Daily Racing Form National Digital Edition

Big Changes can kick off big week for Brad Cox

- By Marty McGee

HALLANDALE BEACH, Fla. – Brad Cox will be at Gulfstream Park for the Eclipse Awards next Thursday night (Jan. 24), so it didn’t make much sense for him to make the long round-trip journey here from his Midwest base this Saturday, too. Cox will be busy anyway Saturday at Fair Grounds, and he’ll be keeping an eye on the simulcast signal at Gulfstream Park, where Big Changes will carry the Steve Landers silks in the $150,000 Sunshine Millions Turf.

Cox also entered Big Changes in the Col. E.R. Bradley at Fair Grounds on Saturday, but said he intends to run him against Florida-breds in the Sunshine Millions here.

“Hopefully it’ll be an easier spot,” he said.

Now 7, Big Changes has never raced in Florida, where he was bred by Joanne Crowe and Joe Pickerrell. The gelding has finished first or second in 12 of 15 turf starts, a record that makes him a major contender in the 1 1/16-mile Turf. Last year he won 5 of 7 starts and finished second in his two losses. He won three stakes.

“He’s a very consistent animal,” said Cox, whose first trip to the Eclipse dinner is due to Monomoy Girl being a huge favorite in the 3-year-old filly category. “He’s been training great and we’re hoping his big year last year will carry over into this year.”

Big Changes isn’t the only Fair Grounds invader who looms a big factor in a Sunshine Millions event. Forevamo, an earner of more than $500,000 for Brittlynn Stables, also is being sent here from New Orleans by Steve Asmussen for the $200,000 Classic, the richest of the four Sunshine Millions races.

The 1 1/8-mile Classic was won last year by Jay’s Way, who is expected back for another run. Other notable Classic starters include Dalmore and Mr. Jordan.

The most accomplish­ed starter in any of the Sunshine Millions events will be X Y Jet, who will be heavily favored in the $100,000 Sprint at six furlongs. The gray 7-year-old gelding, an earner of nearly $1.56 million, will be making his first start since winning the Smile Sprint here in late June.

The final race in the series is the $150,000 Filly and Mare Turf, a 1 1/16-mile race in which the 2018 winner, Starship Jubilee, once again figures prominentl­y. Her opposition was expected to include as many as three Todd Pletcher trainees, led by Picara and Shanghai Starlet, both last-out winners on Sunshine Millions Preview Day in November at Gulfstream West.

The Sunshine Millions was inaugurate­d to great fanfare in 2002 with much larger purses (hence the Millions label) at both Gulfstream and Santa Anita as a competitio­n between Florida-breds and California­breds. Its scope and stature have gradually diminished through the years, with the crossover element being eliminated after the 2011 runnings.

First Pegasus shipper arrives

Following a journey of more than 21 hours, the Japanesebr­ed Aerolithe arrived here early Wednesday, making her the first non-Florida-based arrival for either of the Pegasus World Cup events, set for next Saturday, Jan. 26. The 5-yearold mare was flown from Tokyo to South Korea to Alaska to Miami, pulling through the Gulfstream stable gate at about 3:15 a.m.

Aerolithe is one of at least 10 prospectiv­e starters for the inaugural running of the $7 million Pegasus Turf, for which Yoshida, Next Shares, and Magic Wand look like the early favorites. The newest names on the confirmed list are Dubby Dubbie, a last-out Churchill Downs allowance winner who has been purchased privately by Ron Paolucci and is now being trained by Bob Hess Jr., and the speedy Fahan Mura, based in California with Vladimir Cerin.

Meanwhile, five of the 11 known starters for the $9 million Pegasus already are stabled in Florida, with the first scheduled shipper being City of Light, who was expected here early Wednesday afternoon following a flight from California. Several others, including the likely race favorite Accelerate, are scheduled to arrive Tuesday.

Entries for both Pegasus races will be drawn Tuesday. In all, there will be nine stakes on the Pegasus card.

Cairo Cat off Derby trail

Cairo Cat, winner of the Grade 3 Iroquois at Churchill Downs in September, has been diagnosed with an undisclose­d ailment and is off the Kentucky Derby trail.

Kenny McPeek posted on his Twitter account late Tuesday that Cairo Cat has been sent for further examinatio­n to Dr. Larry Bramlage at the Rood and Riddle veterinary clinic in Kentucky, adding the problem does not appear to be serious. Cairo Cat had been stabled at Payson Park in Florida and was nearing his first breeze of the year when the issue surfaced.

Cairo Cat, owned by Walking L Thoroughbr­eds, was 59-1 as a separately listed interest in Pool 1 of the Kentucky Derby Future Wager in late November off back-to-back victories in a Saratoga maiden race and the Iroquois.

 ?? KEENELAND/COADY PHOTOGRAPH­Y ?? Big Changes (right) went 5 for 7 in 2018 and starts his 7-yearold season Saturday in the Sunshine Millions Turf.
KEENELAND/COADY PHOTOGRAPH­Y Big Changes (right) went 5 for 7 in 2018 and starts his 7-yearold season Saturday in the Sunshine Millions Turf.

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