logo
Peanut butter-like mud: Kentucky Derby is anyone's race with rain in forecast

Peanut butter-like mud: Kentucky Derby is anyone's race with rain in forecast

Fox Sports03-05-2025
The Kentucky Derby is tough to win, with a huge field of stampeding horses and 150,000 screaming fans in the stands. Toss in a rainy forecast that could turn the Churchill Downs dirt strip into something resembling peanut butter, and it gets trickier.
A field of 19 3-year-olds is set to run 1 1/4 miles for a $3.1 million prize and the garland of red roses on Saturday. Mucking things up is a forecast of 65 degrees with a 90% chance of rain.
[MORE: 2025 Kentucky Derby: Post time, updated odds, TV schedule, horses, date, purse]
The soggy weather isn't just a bummer for those wanting the fairest of track conditions. The Derby is also a big party and fashion show, and rain means pulling out ponchos — no umbrellas allowed — to protect the huge hats and floral dresses.
Thirteen of the Derby contenders — including early 3-1 favorite Journalism — have never raced on a wet track. Clods of flying mud hitting their faces could be a turnoff.
"I may go through three pairs of goggles," said Brian Hernandez Jr., who will be aboard Burnham Square.
Six longshots have experience in the muck, with four winning. Coal Battle is 2 for 2, while Japan-based Luxor Cafe is 3 for 4. The others are Neoequos and American Promise, trained by 89-year-old D. Wayne Lukas.
The last Derby run on a sloppy track was in 2019, when Country House won via a disqualification that had nothing to do with the weather. The last muddy track was in 1989, when Sunday Silence won.
Trainer Bob Baffert goes for a record-setting seventh victory in his return from a three-year suspension. He'll saddle Citizen Bull, last year's 2-year-old champion. The colt breaks from the dreaded No. 1 post, leaving him little choice but to get to the front before the rest of the field comes over, potentially cutting him off.
"We're going to tell him to get out of there like he just robbed a bank," Baffert said.
[MORE: How to bet on Horse Racing: The beginner's guide to wagering on the ponies]
No horse has won from the No. 1 post since Ferdinand in 1986.
Baffert's other horse, Rodriguez, was scratched Thursday with a bruised foot, moving Baeza into the field. Trainer Todd Pletcher's only entry, Grande, was scratched Friday for the same reason.
Hall of Fame trainer Steve Asmussen tries to snap an 0 for 26 Derby losing streak with a pair of 20-1 shots: Publisher and Tiztastic. Both are next to each other in the starting gate.
Sovereignty, the early 5-1 second choice, won at Churchill Downs last fall. He'll try to snap an 0 for 13 Derby skid for Godolphin, the racing stable of Dubai ruler Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum.
"I know he loves this track," jockey Junior Alvarado said, "so I'm sitting on a good run with him now."
Sandman, the early 6-1 third choice, is the most expensive horse in the field at $1.2 million. Conversely, 30-1 shot Chunk of Gold was bought for $2,500.
"There's been a lot of expensive horses not pan out and there's been a lot of cheap ones that have panned out," Chunk of Gold trainer Ethan West said. "It's not like he's a big, robust, grand-looking animal. He's very good-looking, but he doesn't look like Journalism, that's for sure."
Journalism looked the part of the Derby favorite while training during a mostly rain-free week on the track and breaks from the No. 8 post.
[MORE: 2025 Kentucky Derby: Chris 'The Bear' Fallica's expert picks, best bets]
"The history of the Derby is usually a pretty vibrant opening quarter-mile," trainer Michael McCarthy said. "He'll be part of that, probably just back off the speed."
The Southern California-based colt's mother's name is Mopotism and wanting a name ending in "ism," co-owner Aron Wellman took inspiration from his old gig as sports editor of the Beverly Hills High School newspaper.
"Now more than ever, in the climate that we're living in, journalists and responsible journalism is so important," he said. "It's so poignant that a horse named Journalism is going to have all eyes on him."
Reporting by The Associated Press.
Want great stories delivered right to your inbox? Create or log in to your FOX Sports account, follow leagues, teams and players to receive a personalized newsletter daily ! FOLLOW Follow your favorites to personalize your FOX Sports experience Horse Racing in this topic
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

