148TH BELMONT STAKES

Creator supplies drama sans crown

Jockey Irad Ortiz Jr. rides Creator (left) across the fi nish line just ahead of jockey Javier Castellano and Destin to win the 148th running of the Belmont Stakes in a photo fi nish Saturday at Belmont Park in Elmont, N.Y.
Jockey Irad Ortiz Jr. rides Creator (left) across the fi nish line just ahead of jockey Javier Castellano and Destin to win the 148th running of the Belmont Stakes in a photo fi nish Saturday at Belmont Park in Elmont, N.Y.

NEW YORK -- The finish was dramatic, even without a Triple Crown on the line.

photo

AP

Creator and jockey Irad Ortiz Jr. edge out Destin and Javier Castellano to win the 148th Belmont Stakes by a nose on Saturday in Elmont, N.Y. It was the closest victory in the Belmont since 1998, when Victory Gallop beat Real Quiet, also by a nose.

Creator found an opening in the stretch and ran down Destin in the final stride to win the $1.5 million Belmont Stakes by a nose -- the closest possible margin of victory. Jockey Irad Ortiz Jr. pointed to the sky in an appropriate winning salute given the horse's name.

"Today was perfect for us by inches," said trainer Steve Asmussen, who will be inducted into racing's Hall of Fame this summer at Saratoga. "Being the victor of the Belmont Stakes will look good on that plaque."

Asmussen, 50, has won more than 7,300 races, including the Preakness with champions Curlin in 2007 and Rachel Alexandra in 2009. He was taken off the Hall of Fame ballot last year, though, because of allegations made by PETA about the way he treated his horses. He was later cleared by racing authorities in Kentucky and New York.

The 1½-mile "Test of the Champion" wraps up the Triple Crown a year after American Pharoah's run to glory in becoming the first horse in 37 years to sweep the Kentucky Derby, Preakness and Belmont. A different horse won each leg this year -- Nyquist took the Derby and Exaggerator won the Preakness.

This was Creator's day, a hot, sticky one at Belmont Park with temperatures in the mid-80s. Exaggerator, the 7-5 favorite in the field of 13, raced well back in the pack, appeared to make a move into contention but didn't have his usual finishing kick. He finished 11th.

A 3-year-old gray colt, Creator -- who won the Arkansas Derby at Oaklawn Park and finished third in the Rebel Stakes -- flew down the stretch as Destin tried to hang on to the lead. He almost made it but settled for second with Japan-based Lani a closing third.

"I'm glad to see him put that number up; they came to the wire together," Asmussen said of the Creator-Destin showdown. "Irad gave him a dream trip. The horse ran super."

Creator, sent off at 16-1, returned $34.80, $14.60 and $9.40. He was the 10th longest shot to win the race since 1940.

Destin, trained by Todd Pletcher, returned $9.40 and $6.20, and Lani paid $6.60. The winning time for the 1½ miles was 2:28.51. The first three finishers were gray colts.

Governor Malibu was fourth, followed by Stradivari, Brody's Cause, Cherry Wine, Gettysburg, Southwest Stakes winner Suddenbreakingnews, Trojan Nation, Exaggerator, Seeking the Soul and Forever d'Oro.

Creator was one of several closers in the field, and the race set up perfectly for him. Gettysburg was a late addition to the field. Both horses are owned by WinStar Farm, with Gettysburg a front-runner who could set the stage for a thrilling finish.

That's exactly what happened. After setting a slowish pace, Gettysburg dropped back after a mile, and Destin took charge well into the stretch. With Ortiz urging him on, Creator stormed into contention after running near the back of the pack for his third victory in 10 career starts. Ortiz, one of the nation's leading riders, won his first Triple Crown race.

"He was calm, and I just waited for somewhere to go," Ortiz said. "When he got clear, he started running."

Unlike Exaggerator.

Kent Desormeaux, the Hall of Fame rider aboard the colt, second-guessed his decision to ask Exaggerator to wait behind the pace. When he tried to make a move, the horse trained by his brother, Keith, just didn't have it.

"I don't know if there would have been any difference in the outcome," Kent Desormeaux said. "When I picked him up at the quarter-pole to try and win the race, there was nothing there."

Exaggerator and Lani were the only horses who ran in all three Triple Crown races. Lani improved each time, running ninth in the Derby and fifth in the Preakness.

"He was in very good condition, and the distance was good," Lani's jockey Yutaka Take said. "The track was a fast one all day, and the rain held off until after the finish when a downpour soaked the track and a crowd much smaller than the 90,000 that showed up for American Pharoah's Triple Crown.

Earlier in the week, celebrity chef Bobby Flay became a co-owner of Creator along with WinStar.

Sports on 06/12/2016

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