Here’s betting on Mendelssohn to end Curse of the European Shipper

Legendary oddsmaker Roxy Roxborough once told me that the difference between betting on the Kentucky Derby in Louisville instead of Las Vegas is this: “After you lose in Vegas, you can walk over and bet a baseball game.”

Wynn race book director John Avello posts the earliest Derby future book in Las Vegas, opening it in September. When I asked him about his exposure to the 20-horse field, he said: “I’m overexposed on all of them.”

Then he told me how a gambler convinced him to give him 300-1 on a horse he had never heard of. That horse’s name? Justify. All he is now is the favorite to win Saturday’s Derby.

Derby betting attracts everyone, not just horseplayers. Gaughan Gaming’s Vinny Magliulo says the three biggest betting days in Las Vegas are the Super Bowl, the first week of the NFL season and the Kentucky Derby.

I am calling this the year of the curse. There are two big ones in play. The Curse of Apollo works against Justify as well as Magnum Moon. No horse since Apollo in 1882 has won the Derby without racing as a 2-year-old.

The second hurdle is the Curse of the European Shipper. Not one has come across the pond and won the Derby. Three losers that come to mind are Arazi, Johannesburg and the one that buried me a year ago, Thunder Snow.

But Thunder Snow has proven to be an outstanding horse, and I’m going to write off his bucking-bronco episode of 2017 to a sloppy track and being tucked near the inside of a 20-horse cavalry charge.

I am going against that curse this year and backing European-trained Mendelssohn. He has been aimed at the Kentucky Derby since he was born 80 miles from Louisville. He was purchased as a yearling in Keeneland for $3 million by the Irish giant Coolmore.

Mendelssohn is the richest horse in the Derby by any measure — either by his sale price or the $1.9 million he has earned. But that isn’t the reason I am targeting him as my key horse.

His trainer is Aidan O’Brien, who a year ago won a record 28 Grade/Group 1 stakes. He never has won a Kentucky Derby, so he will be trying hard to change that. And jockey Ryan Moore is one of the best, even though he hasn’t won the Derby.

Mendelssohn has won on three continents, including in North America last year in the Breeders’ Cup Juvenile Turf at Del Mar. O’Brien then eased him onto the dirt, at which he won the Patton Stakes on an artificial surface March 9 in Ireland.

Mendelssohn then went to the dirt for the first time and blew away the field by 18 lengths in the UAE Derby in Dubai. That race was 1 3/16 miles, half a furlong short of the Derby distance of 1¼ miles. None of the other 19 horses has raced that far.

As for Justify and the curse of Apollo, 61 horses have tried since 1944 to win the Run for the Roses without racing at age 2. Only eight have finished in the money, including Battle Of Midway last year. Bob Baffert will try it with Justify, but he also tried with Bodemeister, finishing second to I’ll Have Another in 2012.

I’m going to bet Mendelssohn at $50 across the board. But I’m going to come back and make it an even $200, because I want $25 to win and show on Bolt d’Oro. I cannot pass up a horse trying to become only the second Montana-bred to win the Derby. The first was Spokane in 1889.

Come to think of it, maybe there’s a third curse. If Mendelssohn doesn’t come through, maybe Bolt can beat the Big Sky Jinx.

More betting: Follow all of our sports betting coverage online at reviewjournal.com/betting and @RJ_Sports on Twitter.

Brent Musburger’s betting column appears Saturday in the Las Vegas Review-Journal. His show on the Vegas Stats & Information Network can be heard on SiriusXM 204 and livestreamed at reviewjournal.com/vegas-stats-information-network.

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