Before Rachel Alexandra joined the fray, the 134th Preakness shaped up to be a ho-hum duel between the horse who won the Kentucky Derby as a 50-1 long shot and many of the colts he had already beaten.
Although Mine That Bird certainly deserved to win the Derby, he doesn't appear to be talented enough to become the first horse since Affirmed in 1978 to win the Triple Crown. Even if Rachel Alexandra wasn't in the field, Mine That Bird would not have been favored to win the Preakness.
Things began to get interesting after the filly was formally entered in the race. Suddenly, there was a legitimate favorite
- a horse who had won five straight races by a combined 43 lengths.
"The filly gives us stability because she's such a talent," said Hall of Fame trainer D. Wayne Lukas, who has two horses running in the Preakness. "If the filly wasn't here it would be totally upside down, because we're still trying to validate the Derby winner."
And what about that filly? Can Rachel Alexandra outrun 12 strapping 3-year-old colts? A filly hasn't won the Preakness since 1924, so this race could make history.
There's also been an intriguing, unprecedented switcheroo. Jockey Calvin Borel left Mine That Bird to ride Rachel Alexandra, marking the first time a jockey surrendered a shot at the Triple Crown by switching from the Derby winner to a different horse in the Preakness.
On Friday, Borel further insulted Mine That Bird.
"He'd have to run the race of his life to beat my filly," Borel said. "I think all the other horses are going to have to run the race of their lives or me fall off or something stupid happen."
The switch means Mine That Bird's new jockey, Mike Smith, will climb aboard the Derby winner for the first time in the infield saddling area Saturday minutes before the Preakness post parade.
Now there's something that doesn't happen every third Saturday in May.
Much discussion has occurred this week over the choice of owner Jess Jackson to run Rachel Alexandra against bigger, stronger boys. Jackson was convinced there weren't any decent fillies left to challenge his 3-year-old, and figured it would do the sport some good to match a talented filly against some of the best colts in the business.