Journalism shows heart, resiliency to win the Preakness Stakes — just like the Altadena community he representsNew Foto - Journalism shows heart, resiliency to win the Preakness Stakes — just like the Altadena community he represents

Michael McCarthy had just witnessed a display of resiliency unfold in front of him at the Preakness Stakes on Saturday when he referenced another. "We'll rebuild," McCarthy told NBC in a televised interview from the wet track of Baltimore's Pimlico Race Course, just minutes after his horse, Journalism, won the 150th running of the Triple Crown's middle leg. "This is for Altadena." Journalism's victory required a comeback of more than five lengths, an improbable run that required slipping between two horses on either side as it entered the backstretch, then furiously making up ground on leader Gosger, never taking the lead until the final strides. The route was unexpected and challenging — not all that dissimilar to what its trainer had endured since January wildfires in Southern California displaced McCarthy and his family from their home. As flames creeped within areported600 feet of the walls of McCarthy's Altadena home, he his wife and daughter left at 4:40 a.m. and checked into a hotel,The Athleticreported last month. McCarthy's home in Altadena suffered smoke damage but ultimately survived what became known as the Eaton fire, named for a nearby canyon from which it originated and grew into a blaze that would kill 18 people. But his neighborhood was largely destroyed, as was the city where he was raised. What remained in Altadena was "just chimneys," McCarthytoldNBC Sports last month. Together the Eaton and nearby Palisades fire, which also ignited in early January in Pacific Palisades west of Los Angeles, and also spread via extreme winds, destroyed an estimated 16,000 structures, impacted more than 30,000 people and at an economic loss of more than $250 billion. On the Jan. 8 morning when the fire broke out, 3-year-old Journalism was in the back right corner of its stall in a barn at Santa Anita Park in nearby Arcadia, "which is where they go when they know something is going on," McCarthytoldNBC Sports' Tim Layden. The trainer decided to move Journalism and other horses out of the barn that day and had them driven near San Diego as a precaution. Aron Wellman, a co-owner of Journalism,toldThe Athletic last month that "there were a lot of moving parts" as the fires broke out. "The weight of the world was on Michael's shoulders there for a bit," he said. When, four days later, Journalism was brought back to Santa Anita, his trainer remarked that the horse appeared unaffected by the disruption taking place around him. It was a foreshadowing of the horse's unflappability it used to win Saturday at Pimlico. Considered the betting favorite to win the May 3 Kentucky Derby, Journalismfinished second when it was unable to catch Sovereignty.The Derby champion was not entered at the Preakness because of the two-week turnaround. It used to be rare for a Derby champion to skip the Preakness, and thus miss out on the possibility of winning horse racing's Triple Crown, which ends with the Belmont Stakes. Yet this year marked the third time in the last four years the Preakness field has not included the Derby winner. The trend has created a debate about whether the Triple Crown, with three races spaced apart by just two weeks, is too taxing on horses. Only three horses in the Preakness field had also raced in the Kentucky Derby. "I think it says a lot about him," McCarthy said after the race. "None of these Triple Crown races are easy to get to, you certainly need the vehicle, and we had it with him." In comeback, Journalism wins 150th Preakness Stakes Bold colors, big hats and fast horses: Photos of the 150th Preakness Stakes Baltimore's historic Pimlico Race Course will begin demolition after the Preakness In a nine-horse field Saturday, Journalism sat in sixth through the backstretch of the 1 3/16-mile track, and appeared too far back to make a challenge entering the homestretch in front of the Pimlico grandstand that will soon be demolished. Yet Journalism showed why it was the pre-race favorite, with 6-5 odds, by charging to a victory. The comeback "defied logic," Wellman said after the race. "I just think that this victory symbolizes so much about life," Wellman said. "It took guts for Mike McCarthy to make this call to come here. It took guts for (jockey) Umberto Rispoli to power his way through a seemingly impossible hole, getting sideswiped and threading the needle and powering on through. And it took guts from an incredible horse to somehow will his way to victory."

Journalism shows heart, resiliency to win the Preakness Stakes — just like the Altadena community he represents

Journalism shows heart, resiliency to win the Preakness Stakes — just like the Altadena community he represents Michael McCarthy had just wi...
Joc Pederson hits 2-run homer in the Rangers' 5-1 victory over the AstrosNew Foto - Joc Pederson hits 2-run homer in the Rangers' 5-1 victory over the Astros

