the right time. I think he might get better."

"If he stays sound, I think he could go all the way," he said. In other words, Borel thinks he might be riding a Triple Crown winner!

Borel's triumph was so joyful and infectious it almost overshadowed the other remarkable achievement of this Derby trainer Todd Pletcher's first Derby winner after saddling 24 losers.

"It was very important for me to win, but the most important thing was to win it while my parents are still here," he said. "I have dreamed my whole life about winning the Derby.

"I spoke to my parents after the race and my mother said it was the greatest day in her life."

Today, the hex has gone. Todd Pletcher finally got his Derby.

"People say we had one with our name written on it, but I never take anything for granted," he said. "It feels awfully good."

Pletcher paid tribute to Borel.

"No one rides Churchill Downs like he does," he said. "He's five lengths better than any other jockey on this track.



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