Daily Racing Form National Digital Edition

A bridge for Limousine Liberal

- By Marty McGee

LOUISVILLE, Ky. – Fresh off a win in a $500,000 race, Limousine Liberal is entered back Saturday in the $100,000 Aristides at Churchill Downs.

There’s a method to the madness. Lacking few desirable options aside from the $250,000 True North next Friday at Belmont Park, trainer Ben Colebrook essentiall­y is using the Grade 3 Aristides as a steppingst­one to richer races this summer in New York.

“The idea of the True North, we kicked it around,” said Colebrook, referring to himself and K.K. Ball, who owns and co-bred Limousine Liberal with her husband, Lexington, Ky., homebuilde­r Mike Ball.

“You do have almost another week to run there, but once you throw in the ship and everything and the fact A. P. Indian is probably going in there, we thought staying close to home was the way to go. Assuming he runs well, we’ll take a look at maybe the [July 8] Belmont Sprint Championsh­ip and the Vanderbilt [July 29 at Saratoga] as our next options. I’m dying to get him to Belmont Park.”

In his last start, Limousine Liberal held sway in the Grade 2, $500,000 Churchill Downs on the May 6 Kentucky Derby undercard for easily the biggest victory of a 14-race career in which he has four wins, five seconds, and $771,120 in earnings. The 5-year-old Limousine Liberal was assigned the outside post in a field of eight older horses in the 29th running of the Aristides, a six-furlong race slotted as the 10th of 11 races.

In the seven-furlong Churchill Downs, Limousine Liberal and regular rider Jose Ortiz were prominent from the bell, putting away the favored Masochisti­c and holding off a belated surge by Awesome Slew to post the fourth triple-digit Beyer Speed Figure (101) of his career. The slight turnback Saturday should not present a major obstacle, given the favorable post and his natural speed. Corey Lanerie replaces Ortiz, who has a full dance card Saturday at Belmont.

“The horse came out of it really well,” said Colebrook, who is based at Keeneland in Lexington. “He kept his weight good, his appetite’s been good. He’s had a couple of nice breezes in between. The half-mile the other day was slow [49.80 seconds] by design.”

Limousine Liberal will be favored, but not prohibitiv­ely so. A few of his opponents are capable of the mild upset, most notably Union Jackson (post 3, Florent Geroux), fresh from a layoff of nearly four months for Steve Asmussen, and Wilbo (post 4, Albin Jimenez) and Recount (post 5, Chris Landeros), the one-two finishers in a key May 12 allowance at Churchill.

Wabel, Abbaa, The Truth Or Else, and Schivarell­i complete the field.

In last year’s Aristides, Alsvid prevailed by a head over Limousine Liberal, with Union Jackson another half-length back in third.

◗ One race earlier, a wellmatche­d field of older turf sprinters will clash in the $65,000 Mighty Beau. Latent Revenge, the 23-1 runner-up in the Grade 3 Twin Spires Turf Sprint on the Kentucky Oaks undercard, figures as the horse to catch in a field of 10.

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