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Belmont pace likely different tonight for Derby winner Golden Tempo

Kentucky Derby winner and Belmont Stakes entrant Golden Tempo works out Friday ahead of today's 158th running of the Belmont Stakes horse race at Saratoga Race Course in Saratoga Springs, N.Y. (AP photo)

The front-running horses in the Kentucky Derby last month completed the first quarter-mile in under 23 seconds and a half-mile in under 47 seconds.

That blistering pace paved the way for Golden Tempo’s last-to-first charge from the back of the pack to win by a neck. Five weeks later, the Cherie DeVaux-trained colt is among the top contenders in the 158th rendition of the Belmont Stakes at Saratoga Race Course tonight, even if there does not appear to be as much early speed in the field.

That could mean jockey Jose Ortiz has to ride a much different race to close out the Triple Crown than the masterful way he did to start it, especially considering the stiff competition from morning line favorite and Derby runner-up Renegade, as well as others returning to the track who ran in that race at Churchill Downs on May 2.

“We just have to hope that a pace materializes with his running style,” DeVaux said. “If that does not happen, Jose is going to have to come up with plan B to where he just doesn’t give himself so much to do in the later stages of the race.”

Post time is scheduled for 7:04 p.m.

Ortiz and Golden Tempo blew by brother Irad and Renegade just before the finish line at the Derby, needing every bit of the 1 1/4 miles. With this being the third and final time the Belmont takes place at Saratoga in upstate New York, it is also 1 1/4 miles before reverting to 1 1/2 next year.

That suits Renegade just fine following his strong run in Kentucky.

“Overall, he came out of the race well,” said Hall of Fame trainer Todd Pletcher, who also has Powershift in the field of nine in the Belmont. “Like a lot of horses who run in the Derby, he was a little bit tired immediately after the race. But we gave him a few days to recover.”

The fast fractions in the Derby set the stage for closer-style horses such as Golden Tempo and Renegade. Not so much for Commandment, who went off as the third choice in wagering at 6-1 that day.

Trainer Brad Cox likes what he has seen out of Commandment working out and galloping since and chalks up the last race to trying to keep up with the leaders too much.

“If you were in the first half of the pack in the first quarter-mile, it just didn’t work out real well for most of those horses,” Cox said. “I do think if you zero in on him and watch his race in the Derby, I thought he actually ran pretty well, just obviously wasn’t the result we were looking for.”

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AP horse racing: https://apnews.com/hub/horse-racing

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