June 3, 2012
I'll Have Another set for another disappointing run
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Everyone - even the Taliban - wants a Triple Crown winner. It last happened 34 years ago, and it once happened with regularity; in the 1970s, there was a Triple Crown winner three times in a six-year span.

But this Saturday in New York, I'll Have Another will turn into I'll Have Another Disappointment. I can't tell you the exact place I'll Have Another will finish, I just know it won't be first.

(As the bearer of bad news, I respectfully ask my readers not to kill the messenger.)

There are three things that are next-to-impossible to do in this modern life:

1. Beat the banks at their own game.

2. Get a cable or satellite provider to show up in the designated time window they've given you.

3. Win the Kentucky Derby, Preakness and Belmont Stakes over a six-week period.

Since Affirmed achieved the feat in 1978, 11 horses have won the first two legs of the Triple Crown but failed to win the Belmont. Now, I don't have an advanced degree in math or statistics, or in anything for that matter, but I do recognize - as an amateur meteorologist - that if a set of conditions produce a similar result 11 times out of 11, there is a 100 percent chance the 12th time will yield the same outcome.

In other words - in layman terms - I have a better chance of climbing Mount Kilimanjaro on roller skates than I'll Have Another does of winning the Belmont.

For the record, here are the 11 horses that have been two-thirds to glory since Affirmed:

Spectacular Bid, 1979; Pleasant Colony, 1981; Alysheba, 1987; Sunday Silence, 1989; Silver Charm, 1997; Real Quiet, 1998; Charismatic, 1999; War Emblem, 2002; Funny Cide, 2003; Smarty Jones, 2004, and Big Brown, 2008.

(Older racing aficionados might remember the ill-fated Triple Crown bid in 1963 by Mister Ed, the iconic crossbred gelding owned, trained and ridden by Wilbur Post. Mister Ed won the Derby and the Preakness and then - in an infamous foul-up forever etched in Triple Crown lore - was late to the gate at the Belmont because of a phone call he took in his stable.)

Most people don't understand how daunting the physical task is for these horses.

They must race on three tracks in three states, in a compressed time period. And the final challenge - the Belmont - is the furthest they'll ever run.

Do you know how tough it is to go a mile-and-a-half when you've never done it before? That's like asking Couch Slouch to go a year-and-a-half into a marriage.

(Incidentally, how grueling is horse racing? HBO's "Luck" was canceled because three thoroughbreds perished during production. And that was a TV shoot, with makeup trailers, craft services and personal assistants for every equine's needs; away from Hollywood, you've got to figure horses have it even tougher.)

While I'll Have Another might be the best 3-year-old, there are so many variables you cannot predict in horse racing:

He might wake up Belmont morning with a toothache we don't know about.

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