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Numbers Horse Qualifying Points Trainer Jockey Morning Line Odds Final Odds Margin Winnings 1 3 Mystik Dan: 46 Kenneth G. McPeek: Brian Hernandez Jr. 20:1 18.61 $3,100,000 2 2 Sierra Leone: 155 Chad C. Brown: Tyler Gaffalione: 3:1 4.79 Nose $1,000,000 3 11 Forever Young 100 Yoshito Yahagi: Ryusei Sakai: 10:1 7.03 Head $500,000 4 4 Catching Freedom
Rich Strike (foaled April 25, 2019) is an American Thoroughbred racehorse that won the 2022 Kentucky Derby, racing at 80:1 odds. [2] [3]Rich Strike is the second-biggest longshot to have won the Kentucky Derby after Donerail (91:1 odds) in 1913. [4]
Essential Quality is a gray stallion who was bred in Kentucky by Godolphin Stables, for which he races as a homebred.He is by leading sire Tapit, whose earlier crops had included five Breeders' Cup winners (Stardom Bound, Tapizar, Tapitsfly, Hansen, and Untapable), and three Belmont Stakes winners (Tonalist, Creator, and Tapwrit). [3]
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Because of his withdrawal, Bodexpress drew into the field as program number 21. [16] With the subsequent scratch of Haikal (originally post position 11) combined with Omaha Beach (originally post position 12), horses with higher program numbers moved over two place in the starting gate—for example, Code of Honor (saddle cloth 13) started from ...
Rich Strike drew into the Derby as a result of the scratch. He had a record of 1–0–3 in seven lifetime starts and earned his qualifying points by finishing in third place at the Jeff Ruby Steaks. [33] His only win came in a maiden claiming race on September 17, 2021. [34]
The 2020 Preakness Stakes was the 145th Preakness Stakes, a Grade I stakes race for three-year-old Thoroughbreds at a distance of 1 + 3 ⁄ 16 miles (1.9 km). The race is one leg of the American Triple Crown and is held annually at Pimlico Race Course in Baltimore, Maryland.
The 2004 Belmont Stakes was the 136th running of the Belmont Stakes.The 1 + 1 ⁄ 2-mile (2,400 m) race, known as the "test of the champion" and sometimes called the "final jewel" in thoroughbred horse racing's Triple Crown series, was held on June 5, 2004, three weeks after the Preakness Stakes and five weeks after the Kentucky Derby.