Koichi Nishikawa’s Luxor Café and Junko Kondo’s Admire Daytona (JPN) turned in works over a fast track on a warm Tuesday morning at Churchill Downs.

Trained by Noriyuki Hori, Luxor Café worked five furlongs in 1:02.40 with jockey Joao Moreira aboard. Fractions on the work were :13.40, :26, :37.80 and 1:02.40.

Trained by Yukihiro Kato, Admire Daytona worked five furlongs in 1:02.40 with Yoshimitsu Niyashita aboard. Working in company with the 3-year-old Dale Romans-trained maiden winner Greatdayforhockey, Admire Daytona produced fractions of :13.40, :25.60, :49.40, 1:02.40 and out six furlongs in 1:16.20.

Both colts worked during the 7:15-7:30 (all times Eastern) training period reserved for Kentucky Derby and Oaks entrants.

ADMIRE DAYTONA (JPN) – Trained by Yukihiro KatoJunko Kondo’s Admire Daytona worked five furlongs in 1:02.40 with Yoshimitsu Niyashita aboard.

Working in company with the 3-year-old Dale Romans-trained maiden winner Greatdayforhockey, Admire Daytona produced fractions of :13.40, :25.60, :49.40, 1:02.40 and out six furlongs in 1:16.20.

“Up until now he’s been just training on his own just maintaining condition from Dubai,” Kato said of the UAE Derby (GII) winner. “Today we wanted to train him in company to tighten the screws down and it was perfect. He is a horse that thrives off a challenge. We really appreciate Dale Romans helping us out today.”

AMERICAN PROMISE – BC Stables’ American Promise galloped a mile and a half under Tayja Smith for trainer DWayne Lukas at 7:15.

Looking on from the backstretch was jockey Nik Juarez, who will have the mount in Kentucky Derby 151 that will mark his inaugural foray in the Run for the Roses.

“I am just taking it all in,” said Juarez, whose agent is three-time Kentucky Derby-winning rider Gary Stevens. “He told me to just soak it all in.”

Juarez was aboard American Promise for the first time when he won the Virginia Derby by 7 ¾ lengths on March 15 at Colonial Downs.

“He was exceptional that day and he did what Mr. Lukas was expecting him to do,” Juarez said.

Stevens will have Juarez busy on Saturday with four mounts before the Derby plus one in the nightcap on the 14-race program.

So, what will the Derby rookie be thinking about when he guides American Promise into post 5 on Saturday?

“I’ll be in the gate with confidence and wait for the gate to pop,” Juarez said.

BAEZA – The Kentucky Derby’s lone also-eligible went about his business Tuesday morning at Churchill Downs as his people hope for that touch of good fortune that will get him in the starting gate this Saturday.

          The McKinzie colt had regular exercise rider Frankie Herrate in the irons as they headed out during the Derby/Oaks special training period at 7:15 a.m. on a warm morning in Louisville. Their first stop was the new paddock at the ancient oval and the bay handled that just fine. From there they came back to the racetrack and put in a good gallop of approximately a mile and a quarter.

          The day prior, he’d turned in his final Derby work by going 1:02 for five furlongs.

          Trainer John Shirreffs looked on Tuesday from the Lukas Gap area.

          “We just want to keep him from getting too fresh now,” the veteran conditioner said. “Keep that nose to the grindstone, so to speak. Later in the week we’ll lighten it up.”

          Currently Baeza is No. 21 on the Derby list and is needing one of the 20 scheduled runners to withdraw from the mile and a quarter before the 9 a.m. scratch time Friday for the big race. Eclipse Award winner Flavien Prat is listed as the rider, if the bay gets to do his thing.

BURNHAM SQUARE – Whitham Thoroughbreds’ Burnham Square galloped a mile and a half under Mark Cutler at 7:15 for trainer Ian Wilkes.

