Swiss Skydiver Gets the Better of Authentic in Stirring Preakness Stretch Drive

Only five fillies had managed to take home the blanket of black-eyed susans in the previous 144 runnings of the GI Preakness S. and the last to do so was Hall of Famer Rachel Alexandra, who beat GI Kentucky Derby winner Mine That Bird by a length in the 2009 renewal. However, in 2020, a year of upsets and the unconventional, a filly took down the Derby winner yet again with Oaks runner-up Swiss Skydiver (Daredevil) getting the better of Derby hero Authentic (Into Mischief) in an epic stretch battle in this year’s Preakness. In addition to being the final leg of the Triple Crown, rather than the middle jewel, the Preakness was also a “Win and You’re In” for the GI Breeders’ Cup Classic.

Let go at 11-1, Swiss Skydiver was away in good order from post four and settled on the fence in a joint third with Art Collector (Bernardini)–who beat Swiss Skydiver in her first try against males in the GII Toyota Blue Grass S. in July–and Pneumatic (Uncle Mo). The trio ran just a length off the front-running Bob Baffert duo of Authentic and Thousand Words (Pioneerof Nile), a late scratch on Derby day after flipping over in the paddock, through a moderate first quarter in :24.48 and a half-mile in :47.65.

Thousand Words threw in the towel at that juncture, leaving Authentic exactly where he wanted to be, alone on the lead. That was Swiss Skydiver’s moment to strike. The chestnut filly took advantage of the opening on the rail left by Thousand Words, slipping through to challenge Authentic. She stuck her head in front as three-quarters went in 1:11.24 and turned for home with a half-length advantage. Swiss Skydiver and Authentic pulled well clear of the rest of the field in the lane, battling it out all the way to the wire in the grittiest of stretch duels. However, despite Authentic’s best efforts, Swiss Skydiver refused to yield to the Derby winner, determinedly fending off her foe all the way to the wire to make history by a neck.  It was 9 3/4 lengths back to 40-1 shot Jesus’ Team (Tapiture) in third and Art Collector was just a head behind him in fourth.

“I’m just proud of Robby [Albarado],” said trainer Ken McPeek, who was winning hiss first Preakness and second Triple Crown race, having saddled Sarava to a 70-1 upset in the 2002 GI Belmont S. We had to call him in at the last minute. He did a great job. I’m really proud of him, her, [owner] Peter Callahan. I wish he was here. This is just a real honor to be around a horse like this. This is a special moment.”

McPeek continued, “It was a genius move by Robby coming up the fence. He saw a hole and went right at it. It felt like she took him there. If he waited, she would take him there. I think she should have won the Oaks too. Maybe if we stay inside, we win that one too, but it is what it is. She’s just really neat to be around. Robby and I have had a great week. We’ve been getting on her, walking her together, eating breakfast, lunch and dinner together. This is a lifetime experience for both of us and we hope we’re back.”

When asked if he will take the free berth to the Classic or go back to running against females in the GI Breeders’ Cup Distaff, McPeek said, “We can look at both races, I suppose. We got in for the Distaff after the Alabama, but I would say right now we would probably lean towards the older fillies and mares. But nothing set in stone and we don’t have to make a decision today, I don’t think.”

The stretch duel was reminiscent of another Triple Crown battle of the sexes involving Albarado and Authentic’s pilot John Velazquez. In 2007, Velazquez was the one on the filly, piloting Rags to Riches to a narrow success over Preakness winners Albarado and Curlin in a thrilling battle at Big Sandy in the 2007 GI Belmont S. (video).

“I had an opportunity, a split second, to take advantage of the rail because Johnny [Velazquez on Authentic] was sitting off the fence there,” said Albarado. “I made a conscious decision on the backside. ‘It’s give or take now. Do I make that move now or do I wait to see if they come back to me?’ She’s been doing extremely well. Kenny’s been doing a great job. I’ve been around her all week. I figure she knows where she’s at, she’s in her surroundings. I said let me try and make this Jerry Bailey move and win.”

“We had a good start, no trouble at all,” said Velazquez of beaten 3-2 chalk Authentic. “In the first turn we got by Art Collector. By the backstretch, I tried to open up, but he just stood there and Swiss Skydiver came to him. I tried to get him rolling again, but he just stayed with that other horse from the half-mile pole to the wire.”

