“I’m just glad I don’t have to answer that question anymore," DeVaux said to a rousing round of applause.
DeVaux joined Jena Antonucci, with Arcangelo in the 2023 Belmont, as the only women to train the winner of a Triple Crown race. She was just the 18th woman to saddle a horse in the Derby in its 152-year history, and the gravity of the situation came into focus for her days earlier when she saw a young girl on the backstretch and realized the impact she is making.
“It really is an honor to be able to be that person for other women or other little girls to look up to,” DeVaux said. “You can dream big, and you can pivot. You can come from one place and make yourself a part of history.”
DeVaux credits growing up with seven brothers and two sisters for her toughness. After winning the Derby on her first try eight years after starting her own stable, she thanked her husband for inspiring her to give it a chance.
“I didn’t believe,” DeVaux said. “I started my career here 22 years ago as a bright-eyed, bushy-tailed exercise rider. And I would not believe that I would be sitting up here today. Never in my life did I think I would.”
It came with a lot of hard work. DeVaux fielded questions this week about Golden Tempo's cracked heels, and she downplayed concerns. She put a lot of time into getting the colt into form, trying blinkers and other things to get the son of Curlin to focus.
Jockey Jose Ortiz even described Golden Tempo as lazy. But Ortiz showed what he and the horse could do Saturday, winning the Derby for the first time in his 11th try — and doing so in impressive fashion.
Ortiz navigated past 17 other horses around the final turn and made a hard charge down the stretch. With a crowd of more than 100,000 watching and roaring at Churchill Downs, Golden Tempo passed morning line favorite Renegade — ridden by brother Irad — just before the wire to win the 1 1/4-mile race in 2:02.27 at odds of 23-1.
Their parents were there to witness it.
“I get to ride it almost every year, but to get to win it, it’s just special,” said Ortiz, who also won the Kentucky Oaks on Friday aboard Always a Runner. “I just wish my grandpa was here, but I know he’s looking from heaven. Just very happy that I get my goal, my life dream goal achieved.”
Golden Tempo paid $48.24 to win, $19.14 to place and $11.90 to show. Renegade paid $7.14 to place and $5.46 to show. Ocelli — who didn’t get into the field until Thursday when Brad Cox’s Fulleffort was ruled out — paid $36.34 to show after going off at 70-1.
“He gave me a really good run and proud of his effort,” Ocelli jockey Tyler Gaffalione said. "We were just not able to get the job done but hats off to the winner and runner-up. They ran huge races.”
The 152nd Kentucky Derby went on with just 18 horses following a scary incident before the race. Great White was a late scratch by track veterinarians after flipping and throwing his jockey.
Great White’s trainer, John Ennis, confirmed to The Associated Press that the big gray gelding and jockey Alex Achard were fine.
Great White became the fifth horse scratched this week and the second Saturday. Silent Tactic was ruled out Wednesday, Fulleffort on Thursday and Right to Party on Friday, with Great White, Ocelli and Robusta getting in. The Puma was out, less than 12 hours before post time, because of a swollen leg from a skin infection, but it was too late to replace him.
Following Golden Tempo's victory in the $5 million Run for the Roses, the immediate question was whether he would run back in two weeks in the Preakness Stakes on May 16. After two of the previous four Derby winners did not participate in the Preakness, DeVaux said it would be determined in the coming days.
“We’re going to let him decide that,” DeVaux said. “We’re going to have to allow him to tell us, because the horse is first. We’re not here for ourselves. We’re not here for our egos. We’re here for the horse.”
Jockey Jose Ortiz comes from last to pass brother Irad and win Kentucky Derby
Jose Ortiz didn't just save his best for last to win the Kentucky Derby.
The jockey did it the hard way by literally surging back from last place.
Ortiz rallied 23-1 long shot Golden Tempo from way back to claim the 152st Derby on Saturday, beating his older brother by a neck. As expected, Irad Ortiz Jr. went over to pat his brother and congratulate him for getting the best out of a colt Jose Ortiz believed had potential.
“We always knew this horse had a lot of ability,” the younger Ortiz said. “You could see early in his career we tried things because he’s a lazy horse. I knew always Golden Tempo would be my Derby mount. This is an incredible experience. I just won the Kentucky Derby.”
Ortiz became just the ninth rider to sweep horse racing’s two marquee events at Churchill Downs. It came less than 24 hours after he guided filly Always a Runner to his first Kentucky Oaks victory on Friday night with trainer Chad Brown hoping for a Derby/Oaks double.
Instead, Ortiz made history for trainer Cherie DeVaux, who became the first woman to train a Derby winner. With their parents in attendance, he beat his older brother — also arguably one of the best riders in the world — to win.
“We got squeezed at the start,” the elder Ortiz said. "We came flying late, but the winner just got the jump on me. He ran very well.”
As DeVaux tried to grasp her own breakthrough through hugs and tears from family, she praised Ortiz for doing the near-impossible on horse racing’s biggest stage.
“Jose is the hero of the of the weekend,” she said before heading to the winner's circle. “Jose has been a major part of our success. He has worked hard. He comes to the barn. He has a vested interest in everything that we do. And it’s just great to share this with him.”
Unlike Friday's Oaks, where Ortiz had Always a Runner near the leaders before taking charge through the final turn and soaring past Meaning for a 1 1/4-length win, seizing the Derby required everything from jockey and mount.
Golden Tempo was bumped and bunched at the start and out of view for much of the race. His trip required extra ground with a wider path outside as the field turned for home, but Ortiz somehow got him near the middle entering the stretch. He found another gear to stalk Renegade and Ocelli, who also rallied from back, and edged Renegade at the wire.
“I felt like I had horse,” Ortiz said, “so I was following Irad on Renegade and I felt like we were moving along very nice. I felt like going outside on him wasn’t going to hurt me. I think he was the horse to beat.”
And the younger Ortiz is now part of an exclusive club at Churchill Downs.
He follows Brian Hernandez Jr., who rode Mystik Dan (Derby) and Thorpedo Anna (Oaks) to victory two years ago for trainer Kenny McPeek. Then again, Ortiz has been pretty charmed this weekend with five winners on Friday, including the Oaks, and five seconds in 11 mounts Saturday before capping it with the Derby.
This win, if not the weekend, will follow Ortiz for a lifetime. Considering the path followed Saturday to make it possible, he's taking nothing for granted.
“It feels great,” said Ortiz, who credited DeVaux along with Golden Tempo's owners. "Unbelievable weekend. It’s the result of all the hard work I put in for the last 15 years. I just want to be thankful. I feel blessed to be here. I’m just very thankful to all of them.”