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Jones takes final shot at Kentucky glory

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Larry Jones exchanged his cowboy hat for a helmet and then tightened the girth on Friesan Fire. The rain restrained itself, although heavy, dark clouds hung so low in the sky the treetops seemed a threat to puncture them like so many pinatas. Any moment now, as the trainer prepared to gallop Friesan Fire, Walter Brennan was due to shuffle around the corner of the barn and exclaim something about the glimmer in the colt's eye and the look of a champion and, by golly, every day is a great day for racing.

It's that kind of story, very Hollywood-ish. After sending out the runner-up in each of the last two Kentucky Derbies, Jones has one more chance to win the most famous horse race in America, if not the world. And he just might. Friesan Fire is among a handful of horses that have a genuine chance to win today. And if he does, his victory will be a happy ending that's rife with poetic justice.

Last year, Eight Belles' tragic breakdown put Jones in the vortex of controversy. People who mistakenly thought fingers are for pointing found him an easy target because he didn't run or hide or train incognito. He endured it all with gentlemanly poise.

Two years ago, after Hard Spun worked five furlongs in 57.60 seconds on the Monday before the Kentucky Derby, all the armchair trainers who never roll out of bed before sunrise and all the "experts" who confuse mathematics with sport said the colt went too fast and would be a monumental flop on Saturday. This farm boy from Hopkinsville, Ky., doesn't know how to train top racehorses, they said.

And, of course, Hard Spun finished second in the Kentucky Derby.

And so when Friesan Fire worked five furlongs here at Churchill Downs in 57.80 on Monday, the armchair trainers and "experts" remained quiet. It has taken a while, but they finally concede that the farm boy from Hopkinsville is a true horseman. And he has one more chance to win the Derby, for Jones has announced his retirement.

Close to 6 feet tall, Jones often gallops the horses he trains, and this week galloped Friesan Fire, who hasn't raced since winning the Louisiana Derby over a sloppy track seven weeks ago.

"When somebody questions the seven-week layoff," said Cindy Jones, while her husband was on the Churchill track, "they need to take a look at Larry."

In other words, with Jones galloping them, the horses get plenty of work.

For the last four years, Jones has missed Christmas with his grandchildren. That's why at the end of the year he'll retire at 53, he said: to get out of the "24-hour-seven-days-a-week grind."

And that's why it would be Hollywoodish and richly appropriate if this farm boy from Hopkinsville, who has been second in consecutive years and who had the early favorite this year, were to win the Kentucky Derby.

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