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Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

No third charm for Desormeaux


Co-owner Michael Iavarone hugs Big Brown after the horse came in last at the Belmont Stakes. Associated Press
 (Associated Press / The Spokesman-Review)
Dan Gelston Associated Press

NEW YORK – His first Triple Crown bid ended by a nose. This one was over way before Big Brown closed on the finish line.

Ten years apart, the pair of crushing finishes stung jockey Kent Desormeaux.

“I think I’m numb, really,” he said. “A little lost. Just feeling no emotion whatsoever. Blank.”

Desormeaux added a second Belmont Stakes heartbreaker to his Hall of Fame career. A decade after losing aboard Real Quiet, Desormeaux failed in his shot at redemption Saturday and lost the Belmont aboard Big Brown.

No Triple Crown. No shot. Worst of all, nothing left in his spectacular horse.

Desormeaux and Big Brown failed in their bid to become horse racing’s 12th Triple Crown winner and finished dead last.

“I had no horse. He was empty,” Desormeaux said.

Dr. Larry Bramlage said the bay colt was healthy. That was about the only good news for Desormeaux, trainer Rick Dutrow Jr. and the owners of the colt after he finished way behind winner Da’ Tara, the longest shot on the board at 38-1.

Desormeaux hopped off Big Brown and started looking for Dutrow.

The two didn’t immediately find each other on the track. They’ll be looking even longer for answers on what went wrong.

“This horse was in no way, shape or form lame or sore,” Desormeaux said. “But there’s something amiss, probably just tired. In the horse’s best interest, let’s get him back to the barn and recharge his batteries.”

Desormeaux desperately hoped he could erase 10 years of bad memories with a Triple Crown victory. He lost a Triple try in 1998, when Real Quiet was nosed out at the wire.

“This one would have been a life-changing experience if I won,” he said.

Desormeaux called Big Brown the best horse he had ridden, better than Real Quiet. He said there was no comparison between the horses in the two races.

“Any time I could be less than a length, I think there’s absolutely something I could have done different, and that one just ate me up,” Desormeaux said. “This will never eat me up.”

A decade ago, still brimming with an attitude as much cocky as confident, Desormeaux rode Real Quiet to victories in the Kentucky Derby and Preakness Stakes. Winning the Belmont and the Triple Crown appeared a mere formality, especially once the colt stormed out to a four-length lead on Victory Gallop.

Victory Gallop, though, caught Real Quiet in the final stride of a sensational stretch run and won by a nose.

A dejected Desormeaux expressed regret this week at the way he handled Real Quiet. He asked the colt for too much of an explosion at the top of the stretch and Real Quiet had nothing left for the final quarter mile.

Different decade, same result.

Desormeaux said life goes on as usual.

“Life throws curves,” he said. “Some of us hit them, some of us sulk around. We continue to hit the curveball.”