A victory by Burnham Square on Saturday would put Wilkes into some exclusive company as one of 12 trainers to saddle a Kentucky Derby winner and a Breeders’ Cup Classic (GI) winner.

Wilkes saddled Fort Larned to victory in the 2012 Classic at Santa Anita for Janis Whitham with Brian Hernandez Jr. aboard. Hernandez has the mount on Burnham Square on Saturday.

Whitham Thoroughbreds has six horses with Wilkes now and the trainer was asked what a Derby victory for his longtime clients would mean.

“I can’t explain it,” Wilkes said. “It would mean so much to the staff. I would like to try to answer that Saturday evening.”

CHUNK OF GOLD – Terry Stephens’ Chunk of Gold visited the Kentucky Derby starting gate and then galloped a mile and a half under trainer Ethan West during the 7:15-7:30 training window.

CITIZEN BULL/RODRIGUEZ – Trainer Bob Baffert’s two Derby colts – Rodriguez and Citizen Bull – had different agendas Tuesday morning at Churchill Downs. The latter was only a shedrow walker (he’s drilled a nifty bullet :58.40 Monday), but the former took to galloping during the special Derby/Oaks training period under exercise rider Eric Garcia.

          Rodriguez took care of business and returned to Barn 33 in good order.

          Come Saturday, both runners figure to be busy early as likely members of the forward contingent in Kentucky Derby 151. Citizen Bull drew the rail and rider Martin Garcia will have last year’s 2-year-old champ going full tilt ASAP. Hall of Famer Mike Smith is assigned to Rodriguez again (they most recently had captured the Wood Memorial in New York) and his front-running style indicates he’ll be in the hunt from the git-go, too.

          Trainer Baffert, a six-time winner of the Kentucky Derby, is back in town and back in action after being sidelined for three years after his horse Medina Spirit failed a post-race drug test in 2021. Baffert, a member of horse racing’s Hall of Fame since 2009, said one of the things he’s happiest about is his chance to be back in action with his good ‘other’ horses on the Derby undercard.

          “You know, they always have a terrific undercard for the Derby with lots of good opportunities for good horses,” he said Tuesday morning on the Churchill backstretch. “I had good horses over the past three years and never got to run them here.

          “But I’m back doing it now (he has five horses in undercard races on Saturday) and have spots for my horses to run. That’s one of the best things of all for me and for my owners.”  

COAL BATTLE – Norman Stables’ Coal Battle walked the shedrow as Barn 42 a day after working three furlongs in :36 under Bethany Taylor.

Owner Robbie Norman from Alabama was on hand and enjoying the Derby experience.

“We’ve been here since Saturday before the draw,” Norman said. “I have never been to the Derby. I had a horse here in 2022 (with trainer Lonnie Briley) on the Thursday before, but the traffic was so bad, I just turned around and decided I wouldn’t come back until I had a horse in it.”

Briley has been training for Norman for 13 years.

EAST AVENUE – Godolphin’s East Avenue galloped a mile and a quarter at 7:15 under Stephen Dolan for trainer Brendan Walsh.

FINAL GAMBIT – Juddmonte’s Final Gambit galloped a mile and a half under Joel Osirio for trainer Brad Cox at 7:15.

FLYING MOHAWK – Two Eight RacingBerry Family Racing and Kaleta Racing’s Flying Mohawk galloped at 7:15 under Maurilio Garcia for trainer Whit Beckman.

GRANDE – The Wood Memorial (GII) runner-up continued his training for Kentucky Derby 151 with a solid gallop of about a mile and three-eighths Tuesday morning during the 7:15 to 7:30 special period for Derby and Oaks horses.

          Exercise rider Juan Suarez was at the controls and trainer Todd Pletcher was a very interested observer.

          Things are flowing fine during Derby week for the Hall of Fame conditioner, who knows a thing or two about how the drill works at Churchill Downs. When he puts the saddle on his Curlin colt Saturday, it will be the 66th time he’s sent a horse out in America’s most famous race. Not surprisingly, that’s a record – by a clear margin.