The Spirit's new coach? ‘Vulnerable,' honest and right where he wants to be
The Spirit's new coach? ‘Vulnerable,' honest and right where he wants to be

Washington Post

time4 hours ago

  • Washington Post

The Spirit's new coach? ‘Vulnerable,' honest and right where he wants to be

Adrián González was six months into a stint coaching a Japanese youth team in 2017 when he decided it was time to trade arrogance for empathy. Arriving from venerable Spanish club RCD Espanyol's academy, the Barcelona native assumed he could defuse any culture shock, leave bedside manner at the door and seamlessly share his coaching acuity. But as his ego interfered and his instructions got lost in translation, González and his team suffered the consequences. 'I was blaming, complaining, judging,' González said. ''Oh, they don't understand me. They are so bad.' And I was suffering.' So González committed to change. Revisiting his collegiate studies in Spain, he read up on self-awareness, emotional intelligence and other sports psychology principles. Sure enough, with a newfound emphasis on the human side of coaching came clearer tactical communication. 'From there, I haven't stopped,' he said. 'I invest a lot of time in myself, doing therapy — and different type of therapies — trying to know myself as much as possible, being aware, trying to manage my emotions, my mindset.' After serving as the Washington Spirit's interim coach, assistant coach and acting coach over the past 18 months, González has at last ascended to the top job amid an unusual midseason shake-up. When the fourth-place Spirit (7-4-2) comes out of the NWSL's six-week midseason break against the Portland Thorns (6-3-4) on Sunday afternoon at Audi Field, González will be on the sideline for his first match as the club's full-time head coach. If the 36-year-old abides by an overarching coaching mantra, it's a thirst to understand. By understanding his players as athletes, he aims to shape an on-field identity suited to their skills. By understanding his players as people, he strives to unlock their potential. By letting them understand him, González hopes to foster a culture of open communication. 'He's very vulnerable,' Spirit captain Aubrey Kingsbury said. 'He's very honest. He's always been very up-front with us players about how he's feeling emotionally, and I think that's really important. It just creates an environment where everyone can be authentically themselves.' Winger Brittany Ratcliffe added: 'Obviously, on the field, he sees us. Do we work hard? Do we defend? Are we able to finish? But it takes another level of effort to get to know us as people.' Getting to know González is easy enough. Open to introspection, he tends to cheerfully respond, 'Oh, that's a good question,' to queries that catch him by surprise — and then he rattles off a lengthy response all the same. Asking about his first memories of soccer, however, drew a succinct reply: 'I've been playing since I have memory, to be honest.' When González needed to make some cash before college, a year assisting with his father's carpentry work confirmed that he wasn't destined to follow in his footsteps. 'He's an artist with wood,' González said of his father. 'I'm horrible.' González played for semiprofessional teams in Barcelona and Lleida, where he studied at Catalonia's National Institute of Physical Education, but realized by his early 20s that coaching deserved his undivided attention. After joining Espanyol as a youth coach in 2013, he spent a decade climbing the ladder there in all manner of roles — with year-long detours to Japan and then Greece — before being appointed the coach of the Espanyol women's team in 2023. González had that squad on the verge of promotion to Spain's first division when Jonatan Giráldez, his friend and decorated coaching cohort, approached him in early 2024 with an unexpected offer. As Giráldez planned to see out the European season