All Good for Oaks Runners Saturday

The runners from Friday's GI Kentucky Oaks appeared to exit the event in good order, with winner Malathaat (Curlin) “Excellent” Saturday morning according to trainer Todd Pletcher. Pletcher later added of Shadwell's five-for-five 'TDN Rising Star': “You'd like to think with a filly like her you can be thinking Breeders' Cup. But we've got a long way to go before we get there.”

Narrow runner-up Search Results (Flater) was also no worse for wear the morning after. “We checked her out this morning and she looks fine,” conditioner Chad Brown said. “She came back good and will ride back to New York on Monday. Right now, we'll look at the [June 5 GI] Acorn and [July 24 GI] Coaching Club American Oaks; those are the two most likely things we'll discuss.”

Trainer Dallas Stewart simply said he was “Proud” of longshot third-place finisher Will's Secret (Will Take Charge), while Stonestreet/Asmussen runners Clairiere (Curlin, fourth) and Pauline's Pearl (Tapit, eighth) will get a brief freshening.

Brad Cox's two runners Travel Column (Frosted) and Coach (Commissioner) were fifth and ninth, respectively. “[Travel Column] relaxed well on the front end but just didn't have that final push to continue on,” said Cox. “I'm still not sure what ended up happening with Coach, but we'll regroup and look for more options down the road.”

GII Gulfstream Park Oaks heroine Crazy Beautiful (Liam's Map) suffered a superficial cut on her left foreleg. “She'll be fine. It won't have any impact on her,” said Greg Geier, assistant to trainer Kenny McPeek.

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Malathaat Exits Gutsy Oaks Victory In ‘Excellent’ Condition

“Excellent.”

That was trainer Todd Pletcher's all-encompassing answer to the question of Malathaat's condition on the morning after her gutsy run and neck victory in the Grade I Longines Kentucky Oaks Saturday at Churchill Downs.

With a national television audience taking it in, the well-made daughter of Curlin overcame early troubles, took rider John Velazquez's cues at all points and then dug down deep to win a photo finish and $713,000 in the 147th “Run for the Lilies.”

The Shadwell Stable miss now is a perfect five for five in her brief racing career, has three graded stakes on her ledger and is well on her way to millionaire status ($953,000) with a very bright future ahead.

The conditioner wasn't sure yet what the shipping plans were for his star 3-year-old miss. He said the outcome of events Saturday (read Kentucky Derby) for his four star colts would play a big factor into who, where and when would be on the road from his potent string.

“You'd like to think with a filly like (Malathaat) you can be thinking Breeders' Cup (at Del Mar in November),” Pletcher said. “But we've got a long way to go before we get there.”

SEARCH RESULTS – Trainer Chad Brown said Klaravich Stables' Search Results was a tired filly Sunday morning but was none the worse for wear after a heartbreaking and ultra-game second by a neck in the Oaks.

“We checked her out this morning and she looks fine,” Brown said. “She came back good and will ride back to New York on Monday. Right now, we'll look at the (Grade 1) Acorn and Coaching Club American Oaks; those are the two most likely things we'll discuss,” Brown said.

Search Results saw her unbeaten streak end at three but lost nothing in defeat while battling the undefeated Malathaat through the stretch. The daughter of Flatter tracked early leader and second-choice Travel Column 3-wide throughout under Irad Ortiz Jr., made first run off the far turn, and refused to yield to the winner.

“It was a huge race,” Brown said. “I watched the replay a couple of times and I thought Irad used good judgement. It was just the way it unfolded, she was parked out a little bit, and I would have preferred that we were right next to Travel Column and saved a little bit more ground on both turns it may have helped reserve a little bit of fuel. That said, the winner broke a little tardy and had to be used and was pitched out following me just as wide, so she won obviously fair and square.”

Brown was also quick to applaud Hall of Fame jockey John Velazquez, who gave the winner a flawless ride, while showing a little gamesmanship as well.

“It was typical Johnny fashion,” Brown said. “He rode so smart to follow us, then floated us down to the inside, which is his patented move. It was a smart move. And it was a winning move. She just had a little more and she's a really good horse.”

Sitting back in his office chair in Barn 25, Brown looked back on the last 10-12 days and summarized the proceedings, while admitting the end result might have been right in front of everyone all along.

