ALBARADO FEELS STEPPENWOLFER HAS THE RIGHT
APTITUDE
"I worked his daddy out of that barn," jockey
Robby Albarado said the morning of April 29, pointing to barn 43 on
the Churchill Downs backside. Albarado was in barn 42, where
Steppenwolfer occupies the end stall. A few minutes later, he would
guide the son of Aptitude through his final workout prior to
Saturday's Kentucky Derby presented by Yum! Brands (gr. I).
In 2000, Albarado was asked by trainer Bobby Frankel to climb
aboard Aptitude for his final two Derby works. Aptitude was ridden
in the Derby by Alex Solis, while Albarado piloted Captain Steve
for trainer Bob Baffert. Eight days prior to the 2000 Derby,
Albarado and Aptitude, by A.P. Indy, went six furlongs in 1:12 4/5,
and then blew out four furlongs three days before the race in :47
1/5.
While Aptitude and Solis were wide in the turn for home, Kent
Desormeaux and Fusaichi Pegasus had the rail, and then moved out
for the stretch drive. Fusaichi Pegasus, the 2-1 favorite, won by 1
½ lengths while Aptitude, sent off at nearly 12-1, got second.
"Fusaichi was able to save ground,"Albarado said. "When they
straightened for home, Aptitude had to go around." Albarado, of
course, wanted to win on Captain Steve, but he felt a part of the
Aptitude team as well.
"Aptitude and Steppenwolfer have a very similar running style,"
the 32-year-old jockey said. "Distance is not a problem." In fact,
Albarado said, he and trainer Danny Peitz have been patiently
awaiting the Derby for that very reason.
"We've been waiting and waiting for more ground," Albarado, the
leading rider at the 2005 Churchill Downs meet, said. "We know
there are plenty of speed horses in the field, and we know we will
be coming from off the pace. Speed will come back to you going a
mile and a quarter."
With a 20-horse field, there can be trouble weaving through
horses, but Albarado said that is where handicapping comes into
play. He wants to place himself in the right spot aboard the colt
owned by Robert and Lawana Low.
"You have to be a handicapper as a jockey," he said. "I will try
to get behind the right horses; follow the right horses. In the
Derby, the field really stretches out down the lane. I just have to
be in the right spot."
Albarado pointed to several recent Derbys as examples of how
rubber-legged horses can get inside the eighth-pole of the
Derby.
"Look at last year," Albarado said. "It looked like Afleet Alex or
Closing Argument but Giacomo just kept coming. Look at Monarchos
(in 2001), how he pulled away the final sixteenth."
Albarado was aboard Steppenwolfer before the colt ever started, at
Saratoga last summer. "I worked him and he was just a big kid. When
I saw him again at Oaklawn this winter, I couldn't believe how he
had grown up." Albarado has ridden Steppenwolfer four times, wins
at Louisiana Downs and Oaklawn, a third in the Rebel (gr. III) and
most recently a second in the Arkansas Derby (gr. II). His last
three starts, Steppenwolfer has run behind Lawyer Ron, who worked
just before him Saturday morning.
"Our key is the mile and a quarter," Albarado said. "I think we
have one of the few that wants to go that far."
Albarado felt it about Aptitude. He hopes to prove it aboard his
son.
Date:
02 May 2006