Six Graded Reasons to Clear Your Saturday at Churchill Downs
The graded stakes calendar roars back to life this weekend, and Churchill Downs is the place to be. Saturday's Stephen Foster Preview Day headlines an 11-race card that gets underway at 12:45 p.m. Eastern, built as a local prep for the Grade 1 Stephen Foster Stakes. All told, the program offers seven stakes worth $1.975 million in purses, six of them graded, led by the $300,000 Blame. If you only carve out one afternoon of racing this spring, make it this one.
The Blame Stakes is the marquee, and it looks wide open, but one runner carries a serious class edge. Wathnan Racing's Hit Show, winner of the 2025 Dubai World Cup, returns to Churchill to headline a field of eight older horses, with Irad Ortiz Jr. up from post 3 for trainer Brad Cox. Cox calls him a classy, well-traveled older horse who has trained sharply since coming home. He will not have it easy. Fellow Grade 1 winner Rattle N Roll, the 2023 Blame winner, lines up at 4-1 on the morning line to Hit Show's 5-2, while Hall of Fame looked impressive when he beat Breeders' Cup Classic winner Sierra Leone in the New Orleans Classic. Morning-line favorite Vibe, unbeaten in three this year, is expected to scratch and reroute to the June 6th Metropolitan Handicap.
The undercard is where this day truly earns its billing. In the Grade 2 Shawnee, watch the older fillies and mares, where Godolphin homebred Immersive figures to draw plenty of attention. The Nyquist filly was voted champion two-year-old filly and was last seen finishing runner-up for Cox in the Grade 3 Distaff at Aqueduct. Cox likes her stretching back out around two turns, where she has proven herself against top company. Note, though, that Breeders' Cup Filly and Mare Sprint heroine Splendora is expected to scratch, reshaping the picture.
Bob Baffert's increased presence under the Twin Spires is one of the year's better storylines, and he sends a pair to the Grade 3 Aristides. Cornucopian, a graded stakes winner, looks to bounce back from a well-beaten Churchill Downs Stakes effort, while the Grade 1-placed Madaket Road draws in off a recent allowance score.
The turf menu is loaded, too, anchoring an all-stakes, all-turf Pick 4. In the Grade 3 Mint Julep, John D. Gunther homebred Favorite Memory, a Frankel filly from Cherie DeVaux's barn, makes her first U.S. start after running in England. The Grade 3 Regret brings a sharp group of sophomore fillies, where Tam Tam, beaten just a head in the Grade 2 Edgewood on Oaks Day, should be the one to beat under Junior Alvarado. And in the Grade 3 Arlington, Steve Asmussen's Lagynos chases a fourth straight win, with the lightly raced Minaret Station a possible spoiler.
The action is not confined to Kentucky. Out west, Seismic Beauty returns in the Grade 2 Santa Margarita at Santa Anita on Saturday for Baffert, a year after winning the same race gate to wire by five lengths. Santa Anita comes back Sunday with the Grade 3 Triple Bend, featuring Grade 1 winner Stronghold for Phil D'Amato, while Woodbine rolls out the Grade 2 Eclipse alongside the Grade 3 Bell Mahone and Grade 3 Jacques Cartier.
Quarter Horse fans have their own blockbuster Saturday night, as Remington Park closes its spring meet with the Night of Champions, a dozen stakes worth more than $2.5 million in a 12-race card going off at 6 p.m. Eastern. The crown jewel is the Grade 1, $1.1 million Heritage Place Futurity for two-year-olds, where May trials standouts Curls Favorite Jet and Fall Classic posted the fastest qualifying times. The supporting cast is loaded, headlined by the Grade 2, $373,800 Heritage Place Oaks, where Los Alamitos Two Million Futurity winner Toby Sis tries to move within a neck of a perfect seven-for-seven record, plus the Grade 2 Heritage Place Derby and the Grade 1 Remington Park Invitational Championship, where 2022 AQHA World Champion Empressum returns to his favored 440 yards at age eight.
Best of all, the timing is perfect. The 158th Belmont Stakes is just a week away, set for June 6th at Saratoga, the third and final year the Triple Crown finale runs there at the shortened mile and a quarter while Belmont Park is rebuilt. Consider this weekend the appetizer before the classic. Grab a seat, build your Pick 4 ticket, and enjoy the ride.