

Todd Pletcher got the news mid-flight. His wife relayed it from the post draw: Renegade, the 4-1 morning-line favorite for the 2026 Kentucky Derby, pulled Post 1. The rail. The same pill that has been swallowed 39 consecutive attempts without a winner since Ferdinand walked into the Churchill Downs winner's circle back in 1986. Forty years of nothing from the inside. That is not a coincidence. That is a structural problem, and if you are building a ticket for the first Saturday in May, you need to understand exactly what you are dealing with before you put real money on the chalk.
This is a full breakdown of the post-1 data, what the pace scenario looks like for Renegade, where the real value sits in the 2026 field, and how to build exotic tickets that give you winning coverage without betting blind into a four-decade drought. For a complete look at how every horse on the Road to the Roses arrived at Churchill Downs, check the full trail breakdown at US Racing.
| 2026 Kentucky Derby Odds and Post Positions | ||
| PP | Horse / Jockey / Trainer | Fractional |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | RenegadeI. Ortiz Jr. · T. Pletcher | 4/1 |
| 2 | AlbusM. Franco · R. Mott | 30/1 |
| 3 | IntrepidoH. Berrios · J. Mullins | 50/1 |
| 4 | Litmus TestM. García · B. Baffert | 30/1 |
| 5 | Right to PartyC. Elliot · K. McPeek | 30/1 |
| 6 | CommandmentL. Saez · B. Cox | 6/1 |
| 7 | Danon BourbonA. Nishimura · M. Ikezoe | 20/1 |
| 8 | So HappyM. Smith · M. Glatt | 15/1 |
| 9 | The PumaJ. Castellano · G. Delgado | 10/1 |
| 10 | Wonder DeanR. Sakai · D. Takayanagi | 30/1 |
| 11 | IncrediboltJ. Torres · R. Mott | 20/1 |
| 12 | Chief WallabeeJ. Alvarado · B. Mott | 8/1 |
| SCR | Silent TacticC. Torres · M. Casse | 20/1 |
| 14 | PotenteJ. Hernández · B. Baffert | 20/1 |
| 15 | Emerging MarketF. Prat · C. Brown | 15/1 |
| 16 | PavlovianE. Maldonado · D. O'Neill | 30/1 |
| 17 | Six SpeedB. Hernández Jr. · B. Seemar | 50/1 |
| 18 | Further AdoJ. Velazquez · B. Cox | 6/1 |
| 19 | Golden TempoJ. Ortiz · C. DeVaux | 30/1 |
| SCR | FulleffortT. Gaffalione · B. Cox | 20/1 |
| 21 | Great WhiteA. Achard · J. Eniis | 50/1 |
| 22 | OcelliJ. Ramos · W. Beckman | 50/1 |
Last Updated on 04/30/2026
Start with the number that matters most. Post 1 has gone zero for thirty-nine in the Kentucky Derby since Ferdinand won in 1986. That is not a small sample. Thirty-nine starts is a meaningful dataset, and the failure rate is not driven by a lack of quality horses. Good horses have broken from the rail in the Derby. They have lost anyway. The geometry of Churchill Downs' first turn in a 20-horse field is the core problem.
When 20 horses leave the gate simultaneously on a mile and a quarter oval, the horse on the inside rail faces a binary and ugly choice. He either breaks sharply and fights for the lead, burning energy he needs in the stretch, or he gets shuffled back through a moving wall of flanks and hooves while every horse to his outside angles for position. Neither scenario is kind. The tighter the turn, the worse the compression. Churchill's first turn, especially with a full field, is among the most punishing pieces of real estate in American horse racing.
Pletcher knows this as well as anyone alive. This is the third time in six years a Pletcher colt has drawn the inside post in the Derby. Known Agenda ran into trouble in 2021 from Post 1. Mo Donegal had similar issues in 2022. The trainer is not walking into this blind, but knowing the problem and solving it are two different things. Irad Ortiz Jr. is one of the best riders in the country, and if anyone can manufacture a clean trip from the rail, it is him. The question is whether Ortiz can neutralize a 40-year structural disadvantage in a single race. At 4-1, the market is not paying you nearly enough to find out.
You can follow every step of the qualifying trail on the Bet on Road to the Roses page and cross-reference each horse's qualifying points to understand how the field was constructed before placing your first dollar.
Renegade's running style adds a layer of nuance that the rail-curse conversation sometimes glosses over. He is a deep closer, not a speed horse. That matters because the contrarian argument you will hear at the rail and across Reddit threads right now is that a closer from Post 1 can actually save ground by settling near the back of the pack early, then swinging out into clear running in the far turn. The logic is sound in theory. Irad Ortiz Jr. has executed that exact trip before.