When asked his thoughts post-race, Baffert said, “I was hoping he was on the lead. We had to get the lead. He runs better on the lead. He likes to be out there running fast. But he got beat. He had the whole stretch to get by her. She ran a gallant race. He’s a free-running horse and likes to be on the lead. I saw he wasn’t on the lead and was struggling a little bit. That’s a good filly. He had every chance to get by her. He got beat. He just couldn’t get by her. She dug in. She’s tough.”

 

The Makings of a Champion…

Purchased by McPeek for just $35,000 at Keeneland September, Swiss Skydiver opened her account with a 5 1/2-length graduation in her seven-panel unveiling at Churchill Downs Nov. 16. A close second over a sloppy mile beneath the Twin Spires just two weeks later, she could only manage fifth in Tampa’ss Gasparilla S. Jan. 18 and was third to early divisional leader Finite (Munnings) in the GII Rachel Alexandra S. Feb. 15.

Swiss Skydiver had her coming out party so to speak in the Mar. 28 GII Gulfstream Park Oaks, which she won in dominant fashion at odds of 9-1. Victorious again in the May 1 GIII Fantasy S. at Oaklawn, the Peter Callaghan colorbearer went wire-to-wire for a four-length romp in the GII Santa Anita Oaks June 6. Trying males for the first time in the July 11 Blue Grass, she was bested only by Art Collector, finishing a gallant second and rebounded with a decisive score in the 10-furlong GI Alabama S. at Saratoga Aug. 15. Dispatched as the second choice to Gamine (Into Mischief) in the rescheduled Oaks Sept. 4, the chestnut made a three-wide bid, but could not quite catch GI Juddmonte Spinster S. contender Shedaresthedevil, finishing second.

Pedigree Notes:

Swiss Skydiver is one of four black-type winners and two Grade I/graded winners along with Shedaresthedevil for former WinStar stallion Daredevil, who was exported to Turkey in November. Her dam Expo Gold was purchased by Blue Chip Thoroughbreds for $15,000 at the CTBA January Mixed Sale. Her first foal Is It Gold (Indygo Shiner) is set to sell in foal to Nyquist as part of the South Point Sales consignment at the upcoming Keeneland November Sale. Expo Gold’s recent produce includes an unraced juvenile colt named Inspector General (Daredevil), who was purchased by Southern Racing for just $4,000 at KEESEP; and a yearling colt by Danzing Candy, who RNA’d for $145,000 at the recent Fasig-Tipton Selected Yearlings Showcase. The 12-year-old mare was barren when bred to Danzing Candy for 2020 and was bred to Catholic Boy this spring.

Post-Preakness Thoughts…

“I feel very excited and I’m proud of my team and their work with Jesus’ Team. He’s really improved every day. I am very sure that he is going to be a great horse in the United States. I’m very happy for the result in this race, the Preakness Stakes, one of the most important races for 3-year-olds in this amazing country.” –Jose D’Angelo, trainer of Jesus’ Team (third)

 

“I thought he ran fine. He didn’t break quite as sharp as we hoped he would and that kind of had us playing catch-up a little bit. He was kind of in tight and it wasn’t the best trip; it’s not the trip we were hoping for. But we’ve got no excuse. The winner ran huge and we had our shot to get to them and just couldn’t do it.” –Tom Drury, conditioner of Art Collector (fourth)

Saturday, Pimlico
PREAKNESS S.-GI, $1,000,000, Pimlico, 10-3, 3yo, 1 3/16m, 1:53.28, ft.
1–SWISS SKYDIVER, 123, f, 3, by Daredevil
                1st Dam: Expo Gold, by Johannesburg
                2nd Dam: Clouds of Gold, by Strike the Gold
                3rd Dam: Cloudy Colors, by Personal Flag
($35,000 Ylg ’18 KEESEP). O-Peter J. Callahan; B-WinStar Farm,
LLC (KY); T-Kenneth G. McPeek; J-Robby Albarado. $600,000.
Lifetime Record: 11-6-3-1, $1,792,980. *1/2 to Miss Hot Legs
(Verrazano), SP, $151,620. Werk Nick Rating: A. Click for the
   eNicks report & 5-cross pedigree.
2–Authentic, 126, c, 3, Into Mischief–Flawless, by Mr. Greeley.
($350,000 Ylg ’18 KEESEP). O-Spendthrift Farm LLC,
MyRaceHorse Stable, Madaket Stables LLC and Starlight
Racing; B-Peter E. Blum Thoroughbreds, LLC (KY); T-Bob
Baffert. $200,000.
3–Jesus’ Team, 126, c, 3, Tapiture–Golden Memories, by Suave.
($30,000 Ylg ’18 KEESEP). O-Grupo Seven C Stable; B-Pamela P.
Gartin (KY); T-Jose Francisco D’Angelo. $110,000.
Margins: NK, 9 3/4, HD. Odds: 11.70, 1.50, 40.90.
Also Ran: Art Collector, Max Player, Excession, Mr. Big News, Thousand Words, Ny Traffic, Pneumatic, Liveyourbeastlife. Click for the Equibase.com chart, the TJCIS.com PPs or the free Equineline.com catalogue-style pedigree. VIDEO, sponsored by Fasig-Tipton.

