Daily Racing Form National Digital Edition

Asmussen closing in on Baird’s win record

- By Marty McGee

LOUISVILLE, Ky. – A Churchill Downs backstretc­h visitor caught sight of Steve Asmussen early Saturday and asked him to raise nine fingers. Asmussen grinned and complied – without even trying.

“How’s this?” said Asmussen, quickly referring to what little remains of his left thumb.

Asmussen had achieved the incredible feat of 9,000 career victories the previous night when Troy Ounce won the second race at Remington Park in Oklahoma, so the nine digits are symbolic. Asmussen, now 54, was 10 years old when he lost most of his thumb.

“I was holding a horse [Something Lika Jet] of my mother’s that had just won a race in the test barn at La Bahia Downs in 1976,” he recalled.

Losing most of the thumb to a nasty bite hasn’t kept Asmussen from accomplish­ing what only one person has and very few others ever will in Thoroughbr­ed racing. Through Sunday, he had won 9,004 races while clearly on the fast track to becoming the all-time wins leader at a relatively young age. Only the late Dale Baird, with 9,445, has won more.

Asmussen has trained the Horse of the Year four times – Curlin in 2007-08, Rachel Alexandra in 2009, and Gun Runner in 2017 – and was inducted into the Racing Hall of Fame in 2016. He’s serious and highly ambitious, yes – but he also can self-deprecate, at least when it comes to having been mangled, ironically, by a horse.

“The all-time win record is 9,445, and I have about 9.5 digits,” he said. “Looks like just enough.”

Set Piece favored

Set Piece, a Juddmonte Farms homebred who looked like a world-beater in winning his first North American start here in June, figures as a decisive favorite Wednesday when Churchill begins the final five-day stretch of the 14-day September meet.

Set Piece, with Florent Geroux riding from post 6, is one of eight older horses in race 8, the only allowance on a ninerace card that starts at 12:45 p.m. Eastern. The $81,000 thirdlevel allowance is scheduled for 1 1/16 miles on the turf.

After going 3 for 6 overseas, Set Piece overcame a poor start in his Stateside debut to win going away. Trained by Brad Cox, the 4-year-old gelding has raced just once in the interim, a sixth with an excuse at this same level on the first Saturday of the 2020 Saratoga meet.

Cox, with six wins at the meet, trails only Asmussen (eight) atop the meet standings.

Cloudy skies and mid-70s highs are in the Wednesday forecast. Live televised action of the entire card is available in its entirety on FS2 (12:30-5 p.m.).

The Grade 3 Ack Ack, to be run Saturday at a mile, is the end-of-meet highlight. Closing day is Sunday, with Keeneland starting its 17-day fall meet Oct. 2.

◗ Miguel Mena is hoping to return sooner than expected from an injury suffered last week in a Churchill spill. His agent, Joe Santos, said the 33-year-old jockey has been experienci­ng minimal pain in his ribs, which initially were believed to be cracked or badly bruised, and that a return by opening day at Keeneland is realistic.

◗ Trainer Neil Pessin has confirmed that Bell’s the One, winner of the Grade 1 Derby City Distaff on the Sept. 5 Kentucky Derby card, will bypass the Oct. 3 Thoroughbr­ed Club of America at Keeneland to train straight into the Nov. 7 Breeders’ Cup Filly and Mare Sprint, also at Keeneland.

 ?? BARBARA D. LIVINGSTON ?? Steve Asmussen is the second trainer to ever win 9,000 races.
BARBARA D. LIVINGSTON Steve Asmussen is the second trainer to ever win 9,000 races.

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