          “We’ve got him lined up to do some paddock schooling in the third race Wednesday,” Pletcher noted.

          Hall of Famer John Valezquez will be aboard Grande and come out of Post 10 on Saturday.

JOURNALISM – The well-made Curlin colt known as Journalism continued Tuesday morning to move toward his date with destiny in Kentucky Derby 15.

          With regular exercise rider Marc Witkowski doing the steering, the likely Kentucky Derby favorite merely jogged a mile, then spent some time getting used to the starting gate. It all went well for the bay who comes into Run for the Roses with three straight graded stakes on his ledger, the most recent being the Grade I Santa Anita Derby.

          Trainer Michael McCarthy oversaw the proceedings and continues to navigate his way through a hectic week. The 54-year-old, who spent his growing-up-years in Southern California and now calls that part of the world his training headquarters, said he always enjoys coming back to Kentucky.

          “In a lot of ways Louisville feels like home,” he said. “I had all those years here with Todd (he was an assistant for Todd Pletcher for 11 years), so I know my way around a bit. If I want to go for a nice dinner, Jack Fry’s is one of my favorites. And there are a couple of watering holes around town (Molly Malone’s and a pint of Guinness drew a nod) where I like to stop by.

          “But I’m not drinking this week. I’ve got other things to do.”

LUXOR CAFÉ – Koichi Nishikawa’s Luxor Café worked five furlongs in 1:02.40 with jockey Joao Moreira aboard. Fractions on the work were :13.40, :26, :37.80 and 1:02.40.

“Today I was asked to canter a lap as a warm up,” Moreira said of the colt trained by Noriyuki Hori. “Then I galloped him from the five-furlong pole. It was just an easy work, just to keep him ticking over. The horse felt good, relaxed and had good rhythm throughout. I was happy with his action and focus. He pulled up well. Looking forward to the challenge of riding him in the Kentucky Derby.”

NEOEQUOS – C2 Racing StableIan ParsardShining Stables and Stefania Farms’ Neoequos galloped at 7:15 for trainer Saffie Joseph Jr.

OWEN ALMIGHTY – Flying Dutchmen Breeding and Racing’s Owen Almighty galloped a mile and a half at 7:15 under Antonio Orellana for trainer Brian Lynch.

Javier Castellano, who savored Derby success with Mage in 2023, will be aboard Owen Almighty for the first time in Derby 151 and exit post 20.

“He has tactical speed and he can sit off the pace,” Lynch said of his three-time stakes winner. “Then we’ll see what happens.”

Owen Almighty is scheduled for a paddock schooling session in Wednesday’s third race.

PUBLISHER/TIZTASTIC – Trainer Steve Asmussen’s Derby duo jogged during the 7:15-7:30 training window.

Gus King and the Estate of Brereton Jones’ Publisher was partnered by Carlos Rosas with Roberto Howell aboard Tiztasic, owned by Winchell ThoroughbredsMrs. John MagnierMichael Tabor and Derrick Smith.

RENDER JUDGMENT – Baccari Racing StableDream Walkin FarmsMJM Racing and Rocket Ship Racing’s Render Judgment galloped at 7:15 under Robby Albarado for trainer Kenny McPeek.

SANDMAN – D. J. StableSt. Elias StableWest Point Thoroughbreds and CJ Stables’ Sandman galloped a mile and a quarter at 7:15 under Froylan Garcia for trainer Mark Casse.

Jose Ortiz, who rode Sandman to victory in the Arkansas Derby (GI) in his most recent start, will be aboard for the fourth time on Saturday. Ortiz rode Sandman in his debut here last June and also in the Iroquois (GIII) in September before reuniting at Oaklawn Park.

“Jose said he rode him terrible the first time,” Casse said. “Before the Arkansas Derby, we watched tapes of the Southwest (GIII) and Rebel (GII) and they key is to let him get into his stride and Jose let him settle (in the Arkansas Derby).”

