The Week in Review: The Race Everyone Wants to See, Midnight Bisou Vs. Monomoy Girl

The running of the GII Ruffian S. Saturday at Belmont lacked the sizzle that was part of the narrative for several other major races over the weekend, but that wasn’t the fault of Monomoy Girl (Tapizar). She did exactly what was asked of her. She showed up and beat four overmatched horses in an effort that was more perfunctory than impressive.

“This was a nice race for her to come back into stakes competition and now we can tackle some bigger races and a tougher field, too,” jockey Florent Geroux said.

Exactly.

With Monomoy Girl coming back off an 18-month layoff, trainer Brad Cox was in no hurry to throw her to the wolves. He started her off in an allowance race at Churchill Downs and then in the one-mile, one-turn Ruffian, a race that didn’t figure to include a stellar group of opponents for the 2018 Eclipse Award winner. But the time has come for Cox to get more aggressive and point for a race that will be a truer test.

There are a lot of good storylines out there this year. How far can Tiz the Law (Constitution) go in the strangest Triple Crown ever? What will Maximum Security (New Year’s Day) look like when he comes back for new trainer Bob Baffert? At age seven, will Tom’s d’Etat (Smart Strike) continue to thrive for trainer Al Stall, Jr. and be named Horse of the Year?

But nothing would compare to a rematch between Monomoy Girl and Midnight Bisou (Midnight Lute). It’s enough that it would be a showdown between two superstar mares, but it’s the intrigue, uncertainties and twists that would make this such an exciting, unpredictable “good-for-the game” race.

The story of the rivalry between the two begins in the 2018 GI Kentucky Oaks. Monomoy Girl won that day and Midnight Bisou was third. She beat her again in the GI Coaching Club American Oaks. In the GI Cotillion S. at Parx, Monomoy Girl crossed the wire in front, but was disqualified for bothering Midnight Bisou, who was placed first. Monomoy Girl was first in the 2018 GI Breeders’ Cup Distaff and Midnight Bisou was third, making it a perfect four-for-four in terms of which filly crossed the wire ahead of the other.

With Monomoy Girl sidelined throughout 2019, Midnight Bisou flourished. She went seven for eight last year and was named champion older filly or mare. She’s been every bit as good, if not better, this year, finishing second when going against males in the $20-million Saudi Cup and then returning with a flourish, an 8 1/4-length winner in the GII Fleur de Lis S. at Churchill. She’s scheduled to go next in the GI Personal Ensign S. at Saratoga Aug. 1.

That’s what we know. What we don’t know is who the better horse is today, Midnight Bisou or Monomoy Girl? It could be that Midnight Bisou took full advantage of Monomoy Girl’s absence and would not have done nearly as well if her rival were standing in her way. Or has Midnight Bisou improved so much that she is now the better horse of the two?

The only way to find out is for them to meet on the racetrack.

The most likely spot for that to happen would ordinarily be in the GI Breeders’ Cup Distaff, but there’s no certainty both will be there because Midnight Bisou’s connections have said their horse may run in the GI Breeders’ Cup Classic. There is still the possibility, however, that both could land in the same prep for the Breeders’ Cup, perhaps in the GII Beldame S. at Belmont or, more likely, the GI Spinster S. at Keeneland.

More often than not, the stars don’t align when it comes to getting star horses into the gate to face one another. Rachel Alexandra never did face Zenyatta. But this one might be different. The ownership groups behind both horses have already shown that they are game for anything. Midnight Bisou was slated to be retired at the end of last year, but came back for another season, which has included an adventurous trip to Saudi Arabia. The Monomoy Girl camp endured 18 months away from the races and brought their horse back when many would have retired her. Neither one is afraid of a challenge or will duck anyone. Whether it’s in the Breeders’ Cup or in a fall prep, they very well could face one another.

Should they meet, I would back Monomoy Girl. Until Midnight Bisou proves she can beat her, I can’t get past those four races in 2018 and Monomoy Girl looks like the time away has done nothing to diminish her skills. But the fun won’t be in being right or wrong, but in seeing two of the best of their generation proving their superiority on the racetrack. Fingers crossed that it happens.

Kudos to Swiss Skydiver and Her Team

Trainer Kenny McPeek and owner Peter Callahan could have gone the safe route and run Swiss Skydiver (Daredevil) against fillies in the GI Central Bank Ashland S., a race she likely would have won. Instead, they decided to run their filly against boys in the GII Toyota Blue Grass S.

In the end, it may have cost them a Grade I win and the winner’s share of a $400,000 purse, but they need not look back or have any regrets. They are a rare pair that figured out that sometimes it’s worth giving your horse the ultimate test and trying to make history. Had Swiss Skydiver run seventh, they might have looked foolish. But she put in a valiant effort and finished second behind a quickly rising star in Art Collector (Bernardini). In defeat, she earned more respect and admiration than she possibly could have achieved by beating fillies for a fourth straight time in the Ashland.

