I'll Have Another arrives at Pimlico
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Reddam Racing's I'll Have Another boarded a van at Churchill Downs at 1:19 p.m. (EDT) Monday for the first leg of a journey to Pimlico Race Course, where his quest for a sweep of the Triple Crown will resume in the 137th running of the Preakness Stakes on May 19. The 2012 Kentucky Derby champion left Louisville International Airport on a Tex Sutton charter, landed at Baltimore-Washington International Airport, and got a police escort to the track from the Baltimore City Police Department. Led by groom Benjamin Perez, I'll Have Another stepped off the horse van at Pimlico at 5:07 p.m. Trainer Doug O'Neill, who returned to Southern California to tend to his stable, deputized assistant trainer Jack Sisterson to supervise I'll Have Another's trip to Baltimore. "He loves to fly," Sisterson said. "His ears were pricked. "We were getting a police escort and there were people in the streets chanting 'I'll Have Another.' He knows that's him. His ears were pricked and he said, 'Yeah, that's me.'" It is the earliest arrival by a Derby winner since Monarchos was shipped to Baltimore four days after his 2001 victory. About two decades ago, Hall of Fame trainer D. Wayne Lukas started a trend of waiting until the Tuesday or Wednesday of Preakness week before shipping to Baltimore. That approach became the norm, but O'Neill was anxious to get his colt to Baltimore.
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"There were a couple of reasons," Sisterson said. "We discussed a few plans
and we just thought the more time here to get used to the surface, the better
for him. He was enjoying the track at Churchill, and we took him a week before
there. It's not going to hurt him being here for the two weeks."
Sisterson said that I'll Have Another will walk the shedrow Tuesday.
O'Neill will arrive from Southern California Wednesday, when I'll Have
Another is expected to return to the track. The conditioner will be throwing out
the first pitch when the Baltimore Orioles host the New York Yankees May 15.
"Every trainer has a different training style," Sisterson said. "I suppose
it's better to get the horse used to the surface and things like that. So, he's
here now, and we're excited to have him here for the two weeks."
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A perfect three-for-three this year with previous victories in the Grade 2 Robert B. Lewis Stakes and Grade 1 Santa Anita Derby, the son of Flower Alley will reside in Stall 17 of Barn D, next to the Preakness Stakes barn. He was accompanied to Pimlico by Lava Man, the multiple Grade 1 stakes winner who is now serving as a stable pony, among several other O'Neill-trained horses. "Lava Man was the celebrity of the week (before the Derby)," said Sisterson of the former claimer who went on to earn $5.2 million. "They were like a tag team, Lava Man and I'll Have Another. Lava Man brought him to the start on Saturday." Sisterson, a 27-year-old native of Durham, England, was still having trouble describing the elation he felt from the victory at Churchill Downs. "I don't think it's sunk in yet. Words can't describe how I feel. Seeing him at the sixteenth-pole coming down the racetrack in front and crossing the finish line, I said, 'Wow! We did it! '" said Sisterson, who has been working for O'Neill for a year. "Even the excitement getting to the race was a real experience in itself. On the walk-over, I said, 'Wow! Here we go!'"
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I'll Have Another, who became the first horse in Derby history to win after
breaking from the number 19 post, received a dream trip under jockey Mario
Gutierrez before running down pacesetter Bodemeister nearing the finish line on
his way to victory by 1 1/2 lengths.
For Sisterson it was a victorious homecoming, of sorts. He attended the
University of Louisville on a soccer scholarship and graduated with a bachelor's
degree in equine administration. He worked for trainers Todd Pletcher and Eddie
Kenneally in Kentucky before venturing to Southern California three years ago.
Sisterson and five other members of O'Neill's crew that accompanied I'll Have
Another to Pimlico were still feeling the jubilation of their Kentucky Derby
experience Monday, but the assistant trainer said that the work atmosphere in
the stable is always upbeat on a daily basis.
"It's fantastic working for somebody who (creates) such a teamwork effort,"
Sisterson said. "It's a complete open-door policy. I suppose if you work for a
boss like that, you feel more comfortable going to work. If you come out to
California and come to the barn, the spirits are high and we're all family. If
the spirits are high with the employees, I think it rubs off on the horses. I
think that was brought out on Saturday."
The Derby winner's owner, J. Paul Reddam, has rented a house for the crew's
two-week stay in Maryland.
Also on the flight with I'll Have Another was Went the Day Well. The Graham
Motion trainee was then vanned to the Fair Hill Training Center where he will
prepare for the Preakness. The son of Proud Citizen finished fourth in
Saturday's Derby and is a confirmed Preakness starter.
Others under consideration for Maryland's signature race from the Kentucky
Derby are Bodemeister (second), Dullahan (third), Creative Cause (fifth),
Liaison (sixth), Hansen (ninth) and Optimizer (11th).
Union Rags (seventh) has been removed from the list of potential starters.
Potential new shooters include Brimstone Island (second, Canonero II);
Cozzetti (fourth, Grade 1 Arkansas Derby); Hierro (winner, Grade 3 Derby Trial);
Isn't He Clever (eighth, Arkansas Derby); Paynter (second, Derby Trial);
Pretension (winner, Canonero II); Teeth of the Dog (third, Grade 1 Wood
Memorial); Tiger Walk (fourth, Wood Memorial) and Zetterholm (winner,
Patsyprospect).
The Preakness is limited to 14 starters, with two also-eligibles runners. The
first seven starters are determined by most graded earnings, the next four
starters from earnings from open stakes races. The final three starters are
based off total earnings.
Under the three-tiered system, the horses currently on the outside looking in
are Zetterholm, Cozzetti and Brimstone Island.
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