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Preakness Stakes 2023: National Treasure ends Mage's Triple Crown dream

148th Preakness Stakes BALTIMORE, MD - MAY 20 Fans sit in the Grandstand at Pimlico Race Course on May 20, 2023 in Baltimore, Maryland. (Photo by Horsephotos/Getty Images)

Mage entered the 2023 Preakness Stakes with hopes for the Triple Crown and exited it with a surprise loss.

National Treasure, which entered the race at 4-1 odds, took home an unexpected win at Pimlico on Saturday, defeating the Kentucky Derby winner and pre-race favorite Mage.

Blazing Sevens finished the race in the place position, while Mage showed for third.

It is the fifth straight time the Kentucky Derby didn't win the Preakness. The last horse to go even back-to-back at the two races was 2018 Triple Crown winner Justify.

National Treasure's win came a few hours after a dark scene at Pimlico, when Havnameltdown, also trained by Bob Baffert, was euthanized on the track due to a "non-operable" fetlock injury. The Derby had been held in a similar environment due to seven horse deaths in the run-up at Churchill Downs.

Mage was odds-on Preakness favorite after First Mission scratched

This year's race saw a running of only seven horses. Mage entered as the clear favorite, with a morning line of 4-5, among a field that contained none of its 17 competitors from the Derby. He eventually settled to 7/5 at race time.

Those odds shortened significantly the day before the race when First Mission, considered the horse most likely to knock off Mage, was scratched due to a left hind issue that worried the veterinarians. That left National Treasure as the closest to Mage on the board at 3-1 the next morning, followed by Blazing Sevens at 5-1.

Mage was unusual winner at Derby

That favorite status for Mage was a contrast to how he entered the Derby, where Mage went off at 15-1 odds to win. The three-year-old colt had only three previous starts — and one win — to his name, and he became only the third horse to win the race after not racing as a two-year-old, joining 2018 winner Justify and 1882 winner Apollo, per Bloodhorse.

Those odds seemed to bear out early in the race, when Mage found himself near the back of the pack amid a fast pace by the leaders. Jockey Javier Castellano made his move around the three-quarter-mile mark, breaking to the outside and surging to the lead in the final stretch.

Mage topped runner-up Two Phil's by a length with a time of 2:01.57, while Angel of Empire, one of the pre-race favorites, showed for third.

Neither Two Phil's nor Angel of Empire were present in Maryland on Saturday. Larry Rivelli, trainer of Two Phil's, told Bloodhorse that two weeks was "too soon" for Two Phil's to get back into shape, and he didn't expect to run the Belmont Stakes either. Angel of Empire, however, is reportedly on track to compete at Belmont.

Pre-Derby favorite Forte wasn't ready for Preakness return

The real drama of the Derby came before the race, when morning favorite Forte was scratched hours before the race after a veterinary inspection. It was later reported Forte had failed a drug test in September, but that wasn't a reason for the scratch.

Forte was also rendered ineligible for the Preakness after being placed on the veterinary list for two weeks due to a bruised right front foot.

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