Sandman finished third in the Street Sense (GIII) in his third Churchill start, but Casse does not feel the track will be an issue Saturday.

“A lot has been made of him not running well here,” Casse said. “The track was totally different last fall and now is the best I have seen it and I have been coming here 47 years. (Trainer) Dale Romans said the same thing last night and he has been here about as long as I have.”

Sandman is scheduled to school in the paddock this afternoon with horses in the third race.

SOVEREIGNTY – The colt who is the 5-1 second betting choice in the morning line for the Kentucky Derby was kept to the task Tuesday morning at Churchill Downs with regular exercise rider Guesler Cardona on his back.

          He put in a good gallop, then went up and into the paddock with trainer Bill Mott on his pony as accompaniment. All went well in that regard.

          Mott, who’ll be saddling his 14th Derby starter Saturday, looked a day ahead with his Into Mischief youngster. “We’ll probably paddock school him in the afternoon Wednesday,” he noted.

          Sovereignty is scheduled to be ridden by Junior Alvarado in Derby 151 and they are drawn into post 18 in the 20-horse field.

THE $5 MILLION KENTUCKY DERBY PRESENTED BY WOODFORD RESERVE (GI) – The field for the 151st running of the Kentucky Derby presented by Woodford Reserve (GI) (with jockey, trainer and morning line odds): Citizen Bull (Martin Garcia, Bob Baffert, 20-1); Neoequous (Flavien Prat, Saffie Joseph Jr., 30-1); Final Gambit (Luan Machado, Brad Cox, 30-1); Rodriguez (Mike Smith, Bob Baffert, 12-1); American Promise (Nik Juarez, D. Wayne Lukas, 30-1); Admire Daytona (JPN) (Christophe Lemaire, Yukihiro Kato, 30-1); Luxor Café (Joao Moreira, Noriyuki Kato, 15-1); Journalism (Umberto Rispoli, Michael McCarthy, 3-1); Burnham Square (Brian Hernandez Jr., Ian Wilkes, 12-1); Grande (John Velazquez, Todd Pletcher, 20-1); Flying Mohawk (Joe Ramos, Whit Beckman, 30-1); East Avenue (Manny Franco, Brendan Walsh, 20-1); Publisher (Irad Ortiz Jr., Steve Asmussen, 20-1); Tiztastic (Joel Rosario, Steve Asmussen, 20-1); Render Judgment (Julien Leparoux, Kenny McPeek, 30-1); Coal Battle (Juan Vargas, Lonnie Briley, 30-1); Sandman (Jose Ortiz, Mark Casse, 6-1); Sovereignty (Junior Alvarado, Bill Mott, 5-1); Chunk of Gold (Jareth Loveberry, Ethan West, 30-1); Owen Almighty (Javier Castellano, Brian Lynch, 30-1); AE: Baeza (Flavien Prat, John Shirreffs, 12-1).

LONGINES KENTUCKY OAKS UPDATE

ANNA’S PROMISE – Bell Racing’s Anna’s Promise galloped at 7:15 for trainer Carlos David.

BALLERINA D’ORO – Rodeo Creek Racing’s Ballerina d’Oro galloped at 7:15 under Kriss Bon for trainer Chad Brown.

BLESS THE BROKEN – Cypress Creek Equine and Madaket Stables’ Bless the Broken galloped a mile and half under Genis Bracho at 7:15 for trainer Will Walden and was scheduled for a paddock schooling session Tuesday afternoon with horses in the second race.

Son of Classic-winning trainer Elliott Walden, Will Walden has been training for four years after starting with a small string at Keeneland. In that string was a filly Walden thought might get him to the Oaks.

“I thought I might have been here two years ago with T Max,” Walden said. “She ran second to Tom Amoss’ good filly (Hoosier Philly) in the Rags to Riches here in the fall of 2022.”

Elliott Walden came close in the Derby twice with runner-up finishes by Victory Gallop in 1998 and Menifee in 1999.

