KENTUCKY DERBY DRAMA AS MYSTIK DAN WINS 150TH EDITION IN THREE-WAY PHOTO FINISH

Mystik Dan held on by a nose in a dramatic three-way photo finish to grab Kentucky Derby glory for trainer Kenny McPeek and jockey Brian Hernandez Jr.

Sierra Leone finished strongly but could not quite give his Coolmore owners compensation for City Of Troy's disappointing display in the 2,000 Guineas, while Japanese raider Forever Young was another nose back in third.

Ben Curtis, champion apprentice in Ireland back in 2010, finished eighth on Honor Marie, while Frankie Dettori was 16th of the 20 runners on Society Man.

The 150th 'Run for the Roses' took place on a 10-furlong dirt track described as running fast after a glorious day in Louisville had dried up Friday night's rain.

A crowd of 156,710 packed into Churchill Downs let out an almighty roar, as Track Phantom took an early lead, flanked by Just Steel and the favourite Fierceness.

That trio held sway until the turn for home, when Mystik Dan burst through on the inside rail and quickly stormed into a three-length lead.

Sierra Leone and Forever Young fought hard to claw back the deficit and were closing in on the leader with every stride, but the finishing line came just in time for Mystik Dan.

It completed a memorable double for the successful trainer and jockey, who had won the Kentucky Oaks with Thorpedo Anna 24 hours earlier, and McPeek told NBC Sports: "Brian just did an amazing job - just a brilliant, brilliant, brilliant jockey and ride.

"The draw (stall three) helped us from the beginning but Brian is amazing, probably one of the most underrated riders in racing, but not anymore, right!"

Hernandez admitted the long wait for the result to be confirmed was agonising, stating: "This is just unbelievable, that was the longest few minutes I've ever felt in my life, waiting for them to put that number up.

"It was exciting when we hit the front but I wasn't sure we had won, so it was quite a rush to stay there and wait for it.

"This is a lifetime achievement. This goes to our whole family, we've all worked all our lives for this and it's hard to describe what kind of feeling this is.

"I always told myself I was never going to step into the Derby winner's circle until I can do it on the back of a horse, so to be able to live that dream from when I was a six-year-old kid on my grandparents' farm, telling them all I was going to the Kentucky Derby one day - and here we are.

"It surely makes the last 20 years of getting up at five in the morning and finding horses to ride and finding people to give us opportunities all come to fruition on days like yesterday and today.

"It's hard to put into words and it's probably going to take about a week to sink in before we say hey, we won the Kentucky Derby and the Kentucky Oaks in the same year."

Trainer Chad Brown said of runner-up Sierra Leone: "To get beaten a nose in the Kentucky Derby, it's a tough one, but that's professional sports and at this level you're going to win some and lose some, and often times it's going to come down to a matter of inches.

"He's a tremendous horse, he's nearly undefeated and hasn't lost by much in both of his defeats and I'm just so lucky to have him and so proud of his effort today.

"He did everything we asked him to do and it came up just a little bit short, but hats off to the winner, and Ken McPeek having the Derby and Oaks winners, to him and his team, they really did a fabulous job.

"The Derby gods can be cruel sometimes, making you wait, and some trainers never have one, so if I'm lucky enough to be back in the same position, I'll be grateful for that."

2024-05-05T07:57:21Z dg43tfdfdgfd