The Grass Is Blue Rallies to Busanda Score

There were some anxious moments throughout the running of the Jan. 24 $97,000 Busanda Stakes for The Grass Is Blue, but the daughter of Broken Vow proved superior in the nine-furlong event for sophomore fillies at Aqueduct Racetrack. Owned by Louis Lazzinnaro and trained by Chad Brown, The Grass Is Blue received a well-timed ride by jockey Manny Franco, who piloted the filly to a one-length triumph in her second start around two turns and first with blinkers. The Grass Is Blue garnered 10 points on the Road to the Kentucky Oaks when taking the Busanda—a 10-4-2-1 qualifier for the prestigious event. The Grass Is Blue arrived at the Busanda off a close third as the favorite in the Dec.26 Anne Arundel County Stakes at Laurel Park. Breaking from the outside post in the five-horse field, The Grass Is Blue was angled to the inside by Franco approaching the first turn while Traffic Lane assumed command with fellow Todd Pletcher-trained Repole Stable color bearer Coffee Bar close behind in second through an opening quarter-mile in :24.44. Franco had a tight hold on The Grass Is Blue, who was rank as the field approached the backstretch. With the half in :49.73, Traffic Lane maintained command as The Grass Is Blue was still in search of racing room along the fence with Wonderwall and Diamond Ore inching closer to the front. As Coffee Bar inched her way to even terms with her stablemate at the top of the stretch, Franco weaved The Grass Is Blue two paths to the outside and in the clear and gave the filly her cue at the three-sixteenths pole. Coffee Bar proved to be a tough customer and battled gamely to the inside, but the 8-5 favorite proved best, completing the 1 1/8 miles in a final time of 1:54.90 on the fast main track. The New York-bred Coffee Bar, a Repole Stable homebred, finished another five lengths ahead of Diamond Ore, who rounded out the trifecta. Traffic Lane and Wonderwall completed the order of finish. Franco expressed confidence in his filly and said the equipment change made a big difference. "I knew I had a lot of horse under me the whole way around," said Franco, who piloted Always Shopping to a win in the 2019 Busanda."The blinkers helped a lot. I was just waiting for the right moment to make my move and at the quarter pole, she just accelerated. With the blinkers first time, I knew she was going to take me there. I just wanted to give her a breather at some point during the race and that's why I stayed inside. When the time came, I tipped out and she just accelerated. She got the distance really well." Lazzinnaro was full of praise for Franco for a confident and patient ride aboard his filly. "I think Manny gave the horse a perfect trip," Lazzinnaro said. "It looked like she liked the track a lot so we'll probably keep her here during the winter and let Chad figure out what to do and how to go about winning another race with her. Chad took his time with her and got her going good. The distance was good for her today." The Grass Is Blue returned $5.50 as the favorite and banked $55,000 in victory pushing her lifetime earnings past the six-figure mark to $121,978. She has holds a 3-0-1 from five starts. Bred in Kentucky by Phillips Racing Partnership, The Grass Is Blue is out of the Aldebaran mare Shine Softly, whose mother Soaring Softly won the 1999 Breeders' Cup Filly & Mare Turf (G1T) and was named champion turf mare that same year. She was purchased by Jacob Schnoor Jr. for $20,000 from the Darby Dan Farm consignment to the 2019 Keeneland September Yearling Sale. Shine Softly has produced five winners from as many starters. She is also dam of a 2-year-old Dialed In colt, a yearling Bolt d'Oro colt, and was reported bred last year to Laoban.