“He told me to be decisive and makes sound decisions,” Will Walden said of training advice from his father.

DREXEL HILL/SIMPLY JOKING – Trainer Whit Beckman’s Kentucky Oaks duo both galloped early under Maurilio Garcia.

First out at 5:30 was Grantley AcresRyan Conner and Berkels0813’s Simply Joking with Legion Racing’s Drexel Hill following soon after.

Both fillies then schooled in the paddock after training.

FIVE G – Gatsas Stables’ Five G galloped a mile and a half during the 7:15-7:30 training period under Raul Alejandro for trainer George Weaver.

Winner of the Gulfstream Park Oaks (GII) in her most recent start, Five G will be ridden by Manny Franco.

In 2015, Weaver and Franco made their Kentucky Derby debuts with Tencendur with Franco was 20 and just in his third year of riding.

“He’s a very capable rider and I was using him before he really got popular and his career has just kept going up,” Weaver said. “He ended up on her at Gulfstream Park and got a chance to know her. She ran her best numbers.”

FONDLY – Eclipse Thoroughbred Partners and Madaket Stables’ Fondly visited the starting gate in the mile chute and then galloped a mile and a half under William Humphrey for trainer Graham Motion.

GOOD CHEER – Godolphin’s Good Cheer, the 6-5 morning-line favorite for Kentucky Oaks 151, galloped in blinkers at 7:15 under Katie Tolbert for trainer Brad Cox.

LA CARA – Tracy Farmer’s La Cara jogged a mile early Tuesday morning under Kevin Donnis for trainer Mark Casse.

“She is high energy and we want to tamp that down a bit, so we will probably keep doing that (going out early during the week),” Casse said.

Farmer also bred La Cara and he and Casse teamed up with another homebred to win the 2019 Belmont Stakes (GI) with Sir Winston.

“He is pumped up (about La Cara),” Casse said. “More pumped than he was before the Belmont.”

La Cara was scheduled to school in the paddock with horses in Tuesday afternoon’s third race.

QUICKICK – Greenwell Thoroughbreds’ Quickick galloped a mile and a half at 7:15 under Rafael Rustrian for trainer Tom Amoss and was scheduled to school in the paddock Tuesday afternoon with horses in the seventh race.

Fourth in the Fair Grounds Oaks (GII) in her most recent start, Quickick will be ridden by Umberto Rispoli for the first time in Friday’s Oaks.

“She is really going to have to improve but there are a couple of things that are giving me confidence,” said Amoss, who saddled Serengeti Empress to victory in the 2019 Oaks.

“She has really blossomed up here. At the Fair Grounds, she was quiet and stayed in the back of her stall but up here her coat and weight have improved.

“I like what I have seen from her,” Amoss added of the filly who has had four five-eighths work over the track here since the Fair Grounds Oaks. “She can’t give them a head start. We have been working on that to fall into a better position and not be in a different ZIP code.”

QUIETSIDE – Shortleaf Stable’s Quietside galloped at 7:15 under Daniel Ortiz for trainer John Ortiz.

The Fantasy (GII) and Honeybee (GIII) winner was accompanied to the track by the John Ortiz-trained Barber Road, who finished sixth in the 2022 Kentucky Derby.

TENMA – The Kentucky Oaks filly Tenma got to work early Tuesday morning, heading trackside for a gallop just when Churchill opened for horse business at 5:15. Exercise rider Eric Garcia was at the controls and they took a full tour – and a little bit more – around the big oval.

          The Bob Baffert-trained miss will be partnered by her regular guy, Juan Hernandez, come Friday and the 151st edition of the famed Kentucky Oaks. They’ll break from Post 9 in the 14-horse lineup as they begin their nine-furlong test in front of a crowd that is expected to surpass 100,000.

