Just getting through the Preakness was a test for the Kentucky Derby champion and heavy 2-5 favourite.
When Smith looked over his shoulder early and saw Good Magic, he thought, "Oh man, it's going to be a match race from this point on," and Justify held up to the challenge down the backstretch and late as Bravazo and Tenfold chased him down.
"They tested his fitness," Smith said after his second Preakness win and first since 1993. "This is his hardest race he's had."
With Baffert praying for the wire at Pimlico, Justify won by half a length after completing the race in 1m 55.93s. Bravazo edged Tenfold for third, and Good Magic was fourth.
"What I saw of it, I liked it a lot," said veteran D Wayne Lukas, who trains Bravazo. "I want them to extend it another 50 yards. ... We ran at him. We kept him honest just like we said we would."
Good Magic pressed Justify so much, the Derby runner-up faded near the race's end and fell out of the money for the first time in his career.
"It just wasn't a good trip," Good Magic trainer Chad Brown said. "I would have liked to see a different scenario, maybe where we're just off the pace a little bit, we weren't getting pressed on the fence the whole way. Disappointing."
That almost happened to Justify. Smith was worried when he saw Good Magic over his shoulder and when Justify slipped early, and he was hoping there was enough left to get to the wire.
Baffert tied Lukas' record with his 14th Triple Crown victory and matched 19th-century trainer RW Walden with his seventh Preakness title. Baffert also remained undefeated with Derby winners in the Preakness following Silver Charm, Real Quiet, War Emblem and American Pharoah.
Justify showed more evidence of being the same kind of super horse as American Pharoah, and Baffert has repeatedly drawn comparisons between them. Those will only continue assuming Justify is good to go for the Belmont in three weeks.
"He has to come out of the race well, and he's got to be training really well," Baffert said. "I did the same thing with American Pharoah, all my horses that ran the Triple Crown, they have to be 100 per cent."
Justify looked every bit of 100 per cent after a bruised heel in the Derby caused quite the firestorm. A bigger question now is how the lightly-raced colt who didn't run as a 2-year-old handles a mile-and-a-half.
Had the Preakness been just a tenth of a mile longer, Justify might have been caught, though Smith thought he had plenty of horse left.
"He withstood that, and even though he got tired, he was also looking around a bit at the end," Smith said.
Justify never had to work this hard to win, winning his first four starts by a combined 21 lengths. He didn't blow away the field of three Derby horses and four new challengers, but he showed something else.
"These great horses, they just define themselves when they get in that situation," Baffert said.
- AP