SARATOGA SPRINGS, N.Y. – Break Even kept her record unblemished and added another dimension to her repertoire after leading throughout to register her sixth consecutive victory making her turf debut in Sunday’s $100,000 Coronation Cup at Saratoga. With regular rider Sean Bridgmohan aboard, Break Even once again put her abundant speed on display quickly sprinting clear of her six rivals in the 5 1/2-furlong Coronation Cup. The 3-year-old daughter of Country Day posted eye-catching splits of 21.03 and 43.50 seconds for the opening quarter and half-mile, settled into the stretch with a comfortable advantage then held safe a belated rally from Eyeinthesky to win by a length. The latter raced at the rear of the pack during the early going, swung five wide into the stretch and finished best of all down the center of the course but could not really menace the winner. Bohemian Bourbon slipped up the rail to be third, finishing a nose better than Midnight Fantasy who was followed, in turn, by My Galina and Lyrical Lady. Three of the nine fillies originally entered in the race, I’llhandalthecash, A Bit of Both, and Abyssinian, were scratched. :: Get PPs, Clocker Reports, picks, and more from DRF's Saratoga One-Stop Shop Break Even, unraced at 2, has won all six of her starts this season over five different racetracks and been successful on fast tracks, wet tracks, and now grass. A homebred owned by Klein Racing, Break Even completed the distance in 1:01.59 over firm turf and paid $4.20. “Watching the race, it appeared to me after the first half-mile she was under a little bit of a hold and had something left,” said trainer Brad Cox, who watched the race from Churchill Downs. “She obviously took to the grass, which wasn’t a shock. Her whole family could run on the turf and we entered her on the grass the first time out in a maiden race. This was just her first opportunity to prove it. She ran great. I was proud of her.” Cox said despite winning today on the turf, he would likely put Break Even back on the dirt for her next start and consider both the Grade 1 Test at seven furlongs on Aug. 3 and the Grade 2 Prioress going six furlongs on Aug. 31. “We’ll nominate her to the Test and see how it comes up, but with the timing, the Prioress is probably the race we’ll point to.”  Bridgmohan said turf or dirt, it really doesn’t matter for Break Even.  “She’s such a professional, I don’t think it matters what surface she runs over,” said Bridgmohan, who has ridden Break Even to five of her six wins. “She just handles a lot of scenarios, her speed is a great asset, and she’s got a lot of class about her – she’s not a run off kind. She relaxes when she gets there and gives you everything she’s got.”