It's the 134 running of the $1 million Preakness Stakes, the middle jewel of the Triple Crown. Three year old Preakness Stakes Contenders, will run the one and 3/16th mile track at Pimlico in Baltimore, Maryland. In the U.S., all the action takes place on Saturday, May 16, 2009. More Preakness Stakes horse betting information
Preakness -- What's In A Name?

It all started with the Minisi, a northern New
Jersey tribe of Native Americans. They called their area Pra-qua-les, meaning
quail woods. After a series of spellings the name eventually evolved into
Preakness.
One of its variations was Preckiness, used by
General George Washington to describe the area where his troops were quartered
in the winter of 1776-77. Nearly a century later, Milton H. Sanford, a
thoroughbred owner, became attracted to the name. He called his farms, one in
New Jersey and another in Kentucky, Preakness. His Jersey farm was located in
the Indians' "quail woods." Today, there remains a Preakness, N.J. When he
bought a yearling sired by Lexington and foaled by Bay Leaf from A. J.
Alexander, he named the colt (bred in Kentucky at Woodburn Farm) Preakness,
unaware that he was contributing to turf immortality. Preakness, the eighth foal
of Bay Leaf, cost Sanford $2,000. It was Preakness who turned up as a 3-year-old
for his debut in the Dinner Party Stakes at Pimlico's inaugural in 1870. He was
derided as a "cart horse" for his ungainly appearance, but won that first stakes
at Old Hilltop, which became a history-producing victory. In his triumph,
Preakness was ridden by English jockey Billy Hayward, who supplied the name for
one of Pimlico's present adjoining streets. It was the colt's only start in 1870
but he left a lasting impression at Pimlico. Three years later, the Maryland
Jockey Club honored him by calling its newest stakes race "Preakness". The
Dinner Party Stakes eventually became the present-day Dixie Handicap. Preakness
continued to race through his eight-year-old season in America. He won the
Baltimore Cup, carrying 131 pounds at age eight and also finished in a deadheat
with Springbok in the 1875 Saratoga Cup at 2-1/4 miles. Later that year, Sanford
sent Preakness to England. He became one of the first American horses to be
given genuine recognition by the British. Eventually the Duke of Hamilton
purchased Preakness from Sanford for breeding.