Sovereignty scratched from Breeders’ Cup - Kentucky Derby winner removed because of fever

October 30, 2025
Jockey Junior Alvarado reacts aboard Sovereignty (2), as he crosses the finish line ahead of Journalism (7), with jockey Umberto Rispoli up, to win the 157th running of the Belmont Stakes horse race on Saturday, June 7 in Saratoga Springs, New York.
Jockey Junior Alvarado reacts aboard Sovereignty (2), as he crosses the finish line ahead of Journalism (7), with jockey Umberto Rispoli up, to win the 157th running of the Belmont Stakes horse race on Saturday, June 7 in Saratoga Springs, New York.

DEL MAR, California:

Kentucky Derby and Belmont Stakes winner Sovereignty has been scratched and will not run in the Breeders' Cup Classic on Saturday after catching a fever this week, taking the favourite out of the $7 million world championship race.

The Breeders' Cup announced the scratch of the country's top three-year-old horse yesterday after trainer Bill Mott told the Daily Racing Form about the decision he and his camp made. Mott had previously said Sovereignty not racing was a possibility.

"It's not good for the race; it's not good for racing," said Hall of Fame jockey Jerry Bailey, who won the Classic five times.

"Any time you have a great horse that doesn't run when planned, it's disappointing. But the horse is going to be fine. It was a fever. Just the timing is terrible."

Sovereignty opened as a heavy 6-5 morning line favourite in the field of 10, which also includes Derby and Belmont runner-up and Preakness winner Journalism. The Breeders' Cup Classic was expected to determine the Horse of the Year.

The adjusted odds made Fierceness the new favourite at 5-2. Fellow 4-year-olds Forever Young and Sierra Leone, the reigning Breeders' Cup Classic champ, are 7-2, while Journalism is 5-1.

"It doesn't change the complexion of the race at all - not at all," said Bailey, now an analyst for NBC Sports. "There are so many other marquee horses in there.

"Yes, it lessens the race without a horse of his calibre in it, but it's still a fantastic race and it doesn't change the way the race will be run, I don't think, in any way."

Mott and ownership have made it clear over the past several months that they would play it safe with Sovereignty, including the call to skip the Preakness after he won the Derby and looked like a legitimate Triple Crown candidate.

"That's been Bill Mott's nature all along," Bailey said. "It's always about the horse first, and if everything's not 100 per cent, then he's not going to carry on, so that's not a surprise."

-AP

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