Seems to me one of the biggest keys to getting the 1 1/4 is you have to have a horse that can relax, and I think there is more to that than just pace. Bode doesn\'t have a lot of experience. He also has a history of getting worked up and hot pre-race. So even if we assume he gets the pace AND doesn\'t regress due to his recent effort, will he still handle the stress of a 20 horse, rough and tumble field with a packed grandstand and infield? Will he be able to relax enough to work out a trip?
Those are big questions. And as someone already pointed out, Curlin couldn\'t do it. Look what he turned out to be...
So regardless of pace, I just think there are questions about this colt that just aren\'t going to be answered until after the race. Yo
For what it\'s worth, I\'ve been following this colt all spring since I heard that he was outworking Secret Circle in the AM when they were workmates. If you look at what Baffert has been doing with Bode in the AM it\'s obvious he gets what the colt needs to learn. Leading up to the ARK Derby, 2 and 3 works back, Baffert had Bode out behind a workmate and the whole point of the works were to teach the colt to stay behind, relax and wait until asked. Bode responded without being rank at all, waited, and then finished exactly when asked. In the one work he got stuck behind a wall of other workers and still weaved through traffic, and in the other he blew by his workmate (a small level stakes type) and then topped the work off with a DOUBLE gallop out of two, 12 and change 1/8ths around the bend. They were both good works, but the second one was a hell of a work for anyone who saw it or heard about it. To me it provided some evidence that Bode was at least coming around and learning what he needed to do - and more importantly that he was sitting on a big race.
For his last work before the ARK Derby, I found it very telling that although Bode clearly needed the earnings to make it to Louisville, Bullet Bob seemed confident enough to back off a bit and just have Bode breeze comfortably behind a workmate all the way around the track. Bode still caught his workmate in the last 100 feet or so, but again, it was another drill focused on getting this colt to learn to relax.
Turned out to be all the right moves because Bode\'s cruising speed was all he needed to wire the weak field at Oaklawn (I say week because to my eye he didn\'t beat much). Most importantly, Bode didn\'t get hot pre-race in front of a big, record setting crowd and he relaxed during the race even after a questionable break from an outside post. He comfortably widened his margin at every call, and his last 1/8th was pretty special according to the clock and visually.
But is he going to repeat that and get the 1 1/4?
No way to know for sure. And even if he gets a front running trip in 47.8 112 it isn\'t going to help him if he is rank or leaves his race in the paddock.
Going to be a good Derby to bet I think.