Great point.
Reading this board after a horse wins the derby with all the \"wait till the Belmont\" stuff reminds me of the old NY Post articles on Monday after football season by Steve Serby - entitled \"loser\'s lament\".
Don\'t get me wrong, I unloaded both barrels against Nyquist but I (and many on this board, were just plain wrong). I don\'t get TGJB\'s post \"an X is coming, maybe not the next time but it is coming\". This can be said about every horse who ever ran. They aren\'t machines. Of course an \"X\" is coming. But who knows when. Just like the Martingale system. Keep doubling your bet, the coin can\'t keep coming up heads.
I don\'t know, let\'s take an objective look at Doug O\'Niell (I don\'t like him, but lets be objective here). He had I\'ll Have Another run a big number in February, often the kind that put a horse over the top (see Pletcher) and then got the horse to run big in the Derby and the Preakness, running down an extremely game Bodemeister, trained by \"Mr Triple Crown\" - Bob Baffert. Sure he got hurt before the Belmont, but the guy was 2 for 2 with 2 huge races by any reasonable measure.
Then we get an early developer in Nyquist, who seemingly didn\'t get better at 3. He ships cross country to Florida to take on Mohaymen in his own back yard, a move many here and elsewhere said was the wrong move, chasing bonus dollars instead of prepping for the Triple Crown. He crushes Mohaymen. Then the talk was that no horse had come into the Derby with less foundation (in furlongs of preps) than Nyquist and he was \"flatlining\" from a development perspective and a huge underlay at 2-1. Well, he crushed the field. Make no mistake, he crushed the field. As somebody who was 5 deep against him to nice scores, I felt sick 100 yards into the race. He looked a winner every step.
The horse has done everything right. The trainer has been good in these spots. (and while I think the Rags guys are clowns, in many respects, saying that Nyquists derby was as good as AP\'s is NOT the best example of that. He ran fast, looked a winner every step and was never under duress. AP, despite the ground loss loaded final figure, gutted out a win and at times looked like Firing Line would beat him).
All that doesn\'t mean that Nyquist can\'t be a play against at 3-5 next time, but I wouldn\'t be taking out second mortgages to do it....
Rob