Trainer Todd Pletcher (Always Dreaming, PP No. 4; 4-5) â âLike I said before, I wasnât overly concerned about where we drew. He was 4 in the Florida Derby, 5 in the Kentucky Derby. Heâs generally a very alert horse away from the gate. Heâs a good horse standing in the gate. I guess if you were hand selecting wherever you drew maybe youâd like to be outside of Conquest Mo Money. As we know, in a lot of races things change as soon as the gates open. Weâll just let him run his race.â
âI donât think [Classic Empire being in Post 5] matters, as long as everybody breaks cleanly. I would imagine that Classic Empire is going to keep an eye on where we are. The first and second choices are side by side.â
Trainer Mark Casse (Classic Empire, PP No. 5; 3-1) â âWeâll hope for a good break. Always Dreaming is obviously a very good horse. We just want a fair shot at him. Conquest Mo Money will probably show speed from the outside and Always Dreaming will be right there, but if we break running, we can be there, too. Itâs a good post.â
Scott Blasi, assistant to trainer Steve Asmussen (Lookin At Lee, PP No. 9; 10-1; Hence, PP No. 3; 20-1) â âIn years past, theyâve shown a lot of pace in the Preakness. Itâs supposed to be a fast track that day. Both of our horses close. I thought Hence got shuffled back quite a bit in the Derby, farther back than he normally would be. Lee is going to run his race every time. He always does; he tries so hard. We just need a few things to go our way and for there to be some good pace in the race.â âWeâll see how he breaks and where he positions himself. This track is not Churchill. When the gates open weâll see where we end up.â âLookin At Lee, being the [Derby] runner-up, great race, great ride by Corey Lanerie. Heâs proven he belongs with these. He had a troubled trip in the Arkansas Derby or things might have gone a little different there. That being said, he brings his game every time. Heâs a blue-collar horse and probably easy to overlook, but not for us.â
Trainer Chad Brown (Cloud Computing, PP No. 2; 12-1) â âIâm fine with the post. He should be able to work out a good trip from there.â
Trainer Miguel Hernandez (Conquest Mo Money, PP No. 10; 15-1) â âI like it. The last three times I had all outside positions and the best happened to us. You are out of trouble and you can see how it is going to play. I like that hole. From there, you can go in front or go behind. You can play many, many things.â
Trainer Antonio Sano (Gunnevera, PP No. 6; 15-1) â âThe post position is good. It is right near the middle. It is two furlongs from the first turn and my horse runs from behind. Itâs no easy race, but itâs a different race. Thereâs not 20 horses; itâs quite a difference.â
Trainer Brendan Walsh (Multiplier, PP No. 1; 30-1) â âItâs the shortest way around. Iâd rather that than draw way outside. I donât think it makes a huge difference, especially to him. Heâs been crowded before; heâs been in kick-back before. I think itâs fine. We wanted middle to inside.â
Trainer Kenny McPeek (Senior Investment, PP No. 8; 30-1) â âItâs fine. Heâs a closer. I donât see it being an issue.â
Trainer Doug OâNeill (Term of Art, PP No. 7; 30-1) â âLucky 7. Heâs a strong, long, good-bodied horse, and I always think with those horses, the less traffic they encounter early on, the better. I think 7 will have to be perfect.â