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Twinspires Triple Crown Throwdown: Preakness Stakes

Ed DeRosa of Brisnet.com takes on TDN’s Steve Sherack and Brian DiDonato as they handicap Triple Crown prep races plus the big three races themselves. The three will make $100 Win/Place bets in the preps and $200 Win/Place bets in the Kentucky Derby, Preakness and Belmont. Highest bankroll at the end wins.

DeRosa – Bankroll: $5480 – GI Kentucky Derby ResultMax Player rallied for fifth.

GI Preakness S. – I wanted to bet Art Collector in the Kentucky Derby, so why not in the Preakness against arguably a softer group with the defections of Tiz the Law and Honor A. P.? Art Collector would have been half the price as Authentic in the Derby, but now we get twice the price since Authentic won the race Art Collector wasn’t in. I’m not up on all that newfangled math my kids take, but I still know logic, and it’s telling me to bet my lungs on Art Collector. I don’t give a lot of wagering advice in this spot, but mine would be to save whatever it is you plan to bet across all the great racing this weekend and put it all on the nose of Art Collector. Best bet of the Triple Crown Throwdown series right here in the Preakness. Selection: #3 Art Collector (5-2).

Sherack – Bankroll: $4110 – GI Kentucky Derby Result Honor A. P. was up against it from the moment they sprung the latch and was along for fourth after an impossible trip.

GI Preakness S.Pneumatic finally posted the breakthrough victory I was waiting for in the TVG.com Pegasus S. at Monmouth, and if his subsequent training at Saratoga is any indication, he may have another leap forward coming here. He’s tactical enough to work out the right trip in a race that appears to have plenty of speed signed on as well. Selection: #10 Pneumatic (20-1). 

DiDonato – Bankroll: $5840 – GI Kentucky Derby Result Tiz the Law (+$340) settled for second best on the day. Not sure that’s his favorite track, and it’s tough to dance every dance even when the order and spacing are different.

GI Preakness S. – This seems like a good spot to take a chance with a longshot. Authentic’s last effort almost certainly wins this too, but it wouldn’t be surprising if he turned out to be a little bit over the top here. His pre-Derby worktab suggests he was 100% cranked for last time, and while his two breezes for this were fast, he’s not going to work out the same trip here. There’s plenty of other pace, which is part of the reason I’ll also oppose Art Collector, who I wasn’t totally sold on before his late Derby defection. He can win, but he’s another who’s probably not going to get the same perfect trip he’s enjoyed in recent outings. Max Player is the one I’ll try. His Derby run was sneaky good–he traveled on the dead rail for a good chunk of the race, and made a legitimate stretch run. One of these days he’s going to get the meltdown he needs. Maybe it’ll be Saturday. Selection: #8 Max Player (15-1).

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Preakness Notes: ‘Other Baffert’ Expected To Run Big, Swiss Skydiver ‘A Model Of Consistency’

Authentic, Thousand Words

While his Kentucky Derby (G1) winner Authentic is the program favorite for the 145th Preakness Stakes (G1) at Pimlico Saturday, Hall of Fame trainer Bob Baffert said his other starter should not be overlooked.

“Thousand Words has been very good here. I expect him to run a big race, too,” Baffert said Friday morning.

Thousand Words is a son of Baffert-trained Pioneerof the Nile, who sired Baffert-trained 2015 Triple Crown winner American Pharoah. He was scratched from the Derby after rearing and falling while being saddled in the paddock. A lackluster work on Sept. 19 put his Preakness status in question, but he stepped back into the picture for the Maryland classic with a sharp breeze while wearing blinkers on Sept. 26. He will be equipped with blinkers again in the Preakness after having competed without them in his last two races. Florent Geroux will ride the colt, who is 6-1 on the morning line, for the first time.

Purchased for $1 million as a yearling by Albaugh Family Stable LLC and Spendthrift Farm LLC, Thousand Words won his first three starts and was a prime member of Baffert's crew of Triple Crown prospects early this year. Even though he was being successful, Baffert said the colt was a bit behind the other members of his core group of top 3-year-olds: Authentic, Nadal and Charlatan.