with Barcelona, then take over as the Spirit's coach midway through the NWSL season, he asked González to serve as Washington's interim leader and become an assistant upon his summer arrival. It was a serendipitous opportunity for González, who came to the United States a decade earlier to play college soccer in Mississippi before his scholarship money fell through and he returned home after two weeks. Instead, González spent a year honing his English in London in hopes of expanding his overseas options. Although González hesitated to leave his Espanyol side, Giráldez's pitch, the Spirit's ambition and the chance to head stateside won him over. While many wrote off 2024 as a rebuilding year for Washington, amid a youthful roster overhaul and the unusual coaching transition, González steered the Spirit to a surprising 10-4-1 record before Giráldez took over. 'Even though it was 'interim,' in my mind, I was acting and leading as a head coach,' González said. 'When you're a head coach and then you go to assistant, you miss leading.' With Giráldez at the reins and González assisting him, the Spirit finished second in the standings before falling to the Orlando Pride in November's NWSL final. In March, the Spirit kicked off its 2025 campaign with a win over Orlando for the Challenge Cup crown. But when the head coaching position at OL Lyonnes — another team in Spirit owner Y. Michele Kang's empire — opened up in May, Giráldez shook up the soccer landscape on multiple continents by leaving Washington for the French powerhouse. For the Spirit, promoting González to head coach was less of a decision than an inevitability. When Giráldez's wife gave birth to their second child in June, González got a head start on head coaching and filled in for what would have been Giráldez's final two matches. Upon his formal introduction last month in downtown D.C., González said he felt as though he was 'dreaming' and spoke of 'building my roots' in the region. For a club that has had five head coaches in the past four years, the notion of a leader in it for the long haul was a welcome development. It helped, too, that González already had a reputation as a personable and approachable coach. 'The way that Adrián goes about trying to get the best out of his players is a little bit different than Jona's style,' defender Kate Wiesner said. 'He's the guy that's going to bring a lot of passion, a lot of enthusiasm every day in the morning. I think it makes it a little bit easier for us to show up here every day with energy.' Tactically, González emphasized a range of preferred principles: short and midrange passes mixed with downfield verticality. Generally pressing high while knowing how to deploy a lower defensive block. As his roster shifts, amid injuries and signings and departures, so does his approach. 'I can have an essence as a coach, obviously,' González said. 'But then you just modify that or create that game style according to the profiles that you have.' Now, those profiles again include star winger Trinity Rodman, who had been excused from the team since mid-April to manage a back injury but returned to full training in recent weeks. 'We have that relationship,' Rodman said of González, 'so it's been already a pretty easy transition.' For González, who lives a 10-minute drive from the Spirit's Leesburg facility and relishes the suburban setting's 'peaceful' lifestyle, his winding road has at last taken him to an ideal destination. Case in point: When clubs contacted the Spirit about interviewing González for head coaching jobs this past offseason, Washington turned them away — and he wasn't particularly interested anyway. 'In my mind, those opportunities or those options were secondary because I wanted to continue here,' González said. 'I didn't want to leave the team, because I was feeling like we still have a lot of things to achieve.' 'This,' he added, 'is the place that I want to be.'

