Skip navigation
sponsored by 

Favored Big Brown wins tragic Kentucky Derby

Winner surges from 20 post; filly Eight Belles is 2nd but is fatally injured

Al Behrman / AP
Kent Desormeaux rides Big Brown to a 4 3/4-length victory in the 134th Kentucky Derby on Saturday.
Video
  Watch replay of Big Brown's win
May 3: 134th running of Kentucky Derby.

NBC Sports

  Join the Debate
Frank Perez, Hey Byrne

Before the race begins on Saturday, NBC will have a panel discussion on Eight Belles' tragic breakdown and other controversies surrounding horse racing. Click on the links below to share your opinions. Television coverage begins at 4:30 p.m. ET on NBC.

VOTE: Is speed or durability more important?
VOTE: Should drugs be banned from racing?
VOTE: What part of horse racing needs change?
  Share your thoughts on message boards

The Preakness: Who will win?
Big Brown
Vote now!
Check out the contenders and vote on the winner of the Preakness Stakes.
Slide show
  Get your hat on
Slide show of some of the fancy and wacky sombreros on display at the Kentucky Derby this year.

more photos

updated 10:25 a.m. ET May 5, 2008

LOUISVILLE, Ky. - Big Brown was pulling away from the field, accelerating with every powerful stride toward the finish line in the Kentucky Derby.

The crowd of 157,770 was on its feet and cheering as the big, unbeaten, muscular bay crossed the line first, 4¾ lengths ahead of the filly Eight Belles.

Trainer Rick Dutrow Jr. was still celebrating, along with thousands of happy bettors, as Big Brown and the 19 other horses in Saturday’s race galloped out around the first turn at Churchill Downs.

Story continues below ↓
advertisement

It took a few minutes to sink in, but anyone watching those horses soon realized that one of them had fallen to the track.

“It’s the filly,” someone whispered. She went down about a quarter mile past the finish line.

In just a few minutes, the joy of the Derby and the promise of a new Triple Crown season were upended when Eight Belles was euthanized by injection on the track.

She had broken both front ankles and could not be saved.

“This horse showed you his heart,” winning jockey Kent Desormeaux said, “and Eight Belles showed you her life for our enjoyment today. I’m deeply sympathetic to that team for their loss.”

Big Brown did everything his owner said he would do. An explosive finishing kick put away his rivals for his fourth consecutive victory.

Video
  Iso-cam on Big Brown
Follow Kentucky Derby winner Big Brown on an isolated camera through the entire race.

NBC Sports

Eight Belles, meantime, was attempting to become the fourth filly to win the Derby. Her owners chose to keep her out of Friday’s Kentucky Oaks so she could run with the boys in the Derby. And run she did.

Big Brown’s start from the outside post did little to hamper his charge when the field turned for home. Under the urging of Desormeaux, the 2-1 favorite cruised to an easy victory to become the seventh undefeated Derby winner. The last one was Barbaro in 2006.

That wasn’t the only reason thoughts of Barbaro were hard to ignore on this Derby Day.

The breakdown brought back memories of the 2006 Preakness, where Barbaro shattered his right rear leg just after the start. The colt was euthanized months later, after developing laminitis from the catastrophic injuries.

In two weeks, Big Brown will race in the Preakness as the only 3-year-old with a chance to become the first Triple Crown champion since Affirmed in 1978.

“We’re ready to roll,” Dutrow said.

All week, Dutrow told the world he had the best horse in the field — and the big bay colt justified every accolade tossed his way.

“I can’t describe the feeling that all of us have right now,” he said.

  Click for related content

The colt became the first Derby winner since Regret in 1915 to have raced only three times previously. He is only the third in 60 years to win after racing in just two Derby preps — Sunny’s Halo in 1983 and Street Sense last year were the others.

In addition, Big Brown became the second winner to start from the No. 20 post. The gelding Clyde Van Dusen did it in 1929.

Big Brown covered the 1¼ miles in 2:01.82 in front of the second-largest crowd in Derby history. He paid $6.80, $5 and $4.80.

Eight Belles paid $10.60 and $6.40, and Denis of Cork, at odds of 27-1, returned $11.60.

Rate this story LowHigh
 

Sponsored links