Trainer Rick Dutrow Jr., seen with Big Brown in April, has been pointing the finger at jockey Kent Desormeaux in the wake of the horse's surprising flop at the Belmont Stakes. (Ed Reinke/Associated Press)Trainer Rick Dutrow Jr. still blames Kent Desormeaux for Big Brown's stunning last-place finish in the Belmont Stakes Saturday but says he wouldn't object to the jockey riding the horse in his next race.
The decision to change jockeys is up to co-owner Michael Lavarone, Dutrow said.
"I don't want to hurt anyone, especially Kent," Dutrow told the Associated Press on Tuesday morning. "But I still don't understand what happened. I don't see the horse with a problem, so I have to direct my attention toward the ride. That's all I can come up with."
With Big Brown trying to become the first U.S. thoroughbred-racing Triple Crown champion in 30 years after dominant wins in the Kentucky Derby and Preakness, Desormeaux eased up the unbeaten colt with a quarter-mile remaining in the Belmont on Saturday.
"I had no horse. He was empty," Desormeaux said after the race.
Dutrow on Monday questioned why Desormeaux pulled the reins in the race, which was won by 38-1 long shot Da' Tara.
Desormeaux has five Triple Crown wins but has yet to ride a Belmont winner.
Dutrow insisted Tuesday he had found nothing wrong with Big Brown.
"Maybe next week if something starts going wrong with the horse, then I'll understand everything," he said.
"As long as the horse stays the way that I see him right now, then things are just going to keep building up for me to know that it was the ride that did him in."
He said he hadn't spoken to Desormeaux,
"If he calls me, I'll talk to him, sure," Dutrow said.
If Big Brown is healthy, the plan is for him to run next in the Travers Stakes on Aug. 23 at Saratoga, N.Y.
Dutrow said he had no regrets about his bombastic proclamation that Big Brown clinching the Triple Crown was a "foregone conclusion."
"It's not like I'm going to go and cry in the corner," he said as he prepared for several of his horses to run Wednesday. "I've got plenty to do here."