“At the end of the day, as I've learned with the Oaks and the Derby, there's a big buildup and these are fun races to analyze,” Brown said. “Then you throw into the mix that this is one of the only events where the media is actually watching these horses train every day. And there's a lot of different scenarios and projected paces and trips and opinions, and it's great. But at the end of the day, a lot of times in these big races, when you look at them the next day, it wasn't too hard to figure out; the two undefeated fillies threw down in the lane and that was the way it was probably the way it was supposed to be.”

As for the prospect of facing Malathaat again, Brown took a bit more stoic approach, while noting both fillies might go down a different path this summer, with Saratoga's 1 1/8-mile Coaching Club and 1 ¼-mile Alabama on the calendar.

“I think I'd be foolish to say I'm looking forward to running against her,” Brown joked. “I don't know if you ever want to run against great horses, especially if you have one of your own. I read this stuff sometimes, and I'm not one of these bravado guys that say 'I'm looking forward to a rematch.' I appreciate the sport, and I look forward to the challenges, but I've got a really good horse and there are races out there for all of us. And looking at Malathaat and the schedule going forward, it looks like she won't have any trouble beyond this (distance), like in the Alabama. I don't really see that in our filly's future. Coming in, we thought 1 1/8 miles was fine for our filly, and if you take the winner out, she was well clear of the others. But I don't know if Search Results will relish a mile and a quarter, so they might separate at that point. The mile and an eighth races though, I wouldn't hesitate to run her in any race I saw fit, regardless of who was running, and I say that with the utmost respect to the others.”

WILL'S SECRET – Trainer Dallas Stewart simply described his feelings of Will's Secret's third-place finish in Friday's Longines Kentucky Oaks as, “Proud.”

Stewart reported that he and owner Willis Horton will look for additional races down the road for the 3-year-old filly.

CLAIRIERE/PAULINE'S PEARL – Both of Stonestreet Stables' homebreds Clairiere and Pauline's Pearl, who were fourth and eighth, respectively, came out of the Oaks in good order and will be given a brief freshening, according to trainer Steve Asmussen's assistant Scott Blasi.

TRAVEL COLUMN/COACH – Trainer Brad Cox reported both of his Kentucky Oaks entrants Travel Column and Coach exited the 1 1/8-mile race in fine fettle.

Travel Column dueled on the lead until fading in mid-stretch while Coach ran an enigmatic ninth.

“(Travel Column) relaxed well on the front end but just didn't have that final push to continue on. I'm still not sure what ended up happening with Coach but we'll regroup and look for more options down the road.”

MILLEFEUILLE – Trainer Bill Mott said that Juddmonte's Millefeuille was fine Saturday morning, a day after finishing sixth in the Oaks after a wide trip all the way through the 1 1/8-mile test.

“There will be a race for her,” Mott said. “The first two (Malathaat and Search Results) were clearly the best yesterday. She may be able to compete with those with a good trip.”

The day was not a total loss for the Mott barn as Obligatory, who served as Millefeuille's workmate prior to the Oaks, won the Eight Belles (G2) with a last-to-first run. “We thought Obligatory is as good as the other one.”

MARACUJA – Beach Haven Thoroughbreds' Maracuja exited her seventh-place finish in the Oaks in good order and will eye a couple of Saratoga grade 1 races later this summer, according to trainer Rob Atras.

“She cooled out really good and last night she was good and relaxed when we left and ate up as well,” Atras said. “We'll go back to Belmont and regroup a little bit. We'd like to look at races like the Coaching Club American Oaks and Alabama at Saratoga.”

Maracuja was Atras' first starter in the Oaks, and while she may have been 37-1 on the toteboard, the daughter of Honor Code acquitted herself nicely in what was her first start away from Aqueduct.

“She ran well, I can't knock her at all,” Atras said. “We were happy to be here but we also wanted to run well, and I think she did that. She broke a little slow and that cost her some tactical position. I really think, in the Oaks and Derby, having watched them, you need to have a horse with tactical speed and she doesn't quite have that like those top fillies. But she's still learning and developing and I really think she's got a bright future.”

CRAZY BEAUTIFUL – Phoenix Thoroughbred LTD's Crazy Beautiful received a superficial cut to her left front leg during Friday's Oaks, in which she finished 10th.

