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Mage ownership to decide on Preakness Stakes after workout

Kentucky Derby winner Mage remains on track to run in the Preakness Stakes in Baltimore next week, with a final decision expected Friday.

Ramiro Restrepo, part of the ownership group, said Thursday that those in charge of deciding Mage's next race wanted to see one final workout before making that determination.

"Everything is just patience and temperance on our end," Restrepo said on a conference call with reporters. "The plan is that if on Friday he trains satisfactory like he's been training all week, then we would make the announcement that we would go to the Preakness."

Mage would be the first unquestioned Kentucky Derby winner to go to the Preakness with a chance to win the Triple Crown since Justify in 2018.

In 2019, Maximum Security was disqualified and Country House elevated to first, with neither running in the Preakness; in 2020, the Belmont Stakes was run first because of the pandemic; in 2021, Medina Spirit failed a drug test after winning the Derby and was eventually DQ'd; and in 2022, the owner and trainer of long shot Rich Strike decided to skip the race.

Although the two weeks between the Derby and Preakness make for an unusually tight turnaround for top thoroughbreds in North America, Restrepo downplayed that concern, citing trainer Gustavo Delgado's experience.

"He's won two [Venezuelan] Triple Crowns with similar time frames, so as far as being prepared and being able to know all the things that Mage needs to check off the list to be able to participate his best for the Preakness, we have that in play and we're quite comfortable with it," Restrepo said.

Logistical preparations are already underway to get Mage to Pimlico Racecourse in Baltimore.

Restrepo said he and the other owners will make the best decision for the lightly raced colt who has so far made only four career starts.

"Every decision that is made on our end, Mage makes that decision for us," Restrepo said. "All indications are that Mage is feeling good, doing well on the racetrack."

Mage won the Derby at odds of 15-1 after a tumultuous 10-day stretch at Churchill Downs during which seven horses died and five were scratched from the $3 million race, leaving a field of 18 to run instead of the usual 20.

Forte, the morning-line favorite, was scratched hours before the race by Kentucky Horse Racing Commission veterinarians who had concerns about a bruised right front foot. Kentucky racing officials put him on a mandatory 14-day veterinary list earlier this week, and trainer Todd Pletcher was suspended 10 days by New York officials on Thursday for Forte's positive drug test in September, ruling out any slim chance of the horse running in the Preakness.

Disarm, which finished fourth in the Kentucky Derby, is expected to join Mage in the Preakness field.

"Very pleased with how he's come out of the race," said trainer Steve Asmussen, who is also planning to saddle Red Route One in the Preakness. "[Disarm has] been back to the track a couple of days now. Will not need much at all from him from a training standpoint. Just want him to continue to be loose and comfortable."

Brad Cox, who had four horses in the Derby, will not bring any of them back for the Preakness but instead intends to challenge Mage this time with First Mission. Shug McGaughey has his first Preakness horse in a decade in Perform, and Chad Brown is planning to enter Blazing Sevens in the race.

It was not clear whether Bob Baffert will decide to go for a record-breaking eighth victory in the race with National Treasure. Baffert was not allowed to train horses for the Derby in 2022 or 2023 because of Medina Spirit's failed drug test, but he is now cleared to do so in the Preakness.