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No Asterisks Needed: Breaking Down the 2020 Kentucky Derby

Historians 100 years from now will note the 2020 Kentucky Derby took place the first Saturday in September, instead of the first Saturday in May. They’ll note that, due to the coronavirus pandemic, America’s annual racing bacchanalia was shy of bacchanalia because Churchill Downs was shy of spectators.

Tiz the Law brings that placid demeanor everywhere but the starting gate. It’s one reason he’s the favorite to win Saturday’s 146th Kentucky Derby. (Image: Churchill Downs/Coady Photography)

Barring any Maximum Security-esque escapades, no historian worth their PhD will put an asterisk on the winner of America’s biggest horse race. That horse will carry the title “Kentucky Derby champion” into perpetuity. He will sire offspring that will carry premiums in horse sales going forward.

And if favorite Tiz the Law wins the second leg of what is a four-month Triple Crown chase, he’ll have the opportunity to become the 14th Triple Crown winner, and the third in six years.

You can hold the bacchanalia and the 150,000-plus fans, but hold the asterisks on this year’s Derby. History demands it.

Limitless Betting Combinations on 16 Horses

The $3 million Derby, which starts at approximately 4:01 p.m. PT, is the marquee race on Churchill Downs’ Saturday card. That card features six other graded stakes. It’s a bettor’s bacchanalia, a movable feast of dizzying combinations and options that can be life-changing.

How to make that happen is the eternal puzzle. But a few notes bear mentioning.

First, everyone’s favorite one-eyed gelding, rail-sitter Finnick the Fierce, bowed out Friday. Owner Arnaldo Monge, who is a veterinarian, decided to scratch Finnick the Fierce after he said the horse acted funny after a Friday morning workout.

“Because he’s blind on the right eye, he carries himself a little funny,” Monge told Churchill Downs. “And we always knew that. But ever since he arrived, the vets have been keeping an eye on the horse and I’m telling (co-owner) Rey (Hernandez) ‘Well, they’re concerned about this and there might be a legitimate reason. We’re always trying to do the best for the horse, so we made the decision (to scratch) because we don’t want to go tomorrow and we’re all excited and then he gets scratched at the post.”

Here’s Where You Want a Stalker

As we break down the field by category, keep in mind a deep closer hasn’t won the Derby since Orb in 2013. At the same time, keep in mind that even though this field is loaded with closers of varying abilities, it’s usually a closer who sneaks onto the back end of a trifecta or superfecta. Those are the players (perhaps Max Player this year?) who produce eye-popping payoffs.

Keep in mind that pace-pressers won every Derby dating to California Chrome in 2014. And keep in mind that Tiz the Law is a presser who won his last four starts ranging from a half-length to 2 ½ lengths off the lead.

Authentic’s victory in March’s San Felipe Stakes established him as a front-row Kentucky Derby contender. (Image: MyRacehorse.com)

OnlineGambling breaks down our field for Saturday’s race in categories, worst to first. The listed odds are updated as of Friday, 3:30 p.m. PT.

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