Tiz the Law big favorite in a Kentucky Derby unlike any other

AP photo by Charlie Riedel / Horses run on the track early Friday morning at Churchill Downs in Louisville, Ky. The Kentucky Derby is Saturday evening, but it will be held without fans and the usual festive atmosphere, with the venue mostly empty as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic.
AP photo by Charlie Riedel / Horses run on the track early Friday morning at Churchill Downs in Louisville, Ky. The Kentucky Derby is Saturday evening, but it will be held without fans and the usual festive atmosphere, with the venue mostly empty as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic.

LOUISVILLE, Ky. - Forget the mint juleps in souvenir glasses, men in seersucker suits and women wearing hats exploding in a floral frenzy. The Kentucky Derby still has horses - Tiz the Law is the biggest favorite in 31 years - but just about everything else makes the 146th edition of the Run for the Roses unlike any other.

"It's going to be weird," said Bob Baffert, the 67-year-old trainer with five victories in horse racing's most famous event.

None of the cheering - or cursing after losing wagers - from 150,000 fans will be heard this year at Churchill Downs, where America's longest continually held sports event will go on Saturday, four months later than usual. Post time is 7:01 p.m. EDT.

The track initially planned to allow 23,000 fans to attend until escalating positivity rates for COVID-19 in Louisville dictated otherwise.

"Quietude can't hurt," said Barclay Tagg, trainer of 3-5 favorite Tiz the Law. "We've had quiet for almost all his races this year."

Of course, silence changes the very nature of the Derby, known for a mix of the raucous and refined, the freakish and fashionable.

Gone will be the parade of celebrities on the red carpet, the who's who of sports, politics and entertainment crowding Millionaires Row, the national anthem sung by a big name. The University of Louisville marching band won't strike up "My Old Kentucky Home" while the crowd sings along as the horses step onto the track, and the traditional call of "Riders up!" won't be shouted by a bold-faced name standing in the paddock.

Tiz the Law has already won the Belmont Stakes, the kickoff to the reshuffled Triple Crown of Thoroughbred Racing series. That race was run in June at a shorter distance than usual. A victory in Louisville would set him up for a series sweep in the Preakness Stakes on Oct. 3 at Baltimore's Pimlico Race Course.

Also in his favor is that he already proved he can handle the Derby distance of 1 1/4 miles, often the biggest question for any 3-year-old colt. Tiz the Law won the Travers Stakes by 5 1/2 lengths over the same distance at New York's Saratoga Race Course a month ago.

"He's checked all those boxes, and I believe he very well could win the Triple Crown this year," said Jerry Bailey, the retired U.S. Racing Hall of Fame jockey who is now an NBC Sports analyst.

photo AP photo by Darron Cummings / Kentucky Derby favorite Tiz the Law works out Friday at Churchill Downs in Louisville, Ky.

Tiz the Law has won six of seven career starts - his only loss came at Churchill Downs in last year's Kentucky Jockey Club Stakes - by staying close to the pace and making one big run at the top of the stretch.

"I'd like for us to be laying third all the way around until we get down for business," Tagg said. "You think he's gotten in trouble here, in trouble there, and next thing you know he's in front. He's a pretty amazing horse."

A win would make Tagg the oldest trainer to win a Derby at age 82. Mark Casse, trainer of Enforceable, isn't ready to hand Tiz the Law the roses.

"He still has to have a clean trip," Casse said.

Saturday's forecast calls for partly sunny skies and a high of 82 degrees to go with humidity - quite a contrast to the cool and rainy weather when the race is usually run in late spring.

The field has been reduced to 16 horses, the smallest since 2003, when Funny Cide won. That gelding was owned by Sackatoga Stable, which owns Tiz the Law. Managing partner Jack Knowlton and his co-owners will ride yellow school buses to the track, just as Sackatoga's contingent did 17 years ago.

Honor A. P. is the 5-1 second choice. His trainer is John Shirreffs and the jockey is Mike Smith, who teamed to win the 2005 Derby with 50-1 shot Giacomo.

"The odds don't guarantee anything," Shirreffs said. "We just have to see how the race is run."

Authentic is the third choice at 8-1. He's trained by Baffert, who also saddles 15-1 shot Thousand Words. A victory by either colt would tie the white-haired trainer with Ben Jones for the most Derby victories with six.

After Tiz the Law, Honor A. P. and Authentic, the other 13 horses are listed at double-digit odds. Churchill Downs is using a new 20-horse starting gate especially for the Derby, although posts 1, 18, 19 and 20 will be left vacant after King Guillermo and Finnick the Fierce were scratched.

One more Derby difference: It will be the last one run on Lasix. Churchill Downs and the other Triple Crown tracks will ban the antibleeding medication starting next year.

Outside the track's main entrance on Central Avenue, the scene figures to be different, too.

The death of Breonna Taylor, a Black woman shot and killed by police in her apartment in March, has fueled tense demonstrations for 100 consecutive days in the city. The three officers involved in her death have not been charged.

The prospect of unrest on Derby day has its participants unsure what to expect.

"I couldn't be anything else but very concerned," Tagg said. "Hopefully, we can pull it off without anything disastrous happening."

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