ARLINGTON, Texas (AP) — Joc Pederson broke a tie with a two-run home run in the sixth inning, Wyatt Langford hit a solo shot in a two-run seventh and the Texas Rangers beat the Houston Astros 5-1 on Saturday night. Tyler Mahle (5-1) allowed the one run over six innings, keeping his ERA at 1.47 — ranking third in the AL. The Rangers have taken two of the first three games of the four-game series. Pederson, hitting .123 with four RBI to that point as Texas' primary DH this season, followed Marcus Semien's one-out single off Ronel Blanco (3-4) with a drive to right-center for his second homer of the season. Langford's homer off Bennett Sousa immediately followed Josh Smith's sacrifice fly that scored Sam Haggerty. Haggerty led off with a walk and was picked off first base, but he reached third when first baseman Christian Walker threw low to second base. The Astros took a 1-0 lead four batters in when Walker hit a 3-2 fastball for an opposite-field double to score Isaac Paredes. Texas tied it in the third when Langford singled home Kyle Higashioka, who walked and reached third on Haggerty's ground-rule double. The Astros left seven runners on base and were 0 for 4 hitting with runners in scoring position. Key moment Haggerty was a late replacement in Texas' lineup after Evan Carter was scratched with right quadriceps tightness. Key stat Three Rangers starters rank in the AL's 10 top in ERA, Mahle joined by Nathan Eovaldi (fourth at 1.51) and Jacob deGrom (10th at 2.29). Up next Rangers RHP Jack Leiter (3-2, 4.34 ERA) was set to start Sunday in the series finale. The Astros hadn't announced a starter. ___ AP MLB:https://apnews.com/hub/mlb

Joc Pederson hits 2-run homer in the Rangers' 5-1 victory over the Astros

Joc Pederson hits 2-run homer in the Rangers' 5-1 victory over the Astros ARLINGTON, Texas (AP) — Joc Pederson broke a tie with a two-ru...
PGA Championship at a glanceNew Foto - PGA Championship at a glance

CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) — A brief look at the third round Saturday of the PGA Championship at Quail Hollow (all times EDT): LEADING: Scottie Scheffler with a 6-under 65 to reach 11-under 202. CHASING: Alex Noren birdied four of his last five holes for a 66 and was three shots behind. LIV HOPES: Jon Rahm (67) was five shots behind and Bryson DeChambeau (69) was six shots behind. LIV Golf players have won a major each of the last two years. SHOT OF THE DAY: Scheffler hit 3-wood on the 304-yard 14th hole to just inside 3 feet for an eagle on the 14th hole. That started a closing stretch he played 5 under in the last five holes. THE WAITING GAME: Rory McIlroy and Xander Schauffele were scheduled to play as a twosome at 8:25 a.m. Morning storms delayed tee times and the tournament switched to threesomes off both tees. They didn't tee off until 1:38 p.m. Both shot 72 and were 13 shot back. KEY STATISTIC: Only four players in the last 30 years have rallied from three shots or more in the final round to win the PGA Championship. NOTEWORTHY: Scheffler shot 65 for the fourth time in a PGA Championship to share the record with Adam Scott. This is only Scheffler's sixth appearance. QUOTEWORTHY: "It's up to me to go out there and have another really good round and finish off the tournament." — Scheffler. TELEVISION: Sunday, 8 a.m. to 10 a.m. (ESPN+), 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. (ESPN), 1 p.m. to 7 p.m. (CBS). ___ AP golf:https://apnews.com/hub/golf

PGA Championship at a glance

PGA Championship at a glance CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) — A brief look at the third round Saturday of the PGA Championship at Quail Hollow (all ti...
DeChambeau collapses on Green Mile, falling from 1st to tie for 8th at PGA ChampionshipNew Foto - DeChambeau collapses on Green Mile, falling from 1st to tie for 8th at PGA Championship

CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) — For a brief minute, it seemed Bryson DeChambeau was beginning to lock in on a third major championship. The notorious long-ball hitter had just made birdie on the 15th hole Saturday to get to 8-under-par, giving him sole possession of the lead at the PGA Championship. And then Quail Hollow's famous three closing holes known as the Green Mile — and a few untimely gusts of win — changed everything. The two-time U.S. Open champion made bogey on No. 16 and double bogey on 17. In a span about about 90 minutes, DeChambeau went from first place to tied for eighth and six shots behind leader Scottie Scheffler with a round left. While DeChambeau struggled down the stretch, Scheffler seized the moment. The world's No. 1 player played the final five holes in 5 under to take command of the tournament at 11-under 202. Scheffler led by three shots over Alex Noren. DeChambeau's decline started on the par-4 16th hole, the same hole that Rory McIlroy, Xander Schauffele and Scheffler all double-bogeyed Thursday. He missed a makeable par putt, taking his first bogey of the day. Then he found the water on the par-3 17th, forcing him to take a stroke and drop. The LIV Golf player finished with a 5, sending him spiraling down the leaderboard. "I hit a great 9-iron exactly the way I wanted to. The wind just pumped it. Nothing I can do," DeChambeau said. "Wind flipped from being neutral off the right and it just was almost straight in. We misjudged that, considering on (hole) 16 we thought it was playing almost a little downwind." On the 18th, DeChambeau again misjudged the wind and left his approach shot from the fairway bunker short of the flag. He had to settle for par. "The wind cost me three shots — and that's what happens here at Quail Hollow," DeChambeau said. It was a tough break considering he had played the first 15 holes so masterfully in 5-under par and was looking at one of his best rounds at a major. "That's why golf is the worst four-letter word in the world," he said. DeChambeau said he wouldn't change anything about he played his round. "I can't complain too much," said DeChambeau, who shot 2-under 69. "You can always ask for more. You can always try to be a little greedier out there." DeChambeau has been in the mix on the final day in three of his last four majors. He won the U.S. Open last summer at Pinehurst and briefly led on the final day at the Masters before shooting 3-over-par 75 and losing to McIlroy. A 6-shot deficit to Scheffler might seem insurmountable, but DeChambeau said he won't go down without a fight. "I'm behind the 8-ball now. I've got to get my guns a-blazing tomorrow," DeChambeau said. "All I can do is control what I can control and if I go out and shoot 6-, 7-under, that's what I'm focused on doing. Not that that's what's going to do it, but you never know. But I'm going to shoot as low as I possibly can." ___ AP golf:https://apnews.com/hub/golf

DeChambeau collapses on Green Mile, falling from 1st to tie for 8th at PGA Championship

DeChambeau collapses on Green Mile, falling from 1st to tie for 8th at PGA Championship CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) — For a brief minute, it seemed...
Hall of Famers Bob Baffert and D. Wayne Lukas watch horses get troubled trips in the PreaknessNew Foto - Hall of Famers Bob Baffert and D. Wayne Lukas watch horses get troubled trips in the Preakness

AP Sports Writer (AP) — Hall of Fame trainers Bob Baffert and D. Wayne Lukas saw their horses endure some troubled trips Saturday in the150th running of the Preakness Stakes. Baffert's Goal Oriented finished fourth after bumping withwinner Journalismdown the stretch. A stewards inquiry was briefly posted to take a look at the contact, and then it was removed with no changes. American Promise was eighth in a field of nine after going through similar struggles two weeks earlier in the Kentucky Derby led to finishing 16th. Baffert and Lukas, who have combined to win the second leg of the Triple Crown, each lamented not getting what they hoped for from their colts in the Preakness. "He didn't get to run his race," Baffert said. "I wanted to see him on the lead, Maybe he would have stopped, I don't know. He is lightly raced. He ran well, but he is still green. He was not used to being behind horses and he got intimidated." American Promise's jockey, Maryland native Nik Juarez, said the horse "just didn't have it." "When he got bumped and roughed up a little bit, he kind of threw his head and quit on us," Lukas said. "I didn't like the way he responded. ... I just think that attitude-wise, we've got to change it a little bit." Gosger surprises Irish trainer Brendan Walsh's Gosger went off at odds of 15-1, third-longest in the Preakness. He also was poised to pulled a big upset if not forJournalism's remarkable runfrom the middle of the pack to the finish line. "I thought we were home when he opened up," Walsh said. "I'm disappointed not to win it, but I'm not disappointed in the horse. He ran a great race. He is an improving horse and he will improve off this." Jockey Luis Saez said they "had no excuses" and hopes Gosger will learn from the experience. "Luis said at the end he just got a little bit lackadaisical, and he was out on his own maybe a little too long and the other horse came by and flew by him," Walsh said. "Maybe we will get our turn the next time." Malcolm celebrates the 'Middle' NBC Sports' leadup to the race included an introduction from actor Frankie Muniz, known for his childhood role on the show "Malcolm in the Middle." Muniz espoused the virtues of the Preakness as the middle jewel of horse racing's Triple Crown, which for the fifth time in seven years went off without a shot at a Triple Crown for various reasons. "People don't talk about the middle enough," Muniz said, bringing up middle seats on planes, the middle ages and how nobody wants to peak in middle school. "When you're in the middle, you've got to fight for attention." The attention was on Pimlico Race Course, hosting the Preakness for a final time before the structure that opened in 1870is demolished and rebuilt. "Beginnings and endings get all the credit, but life happens in the middle on a journey from here to there," Muniz said. "That's where you prove what you're really made of. On a day like today, at this ancient racetrack all dressed up one more time, there's absolutely no place better to be than the middle." ___ AP horse racing:https://apnews.com/hub/horse-racing

Hall of Famers Bob Baffert and D. Wayne Lukas watch horses get troubled trips in the Preakness

Hall of Famers Bob Baffert and D. Wayne Lukas watch horses get troubled trips in the Preakness AP Sports Writer (AP) — Hall of Fame trainers...

 

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