“She'll be fine. It won't have any impact on her,” said Greg Geier, assistant to trainer Kenny McPeek. The team will regroup and figure out where the filly and King Fury, a scratch Friday from the Derby after he spiked a temperature, race next.

MORAZ – The dark daughter of Empire Maker reported back to Barn 37 late Saturday afternoon none the worse for wear following her front-running, but unplaced finish in the $1.25 million Kentucky Oaks at Churchill Downs. The filly lay second for nearly a mile in the mile and one-eighth Grade I headliner, but couldn't sustain her bid under rider Flavien Prat.

“She came out of it well,” reported assistant trainer Justin Curran. “She ate up last night and is feeling fine this morning.”

Curran wasn't sure of head trainer Michael McCarthy's shipping plans.

“She'll go back to (Southern) California (McCarthy's base) at some point but I'm not quite sure when,” Curran said.

PASS THE CHAMPAGNE – Pass the Champagne emerged from her 12th-place finish in the Kentucky Oaks in good order and was being hand walked around the barn Saturday morning by her trainer George Weaver.

“She's good,” Weaver said. “We'll get her home and make next race plans from there.”

COMPETITIVE SPEED – John Minchello's Competitive Speed is scheduled to return to her home base at Gulfstream Park on Sunday after exiting the Oaks in good order for trainer Javier Gonzalez.

No specific race has been targeted for a return to the races according to Gonzalez.

“The result was not what I wanted but it was a good experience,” Gonzalez said. “I always learn, so let's see what happens next time.”

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Curlin’s Undefeated Malathaat Scores Gutsy Victory in KY Oaks

LOUISVILLE, KY – His Highness Sheikh Hamdan bin Rashid Al Maktoum is smiling somewhere tonight.

Shadwell Stable's 'TDN Rising Star' Malathaat (Curlin) outslugged Search Results (Flatter) by a neck in a battle of unbeatens in a GI Kentucky Oaks for the ages Friday at Churchill Downs. It was another 2 3/4 lengths back to Will's Secret (Will Take Charge) in third.

Sheikh Hamdan, who campaigned countless champions and Classic winners across the globe, passed away at 75 in late March.

“A million things have been going through my mind,” Shadwell Stable's Vice President and General Manager Rick Nichols said. “You know, losing the boss the way we did and him coming off a great year–he was the leading owner in Europe last year. And we have many good horses in our stable this year. And having Malathaat step up and give him an Oaks win is, you know, more than we could ask for.”

Nichols continued, “He loved the sport. Even in his advanced years, he didn't lose his passion for it. He was a very, very close friend. He was a lot of times a father figure, sometimes like a brother, sometimes like a friend. But he was always the boss. I loved him dearly. He'll always be missed.”

Favored at 5-2, the $1.05-million Keeneland September Yearling purchase was squeezed and bumped at the start as the lively and pinked-out Oaks day crowd of 41,472 let out a roar as the field of 13 was on its way beneath sun-splashed skies.

Malathaat, who made it four-for-four in a hard-fought GI Central Bank Ashland S. victory at Keeneland last out Apr. 3, recovered nicely, and got into a good rhythm beneath Johnny Velazquez heading into the clubhouse turn in a four-wide fifth as Travel Column (Frosted) led through a :23.60 opening quarter.

Search Results, heroine of the GIII Gazelle S. Apr. 3, sat in third, meanwhile, ready to pounce with Irad Ortiz, Jr. in the irons as Malathaat was two spots back in fifth through a half mile in :47.47.

Search Results and Malathaat both began to rev up three and four wide to take on the pacesetter approaching the quarter pole and the stage was set.

Search Results briefly held a narrow advantage in the stretch and fought on bravely from the inside, but just couldn't withstand Malathaat, who ground her way by for the lilies.

In a touching moment just past the wire, Ortiz gave his highly respected elder statesman several pats on the back as the two galloped out in tandem.

“She didn't get away the best, but I got a spot with her,” Velazquez said. “She was running well and when I turned for home, I had a target [Search Results] to send her after. We got up next to her and my filly went by. Then she waited a bit; she does that. The other filly came back, but I could tell I was still in control. I never thought I was going to do anything but win.”

It was the fourth Oaks win for Pletcher and the second for Velazquez, who teamed with the future Hall of Famer to take the 2004 renewal with Ashado. Pletcher's other two Oaks victories were with Princess of Sylmar in 2013 and Rags to Riches in 2007.

