Belmont Stakes Results
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Belmont Stakes 2005
Belmont Stakes Results
Afleet
Alex Dominates 137th Belmont Stakes
Saturday, June 11, 2005
By Bruno Zalubil
Afleet
Alex wrote his name into the history books after passing eight
horses on the final turn and exploding to the front to win the
137th Running of the Belmont Stakes (Gr. 1) in front of 62,274
fans on Saturday at Belmont Park.
"I don't want to hear any more criticism about my horse," said
jockey Jeremy Rose. "He's one of the best we've see in a long
time."
Afleet Alex, who is owned by Cash is King LLC, won the 1½-mile
"Test of the Champion" by seven lengths in 2:28 3/5 over a fast
track to become the 18th Thoroughbred to win the Preakness and
Belmont Stakes.
Andromeda's Hero, under Rafael Bejarano, finished second. Maiden
Nolan's Cat, under Norberto Arroyo, Jr., was third.

Pinpoint went to the lead and set the early fractions at :24
2/5, :48 3/5 and 1:12 4/5, with A. P. Arrow and Southern Africa
coasting off his flank. Afleet Alex was content to settle back
in ninth position in the 11-horse field and save ground about
six lengths back for the first half of the race. The field
bunched into three rows of three as it
entered the turn for home. Afleet Alex was in the back row,
stuck on the rail. Mike Smith asked Giacomo, the winner of the
Kentucky Derby, to make his move to the outside of the pack,
and, for a moment, it appeared that it would lead to victory.
Afleet Alex, however, was about to be freed from traffic.
Chekhov and Reverberate drifted out slightly on the turn,
allowing Afleet Alex room to advance between Watchmon and Indy
Storm, then catch Giacomo and find open track in the middle of
the stretch.
Then, Afleet Alex took off.
"He just exploded," said winning trainer Tim Ritchey.
The colt, who stumbled at the top of the stretch before rallying
to win the Preakness Stakes, finished the grueling Belmont
Stakes in :24 2/5, the fastest final quarter mile since Art and
Letters in 1969.
"I had the best horse," Rose said. "The only thing that could
get him beat was me, so I stayed out of his way."
Afleet Alex - a Florida-bred 3-year-old son of Northern Afleet,
out of Maggy Hawk (Hawkster) - paid $4.30 as the favorite.
"We expected this kind of performance today," Ritchey said. "All
I kept saying was: 'Be patient, be patient, be patient, wait,
wait, wait.' That was the plan. With these big, wide turns you
have to save all the ground you can. Jeremy Rose has now ridden
three Triple Crown races like a Hall of Famer."
The 137th Belmont Stakes was billed as the rematch between Derby
winner Giacomo and Preakness winner Afleet Alex, and nine other
horses. It was the 13th such rematch since 1956 and the updated
tally has the Preakness winners up, 5-3.
Trainer Nick Zito, who saddled seven different horses for a
total of 11 starters in the three Triple Crown races, finished
second with Andromeda's Hero, fourth with Indy Storm and last
with Pinpoint.
"It's an honor to be second to this great horse," said Zito, who
will be inducted into the Hall of Fame on Aug. 8, 2005. "Without
him in this race, we win the Belmont Stakes. (Andromeda's Hero)
just ran great. All of my jockeys did what they were supposed to
do. Pinpoint may not be ready for these horses yet, Indy Storm
ran great and Andromeda's Hero ran unbelievable."
Bejarano was happy with the response he got from Andromeda's
Hero. "My horse broke really good this time," he said, "so, I
stayed comfortable in good position, trying to stay close to
Afleet Alex. When he moved at the three-eighths pole, I followed
him, and when I asked my horse at the quarter pole, my horse
started running strong. But Afleet Alex just ran away."
Nolan's Cat, whom some believed sullied the Triple Crown by
running as a maiden, surprised many with a solid stretch run and
his third-place finish.
"If this horse didn't have some unfortunate events along the
way, I think he would have been a contender throughout the
entire Triple Crown," said trainer Dale Romans about Nolan's
Cat, who is now 0-3-2 from six starts. "I was real pleased with
the way he ran. He just had some nagging injuries as a
2-year-old and got caught up in quarantine early this year. I
couldn't give him enough seasoning. I was pleased with his race,
and happy the public showed him respect. We didn't have the pace
that we had last year in this race. But he still ran good into a
slower pace. He's the best maiden in the country."
Arroyo, Jr., was impressed with Nolan's Cat: "I had to take him
wide at the top of the stretch," he said. "He really liked the
distance. I had confidence in him. I knew there would be a lot
of horses stopping going a mile and a half. I just let him relax
the first part and started moving up little by little."
Giacomo finished seventh under Mike Smith in his attempt to
become the 12th horse to win the Derby and Belmont Stakes. Smith
surmised that Giacomo displaced his palate during the race.
"Down the backstretch, I could hear him make a loud, roaring
noise," Smith said. "I knew he had (displaced his palate). So, I
got him to the outside and dropped his head - a lot of times
that will help get it back. But he never did. At the
quarter-pole, he let out another one. Galloping out was the
same. When a horse is doing that, he is not breathing right. I
won't take anything away from Afleet Alex. He ran great today."
Added trainer John Shirreffs about his Giacomo: "Mike (Smith)
said the horse started to make a lot of noise, and started
displacing (his upper palate). He looks good now. The Triple
Crown has been great to us. (Mr. and Mrs. Jerome Moss), my wife
and I and for everyone involved, we've all enjoyed it. We've had
a wonderful time with Giacomo. Every stop we've made, everyone
has been great to us. He's going to get a break now."
In the immediate afterglow of the Belmont Stakes, on the track
where 18 horses failed to complete the Triple Crown, including
Smarty Jones last year and Funny Cide the year before, Rose felt
remorse for what he felt could have been.
"He should be a Triple Crown winner, but I messed up or
whatever," Rose told a live national television audience on NBC
as he galloped back to the Winner's Circle. "I say I messed up
because I had the best horse. You can't blame Tim (Ritchey) and
you can't blame Afleet Alex. So, if you have to blame someone,
blame me."
Afleet Alex finished third in the Kentucky Derby on May 7. He
stumbled in the Preakness Stakes yet still pulled away to an
impressive 4¾-length victory on May 21.
After the Belmont Stakes, Afleet Alex is now 8-2-1 from 12
starts with earnings of $2,765,800. He is now a three-time Grade
1 winner, with the Hopeful as a juvenile and the Preakness and
Belmont as a 3-year-old on his resume.
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