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2025 Kentucky Derby

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

151st Kentucky Derby
Kentucky Derby
Grade I stakes race
LocationChurchill Downs
Louisville, Kentucky, United States
DateMay 3, 2025 (2025-05-03)
Distance1+14 mi (10 furlongs; 2,012 m)
Winning horseSovereignty
JockeyJunior Alvarado
TrainerBill Mott
ConditionsSloppy
SurfaceDirt
Attendance147,406[1]
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The 2025 Kentucky Derby (branded as the 151st Running of the Kentucky Derby presented by Woodford Reserve for sponsorship reasons) was the 151st running of the Kentucky Derby. It took place on May 3, 2025, at Churchill Downs in Louisville, Kentucky.[2]

The 2025 Derby was won by Sovereignty, who entered the race off of a win in the Fountain of Youth Stakes and a second place finish in the Florida Derby. Sovereignty was trained by Bill Mott, who won his second Derby—the first since he trained Country House, who was elevated to first place following the disqualification of Maximum Security in the 2019 Kentucky Derby. It was the first Derby victory for Venezuelan jockey Junior Alvarado, and the first win in the race for Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum's Godolphin racing. Godolphin won the Kentucky Oaks the previous day with Good Cheer, marking the first sweep by an owner of both the Oaks and Derby since Sol Kumin's Head of Plains Partners with Monomoy Girl and eventual Triple Crown champion Justify, respectively, in 2018.[3][4] Godolphin is also the first sole ownership to win both races in the same year since 1952, when Calumet Farm won with Real Delight in the Oaks and Hill Gail in the Derby.[5]

Despite poor weather conditions and a sloppy racing surface, Churchill Downs reported an attendance of 147,406 for the 2025 Derby. The all-sources betting handle on the Derby and the entire racing card set records of $234.4 million and $349 million, respectively.[1] NBC Sports reported an average of 17.7 million viewers across NBC and Peacock for their 25th Kentucky Derby broadcast, the largest television audience for the race since 1989.[6]

Qualification

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Entries

[edit]

The field was drawn on April 26 during the race meeting at Churchill Downs. A field of twenty was drawn to start with one also eligible being no. 21 Baeza. Journalism was installed as the morning line favorite at 3–1 as he drew post no. 8 for the derby. Sovereignty was installed as the 5–1 second choice out of post no. 18. Sandman drew post 17 at odds of 6–1. Burnham Square drew post no. 9 for the derby at odds of 12–1.[7]

On May 1, the connections of Rodriguez announced that their horse would be scratched from the Kentucky Derby. Co-owner Tom Ryan announced in a post on X that the Wood Memorial winner had "a small but slightly sensitive foot bruise" and that he would be withdrawn from the race "out of an abundance of caution." The defection allowed Baeza, runner-up to Journalism in the Santa Anita Derby, to draw in to the race.[8] With Flavien Prat named as the primary jockey for Baeza, Luis Saez picked up the mount on Neoequos.[9]

On May 2, veterinarians with the Kentucky Horse Racing and Gaming Corporation scratched Wood Memorial runner-up Grande due to a cracked heel. Owner Mike Repole expressed his displeasure at the decision in a social media post on X. While stating that Grande was recovering from a slight cracked heel during the week, Repole said that follow up X-rays and PET scans on the horse were clean. He added that the team was "baffled and confused" as to the criteria used by the veterinarians to determine who scratches.[10] In an interview with FanDuel TV later that day, Repole suggested that the decision to scratch Grande was made "24 hours too early."[11] The scratch left trainer Todd Pletcher without a Kentucky Derby starter for the first time since 2003.[10]

All 19 participants can be traced back through their lineage to Secretariat

Results

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The start of the Kentucky Derby saw some crowding among horses that broke closer to the rail after Citizen Bull bore out from his inside post position. Sovereignty, who broke from post 15, bobbled after the gate break as Chunk Of Gold came in on him slightly from post 16. As the field settled down going past the stands for the first time, Citizen Bull was ahead of Neoequos, Owen Almighty, American Promise and Japanese invader Admire Daytona. Sovereignty settled in along the rail and was running in 16th, 13+12 lengths behind Citizen Bull, as the 19 horses entered the backstretch. Journalism was ahead of Sovereignty in 10th place down the backstretch, and both he and Sovereignty made sustained bids as the field entered the final turn. Citizen Bull yielded the lead around the far turn, and Owen Almighty and Neoequos were briefly ahead at the top of the stretch before Sovereignty and Journalism passed them to their outside. Sovereignty and Journalism dueled together until inside the final furlong, when Sovereignty began to draw away. Sovereignty's final margin over Journalism was 1+12 lengths. Baeza, who drew in from the also eligible list, closed from 15th down the backstretch to finish third. Final Gambit, who ran last until the end of the backstretch, finished in fourth, and Owen Almighty held on to finish fifth.[3][5][12]