Malathaat's ultra-talented dam Dreaming of Julia (A.P. Indy) was an unlucky fourth for Pletcher as the favorite in the 2013 Oaks.

“I commented coming over that her dam finished fourth in this race and got off to a really poor start, got basically eliminated,” Pletcher said. “When she didn't jump real well the first stride or two and then got jostled around, I was concerned we were going to have the same misfortune we had with her dam.”

Pletcher continued, “I thought Johnny made a key decision to quickly try to get her back into position after that. And I felt a lot better after about a sixteenth of a mile once he got to a good stalking position, had her in the clear, and had her in a rhythm. Then it was just a matter of hopefully there was enough pace on up front that they would come back to her a little bit. It was great ride for a great filly and a great team. We are very fortunate to have her.”

Pletcher began training for Shadwell just last year when longtime trainer and fellow former D. Wayne Lukas assistant Kiaran McLaughlin announced his retirement.

“I remember three or four days after the sale, I saw Kiaran McLauglin,” Pletcher said. “And I said, 'Kiaran, are you getting to get that Dreaming of Julia filly?' He said, 'I think so, yeah.' And I said, 'Man, great, I love that filly.' When I met with Rick and his team at Shadwell before we started training for them, I saw the filly was on the roster. I was really hoping she would come our way.”

Malathaat, a 'Rising Star' debut winner at Belmont last October, stretched to a one-turn mile with a flashy, runaway victory in Aqueduct's Tempted S. a month later. She made her two-turn debut a winning one, concluding her juvenile campaign with a 3/4-length tally in the GII Demoiselle S. Dec. 5. Originally ticketed to kick off her season in the GII Gulfstream Park Oaks, Malathaat was re-routed to the Ashland while observing a 10-day mourning period for Sheikh Hamdan.

Friday, Churchill Downs
LONGINES KENTUCKY OAKS-GI, $1,250,000, Churchill Downs, 4-30, 3yo, f, 1 1/8m, 1:48.99, ft.
1–MALATHAAT, 121, f, 3, by Curlin
1st Dam: Dreaming of Julia (GISW, $874,500), by A.P. Indy
2nd Dam: Dream Rush, by Wild Rush
3rd Dam: Turbo Dream, by Unbridled
'TDN Rising Star' ($1,050,000 Ylg '19 KEESEP). O-Shadwell Stable; B-Stonestreet Thoroughbred Holdings LLC (KY); T-Todd A Pletcher; J-John R Velazquez. $713,000. Lifetime Record: 5-5-0-0, $1,125,150. Werk Nick Rating: A+++ *Triple Plus*. Click for the eNicks report & 5-cross pedigree.
2–Search Results, 121, f, 3, by Flatter
1st Dam: Co Cola (GSP), by Candy Ride (Arg)
2nd Dam: Yong Musician, by Yonaguska
3rd Dam: Alljazz, by Stop the Music
($310,000 Ylg '19 KEESEP). O-Klaravich Stables Inc; B-Machmer Hall (KY); T-Chad C Brown. $230,000.
3–Will's Secret, 121, f, 3, by Will Take Charge
1st Dam: Girls Secret, by Giant's Causeway
2nd Dam: Well Monied, by Maria's Mon
3rd Dam: Queen of America, by Quiet American
O-Willis Horton Racing LLC; B-Willis Horton Racing LLC (KY); T-Dallas Stewart. $115,000.
Margins: NK, 2 3/4, NO. Odds: 2.50, 5.70, 26.50.
Also Ran: Clairiere, Travel Column, Millefeuille, Maracuja, Pauline's Pearl, Coach, Crazy Beautiful, Moraz, Pass the Champagne, Competitive Speed. Scratched: Ava's Grace.
Click for the Equibase.com chart, the TJCIS.com PPs or the free Equineline.com catalogue-style pedigree. VIDEO, sponsored by TVG.

Pedigree Notes:

Malathaat is one of 14 Grade I winners for the mighty Curlin, who was represented two races earlier by GII Eight Belles S. winner Obligatory. She is bred on the same cross as last year's

GI Woodward H. hero Global Campaign and recent GI Santa Anita H. victor Idol.

The legendary A.P. Indy is the sire of the dams of no fewer than 30 highest-level winners, including recent G1 Dubai World Cup winner Mystic Guide (Ghostzapper).