“He was so immature mentally,” Baffert said. “It's started to catch up slowly with him. He's always been a bit of a slow learner, but he's getting with it now. He still has to fill out. He's got a beautiful frame; that's why he cost so much money. He's doing really well. They're both doing really well.”

Thousand Words was fourth to Authentic in the San Felipe (G2) in March and stumbled at the start of the Oaklawn Stakes in April. With blinkers off, he was second by four lengths to stablemate Uncle Chuck in the Los Alamitos Derby (G3) on July 4. Four weeks later, he won the Shared Belief, holding off Santa Anita Derby (G1) winner Honor A.P. After the Derby paddock fiasco, he is at Pimlico playing second fiddle to Authentic in Baffert's band and getting good reviews from the maestro.

“He's getting over the track really well,” Baffert said. “He's happy. He's pretty sharp. He's fresh; he didn't run in the Derby. He's pretty honest. So you never know. He's getting better. I can tell that he looks better now than he did for the Derby.”

Baffert schooled both his colts in Pimlico's indoor paddock Thursday and said saddling Thousand Words will not be a problem.

Asked to make a case for Thousand Words in the Preakness, Baffert said: “He's fast. He gets away from there. I added a little blinker to him. He's got a lot of speed. He's not as quick as Authentic. If he gets into a nice rhythm and is right there you just never know. As the gamblers say, he is the 'other Baffert.'”

Both of Baffert's Preakness colts galloped on the track Friday morning.

Baffert has won the Preakness with each of his first five Derby winners and will try to extend that record to 6-for-6 with Authentic. With the first five, the Preakness was two weeks after the Derby. The pandemic changed the Triple Crown schedule.

“I've never come in here with a horse that I've had a month to prepare him for it,” Baffert said. “I can see a big difference out of him, what he's doing. To me, I think he's getting better. He's stronger. You can tell he is filling out. At this stage of the game they are ready to run with older horses. Back in May, they are still filling out.

“He's doing good, but I've watched those other horses that are in the race train and everybody looks good. Art Collector looks good. Mr. Big News, he looks good. It's exciting with everybody that is here. There are some new faces here and they are excited about their horses.”

Art Collector

Trainer Tommy Drury Jr. got his first look at Bruce Lunsford's Art Collector training at Pimlico Friday morning and was happy with what he saw from the colt who is rated second at 5-2 in the morning line for Saturday's Preakness Stakes (G1).

“I'm just glad to be able to watch him go this morning. It looked like he skipped over the racetrack,” Drury said. “That's all we can ask for. We've all done our part. Maybe a little jog in the morning – we may decide to walk him – and we'll turn our keys over to the jock and hopefully he'll use good judgment and we'll go from there.”

Art Collector will seek his fifth victory in a row since being transferred to Drury this year, including dominating wins in the Aug. 9 Ellis Park Derby and July 11 Blue Grass (G2) at Keeneland in his two most recent starts.

“He's pretty straightforward and easy. We just tried to stay out of his way and use good judgment and make logical decisions,” Drury said. “He won off the shelf the right way. The next logical step was to try him around two turns. We did that. The next logical step after that was to try stakes company. He's kind of earned his way into this stuff.”

Art Collector went about his business Friday morning in a thoroughly professional manner.

“He's pretty laid-back and easy going, which is a good thing because I get nervous for both of us,” said 49-year-old Drury, who celebrated his first graded-stakes success in the Blue Grass.

Art Collector has shown versatility during his winning streak while either setting the pace or stalking the leaders under Brian Hernandez Jr.

“He's a kind horse to ride. As Brian kind of jokes, 'He's a fingertips kind of horse.' He's got a little stop-and-go to him. You can use him to get yourself out of a spot if you need to and he'll shut back down,” Drury said. “We're hoping that will be beneficial come raceday.”

The son of Bernardini didn't make his first start this year until May 17, when he came off a 5 ½-month layoff to win a seven-furlong optional claiming allowance at Churchill.

“If the Derby would have ran on a normal schedule, this horse was only five-eighths fit. Not to mention he had 0 [qualifying] points,” Drury said. “[The reshuffling of the Triple Crown] has actually been beneficial for me. You've got to give Bruce credit for stopping on the horse and letting him mature and thinking about the horse first. I think that's the biggest reason why we're here today.”

