Kentucky jockey Calvin Borel makes his living riding the rail. It's the shortest way around a racetrack, yet few jockeys are as comfortable down there as he is.
Of course, the rail doesn't mean much if you don't have a horse good enough underneath you. Borel certainly did in the Kentucky Derby, guiding Super Saver on the short path in the slop to a 2-length victory, his third in four years.
Borel won his first Derby in 2007 with a rail-hugging ride aboard favorite Street Sense, and his second with 50-1 long shot Mine That Bird last year in a muddy dash from last to first along the rail.
This year wasn't as dramatic, since Super Saver was never worse than sixth in the 2000m race. But Borel did it in his trademark style - keeping close to the rail and swinging outside just once to pass Conveyance before zooming right back inside.
"He could paint the fence while he's going," US Hall of Fame trainer D Wayne Lukas said.
Actually, Borel said, Super Saver wasn't that close.
"Now Mine That Bird might have scraped the fence," he said. "He was all right. I had plenty of room."
Borel isn't expected to deviate from his famed style when he rides Super Saver in the Preakness Stakes on Sunday, aiming for a victory that would set them up for a US Triple Crown attempt.
"He has the talent to do it," Borel said about a Triple Crown sweep. "It's hard to say you're going to win it, but he's peaking at the right time."
Hall of Fame trainer Bob Baffert has been burned by Borel before. He thought he had his fourth Derby victory in the bag last year, but Borel came zooming up the rail - a path Baffert calls the Borel Trail - on Mine That Bird to overtake front-running Pioneer Of The Nile.
"He knows if he gets on top of the rail, it's a big advantage," Baffert said. "Lots of guys try it, but they can't do it. He's got it mastered. He can get a horse to relax. He's got really great hands."
Borel has enjoyed his greatest success at Churchill Downs, a track similar to Louisiana Downs, where the Cajun honed his riding skills and learned to take the shortest way around the track.
He even hugs the rail in the mornings when he's exercising horses.
"I love to ride the fence," he said. "You can't be scared. If I can't do it my way and get the job done, that's when I'm going to retire."
As much as Borel loves it down low, some horses dislike the rail, forcing him out a length or as far as the middle of the track. Others, though, prefer running with the rail on one side, where another horse can't come up inside them and they won't be bumped.
"In a race, you've got to learn how to put one down there," Borel's agent, Jerry Hissam, said. "Most of these horses, when you turn for home, they're starting to drift, they're starting to get tired. You've got to know how to put them down in there and keep them down in there. And why can't anybody else do it? I don't know."
"We all know what he's going to do," said fellow jockey Robby Albarado, who finished 14th in the Derby. "He just does it anyway."
The inside path isn't always open to Borel. "He's got shut off before. They got out in front of him sometimes," Hissam said. "A lot of times it's because he doesn't have the right horse to get to that spot. The hole is going faster than he is. He can't catch the hole so he can't get through it."
Borel is keeping tabs on Super Saver at Churchill Downs, where the colt is training for the Preakness and is scheduled to arrive at Pimlico on Thursday, three days before the 1900m race.
Super Saver had a light schedule before the Derby, with just two races in which he finished third and second. His freshness could work in his favour during the gruelling five-week Triple Crown campaign.
"God willing, he's a colt that will take us all the way because he's a nice horse," Borel said.
Only 11 horses have swept the Kentucky Derby, Preakness and Belmont, with Affirmed the last to do so in 1978.
The Preakness is limited to 14 starters, with the field being declared at Thursday's draw.
- AP
Racing: Borel sure to take shortcuts in Preakness
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