The problem is execution in a 20-horse field on a track with a compression choke point in the first turn. A deep closer from the rail does not get cleanly shuffled back. He gets sandwiched. The horses to his outside are angling in as the field straightens out after the first turn. The horse on the rail either takes dirt from the entire field for six furlongs or makes an extraordinarily wide move that costs him ground he cannot get back. The pace scenario for this particular Derby favors horses who can sit third to fifth from a mid-gate post and pounce at the top of the stretch.
That description fits The Puma from Post 9 and Commandment to a tee. Both have the tactical speed to sit in a comfortable stalking position without burning reserves. Both are being slightly overlooked because the public is fixated on whether Renegade can defy history. That fixation is creating real overlay value in the mid-gate horses, which is exactly where sharp money should be living on this ticket.
For more context on how race geometry and pace flow have shaped outcomes along the Triple Crown trail this season, US Racing has the full series breakdown.
The best pure win-bet value in this field is Further Ado at 6-1 from Post 18. That 106 Beyer Speed Figure from the Blue Grass Stakes is the highest number in the field. The outside post in a 20-horse Derby is not ideal, but it is infinitely more manageable than the rail. Further Ado does not need to save ground. He needs clean air and a pace to run into, and this Derby will almost certainly provide both. Sharp bettors on Reddit have been zeroing in on that Beyer number all week, and the community consensus is that 6-1 is still fair value or better before serious money moves in.
Chief Wallabee drew Post 12, which looks appealing on the surface, but his placings have been regressing in his last two efforts, and the pace he wants is unlikely to set up in his favor here. Cross him off your win list, but consider him as a deep trifecta/superfecta inclusion if you want to spread wide.
The core philosophy here is simple. You are not fading, Renegade, completely. You are fading him at 4-1 from the worst post in the history of this race. There is a meaningful difference. He belongs underneath on your ticket. He does not belong as your single on top at a price that does not compensate for the structural disadvantage he is carrying to the gate.
Keep an eye on the Race of the Week page at US Racing for updated analysis and the Triple Crown bonus offer that gives bettors added upside if a horse sweeps all three legs this spring.
The conversation across X and Reddit this week has been almost entirely consumed by the Post 1 draw, and the tone is consistent: sharp bettors are not fading Renegade outright; they are fading him on top at 4-1. The structural argument against the rail in a 20-horse field has cut through, even among casual fans who do not normally dig into post-position data.
Renegade and Commandment are the horses every bettor needs to know for 2026 #KentuckyDerby betting. Fade Chief Wallabee — his placements are regressing. Full value play breakdown live now. #KYDerby #RunForTheRoses
After the draw swing over to Reddit for James Scully's very first AMA — lively discussion about contenders and what their new post positions mean for their odds in winning Kentucky Derby 2026! #KentuckyDerby #PostPositionDraw
Kentucky Derby 2026 Post Position AMA with Expert Handicapper James Scully — Post Draw Winners and Losers
After the draw, James Scullyhosted a Reddit AMA breaking down what each post position means for the updated 2026 Kentucky Derby odds, with lively discussion on Renegade's rail draw and Further Ado's value at 6-1.
Renegade Rail Curse — Is 4-1 Even Worth It From Post 1?
Sharp bettors on Reddit are zeroing in on Further Ado's 106 Beyer Speed Figure from the Blue Grass Stakes as the strongest statistical case in the field, debating whether 6-1 is fair value or still an overlay before the money moves.
Follow the live conversation on X and Reddit as the picture sharpens heading into race day.
No. The last horse to win the Kentucky Derby from Post 1 was Ferdinand in 1986. In the 39 runnings since, the rail has been shut out completely, making it the single most statistically cursed post in the race. The historical data available at Equibase confirms the full picture of this drought across every Derby field in that span.
Churchill Downs' first turn geometry in a 20-horse field forces the rail horse into a tight, traffic-heavy spot immediately after the break. The horse either burns early energy fighting for position up front, or gets shuffled back through a moving wall of horses cutting in from the outside. Both outcomes damage a horse's finishing chance at the end of a mile and a quarter. That compression is why the inside post in a full Derby field is a structural disadvantage, not just a statistical quirk.
Most sharp bettors are using Renegade underneath in exactas, trifectas, and superfectas rather than straight win bets. A trifecta wheel using Further Ado and The Puma on top, with Renegade and Commandment filling the second and third slots, gives you coverage across the most likely scenarios without overexposing your bankroll to a 4-1 shot breaking from the most historically cursed post in the race. Keep your straight win bet on Further Ado and let the exotics handle the Renegade scenarios.


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.