Swiss Skydriver earned enough points to run in the GI Kentucky Derby, but McPeek said the GI Kentucky Oaks is now the plan. That’s the right choice. If she couldn’t win the Blue Grass, she’s not a Derby winner. What she is is an outstanding filly who put in a valiant effort for an owner and trainer who made this a Blue Grass to remember.

Keeneland Sheds Light on Late Odds Drops

There was another race last week where the odds plummeted on a horse at the very last second and, of course, the horse won. This time it happened at Keeneland. In the sixth race Friday, the odds on Early Mischief (Into Mischief) dropped from 10-1 to 5-1, which didn’t show up until the race was underway.

Someone at Keeneland understood how bad this must have looked. These odds drops are the result of the computer/rebate players pounding the pools at the very last second, betting so much that they can cause massive odds shifts. There’s nothing illegal about this, but every time it happens, it leaves a bad taste in everyone’s mouth and leads some to believe the game is rigged. It’s a serious problem.

Keeneland decided to inform the public of exactly what happened. They investigated and then issued a statement, revealing that $16,000 was bet to win on Early Mischief in the last betting cycle. That same cycle accounted for 26% of the win pool.

That doesn’t solve a problem that is not going to go away, but Keeneland did everything it could to be transparent and let the wagering public know that it had their backs. Other tracks need to follow Keeneland’s lead.

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Art Collector Emerges As a Kentucky Derby Contender With Blue Grass Triumph

Bruce Lunsford's homebred Bernardini colt, Art Collector, threw his hat into the ring for the Kentucky Derby with a victory over top 3-year-old filly Swiss Skydiver in Saturday's Grade 1 Blue Grass Stakes at Keeneland in Lexington, Ky.

Trained by Thomas Drury and ridden by Brian Hernandez, Art Collector sat just behind Swiss Skydiver and jockey Mike Smith, took command in mid-stretch and drew away to win by about three lengths in 1:48.11 for nine furlongs on a fast track. Swiss Skydiver, coming off three consecutive graded stakes wins over fillies, finished second, with Rushie third, Enforceable fourth and Attachment Rate fifth in the field of 13 3-year-olds.

The top four finishers earned 100-40-20-10 qualifying points for the Kentucky Derby, to be run on Sept. 5.

The Blue Grass was the first stakes victory for Art Collector, who was coming off back-to-back allowance wins at Churchill Downs. This was trainer Drury's first graded stakes win as well.

Shivaree, breaking from the inside post, took the early lead, outrunning Swiss Skydiver to the first turn and setting an opening quarter mile fraction of :23.25. Swiss Skydiver took over the in the run down the backstretch after a half mile in :46.61, with Art Collector just behind that pair in third.

Going into the far turn, Swiss Skydiver continued to control the pace, but Art Collector and Rushie began to apply more pressure. After six furlongs in 1:10.63, Art Collector remained the primary challenger for Swiss Skydiver. He ranged up alongside the filly in mid stretch after a mile in 1:35.31, then gradually pulled away in the final sixteenth.

Art Collector, produced from the Distorted Humor mare Distorted Legacy, broke his maiden on turf at Kentucky Downs in his second start when under the care of Joe Sharp. After a seventh-place finish on turf in the G3 Bourbon Stakes, Sharp moved Art Collector to dirt, where the colt finished sixth and then first in two races at Churchill Downs last November. He was disqualified from the win for a medication violation and Lunsford subsequently moved the horse to Drury's care.

Art Collector won  a May 17 allowance sprint at Churchill Downs, coming from off the pace, then wired a four-horse field on June 13, his final start before the Blue Grass.

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Remembering Harriet Sue, The First Filly To Contest The Blue Grass Stakes

Peter Callahan's multiple graded stakes winner Swiss Skydiver is the first filly to race in Keeneland's most famous race, the Toyota Blue Grass (G2), since 1944 – long before corporate sponsorship entered Thoroughbred racing but a year similar to 2020 because of adjustments to Keeneland's Spring Meet.

That first Blue Grass filly was Harriet Sue, a daughter of the legendary Bull Lea who was bred and owned by Hyman Friedberg of Louisville.

The 1944 Blue Grass was part of Keeneland's Spring Meet, which in 1943-1945 was held at Churchill Downs because of World War II. In March 1943, Keeneland had been deemed a “suburban” plant and placed in the classification of race tracks that were asked not to operate because of shortages in rubber. The Keeneland Association leased the Churchill facilities for the three spring seasons. No Keeneland Fall Meets were held during that time.

Scheduling of the day allowed Harriet Sue to run in both the 1944 Ashland and Blue Grass, which since 2014 have been held the same day.

On April 10, Harriet Sue defeated four rivals in the $5,000-added Ashland and recorded an impressive victory for trainer John Hanover and jockey Jesse Higley.