Swiss Skydiver

Trainer Kenny McPeek pronounced Peter Callahan's Swiss Skydiver ready for her clash with the boys in Saturday's Preakness (G1) following her early-morning gallop over a wet Pimlico racetrack Friday.

“She's a model of consistency. She just keeps it even. She's very professional. She keeps it even every day,” McPeek said. “There's nothing complicated about her.”

The daughter of Daredevil has finished first or second in her last six starts, including victories in the Gulfstream Park Oaks (G2), Fantasy (G3) at Oaklawn, Santa Anita Oaks (G2) and Alabama (G1) at Saratoga, as well as runner-up finishes in the Blue Grass (G2) at Keeneland and the Kentucky Oaks (G1) at Churchill.

Swiss Skydiver, who will be ridden for the first time by Robby Albarado, has tactical early speed but has shown the ability to rate off the pace.

“I'm not going to guess the pace of the race. I learned that a long time ago – you can't guess the pace. She's an honest '12s' horse. When you go 24 and 48 [seconds] and then let her do her thing after that – that's her best race. If there's no pace and they go 48 on the front end and she's up there, that's fine. If they go 46 and she's 10 lengths back, I'm fine with that too,” McPeek said. “Robby's going to have to get her in a nice rhythm. He's been around. He knows how fast horses are going and whether they're doing too much.”

Mr. Big News

Allied Racing Stable LLC's Mr. Big News, who finished third in the Kentucky Derby, had a strong 1 ½-mile gallop over a sloppy Pimlico track Friday morning in preparation for a start in Saturday's Preakness (G1).

“He had another good day. Everything has gone well since we got here. I don't know if he's had an opportunity to get across the track like it's going to be Saturday, but he's training very good and he's sharp,” trainer Bret Calhoun said. “I feel good going into it, so now it's up to him.”

The son of Giant's Causeway closed from 10th to enter contention at the top of the stretch in the Derby before finishing evenly in the stretch. Calhoun expects that Mr. Big News will once again be sitting well off the early pace in the Preakness.

“He is who he is. I think he's a closer. That's the style he has developed and I think that suits him best. Sometimes they change their style – some will want to show more; some will want to show less. It's kind of strange over time how they can change their styles sometimes, but this suits him well,” Calhoun said. “We're going to leave him alone and let him run how he wants to run and forget what's going on in front of him.”

Gabriel Saez has the return mount.

Liveyourbeastlife

Whether it's horsemen or horseflesh, trainer Jorge Abreu has learned from and worked with some of the best.

Six years spent as an assistant to 72-year-old Hall of Fame trainer Nick Zito gave him an up close look at champions Storm Song and War Pass and stars such as Bellamy Road, Birdstone and Commentator. Nine years as an assistant to trainer Chad Brown, a five-time Eclipse Award winner already with Hall of Fame credentials at the age of 41, exposed Abreu to a steady wave of talent including champions Big Blue Kitten, Dayatthespa, Flintshire, Lady Eli, Stacelita and Zagora.

Abreu, a 46-year-old native of the Dominican Republic, also spent time as an assistant under trainer John Terranova, getting the chance to gallop horses that Hall of Fame trainer Bob Baffert would ship East for stakes that took residence in Terranova's barn.

“He used to send us horses like Captain Steve, Congaree around that time,” Abreu said. “I'm lucky. I've been around a lot of nice horses.”

This week, Abreu has shared a shedrow with Baffert at Pimlico Race Course for Saturday's 145th Preakness Stakes (G1). Baffert will send out two contenders, including Kentucky Derby (G1) winner and program favorite Authentic, and Abreu will counter with William H. Lawrence's longshot Liveyourbeastlife, runner-up in the Jim Dandy (G2) at Saratoga.

Liveyourbeastlife galloped 1 ¼ miles over the main track Friday morning for Abreu, who is making his Triple Crown debut. Baffert owns a record 16 Triple Crown race wins, including historic sweeps with American Pharoah (2015) and Justify (2018). Also in town for the Preakness are Hall of Famer Steve Asmussen and trainer Ken McPeek, both Classic race winners.

“I can't describe it. I'm speechless. Really. It will be my first time. It's a big step. I'm very blessed to be here,” Abreu said. “You're in the barn with Bob, Kenny, Steve Asmussen – you're talking about the big guns. I'm very proud of myself.”

Abreu saddled his first two winners (from two starters) while under Brown's employ in 2016 before going out on his own full-time in 2017. He was thrilled when Stellar Agent ran third to Brown-trained Newspaperofrecord in the 2018 Breeders' Cup Juvenile Fillies Turf (G1).