Finish Program

Number

Horse Qualifying

Points

Trainer Jockey Morning Line Odds Final Odds Margin
(Lengths)
Winnings
1 18 Sovereignty 110 William I. Mott Junior Alvarado 5–1 7.98 $3,100,000
2 8 Journalism 122.5 Michael W. McCarthy Umberto Rispoli 3–1 3.42 1+12 $1,000,000
3 21 Baeza 37.5 John Shirreffs Flavien Prat 12–1 13.86 1+34 $500,000
4 3 Final Gambit 100 Brad H. Cox Luan Machado 30–1 17.55 4+14 $250,000
5 20 Owen Almighty 65 Brian A. Lynch Javier Castellano 30–1 40.27 9 $150,000
6 9 Burnham Square 130 Ian R. Wilkes Brian Hernandez Jr. 12–1 19.65 10+12
7 17 Sandman 129 Mark E. Casse José Ortiz 6–1 5.77 12+12
8 12 East Avenue 60 Brendan P. Walsh Manuel Franco 20–1 41.97 13+14
9 19 Chunk Of Gold 75 Ethan West Jareth Loveberry 30–1 29.06 15+34
10 14 Tiztastic 119 Steven M. Asmussen Joel Rosario 20–1 24.80 16+12
11 16 Coal Battle 95 Lonnie Briley Juan Vargas 30–1 28.40 17
12 7 Luxor Cafe 70 Noriyuki Hori João Moreira 30–1 8.24 18+34
13 2 Neoequos 40 Saffie Joseph Jr. Luis Saez[a] 30–1 42.58 27
14 13 Publisher 60 Steven M. Asmussen Irad Ortiz Jr. 20–1 33.39 32+14
15 1 Citizen Bull 71.25 Bob Baffert Martin Garcia 20–1 13.98 33+12
16 5 American Promise 55 D. Wayne Lukas Nik Juarez 30–1 12.51 38+12
17 15 Render Judgment 39 Kenneth G. McPeek Julien Leparoux 30–1 20.57 39+34
18 11 Flying Mohawk 50 Whit Beckman Joseph Ramos 30–1 28.39 42+14
19 6 Admire Daytona (JPN) 100 Yukihiro Kato Christophe Lemaire 30–1 42.85 54+34
scratched 4 Rodriguez 121.25 Bob Baffert Mike E. Smith 12–1
scratched 10 Grande 50 Todd A. Pletcher John R. Velazquez 20–1

Track condition: sloppy (sealed)

Times: 14 mile – 22.81; 12 mile – 46.23; 34 mile – 1:10.78; mile – 1:36.84; final – 2:02.31.
Splits for each quarter-mile: (22.81) (23.42) (24.55) (26.06) (25.47)

Note:

  1. ^ Flavien Prat was originally listed as the jockey of #2 Neoequos and #21 Baeza. Prat elected to ride Baeza, which was listed as his first preference.[9]


Source: Equibase chart[12]

Payouts

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The table below provides the Kentucky Derby payout schedule for a $2 stake.[12]

Program number Horse name Win Place Show
18 Sovereignty $17.96 $7.50 $5.58
8 Journalism $4.94 $3.70
21 Baeza $8.38
  • $2 Exacta (18–8): $48.32
  • $0.50 Trifecta (18–8–21): $115.56
  • $1 Superfecta (18–8–21–3): $1,682.27
  • $1 Super High Five (18–8–21–3–20): $38,405.96

References

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  1. ^ a b Hall, Gregory A. (May 3, 2025). "Weather Can't Rain on Kentucky Derby Handle Records". The Blood-Horse. Retrieved May 4, 2025.
  2. ^ "2025 Kentucky Derby horses, futures, odds, preview, date: Expert who hit 10 Derby-Oaks Doubles says picks". CBSSports.com. March 23, 2025. Retrieved March 23, 2025.
  3. ^ a b Grening, David (May 3, 2025). "Kentucky Derby 2025: Sovereignty runs down Journalism to complete Godolphin sweep". Daily Racing Form. Retrieved May 3, 2025.
  4. ^ Frakes, Jason (May 3, 2025). "Sovereignty wins Kentucky Derby at 7–1 odds as Bill Mott etches name in history". Louisville Courier Journal. Retrieved May 3, 2025.
  5. ^ a b Hackbarth, Chelsea (May 3, 2025). "'It's More Than Even A Dream': Sovereignty Reigns In Kentucky Derby". Paulick Report. Retrieved May 3, 2025.
  6. ^ "Kentucky Derby Sets Record for NBC, Peacock". The Blood-Horse. May 4, 2025. Retrieved May 4, 2025.
  7. ^ King, Byron (April 27, 2025). "Favored Journalism Draws Post 8 for Kentucky Derby Late runners Sovereignty (5–1) and Sandman (6–1) will start toward the outside". bloodhorse.com. Retrieved April 27, 2025.
  8. ^ Giannotto, Mark (May 1, 2025). "Rodriguez, trained by Bob Baffert, late scratch for Kentucky Derby; Baeza joins field". USA Today. Retrieved May 1, 2025.
  9. ^ a b Hackbarth, Chelsea (May 1, 2025). "Baeza Gets In; Hoof Bruise Knocks Rodriguez Out Of Kentucky Derby". Paulick Report. Retrieved May 1, 2025.
  10. ^ a b Grening, David (May 2, 2025). "Kentucky Derby 2025: Grande scratched with cracked heel". Daily Racing Form. Retrieved May 2, 2025.
  11. ^ Owner Mike Repole talks FIERCENESS and scratch of Kentucky Derby Contender GRANDE. FanDuel Racing. May 2, 2025. Retrieved May 2, 2025 – via YouTube.
  12. ^ a b c "2025 Kentucky Derby presented by Woodford Reserve (Gr. 1)" (PDF). Equibase. May 3, 2025. Retrieved May 3, 2025.