According to Louisville's Courier-Journal (thanks to research provided by the Keeneland Library), “Bet confidently and ridden confidently, the speedy Harriet Sue didn't betray the confidence of Jockey Jess Higley or the faith of most of the bettors in the gathering of 7,000 race fans at Churchill Downs Wednesday afternoon. 'Sue' pulled away from four other fillies to capture the seventh running of Keeneland's Ashland Stakes by three and one-half lengths.”

That performance led some Turf writers and Harriet Sue's connections to speculate about the filly competing in the Kentucky Derby – something that had not occurred since 1936.

Harriet Sue returned 16 days later to face males in the $10,000-added Blue Grass. She led her seven rivals for most of the race and “gave way near the end,” according to the chart. She finished fifth behind winner Skytracer. He and four other Blue Grass rivals next competed in the Kentucky Derby, but Harriet Sue returned to the filly division. Favored in the Kentucky Oaks, she finished second, 1½ lengths behind Abe Hirschberg's Canina.

In July of that year, Harriet Sue captured the Arlington Matron at Washington Park. By the time she retired, she had made 80 starts with 19 wins and earnings of $64,175.

In 1949, her stakes-winning full sister, The Fat Lady, was second to Calumet Farm's Wistful in the Kentucky Oaks. Wistful would be the year's champion 3-year-old filly.

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Full Field Of 13 Chase Derby Points In Saturday’s Rescheduled Blue Grass Stakes

A full field of 13 horses has been entered for the 96th running of the $600,000 Toyota Blue Grass (G2) for 3-year-olds going 1 1/8 miles on Keeneland's main track, rescheduled to this Saturday, July 11.

A major steppingstone for the $3 million Kentucky Derby Presented by Woodford Reserve to be run Sept. 5 at Churchill Downs, the Toyota Blue Grass offers 170 points toward qualification to this year's Derby with 100 points going to the winner, 40 to the runner-up, 20 to third place and 10 points to fourth. The Derby is limited to the top 20 point earners that pass the entry box.

This year's Toyota Blue Grass, which marks the 25th year the race has been sponsored by Toyota, will go as the ninth race on Saturday's 10-race program with a 5:30 p.m. ET post time. First post for the card that features six graded stakes is 1:05 p.m.

The major storyline in the Blue Grass belongs to sophomore filly Swiss Skydiver, winner of her last three starts and current leader on the Road to the Kentucky Oaks points leaderboard. Trainer Ken McPeek will saddle the daughter of Daredevil as just the second female to start in Keeneland's major Kentucky Derby prep since its inception in 1937.

Another accomplished runner in the field is Jackpot Farm's Basin. Winner of the Runhappy Hopeful (G1) at Saratoga and most recently second in a division of the Arkansas Derby (G1), Basin ranks ninth on the Derby leaderboard with 50 points.

Trained by Steve Asmussen, Basin will be ridden Saturday by Ricardo Santana Jr. and break from post position eight.

“He is fit, ready to go,” said Ryne Poncik of Jackpot Farm. “This nine weeks since the Arkansas Derby (G1) has really helped him. The Arkansas Derby really took a lot out of him trying to keep up with Charlatan all the way around there. So, on these nine weeks he got good weight and he's really looking good.

“It sounds like to me that Shivaree might go and Swiss (Skydiver) will go and then we'll go right with Swiss. Hopefully us and Swiss can get over before the turn and it looks like most everyone on the inside will be coming from far out. So it looks like we'll maybe be 3-wide if I had to guess but it looks like we'll be in the clear. We'll be forwardly placed for sure.”

Invading from California is Jim and Donna Daniell's Rushie. Trained by Michael McCarthy, Rushie finished third in last month's Santa Anita Derby (G1) in his stakes debut to gain 20 Derby points. Javier Castellano, who won last year's running on Vekoma, has the mount and will break from post position 10.

Also looking to add to his Derby points total is John Oxley's Enforceable. Winner of the Lecomte (G3) and runner-up in the Risen Star (G2), Enforceable is trained by Mark Casse and will be ridden by Joel Rosario. Enforceable is 14th on the Derby leaderboard with 33 points.

Rosario is seeking his second Toyota Blue Grass victory to go with the triumph in 2011 on Brilliant Speed. Enforceable, third in last fall's Claiborne Breeders' Futurity (G1), will break from post 12.

“(The post is) not as important with him,” Casse said. “It's not going to affect us as much because we're not going to the lead. It actually could be to our benefit in that he tends to break a little slow. But if he happens to break a little better, it will let (jockey) Joel (Rosario) find his spot. When you're down inside and you break a little slow, you're at everyone's mercy because they come down on top of you. Plus it's 1 1/8 miles so we have a little more run into the first turn.”