THE $1.5 MILLION LONGINES KENTUCKY OAKS (GI) – Here is the field for the $1.5 million Longines Kentucky Oaks (GI) (with jockey, trainer and morning line odds): Early On (Edgard Zayas, Saffie Joseph Jr., 30-1); Simply Joking (Florent Geroux, Whit Beckman, 10-1); Fondly (Irad Ortiz Jr., Graham Motion, 30-1); Drexel Hill (Ben Curtis, Whit Beckman, 30-1); Quickick (Umberto Rispoli, Tom Amoss, 30-1); Ballerina d’Oro (Flavien Prat, Chad Brown, 10-1); La Cara (Dylan Davis, Mark Casse, 6-1); Five G (Manny Franco, George Weaver, 12-1); Tenma (Juan Hernandez, Bob Baffert, 12-1); Take Charge Milady (Brian Hernandez Jr., Kenny McPeek, 12-1); Good Cheer (Luis Saez, Brad Cox, 6-5); Anna’s Promise (Junior Alvarado, Carlos David, 30-1); Bless the Broken (John Velazquez, Will Walden, 30-1); Quietside (Jose Ortiz, John Ortiz, 8-1).

KENTUCKY DERBY, OAKS MORNING WORKOUTS OPEN TO THE PUBLIC THROUGH WEDNESDAY – Continuing through Wednesday, Churchill Downs will be open free-of-charge daily from 6:45-10 a.m. so guests can watch the nation’s top 3-year-old Thoroughbreds train toward their engagements in this year’s Kentucky Derby and Kentucky Oaks during Dawn at the Downs.

     Horses train on Churchill Downs’ main track daily from 5:15-10 a.m. There is an exclusive training window only for Derby and Oaks participants from 7:15-7:30 a.m. following the 6:45-7:15 a.m. renovation break. Those horses will be identified by special saddle towels that include their names: yellow saddle towels for Derby horses and pink saddle towels for Oaks contenders.

     Guests can park for free in the Yellow Lot off Longfield Ave. (all vehicles must be removed by 10:30 a.m.) and enter Churchill Downs through the Clubhouse Gate. Guests will be directed to Sections 115-117 to watch the morning workouts.

     Churchill Downs’ Paddock Grill will be open each morning with coffee and breakfast sandwich options. No outside food and beverages are allowed. Also, the Churchill Downs Store with Kentucky Derby 151 merchandise will be open each morning.

     A stream of the workouts is available at www.KentuckyDerby.com from 6:45-7:45 a.m. through May 1

KENTUCKY DERBY MORNING WORKS SHOW OFFERS BEHIND-THE-SCENES ACCESS TO DERBY, OAKS TRAINING – The Kentucky Derby Morning Workouts Show presented by TwinSpires.com will air until Thursday and offer fans an exclusive look at the final preparations of Kentucky Derby and Oaks contenders.

     Airing daily from 6:45-7:45 a.m, the one-hour program will be streamed live on the Kentucky Derby Facebook, X and YouTube accounts. The show will highlight the 15-minute exclusive training window from 7:15-7:30 a.m. for horses preparing for the $5 million Kentucky Derby presented by Woodford Reserve (Grade I) and the $1.5 million Longines Kentucky Oaks (GI).

     Hosted by Churchill Downs’ expert handicappers Joe KristufekKaitlin FreeTony Calo and Kevin Kilroy, the show will include insight, commentary and exclusive interviews from notable figures such as former leading rider Rosie Napravnik, Churchill Downs track announcer Travis Stone, TwinSpires.com handicapper James Scully and Churchill Downs racing analyst Megan Burgess.

     All Kentucky Derby and Oaks contenders are required to be on-site by Saturday, April 26. The show will continue through Thursday, May 1, showcasing every contender’s final training sessions leading into Kentucky Derby and Longines Kentucky Oaks.

     For more information, visit www.kentuckyderby.com

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@UofLSheriff50. Louisville native, University of Louisville Business School Grad c/o 2004. Co-Founder of TheCrunchZone.com

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