Borel laments coming up empty at Preakness

Super Saver denied opportunity of Triple Crown

? Calvin Borel made no excuses.

Lookin At Lucky, left, with Martin Garcia aboard, works forward while Calvin Borel (white helmet), riding Super Saver, holds pace with First Dude, front right, ridden by Ramon Dominguez, who maintains the lead in the third turn. Super Saver finished eighth in the Preakness in Borel’s quest to win the Triple Crown. Lookin at Lucky won the race on Saturday in Baltimore.

Before he was even out of the saddle at the Kentucky Derby, he predicted a Triple Crown for Super Saver, and here he was at the Preakness, finishing eighth on Saturday.

“He run so hard in the Derby, and he’s not a big horse,” Borel said. “But when you win the Derby, you got to go for three legs.”

Borel’s ideal trip in the Derby — skimming inside the 20-horse field and riding the rail to victory — wasn’t duplicated at Pimlico. He deliberately avoided the rail for this race, he said, because the turns were way too tight.

“My horse broke sharp, right where I wanted,” Borel said. “He just wasn’t able to get there today.”

Borel and trainer Todd Pletcher talked excitedly in the days leading up to the Preakness about how well the horse recovered from the Derby. They seemed convinced that Super Saver had enough talent to become the first Triple Crown winner since Affirmed in 1978.

Borel was second at the three-quarters pole but faded down the stretch and finished out of the money for only the second time in eight career races.

“I’m not disgusted. He just come up empty,” Borel said. “When I asked him, he kind of just folded up. It happens.”

Borel has won three of the last four Derbys, and last year he captured the Preakness aboard Rachel Alexandra. But there was no magic for him this time with Super Saver, the 9-5 favorite.

“When he went to the far turn, you could see that Calvin was squeezing and asking him to go get that horse,” Pletcher said. “He just couldn’t do it. He hung in there. He kept fighting. But it was … a little quick for him.”

Still, Pletcher was upbeat.

“I wouldn’t trade the Derby for anything,” he said. “We got the one we wanted the most. We would have loved to come here and win the Preakness and go to Belmont with a chance to win the Triple Crown. That would be the ultimate challenge.”

Pletcher said he wasn’t planning to run Super Saver at Belmont.

“Now we’ve got time to come back for a big summer,” Pletcher said.

Borel can’t wait.

“I will win a lot of other races with this horse,” he said. “He’s a good one.”