Malathaat is the third foal–first to race–out of Dreaming of Julia, a daughter of MGISW Dream Rush. Dreaming of Julia has a 2-year-old colt by Medaglia d'Oro, a yearling full-sister to Malathaat and foaled a Medaglia d'Oro filly earlier this spring.

The ultra-talented Dreaming of Julia, a Stonestreet homebred and Pletcher-trained 'TDN Rising Star' herself, registered a career high in Belmont's GI Frizette S. at two. Her resume also included a 21 3/4-length victory in the GII Gulfstream Oaks, good for an astronomical 114 Beyer Speed Figure, a runner-up finish in the GI Mother Goose S. and a third-place finish in the GI Breeders' Cup Juvenile Fillies.

This is also the same female family of MGSW Dream Pauline (Tapit) and stakes-winning young sire Atreides (Medaglia d'Oro).

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Kentucky Derby Notes: ‘All The Heavy Lifting Is Done’

Galloping and jogging over a track listed as good dominated the morning activity on the day before the 147th running of the $3 million Kentucky Derby presented by Woodford Reserve (G1).

BOURBONIC, DYNAMIC ONE, KNOWN AGENDA, SAINTHOOD – Trainer Todd Pletcher put the finishing touches on his Derby colts Friday morning, getting the quartet out early for final gallops prior to their Saturday date with destiny in the form of a mile and a quarter.

Three of his charges were among the first horses on the track, ambling over from Barn 42 and going through the six-furlong gap at 5:15 for mile and a quarter gallops. Known Agenda had his regular exercise rider, Hector Ramos, in the tack; Dynamic One was partnered by Carlos Perez Quevedo, and Sainthood had old buddy Amelia Green aboard.

After that trio got back home safely, the barn's final Derby contender – Bourbonic with Ramos up – set out at 5:40 for a mile and three-sixteenths spin that completed the handiwork.

“All the heavy lifting is done,” the trainer said. “They'll all walk the shed(row) tomorrow.”

Pletcher's father, Jake, was on the scene enjoying the Derby buzz. He fills out the family rooting section that also consists of the trainer's wife, Tracy, and his three college-age children, two boys (Texas A & M guys) and a daughter (Wake Forest).

Pletcher, of course, has history with the Kentucky Derby. Quite a bit, in fact.

He's started 55 horses in the race and after Saturday that record mark will rise to 59. Next on that list is his mentor, D. Wayne Lukas, with 49.

And starting four horses in America's Most Famous Race is a big deal, surely, but it's not that big a deal down at the Pletcher barn. This will be the fifth time he's started a quartet (2000, 2010, 2014 and 2018). Just for toppers, he set the race record with five runners in 2013.

The first year he entered the race was 2000 – and he entered it with a bang by running four horses. In 20 of the last 21 runnings, he's been represented by at least one horse. His only miss was in 2003, the year Funny Cide won it. Pletcher was at Churchill Downs that year, but just watched the race from the stands.

The trainer was asked what was the first Kentucky Derby he remembered.

“The first one I really recall was Affirmed (in 1978),” he said. “I'd watched a few on TV in the years before that (Bold Forbes in '76 and Foolish Pleasure in '75), but Affirmed's race got to me. I watched it in New Mexico where my Dad was running horses and I was a 9-year-old. Steve Cauthen (Affirmed's rider) was only 16. I related to that.”

When was the first Derby he saw in person?

“I was with Wayne (Lukas) from 1990 through 1995 and he ran a bunch of horses in the Derby those years (11 all told, including '95 winner Thunder Gulch), but I was working with the New York string,” he recalled. “My first in-person one was in 1999 (won by Lukas' Charismatic). I ran More Than Ready in the WHAS Stakes for 2-year-olds (he won it) earlier on the card and stuck around to watch the race. (He had More Than Ready back the following year — 2000 — in the Kentucky Derby – where he ran fourth – along with three other starters.) That was the first year I started running horses in the Derby.”

The trainer noted one asterisk on his Derby record.

“I actually wasn't here last year (when the race was shifted to the first Saturday in September),” he said. “I was in New York at Saratoga. Wayne (Lukas) was good enough to stable my horse (Money Moves) and saddle him.”

Time moves on. Pletcher's latest remarkable chapter of Derby history will go in the books Saturday.

