ROANOKE TIMES Copyright (c) 1996, Roanoke Times DATE: Sunday, May 19, 1996 TAG: 9605200080 SECTION: SPORTS PAGE: C-1 EDITION: METRO DATELINE: BALTIMORE SOURCE: Associated Press
Trainer D. Wayne Lukas' streak is over. Jockey Pat Day's streak is very much alive.
Day rode Louis Quatorze to a wire-to-wire victory in the Preakness Stakes on Saturday, giving the jockey his third consecutive victory in the second leg of the Triple Crown. He also ended Lukas' remarkable streak of six Triple Crown victories.
``I'm sorry his streak ended,'' Day said. ``I'm glad my streak continued.''
The victory was particularly satisfying for trainer Nick Zito, who had seen three of his horses finish second during Lukas' string.
``I've been on such a great run, but I knew it wouldn't last forever,'' Lukas said. ``We took a healthy cut at it. I've been blessed on this whole run. Now we'll got to work at Belmont and see if we can do it again.''
Day, 42, had ridden Lukas' Prince of Thieves in the Kentucky Derby. But Lukas replaced him in the Preakness with Jerry Bailey, who became available after Grindstone was retired because of a chipped bone in his right front knee.
``I felt bad about being taken off Prince of Thieves, but I was only too happy Nick gave us the chance to ride this horse,'' said Day, who won the Preakness for Lukas on Tabasco Cat in 1994 and on Timber Country last year.
Prince of Thieves, third in the Derby, finished seventh Saturday, as Louis Quatorze, 16th in the Derby, won by 31/4 lengths over Skip Away, who was three lengths ahead of the Lukas-trained Editor's Note.
Cavonnier, the Derby runner-up and Preakness favorite, finished another 21/2 lengths back in the field of 12 3-year-olds.
``You trade a guy, and the next time you look up, he's beating you with a touchdown pass,'' said Lukas, a former high school and college basketball coach who often talks about racing in coaching terms. ``That happens in sports.''
Louis Quatorze led all the way in winning the 1 3/16-mile classic on a sunny day at Pimlico as Lukas-trained horses lost a Triple Crown race for the first time since the 1994 Kentucky Derby.
``It was probably one of the highlights of my training career,'' said Zito, 48, who won his first Preakness and has two victories at the Kentucky Derby. ``Wayne gave me a hug and said, `Congratulations. I'm glad if my streak was broken, you broke it.' That was really nice of him to do that.''
Before the race, Zito told Day he had a wish list. ``Excellent'' would mean the colt got the lead and kept it. ``Good'' was that he would lie second, and ``fair'' was that he would lie third.
``Obviously, he went for `excellent,''' Zito said.
The race nearly ended early for Louis Quatorze when Secreto de Estado broke badly and stumbled.
``I was afraid he might stumble into us, but we got clear,'' Day said.
``It was a brilliant ride by Pat Day,'' said William Condren, one of three owners of Louis Quatorze.
Louis Quatorze shot out of the gate and still was running full throttle when he hit the wire in 1:53 2/5, matching the Preakness record set by Lukas-trained Tank's Prospect, ridden by Day in 1985.
While the race was 1 3/16 miles long, Day was feeling confident by the time the field hit the first turn.
``Coming into the first turn, I thought they'd have trouble outrunning him,'' Day said. ``I kept expecting someone to make a run at us. Skip Away was the only one I saw.''
It was the first wire-to-wire victory at the Preakness since Aloma's Ruler in 1982.
Skip Away, whose trainer, Sonny Hine, said he took a beating in the run down the stretch the first time, got into second place by the time the field had reached the backstretch, and he stayed there. He almost drew even with the winner on the final turn, but never was able to get by him.
``He got parked way out there on the first turn,'' Hine said. ``Pat Day is tough on the front end. We got up to him, but it was too much to overcome. I was very proud of him.''
Louis Quatorze paid $19, $7.80 and $5.20. Skip Away, ridden by Shane Sellers, returned $5.60 and $4.60. Editor's Note was worth $5 to show.
Lukas, who had been seeking his fifth Preakness victory, said Bailey told him Prince of Thieves didn't handle the track very well.
Zito left no doubt about whether Louis Quatorze would run in the Belmont Stakes on June 8.
``Are you kidding?'' the New York-based trainer said. ``How fast can we get there?''
Completing the order of finish were 9-5 favorite Cavonnier, Lukas-trained Victory Speech, In Contention, Prince of Thieves, Allied Forces, Secreto de Estado, Tour's Big Red, Mixed Count and Feather Box.
LENGTH: Medium: 94 lines ILLUSTRATION: PHOTO: AP. Louis Quatorze, with Pat Day aboard, leads the packby CNBacross the finish line to win the Preakness Stakes. color. 2. Jockey
Pat Day won his third consecutive Preakness Stakes, the second leg
of the Triple Crown, by guiding Louis Quatorze to a wire-to-wire
victory Saturday at Pimlico in Baltimore. KEYWORDS: HORSE RACING