Seeking his initial Derby points is Bruce Lunsford's Art Collector. Trained by Tom Drury, Art Collector enters Saturday's race off two allowance victories at Churchill Downs this year by a combined 9 ¾ lengths. Brian Hernandez Jr. has the mount and will break from post position three.

“I'd sure rather be in post three than 13,” Drury said. “He is doing good. He has had to earn his way into this spot. There was a question if he really wants to go two turns, but he checked that box and did it maybe with an exclamation point. He drew away at the end and had his ears up while galloping out afterwards. It is time to jump in to the deep end of the pool and see how he stacks up against this kind (of competition). He will ship from Skylight (training center in Goshen, Kentucky) the morning of the race.”

In addition to McPeek, who won the Toyota Blue Grass with Harlan's Holiday in 2002 and Java's War in 2013, three other trainers will try to add to their win totals in the race.

Nick Zito, whose Blue Grass victories came with Strike the Gold (1991), Halory Hunter (1998) and The Cliff's Edge (2004), will saddle Dream Walkin Farms' Hunt the Front. A maiden winner at Oaklawn, Hunt the Front will be ridden by Corey Lanerie and break from post 11.

Dale Romans, a two-time Blue Grass winner with Dullahan (2012) and Brody's Cause (2016), will send out graded stakes-placed Attachment Rate. Owned by Jim Bakke and Gerald Isbister, Attachment Rate will be ridden by Luis Saez and break from post nine. Saez won the 2016 Blue Grass for Romans on Brody's Cause.

Bill Mott, who won the Toyota Blue Grass in 1984 with Taylor's Special, will send out LNJ Foxwoods and NK Racing's maiden winner Tiesto. Flavien Prat has the mount and will break from post 13.

Three other riders with previous wins – John Velazquez, Rafael Bejarano and Jose Ortiz – will be seeking additional Toyota Blue Grass victories.

Velazquez, who rode Bandini in 2005 and Carpe Diem in 2015 to victory for Todd Pletcher, has the call on Jacks or Better Farm's Shivaree, who will break from the rail.

Bejarano, who won the Toyota Blue Grass in 2007 aboard Dominican, has the call on Partner Stable's Hard Lighting who will break from post six. Ortiz, who took the 2018 race on champion Good Magic, will be aboard Arnaldo Monge and trainer Rey Hernandez's Finnick the Fierce and break from post two.

The field for the Toyota Blue Grass, with riders and weights from the rail out, is: Shivaree (Velazquez, 123 pounds), Finnick the Fierce (Ortiz, 123), Art Collector (Hernandez Jr., 123), Mr. Big News (Mitchell Murrill, 123), Man in the Can (Tyler Gaffalione, 123), Hard Lighting (Bejarano, 123), Swiss Skydiver (Smith, 118), Basin (Santana Jr., 123), Attachment Rate (Saez, 123), Rushie (Castellano, 123), Hunt the Front (Lanerie, 123), Enforceable (Rosario, 123), Tiesto (Prat, 123).

TOYOTA BLUE GRASS POST POSITION DRAW QUOTES

Bret Calhoun, trainer of Mr. Big News (post 4; Mitchell Murrill to ride)

“That's probably a really good draw for us. You don't have to worry about trying to get over. We're already somewhat in a ground-saving position but we're not on the fence, which I didn't want to be. It's probably ideal. If they had let me just the pluck the number out on my own I probably would have picked somewhere around 6 or so. We're not going to be up in the mix early, we're going to be back off the pace so we should be in a good spot.”

On Swiss Skydiver impacting the pace scenario

“I think so, I think the more speed in there, the better it is for us and obviously she has been running up front. There are 2-3 other horses in there who have been running up on the pace so that's all beneficial for us.”

“A lot of people aren't going to believe in him, they think that (win in the April 11 Oaklawn Stakes) was basically a fluke. So yeah, he's got to prove it to everybody. You know, we're seeing him in the mornings, he's proven to us in the afternoons, this is another step forward, and he's a really royal-bred horse and I think he's going to prove himself.”

Ron Moquett, trainer of Man in the Can (post 5; Tyler Gaffalione to ride)

“He has enough tactical speed, so we can be where we need to be (from post five). We'll let the rider do what he is supposed to do and that is make good decisions. He is coming into this race very good. He's been at Keeneland and has worked over the track. The way he has been developing, the Blue Grass is a great test to see how good he is. His races indicate that he is willing to try against better competition.”

Ralph Nicks, trainer of Shivaree (post 1; John Velazquez to ride)

“He will probably be forced to go on with the pace a little bit from the one post, but it is what it is. He arrived at Keeneland Wednesday morning and he made the trip fine. (We picked the Blue Grass) because of the timing and it is easy to get there. Plus there are some big races at Keeneland this fall. This will give him a trip over the track and see how he does. It just made sense. It felt like a good spot.”

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