“She was 71-1 walking over, and I felt like she was 8-1. I had great confidence she was going to run good, and she got beat for second right on the wire,” Abreu said. “Being here, it's a different feel. It's just nervous.”

Liveyourbeastlife is listed at 30-1 on the morning line for the Preakness, but Abreu has similar confidence in the son of Hall of Famer Ghostzapper, who had to be supplemented into the race because he was not originally nominated to the Triple Crown.

“He seems like he's really improving since the last race. He had two really good breezes at Belmont Park, and Mr. Lawrence told me, 'If you want to take a shot, why not? Let's take it,'” Abreu said. “The horse is doing everything right, so why not take the shot? I'm not here just to be here. If I know the horse has no chance, why waste time? It's a very competitive race, but I think my horse belongs in there, So why not give him the chance?”

Lawrence won the Preakness in 2017 as co-owner with Klaravich Stable of Cloud Computing. Liveyourbeastlife will leave from outside Post 11 under champion Maryland jockey Trevor McCarthy, riding in his second Preakness and first since 2015.

“Everything in this game has its ups and downs, but I've been around a lot of nice horses,” Abreu said. “It helps a lot, just to define what kind of horse you're dealing with because every horse is different. Some horses are just late bloomers, some horses are good 2-year-olds or 3-year-olds and then you don't see them anymore. I think this horse is coming around, and I think he's going to be even better as a 4-year-old.”

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Preakness Caps Unconventional Triple Crown

All of 2020 has been unconventional to say the least and the Triple Crown series is no exception. Instead of starting with the GI Kentucky Derby on the First Saturday in May, the highlight of the 3-year-old season kicked off in mid-June with a shortened GI Belmont S., which is traditionally the final leg of the series. It was 11 weeks before the Run for the Roses on the First Saturday in September and now, another four weeks later, the Triple Crown road comes to an end in Baltimore Saturday with the GI Preakness S.

The connections of Belmont hero and Derby runner-up Tiz the Law (Constitution) opted to skip this Classic event and train up to the GI Breeders’ Cup Classic, which means favoritism will sit squarely on the shoulders of Derby victor Authentic (Into Mischief). Opening his account with a trio of victories, two of which were graded, the Bob Baffert trainee suffered his only loss when second to the recently retired Honor A. P. (Honor Code) in the GI Santa Anita Derby June 6. Taking the GI Haskell Invitational S. by a nose July 18, the bay went wire-to-wire in the Derby, scoring a gritty victory over favored Tiz the Law.

“He would have been ready to roll in two weeks,” said Baffert, who is the winning trainer in Preakness history. “I feel pressure now because I never lost a Preakness with a horse I won the Derby with. Now the pressure’s on me.”

His stablemate Thousand Words (Pioneerof the Nile) was a late scratch from the Run for the Roses after rearing and flipping over in the paddock. Also kicking off his career with a trio of wins, including two graded events, the $1-million KEESEP buy was off the board in the GII San Felipe S. and Oaklawn S. this spring. Given a brief freshener following that Apr. 11 test, the bay was second when he returned in the GIII Los Alamitos Derby July 4 and was back to winning ways in the Shared Belief S. Aug. 1 at Del Mar. Baffert puts blinkers on the colt for this return to Grade I company.

Art Collector (Bernardini) was a late defection from the Derby due to a minor hoof issue. The homebred has been a perfect four-for-four since transferring to Tom Drury, starting with a pair of optional claimer scores at Churchill Downs. A decisive winner of the GII Toyota Blue Grass S. July 11, the bay wired the Ellis Park Derby last time Aug. 9.

“The Derby was disappointing because he was training so well leading up to it, but, gosh, I feel like he’s doing equally as well right now,” Drury said. “We’re ready to take our best shot.”

Blue Grass runner-up Swiss Skydiver (Daredevil) takes another crack at the boys in this event. Capturing the GIII Fantasy S. and GII Santa Anita Oaks prior to the Blue Grass, the chestnut filly scored a decisive victory in Saratoga’s GI Alabama S. Aug. 15 and came in second to upsetter Shedaresthedevil (Daredevil) in the GI Kentucky Oaks Sept. 4.

“I don’t know if we have to differentiate genders. In Europe, fillies run against colts all the time. I don’t think Enable has run straight fillies [more than a few times] in several years,” trainer Kenny McPeek said. “Here it seems to be more of a big deal, but for the most part when you bring a good one into the game, it doesn’t matter.”

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