~ I Want Revenge is the favorite in today's race, but General Quarters may be the sentimental favorite.
LOUISVILLE, Ky. -- "Is that the one-horse guy?" a visitor asked as he walked past Tom McCarthy's rented stall on the backstretch at Churchill Downs.
Indeed, it was.
The 75-year-old owner-trainer signed a few autographs Friday under the watchful gaze of his big gray colt, General Quarters, who cost him all of $20,000.
McCarthy, a retired high school principal and biology teacher from Louisville who does everything but ride the horse himself, faces the biggest exam of his life in today's Kentucky Derby.
"How cool would it be if he won?" wondered Hall of Fame trainer Bob Baffert, who saddles early co-second choice Pioneerof the Nile in the 1 1/4-mile race.
That probably would be more than fine with scores of Derby fans still trying to get past last year's awful ending when filly Eight Belles finished second to Big Brown, then went down on two broken ankles and had to be destroyed.
Today, McCarthy won't be one of the trainers hanging out in the box seats and accepting good wishes. Instead, he'll work in the barn until it's time to saddle General Quarters, who gave him his first and, so far, only victory in a Grade 1 race -- the Blue Grass Stakes.
"We're here to do a job, and he's the only one I really need to be with on Derby Day," McCarthy said. "I've got more confidence in him than I have in myself."
McCarthy would be just fine, too, if forecasts calling for rain during the afternoon turn out to be right. General Quarters never has raced on an off-track, but his pedigree suggests he could run well in the slop.
"He gallops over the mud almost like he does over the dry [surface]," McCarthy said after the colt galloped Friday morning.
Just six horses in the full field of 20 have run on an off-track. Among those who haven't are favorite I Want Revenge, Pioneerof the Nile, and his co-second choice, Dunkirk.
"The only thing I could ask for is better weather and a fast race track," said Jeff Mullins, who trains Wood Memorial winner I Want Revenge.
I Want Revenge and 19-year-old jockey Joe Talamo will break from the No. 13 post. The favorite has won the Derby the last two years and three times in the previous five years.
The California-based colt left that state's synthetic tracks to try dirt in New York and is coming off eye-catching victories in the Gotham and Wood.
But he's among eight colts in the Derby who've run mostly on artificial surfaces, making it tricky for bettors to handicap how horses not used to the stuff will fare if mud starts flying in their faces.
"It's hard to evaluate how good they are," four-time Derby winner D. Wayne Lukas said. "Some of them could adapt to this beautifully and others bomb, so it makes it a nightmare to handicap."
Friesan Fire, the early 5-1 fourth choice, won and finished third in his two races on wet tracks. He hasn't raced since winning the Louisiana Derby on March 14, the longest layoff of anyone in the field.
Dunkirk lacks experience on two fronts: He's made just three career starts and he's never run in the mud.
The Florida Derby runner-up didn't race as a 2-year-old because of minor physical problems. No horse since Apollo in 1882 has won with such little seasoning.
Dunkirk's trainer, Todd Pletcher, also saddling long shots Advice and Join in the Dance, will attempt to end his 0-for-21 streak in the Derby.
Baffert is going for his fourth Derby victory and his first since 2002. A win would tie him with fellow Hall of Fame trainer Lukas, who saddles longshot Flying Private. Two-time winner Nick Zito starts Nowhere to Hide and Bill Mott, the last of the four Hall of Fame trainers in the race, has Hold Me Back.
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