Ageless wins The Very One in May 2014 at Pimlico. Photo by Jim McCue, Maryland Jockey Club.

Ageless wins The Very One in May 2014 at Pimlico. Photo by Jim McCue, Maryland Jockey Club.

From a Maryland Jockey Club release

Lael Stables’ Divining Rod, a three-length winner of the Lexington (G3) April 11 at Keeneland, is being pointed to the $1.5 million Preakness (G1), the second jewel of the Triple Crown May 16 at Pimlico Race Course.

It would be the first Preakness starter for trainer Arnaud Delacour, who is gearing up for his return to the Fair Hill Training Center in Elkton, Md. after spending the winter in Florida.

“Yes, I’m thinking of the Preakness,” Delacour said. “The timing seems right. It’s five weeks after the Lexington. We had the Preakness in mind before we entered in the Lexington, hoping he would step up to that caliber of horses. His win in the Lexington was very encouraging.”

A sophomore son of Grade 1 winner Tapit, Divining Rod was beaten a neck in the Sam F. Davis (G3) Jan. 31 and ran a troubled third in the Tampa Bay Derby (G2) March 7 before his breakthrough victory at Keeneland. Under jockey Julien Leparoux, he tracked the early pace before swinging outside and finishing full of run in 1:43.29 for 1 1/16 miles.

“I was very pleased because he really did it the right way,” Delacour said. “He took back a little bit, just relaxed there and came with a big run in the stretch, so that was pretty exciting. He came back very well from it.”

Ageless Likely to Defend Title in The Very One

The $100,000 The Very One is a likely landing spot for Divining Rod’s stablemate Ageless, a 6-year-old mare also owned by Lael Stables. The five-furlong turf sprint is one of seven stakes on the Preakness undercard.

Ageless captured last year’s The Very One by three-quarters of a length as the favorite in 58.91 seconds, parlaying her victory into a half-length triumph in the Royal North (G3) at Woodbine in her subsequent start. She capped the year finishing fourth by less than a length in the Breeders’ Cup Turf Sprint (G1) at odds of 36-1.

“The program for fillies sprinting on the turf is limited. It is a good program, but it’s pretty much the same races,” Delacour said. “At the moment, I am thinking about The Very One for her. Hopefully, we’ll be there on Preakness weekend.”

Ageless has been first, second or third in 15 of 18 lifetime starts with eight wins and nearly $490,000 in purse earnings. She was second in her 2015 debut, the 5 ½-furlong Giants Causeway at Keeneland on the Lexington Stakes program, coming 4 ½ months following the Breeders’ Cup.

“This filly is a very consistent filly. She always runs well, no matter what the outcome is,” Delacour said. “She is amazing. I wasn’t really afraid of the layoff because the last time we gave her a break, she won right off the layoff. I knew she could be ready for that kind of race.”