Churchill Downs‘ unexpected suspension of races for the remainder of the meet did little to hinder the June 11 $400,000 Matt Winn Stakes (G3), which will now be run two hours west of the Twin Spires at Ellis Park in Henderson, Ky.
The 1 1/8-mile test drew a competitive field of eight 3-year-olds, including a quartet of Kentucky Derby (G1) starters led by fourth-place finisher Disarm .
Winchell Thoroughbreds’ Disarm, a striking carbon copy of his sire, 2017 Horse of the Year Gun Runner , will make his first start since his brave effort in the May 6 Run for the Roses. Trained by Steve Asmussen, Disarm ran well off the pace early on before surging five-wide around the turn and bumping with fellow Matt Winn contender Raise Cain inside the final furlong. The career-best effort followed a third-place finish in the Lexington Stakes (G3) and a runner-up finish in the Louisiana Derby (G2).
Originally slated for a bid in the Preakness Stakes (G1), Asmussen ultimately decided to bypass the second jewel of the Triple Crown to give the colt a bit of a breather after a strenuous pre-Derby campaign, where Disarm ran in three races during a seven-week period.
Joel Rosario, Disarm’s rider in the Derby, will fly back to Kentucky after riding Belmont weekend in New York to pilot the likely morning-line favorite.
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The Preakness was never in the cards for the Ben Colebrook-trained Raise Cain, but the June 10 Belmont Stakes (G1) was under consideration for the Derby eighth-place finisher until this past Monday.
Colebrook felt the grueling 1 1/2 miles was too much for Raise Cain, and decided to pinpoint the Matt Winn when the Churchill meet switched to Ellis.
“The 1 1/2 miles was a little bit of a funny distance; they don’t normally run it and he’s never going to have to run that far again. And to ship all the way up there was another factor,” Colebrook said. “The Matt Winn is right here, and when the race changed to Ellis, a few of the horses that were more miler types didn’t go, so the race definitely changed a little bit. It just made more sense for us to stay home and run in a race like that than ship all the way to New York and possibly find out the 1 1/2 miles might not be to his liking.”
A dominant winner of the Gotham Stakes (G3) March 4, Andrew and Rania Warren’s Raise Cain was bumped and checked in the Derby. He returned to the work tab May 22 at Colebrook’s Keeneland home base and has turned in three works since the Run for the Roses.
“He came out of the Kentucky Derby well,” Colebrook said. “He didn’t have the greatest of trips that day. We’re looking forward to running him back on Sunday.”
Junior Alvarado has the mount on the Violence colt for the first time in the Matt Winn.
Other Kentucky Derby contenders include the Brad Cox pupil Verifying and the Ron Moquett-trained King Russell .
Verifying, second in the Blue Grass Stakes (G1) back in April while defeating Raise Cain, wilted after six furlongs in the Derby after setting sprint-like fractions of :22 2/5 and :45 3/5. He crossed the wire in 16th.
The Justify colt, owned by the mighty Coolmore connections, tuned up for the Matt Winn with a sharp five-furlong blowout in 1:00 1/5 at Churchill. Ridden back by Tyler Gaffalione, Verifying will have to contend with last-out Churchill allowance winner Bo Cruz for frontrunning honors. Cox won the Matt Winn last year with three-time grade 1 winner Cyberknife .
Brereton Jones and Nabar Racing’s King Russell drew into the Derby off the also-eligible list. Wide throughout, he struggled home in 15th. The gray son of Jones’ Airdrie Stud stallion Creative Cause was a late-running second in the Arkansas Derby (G1) at Oaklawn Park before his run in Louisville.