Reigning Horse of the Year RACHEL ALEXANDRA (Medaglia d’Oro)
Rachel Alexandra covered the distance under jockey and regular work
Owned by Jess Jackson’s Stonestreet Stables and Harold McCormick,
Trainer Steve Asmussen was pleased with the move and the said the
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“She handles it really well,” Asmussen said. “She went good. We’ve
got travel plans this week and want everything to go smoothly.”
Asmussen had originally planned to ship Rachel Alexandra and most of
his Churchill Downs division to Saratoga next week, but moved those
plans up a week because of the heat wave that has settled over the Ohio
Valley in recent weeks.
“It’s time,” Asmussen said. “I’ll be very happy when she’s settled in
there and we can get into our routine up there.”
Rachel Alexandra is coming off a 10 1/2-length victory in the
$200,000 Fleur de Lis H. (G2) at Churchill Downs on June 12, her first
victory of 2010 following back-to-back upset losses in the New Orleans
Ladies S. at Fair Grounds and the La Troienne S. (G2) at Churchill. Her
12-4-0 record in 17 races includes earnings of $3,216,730.
MINE THAT BIRD (Birdstone), upset winner of the 2009 Kentucky Derby
Jockey Calvin Borel was in the saddle as Double Eagle Ranch and Buena
Churchill Downs clockers caught Mine That Bird in fractional times of
“I told Calvin we needed to let him do it with no prompting today,
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“He’s just blossomed out,” Borel said. “How good is he? I don’t know
— but we’re going to find out. I think he’s a good horse. I don’t care
what anybody says — he wasn’t a fluke.”
“I couldn’t be happier,” Lukas said. “Every step has been right down
the line. I like the way that he’s changing — mentally and physically.
That’s the big thing. We know he can run if everything’s right.
Physically, he’s so much stronger — he might be 150 pounds heavier than
he was last year. And mentally, he’s really getting good.”
Mine That Bird has not raced since a ninth-place finish behind
unbeaten Zenyatta (Street Cry [Ire]) in last year’s Breeders’ Cup
Classic (G1) over Santa Anita’s synthetic Pro-Ride surface, but Lukas is
ready to see the winner of Derby 135 wear one of his signature white
bridles for the first time. The closest opportunities for a return to
racing come this weekend at Churchill Downs: a 1 1/16 mile allowance
race on the main track on Saturday or the $175,000 Firecracker H. (G2)
over a mile on turf on Sunday, the closing day of the 42-day spring
meet.
“We’d like to start him here,” Lukas said. “I used that Firecracker
as a back-up. I know he’s never been on the turf. I really don’t want to
ship him. I have the Salvatore Mile ([G3] on Saturday) at Monmouth, but
I’d like to just leave him in his own stall and try him. If he gets
beat, this first one is a means to an end.
“We’ll wait and see how the next two days look. I have no reason to
believe he won’t bounce back from this work. He does every one of them
so easy. He has amazing efficiency of motion. I’ve had some pretty good
horses that I thought could get over the ground. I don’t know if any of
them got over it lighter than he does.”
Mine That Bird has failed to win in five races since his 50-1 shocker
in the Kentucky Derby. He finished a length behind Rachel Alexandra in
the Preakness S. (G1) and finished third to eventual 2009
three-year-old champion Summer Bird in the Belmont Stakes (G1) after
grabbing a clear lead in the homestretch. But he faltered in his final
three starts of the year, finishing third in the West Virginia Derby
(G2) at Mountaineer Park and sixth in the Goodwood S. (G1) at Santa
Anita before his dull effort in the Breeders’ Cup Classic.
His career record stands at 5-2-2 in 14 races with earnings of
$2,196,581.