OCEANPORT, N.J. -- Bring on Curlin! That's all the owners of Big Brown want in the Breeders' Cup Classic.
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Big Brown put another exclamation point on a magnificent 3-year-old season and set up a potential showdown against last year's horse of the year with a courageous front-running victory over older horses in the $500,000 Monmouth Stakes on Saturday at Monmouth Park.
"I can't wait to run against Curlin," Big Brown co-owner Michael Iavarone said. "If he's gonna show up, he should show up in the Breeders' Cup. That's where we are going to be. That would be a great place for us to run against each other."
Curlin is set to run in the Jockey Club Gold Cup at Belmont on Sept. 27, but majority owner Jess Jackson has not committed to running the 4-year-old in The Breeders' Cup on Oct. 25 at Santa Anita in California.
Big Brown was impressive in his final tuneup for thoroughbred racing's richest race in North American.
The Kentucky Derby and Preakness winner simply refused to lose. The colt opened a big early lead and then held off a determined stretch challenge by Proudinsky to win by a neck for his seventh victory in eight starts.
"If the Breeders' Cup were today, he would be ready," jockey Kent Desormeaux said. "He has come full circle since whatever happened in the Belmont Stakes."
In case you've forgotten, that was the race in which Big Brown was eased trying to win the Triple Crown. The colt returned in August and won the Haskell Invitational here, and followed that by returning to the grass to win the Monmouth Stakes.
The common thread in both races was that Big Brown just won. He got up in the final strides in the Haskell and led wire-to-wire in the Monmouth Stakes, which turned out to be a pretty good race in its own right.
Big Brown covered the 1 1/8 miles in 1:47.41 in returning to the grass for the second time in his career. Unlike the romp in his first grass start, Big Brown was all out to win in his first race against older horses.
Proudinsky just missed collaring Big Brown on the outside, and Shakis was another half length back on the inside.
"He just doesn't care what is under his feet," Desormeaux said. "He is multitalented. He just loves to be a race horse. He doesn't like getting beat. He showed that true grit and determination down the lane. For me, as a rider, it just felt like he had that horse tow-roped. He was just dragging him home."
Big Brown, trained by Rick Dutrow, paid $3.20, $2.60 and $2.20 as the 3-5 favorite in the field of nine. Proudinsky paid $3 and $2.40, while Shakis finished third and was worth $2.80 for show.

