When the gates open at Pimlico on Saturday, Iron Honor will break from post 9 as the 9-2 morning-line favorite in the 2026 Preakness Stakes. For first-time horse racing bettors, that single piece of information carries more weight than it might seem. The morning-line favorite wins the Preakness roughly 49 percent of the time — basically a coin flip in your favor before you even look at the horse. And when you actually look at Iron Honor, the case gets stronger.
Horse racing can feel intimidating for new bettors. Fourteen horses, a dozen storylines, and odds that bounce all week. The easiest anchor in a race like this is the morning-line favorite — the horse the track’s own oddsmaker identified as most likely to win before a single dollar was wagered. At the Preakness specifically, favorites hit at a rate that would make any sports bettor take notice. Nearly half of all Preakness winners have come from the favorite’s spot, which means you are not fighting the odds when you bet the chalk here. You are going with them.
Iron Honor is not the favorite because a few sharp bettors decided to load up on one horse. He is the favorite because trainer Chad Brown, one of the most decorated horsemen in the country, has set him up perfectly for this race — and because Brown has done exactly this before.
Chad Brown has won five Eclipse Awards as the nation’s top trainer. He is as good at this job as anyone alive. More importantly for Iron Honor backers, Brown has a specific and proven path to winning the Preakness: skip the Kentucky Derby, target Pimlico fresh.
In 2017, Cloud Computing went to the Wood Memorial and then bypassed the Kentucky Derby entirely. He won the Preakness. In 2022, Early Voting followed the exact same script — Wood Memorial, skip the Derby, win the Preakness. Iron Honor just ran the Wood Memorial in April, finished seventh after getting bumped hard going into the first turn, and is now pointing straight to Pimlico without a Derby detour.
This is not a coincidence. Brown knows how to freshen a horse, manage his energy, and land him on the Preakness ready to run his best race. If you are betting this race and you see Chad Brown doing the same thing for the third time, you do not look away from that.
After the Wood Memorial, Brown made two adjustments that signal genuine belief in Iron Honor’s ceiling. He removed the blinkers — equipment worn around the horse’s eyes to limit peripheral vision and keep focus — and he named Flavien Prat as the new jockey for the first time.
Removing blinkers is a statement. It tells you Brown thinks the horse has matured mentally, that he can handle the chaos of a big field without the aid of equipment. Some trainers add blinkers to solve a problem. Removing them for a race this important says the problem has been solved.
Prat is one of the best jockeys in the country, with Grade 1 wins across the board. Getting a top-tier rider for your most important race is not a move a trainer makes unless he truly believes the horse can compete at the highest level.
Brown also addressed the post draw directly after Iron Honor landed in post 9, right in the middle of the 14-horse field. His exact words: “Right in the middle, we should not have any excuse from there.” That kind of confidence from a trainer who has already won this race twice with this same setup is not idle chatter. Brown likes where he is.
The 2026 Preakness field has several horses worth respecting, and bettors should understand what they are up against before placing a wager.
Taj Mahal (5-1) is undefeated in three starts and draws attention as a fellow Nyquist offspring, but all three of those wins came at Laurel Park — a significant step up in class comes into question. Chip Honcho (5-1) also skipped the Derby and looked impressive in the Risen Star, winning by five and a half lengths over Golden Tempo. He is legitimate. Incredibolt (5-1) finished sixth in the Kentucky Derby with a troubled trip and has shown he can compete in Grade 1 company. Napoleon Solo (8-1) won the 2025 Champagne Stakes as a juvenile and is a serious long-term prospect.
None of these horses, though, come with the trainer pedigree, the specific Preakness blueprint, or the calculated preparation that Iron Honor carries. Brown has not stumbled into this spot twice by accident. He understands exactly what it takes to win at Pimlico in May.
If you are new to betting on horse racing and you want to put money on the Preakness, platforms like FanDuel and DraftKings both offer horse racing wagering, often with new-user bonuses that can give you extra value on a race like this.
Iron Honor at 9-2 is not a longshot play. You are not hunting for a miracle. At those odds, you are getting nearly five dollars back for every dollar you risk on a horse trained by a two-time Preakness winner who has followed this exact path twice before and won both times. A son of Nyquist — himself a Kentucky Derby winner — with a freshened-up preparation, top jockey, blinkers removed, and post position his trainer is publicly happy about.
Preakness favorites hit close to half the time. Iron Honor is the favorite for every right reason. That is about as clean a betting case as the second leg of the Triple Crown gets.
Prediction markets are pricing Detroit and Colorado as heavy favorites on a big playoff Wednesday,…
DraftKings launched Combos for its Predictions platform, letting users bundle up to six event contracts…
Sen. Adam Schiff escalated the prediction markets fight at a Brookings event this week, accusing…
Michigan's state Senate stripped Gov. Whitmer's proposed per-wager sports betting fee and casino tax hikes…
A Kentucky class action suit filed in federal court on May 11 claims Kalshi's sports…
Connecticut lawmakers passed HB5229 with near-unanimous bipartisan support, sending sweeping sports betting and online gambling…
This website uses cookies.