BROOKLYN STRONG – Mark Schwartz's Remsen Stakes (G2) winner Brooklyn Strong was one of the last Kentucky Derby winners to arrive at Churchill Downs this week, coming in Tuesday morning, and he was among the last to train Friday, the final day of training before the Kentucky Derby. He jogged once around the track and then galloped slow once around.

“He's as fit as I can get him on the one week notice,” trainer Danny Velazquez said. “I'm just happy to be here. I have nothing to prove. He was a $5,000 purchase and we're in the Kentucky Derby. We made the one-percent (of the foal crop).”

ESSENTIAL QUALITY, MANDALOUN – Godolphin's Essential Quality and Juddmonte's Mandaloun had their final training session prior to Saturday's Kentucky Derby.

The Brad Cox duo galloped about 1 ½ miles at 5:15 a.m. A new member of the Cox team joined them for training this morning – Brad's youngest son Brodie.

“That'll do it,” Cox said. “Everyone's here and we're ready to go.”

HELIUM, SOUP AND SANDWICH – D J Stable's Helium and Live Oak Plantation's homebred Soup and Sandwich both galloped Friday morning for trainer Mark Casse.

HIDDEN STASH – Trainer Vicki Oliver got an early start on the morning, leaving Lexington at 3:30 to get to Churchill Downs by 5:15 to give BBN Racing's Hidden Stash a 1 ¼-mile gallop.

“He had an easy gallop this morning and I am undecided on what he will do tomorrow morning,” said Oliver, who has entrants in races one and 10 on Friday's 13-race program.

Oliver, who is saddling her first Kentucky Derby starter, will give a leg up to jockey Rafael Bejarano on Saturday afternoon. Hidden Stash will represent the 11th Derby mount for Bejarano whose best previous Derby finish was fourth on Papa Clem in 2009.

“I hope he breaks clean tomorrow and gets a good position,” Oliver said. “You have a long run to the first turn. I hope they go fast up front … I'd like to see a :46 or :47 half-mile, not a :48 like in the Blue Grass (G2).

HIGHLY MOTIVATED – Klaravich Stables' Highly Motivated galloped about 1 3/8 miles Friday morning for trainer Chad Brown.

HOT ROD CHARLIE – The Hot Rod Charlie contingent rolled out early Friday morning to catch their hero going through his final bit of track work in front of Saturday's Kentucky Derby 147.

The well-made colt had been a regular all week for the special 7:30-7:45 a.m. training session reserved for Kentucky Oaks and Kentucky Derby runners only. But Friday he stepped onto the big Churchill Downs oval at 5:30 with regular exercise rider Jonny Garcia at the controls.

He also had his superstar stable pony – the 20-year-old Hall of Famer Lava Man – on his hip and the colt and his “Coach” (as “Lava” is known around the barn) toured the Churchill oval together, never picking up any more steam than a simple jog.

As “Charlie” returned to the six-furlong gap along the outer rail, he moved past his collection of stable admirers, including his trainer, two-time Derby winner Doug O'Neill. The colt proceeded to throw his head repeatedly and pulled hard on his reins. His message was obvious: He wanted more, quite a bit more. The “Charlie” crew all smiled and bumped fists. Their boy was locked and loaded for his historic Saturday assignment.

KEEPMEINMIND – Keepmeinmind, who has been among the first Kentucky Derby contenders on the track each morning, was joined by about a dozen other Derby contenders as he went out for his usual 1 ½-mile gallop at 5:15 a.m. A little later in the morning, trainer Robertino Diodoro, who will be saddling his first starter in the race, was all smiles as he fed the colt carrots and said everything was “great” with the horse.

Diodoro also reported that Ava's Grace, who had to be scratched from the Kentucky Oaks, only has a minor injury and is expected to resume training next week. She had been sent to Hagyard Equine Medical Institute for a full evaluation Wednesday.

KING FURY – Fern Circle Stables, Three Chimneys Farm's and Magdalena Racing's King Fury put in a 1 ½-mile gallop right after the track opened early Friday with exercise rider Danny Ramsey.

“Everyone in the barn is ready,” said trainer Kenny McPeek. The colt will start from the No. 16 post with Brian Hernandez Jr. riding.

