The Final Stretch to the Kentucky Derby

As the Kentucky Derby nears, racetracks are hosting several different races with many exciting betting opportunities. Plus, Dave Bontempo offers insights into March Madness and MLB’s opening.

In some circles, this is THE DERBY, Part One, not just the Florida Derby, Saturday, March 30 at Gulfstream Park.

Horse racing positions this $1 million event exactly five weeks before the Kentucky Derby, enabling its graduates to regroup for the Run for the Roses on May 4. Recent Florida Derby winners like Orb (2013), Nyquist (2016) and Always Dreaming (2017) went on to capture the Kentucky Derby that same year. Audible (2018) just missed winning the Kentucky Derby last year.

As usual, over the next two weeks, tracks with major stakes races want to corner the market with supporting events. On March 30, Gulfstream features the $300,000 Gulfstream Park Mile and $250,000 Gulfstream Park Oaks, along with the $250,000 Pan American, the $125,000 Cutler Bay and Sanibel Island events, and the $100,000 Sand Springs. That’s eight major races on one card, and it will attract substantial betting interest.

One week later, Aqueduct Park in New York seizes center stage. It delivers the $750,000 Wood Memorial on April 6. The card includes the $400,000 Carter Handicap, $300,000 Gazelle Stakes, the $250,000 Bayshore and $150,000 Excelsior.

Sign up at TwinSpires.com to place your bets.

 

Gulfstream Recap

We’ve talked throughout the Gulfstream Park meet that low-level claiming races offer excellent upset possibilities. False favorites emerge from these events. Jockey Luis Alberto Sanchez delivered fireworks with two long shots on March 24. He guided 25-1 shot Liza Star home in the sixth and 40-1 bomb Joe Cain into second in the 12th race.

In the sixth, Liza Star teamed with 7-2 shot Gracias Adios to produce a whopping $343 exacta, with the payoff enabled by the 6-5 favorite running out of the money. In the 12th, Sanchez got Joe Cain to the wire for second place and produced a $156 exacta. Favorites ran first and third and the trifecta, with the 40-1 shot second, returned $424 for $1. Sweet.

Wonder how you could have caught that? Either by wheeling Liza Star first or second with the field, hoping the favorite would run out…OR taking a three-horse box with a long shot and two favorites. In low-level claiming and maiden races, the improbable often happens. The claiming price in the Liza Star race was $6,250.

 

March Madness Tips Off

From two weeks back, remember the discussion about the 12 seed upsetting the No. 5 in the first round of the NCAA March Madness bracket 35 percent of the time? Well, this year, three of the four dogs won outright, as Murray State, Oregon and Liberty prevailed from that spot and the University of New Mexico lost by one point but covered. That four-pack, had you taken all No. 12s, would have made a handsome return.

For all your sports betting action, check out PlaySugarHouse.com or ResortsCasino.com.

 

Baseball Season Begins

Major League Baseball begins this week, with the Phillies having made the most moves and seeing their season over-under expectation hover from 83 to nearly 90.

High-profile players moving to new teams are so pumped, they often slug a home run in their first game with the new team. That means Bryce Harper, Nelson Cruz and Manny Machado are candidates to go deep in their first outing.

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History Playbook

On This Day In Sports History

November 13, 2022: The Vikings defeated the Bills in overtime, 33–30. After rallying from a 27–10 deficit, Minnesota trailed 27–23 when quarterback Kirk Cousins failed to score on fourth down from the 1-yard line. On the next play, Buffalo QB Josh Allen fumbled the snap. The ball was recovered by linebacker Eric Kendricks for a touchdown and a 30–27 Vikings lead with 41 seconds to go. Buffalo scored on a 29-yard field goal by Tyler Bass to force overtime. Vikings kicker Greg Joseph kicked a 33-yard field goal to win it in overtime.

On This Day In Sports History

November 3, 2007: Navy ended its 43 game losing streak against Notre Dame with a three-overtime 46-44 victory at Notre Dame Stadium in South Bend. Navy’s last win over the Fighting Irish was a 35–14 decision in 1963, and the streak was the longest by one opponent over another in college football history. Regulation ended with a 28–28 score. The third OT started at 38–38. Navy had the ball first and scored a touchdown and a two-point conversion. Notre Dame countered with a touchdown but failed to convert the two-point try.