Always a Runner Looks to Stay Unbeaten in Acorn

It didn't take long for trainer Chad Brown to realize he had something special in a Gun Runner filly named Always a Runner. "She always had the looks of a Kentucky Oaks horse," the five-time Eclipse Award winner said. Not only did she become an Oaks horse, Always a Runner became a Kentucky Oaks (G1) winner when she rallied from eighth to maintain her unbeaten record and score by 1 1/4 lengths in the prized grade 1 test for 3-year-old fillies at Churchill Downs. Now that she has vaulted to the top of her division after a third straight win, she will try to stay there while facing four rivals in the $500,000 Acorn Stakes (G1) June 5 at Saratoga Race Course. "She came out of the Oaks great. I got her up to Saratoga right away and she has trained exceptionally well," Brown said about a filly owned by Douglas Scharbauer, whose mother and sister owned dual classic winner Alysheba, and breeder Three Chimneys Farm. Out of the Malibu Moon mare Always Carina, Always a Runner sold for $1.05 million at the 2024 Keeneland September Yearling Sale and has earned $984,800. There are several notable similarities between the Oaks and Acorn. Both are contested at a 1 1/8-mile distance and four of the five starters are exiting the May 1 Oaks. The big difference? Besides the settings, the field of five as opposed to 13 starters in the Oaks that led to quick fractions of :46.85 and 1:10.78 that were ideal for Always a Runner's late kick. The pace could play a key role in the outcome as none of the four Oaks runners were better than fourth through the opening half-mile at Churchill Downs. That could leave a new face, Maximum Offer, as the source of the early pace. Trained by Ken McPeek and owned by Baccari Racing Stable, Alfred Riccio, and Robert Cotrone, the Maxfield filly was fifth in the Fair Grounds Oaks (G2) and won a May 1 allowance optional claimer at Churchill Downs in her most recent start. Oaks runner-up Meaning will return to test Always a Runner on Friday at the Spa. The Santa Anita Oaks (G2) winner owned by Bridlewood Farm and Eclipse Thoroughbred Partners was fifth early on in the Oaks and forged to the front in midstretch but could not fend off Always a Runner's late surge. "I thought that was a very good performance in the Kentucky Oaks," trainer Michael McCarthy said about the daughter of Gun Runner. "She seems like she's holding her form. I'm looking forward to running her at Saratoga and trying it again." The Acorn should reveal more about Gary and Mary West's Prom Queen. Trained by Brad Cox, the homebred daughter of Quality Road entered the Oaks off a solid win in the Gulfstream Park Oaks (G2). But she broke slowly, and instead of being close to the early pace as in past races, she was 12th after a half-mile and closed to finish fifth, 4 3/4 lengths behind Always a Runner. West Point Thoroughbreds' Counting Stars was third in the Oaks after racing in fourth for much of the race. The Honor A. P. filly was an easy winner of the Fantasy Stakes (G2) for trainer Mark Casse.