World heavyweight boxing champion Tyson Fury is still expected to be part of King Fury's entourage for the walkover from the barns to the paddock Saturday. McPeek extended the offer for the boxer to attend this week, which was accepted.

LIKE THE KING – M Racing Group's Like the King jogged a mile at 7:15 with jockey Drayden Van Dyke aboard alongside a pony with Blake Heap aboard.

Heap, who is overseeing the preparation of Like the King here for Wesley Ward who has a mammoth stable housed at Keeneland, said plans for Derby morning are to be determined.

Heap put the saddle on Tea Olive to win Thursday's fourth race and give Ward his 1,998th career victory. Ward has two more runners entered today on the eve of his first Kentucky Derby starter.

However, there is Kentucky Derby experience in the Ward camp with Van Dyke signed on for his third Derby ride. Van Dyke's agent is three-time Kentucky Derby-winning rider Gary Stevens who is wearing several hats this week working for Fox Sports as well as managing some horses at Lone Star Park in Texas.

“Drayden is like family to me,” said Stevens, who has had Van Dyke's book for the past month and a half. “We talk a lot and he picks my brain and asks questions.”

Stevens rode in the Derby 22 times with his first mount coming in 1985 with Tank's Prospect for D. Wayne Lukas. That Derby marked the first time the then 22-year-old Stevens came to Churchill Downs.

MEDINA SPIRIT – Zedan Racing Stables' Medina Spirit galloped 1 ½ miles during the special 5:15 a.m. training time with exercise rider Humberto Gomez.

MIDNIGHT BOURBON, SUPER STOCK – Winchell Thoroughbreds' Midnight Bourbon and Erv Woolsey's and trainer Steve Asmussen's father Keith's Super Stock both jogged Friday morning, with trainer Steve Asmussen on the pony with Super Stock, while assistant Scott Blasi was out with Midnight Bourbon.

O BESOS – Bernard Racing, Tagg Team Racing, West Point Thoroughbreds and Terry L. Stephens' O Besos had a light gallop around 6:15 a.m. Friday.

Hands-on horseman Greg Foley was seen giving his prized Derby contender a bath following training.

“It's just what we do,” Foley said. “We love our horses and treat everyone like they're a Derby contender.”

ROCK YOUR WORLD – The tall Candy Ride colt went trackside at 6:30 Friday morning to put in his last bit of exercise en route to Saturday's 147th edition of the Run for the Roses.

Regular morning rider Javier Meza was aboard but he didn't have a lot of work to do. Trainer John Sadler had deemed Friday's activities to merely be a jog one time around the track alongside the barn's stable pony.

“He's done all his training,” the conditioner said. “He's ready. He'll walk tomorrow morning.”

Rock Your World, three for three this year (including a tally in the Grade 1 Santa Anita Derby) in his brief career so far, had a fine feather placed in his growing cap when it was announced that his breeding rights had been purchased by the historic Lexington farm Spendthrift, where he'll stand stud upon his retirement.

He's listed as the 5-1 second choice in tomorrow's early Derby wagering and will have the nation's second-leading rider – Joel Rosario – on board as they break from post 15 in the mile and one-quarter classic.

THE FIELD FOR THE $3 MILLION KENTUCKY DERBY PRESENTED BY WOODFORD RESERVE (GI) – Known Agenda (Irad Ortiz Jr., 6-1), Like the King (Drayden Van Dyke, 50-1), Brooklyn Strong (Umberto Rispoli, 50-1), Keepmeinmind (David Cohen, 50-1), Sainthood (Corey Lanerie, 50-1), O Besos (Marcelino Pedroza, 20-1), Mandaloun (Florent Geroux, 15-1), Medina Spirit (John Velazquez, 15-1), Hot Rod Charlie (Flavien Prat, 8-1), Midnight Bourbon (Mike Smith, 20-1), Dynamic One (Jose Ortiz, 20-1), Helium (Julien Leparoux, 50-1), Hidden Stash (Rafael Bejarano, 50-1), Essential Quality (Luis Saez, 2-1), Rock Your World (Joel Rosario, 5-1), King Fury (Brian Hernandez Jr., 20-1), Highly Motivated (Javier Castellano, 10-1), Super Stock (Ricardo Santana Jr., 30-1), Soup and Sandwich (Tyler Gaffalione, 30-1), Bourbonic (Kendrick Carmouche, 30-1). All starters will carry 126 pounds

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