Should you crack the garage door in the summer? The benefits, risks
Should you crack the garage door in the summer? The benefits, risks

Indianapolis Star

time5 hours ago

  • Indianapolis Star

Should you crack the garage door in the summer? The benefits, risks

The dog days of summer are here, and folks are looking for any way to catch a bit of relief. Homeowners may be cranking down the air conditioning or blocking out windows with the hope of saving money on electricity bills. Another tip that circulates each summer encourages homeowners to crack garage doors, if they have them, to provide a bit of additional airflow. Although the idea sounds good in theory, industry professionals have largely advised against this because an unwatched open door can strain a home's air conditioning, pose a security risk, welcome unwanted pests and put strain on a garage door's mechanisms. Here's a deeper look into the benefits and risks of keeping a garage door open during the summer months. Chill out: We found up to 38% off portable and personal air conditioners Opening a garage door can help with airflow inside a tight space, releasing trapped hot air, according to a blog post from Wheat Ridge, Colorado-based American Garage Door. A drawback of doing this is that the open door can also jack up an energy bill. When hot air enters the home, the HVAC system works harder to maintain its set temperature, according to a blog post by California-based Precision Door of Visalia. If you're going to have the garage door open during the summer, it's best to be in the space or around the yard. American Garage Door said having the garage door open can increase natural light and provide an outdoor extension for gatherings or projects; unfortunately, these pros can only be enjoyed while in the space. Summer 2025 brings killer heat. Here are some surprising ways to stay safe. Industry professionals are quick to share the risks of leaving a garage door open during the summer months. Leaving an exterior door open poses a security risk. Anyone or anything (bugs or varmin) can enter the space, taking items they see or entering the home itself. Precision Door of Visalia reiterated that keeping a garage door open can be worse for a home's HVAC system and temperature regulation than what folks may think. "Proper insulation and ventilation systems within the garage can help regulate temperature without compromising security," Precision Door of Visalia wrote in a blog post. "Regular garage door maintenance ensures the door seals properly, preventing air leaks." Leaving a garage door cracked or half open can also strain the door's mechanism and tracks, according to Precision Door of Visalia. Continuous pressure can wear the door faster, leading to issues with broken springs, rollers and cables. Precision Door of Visalia recommends keeping the garage door fully closed to maintain its structural integrity while performing regular maintenance, such as lubricating moving parts, to prolong its life. Cracking open the door may provide a temporary relief, but industry professionals provide more long-term recommendations for keeping a garage cool. Here are some ideas:

Should you crack the garage door in the summer? The benefits, risks
Should you crack the garage door in the summer? The benefits, risks

USA Today

time6 hours ago

  • USA Today

Should you crack the garage door in the summer? The benefits, risks

The dog days of summer are here, and folks are looking for any way to catch a bit of relief. Homeowners may be cranking down the air conditioning or blocking out windows with the hope of saving money on electricity bills. Another tip that circulates each summer encourages homeowners to crack garage doors, if they have them, to provide a bit of additional airflow. Although the idea sounds good in theory, industry professionals have largely advised against this because an unwatched open door can strain a home's air conditioning, pose a security risk, welcome unwanted pests and put strain on a garage door's mechanisms. Here's a deeper look into the benefits and risks of keeping a garage door open during the summer months. Chill out: We found up to 38% off portable and personal air conditioners What are the benefits of leaving a garage door open during the summer? Opening a garage door can help with airflow inside a tight space, releasing trapped hot air, according to a blog post from Wheat Ridge, Colorado-based American Garage Door. A drawback of doing this is that the open door can also jack up an energy bill. When hot air enters the home, the HVAC system works harder to maintain its set temperature, according to a blog post by California-based Precision Door of Visalia. If you're going to have the garage door open during the summer, it's best to be in the space or around the yard. American Garage Door said having the garage door open can increase natural light and provide an outdoor extension for gatherings or projects; unfortunately, these pros can only be enjoyed while in the space. Summer 2025 brings killer heat. Here are some surprising ways to stay safe. What are the risks of leaving a garage door open? Industry professionals are quick to share the risks of leaving a garage door open during the summer months. Leaving an exterior door open poses a security risk. Anyone or anything (bugs or varmin) can enter the space, taking items they see or entering the home itself. Precision Door of Visalia reiterated that keeping a garage door open can be worse for a home's HVAC system and temperature regulation than what folks may think. "Proper insulation and ventilation systems within the garage can help regulate temperature without compromising security," Precision Door of Visalia wrote in a blog post. "Regular garage door maintenance ensures the door seals properly, preventing air leaks." Leaving a garage door cracked or half open can also strain the door's mechanism and tracks, according to Precision Door of Visalia. Continuous pressure can wear the door faster, leading to issues with broken springs, rollers and cables. Precision Door of Visalia recommends keeping the garage door fully closed to maintain its structural integrity while performing regular maintenance, such as lubricating moving parts, to prolong its life. Other ways to cool a garage Cracking open the door may provide a temporary relief, but industry professionals provide more long-term recommendations for keeping a garage cool. Here are some ideas: Greta Cross is a national trending reporter at USA TODAY. Story idea? Email her at gcross@

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store