

| Corona de Oro — 2026 Preakness Stakes Profile | |
|---|---|
| Horse | Corona de Oro |
| Sire | Bolt d'Oro |
| Owner | On Our Own Stable LLC, Commonwealth Stable, U Racing Stables LLC, Saints or Sinners, Titletown Racing LLC, Jim Nichols, Edwin S. Barker, Daniel Rivers, John Haines, and Dallas Stewart |
| Trainer | Dallas Stewart |
| Jockey | J. Velázquez |
| Post Position | 11 |
| Morning Line Odds | 30-1 |
| Running Style | Pacesetter / Frontrunner |
| Top Speed Figure | 118 (HRN) |
| Race | 151st Preakness Stakes, Laurel Park |
| Distance | 1 3/16 Miles (Dirt) |
| Previous Start | 3rd. 2026 Lexington (G3), Keeneland |
For the complete field and current Preakness Stakes odds, cross-reference official entries at BUSR, where you can pull full past performances and official scratches as they come in through race day.
Corona de Oro is one of the most misread horses in the 2026 Preakness field. The 30-1 morning line suggests a longshot, but the raw numbers tell a more complicated story. This Bolt d'Oro colt, trained by Dallas Stewart, posted a 118 speed figure, winning the Fair Grounds MSW in March — a number that ranks among the highest in this entire field. He followed that with a 110 in the Lexington (G3) at Keeneland, finishing third behind Trendsetter. John Velázquez takes the mount from post 11 at 30-1. When a Hall of Fame jockey books a 30-1 shot in a Grade I, the number deserves a second look before you dismiss it.
The honest concern is the gap in his past performances — he did not race from November 2025 through early March 2026, a layoff that raises conditioning questions for a horse now being asked to run a Grade I at 1 3/16 miles. Dallas Stewart has wins at Churchill Downs, Fair Grounds, and Keeneland with this horse, showing genuine multi-track versatility on dirt. But the 30-1 is reflecting real questions about whether his Fair Grounds form translates to a deeper Preakness field. Let's break down what you actually need to know before you build your Preakness Stakes betting ticket around Corona de Oro.
| Date | Track | Race Type | Distance | Surface | Finish | 1st Place (Fig) | 2nd Place | 3rd Place | Time |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 4/11/26 | KEE | G3 | 1 1/16M | Dirt-Fast | 3rd (110) | Trendsetter (114) | The Hell We Did (111) | Corona de Oro (110) | 1:44.51 |
| 3/7/26 | FG | MSW | 1 1/16M | Dirt-Fast | 1st (118) | Corona de Oro (118) | Cromwell (109) | King of Heat (108) | 1:42.8 |
| 1/24/26 | FG | MSW | 6F | Dirt-Fast | 2nd (129) | Noble Affair (130) | Corona de Oro (129) | Special Ops (113) | 1:09.84 |
| 10/16/25 | KEE | Msw | 7F | Dirt-Fast | 3rd (112) | Confessional (122) | Grand Slam Sam (117) | Corona de Oro (112) | 1:23.84 |
| 9/12/25 | CD | Msw | 6F | Dirt-Fast | 7th (77) | Cabourg (86) | Fuzzbuster (81) | Stable Hero (80) | 1:10.9 |
The number that makes Corona de Oro interesting at 30-1 is his 118 from the Fair Grounds MSW win on March 7. Look at this field — a 118 is elite. Trendsetter won the Lexington with a 114. Incredibolt won the Virginia Derby with a 111. Corona de Oro's 118 is one of the highest single-race figures posted by any horse in this Preakness field, and it came just two starts back. The market is pricing him at 30-1 because it was a maiden win, because his Lexington third was against a weaker field than the favorites have faced, and because post 11 as a frontrunner creates a complicated early trip. Those are legitimate concerns. But a 118 is a 118.
Post 11 is the real problem for a horse whose identity is controlling pace from the front. Velázquez will have to decide in the first hundred yards whether to push Corona de Oro aggressively toward the lead — burning early energy against Taj Mahal at post 1 and Chip Honcho at post 6 — or rate him off the pace in an unfamiliar position. Neither option is free. A frontrunner who gets pressed wide in the first turn rarely sustains his best effort into the stretch at 1 3/16 miles. But Velázquez has won Triple Crown races in worse situations. His booking at 30-1 is a signal the market may be overlooking.
Corona de Oro's pace scenario cuts both ways. As a frontrunner from post 11, he adds to the early speed pressure in a race that already has Taj Mahal at post 1 and Chip Honcho at post 6 wanting the lead. If three horses fight for the front through a genuinely hot first half mile, all three tire — and the closers in this field, Incredibolt, Iron Honor, and Talkin, come running. That is the bearish scenario for Corona de Oro. The bullish scenario is that Velázquez finds a clean position just off the pace, Corona de Oro gets cover through the first turn without burning energy, and his 118 raw talent carries him past tired rivals in the stretch.
The Lexington third is actually an encouraging result in context. He finished behind Trendsetter (114) and The Hell We Did (111) — both horses who are in this Preakness field — with a 110 figure on a day when he was likely still finding his best form after the layoff. If he improves off that effort, as Dallas Stewart clearly believes he will, the 30-1 becomes one of the most glaring overlays on the board. Check the Belmont Stakes betting guide if you are building a full Triple Crown ticket this spring.
Here is the practical breakdown for how sharp bettors should think about using Corona de Oro on a ticket at 30-1.
Win Single: Small play justified. A 118 speed figure, Velázquez in the irons, and a pace scenario that could set up in his favor make a small win single at 30-1 defensible for bettors who want an outsider with elite raw ability.
Exacta: Use Corona de Oro underneath your top win selection. At 30-1 in the second slot, the exacta payoff is substantial even at minimum investment.
Trifecta: Include Corona de Oro in third position across multiple combinations. His 118 raw speed figure and the Velázquez booking make him worth a trifecta third slot in a pace-collapse scenario.
Superfecta: Spread Corona de Oro across the third and fourth slots of your $0.10 superfecta. At 30-1 his presence in any part of the superfecta order delivers massive payout leverage at minimal cost. Check the full horse betting guide for structuring exotic tickets efficiently.
For multi-leg plays across the Triple Crown, visit the bet on Preakness Stakes page and the Triple Crown bonus page at US Racing.
GI @PreaknessStakes contender CORONA DE ORO (Bolt d’Oro) appeared to be quite pleased with himself following his training session Friday morning at Laurel Park.
Corona de Oro in Preakness Stakes
Post Position and Jockey: Corona de Oro is breaking from post position 11 and is ridden by Saez. "Corona de Oro (11)"
Corona de Oro opened at 30-1 on the morning line for the 151st Preakness Stakes at Laurel Park on May 16, 2026. He drew post position 11. The 30-1 undervalues his 118 speed figure from the Fair Grounds MSW win and the Velázquez booking — making him one of the more interesting overlays in the field.
Corona de Oro is trained by Dallas Stewart and ridden by John Velázquez from post 11 at Laurel Park. Velázquez is a Hall of Fame jockey with an extensive record in Triple Crown races — his presence on a 30-1 shot is a genuine positive signal.
Corona de Oro warrants a small win single at 30-1 given his raw speed figure and jockey booking. He also belongs in exacta, trifecta, and superfecta structures where his 30-1 price delivers significant payout leverage at minimal ticket cost. Visit the BC free bet page at US Racing for current promotions.


The writing team at US Racing is comprised of both full-time and part-time contributors with expertise in various aspects of the Sport of Kings.























