You have a general sense that Chad Brown has trained a host of Grade 1 turf winners at Keeneland. What you might not realize is Brown’s utter domination of Keeneland’s two Grade 1 turf routes for older fillies and mares, the Jenny Wiley, renewed Saturday, and the First Lady in October. From the 12 editions of these two stakes beginning with the 2018 Jenny Wiley, Brown has won 11. That’s right: 11 of 12. Overall, his runners in those 12 races have compiled a 27-11-7-2 mark. Brown has four chances Saturday in the $600,000 Jenny Wiley to enhance his already impossible record: His entrants are, in post-position order, Fluffy Socks, Gina Romantica, Surge Capacity, and Beaute Cachee. Weather will be a factor in the 1 1/16-mile Jenny Wiley. An especially rainy spell began Tuesday in Lexington and was forecast to extend through Thursday night. The course will not be firm, but it remains to be seen just how mushy the grass becomes. Brown said Thursday he plans to start all four of his horses. Star Fortress likely would have scratched on a firm course but now is likely to run, trainer Cherie DeVaux said Thursday. Elusive Princess also was entered in hopes of catching softer going. At 1 1/16 miles, the race would be too short for her run over firm footing, but Elusive Princess might be able to cope with quicker, more athletic horses on ground that blunts their advantage. :: Subscribe to the DRF Post Time Email Newsletter: Get the news you need to play today's races!  In France, Elusive Princess went 5-3-2-0 on courses rated soft, and she was a sharp winner of her North American debut last summer in the Saratoga Oaks Invitational, run on soft turf. Elusive Princess comes into the Jenny Wiley after a decent comeback fourth in the Hillsborough at Tampa Bay Downs. “There was no pace in that race, and we were committed to taking back. She didn’t run bad. We put her in this race in case we got the rain,” said trainer Arnaud Delacour. Didia and perhaps English Rose fall on the other end of the surface spectrum. English Rose, in from Dubai for Godolphin and trainer Charlie Appleby, most recently won the Group 2 Balanchine at Meydan racing on good ground. She never has encountered anything softer than that and does not appear to have the sort of action to suit significant give in the ground. Didia has made 15 starts, seven in her native Argentina, eight in America with trainer Ignacio Correas, and only has raced on firm turf. Winner of the Grade 2 Pegasus World Cup Filly and Mare Turf in her most recent start, Didia probably wouldn’t love a lot of cut in the ground. “She likes the dirt when it’s fast and deep; same with the synthetic. She has at least liked to train on any surface you put her on,” said Correas, who has the Breeders’ Cup Filly and Mare Turf as a long-term goal for this mare. “I don’t know how she’d like it.” Heading the Brown quartet is Gina Romantica, who flew home under Tyler Gaffalione to nail her top-class stablemate In Italian winning the First Lady last fall, making her 2 for 2 in Keeneland Grade 1s. The 5-year-old mare in October of her 3-year-old season landed the 2022 Queen Elizabeth II Challenge Cup at Keeneland. Last fall, Gina Romantica went on to finish fourth, beaten just one length, in the Breeders’ Cup Mile, a race that took a toll. “She ran really well over there. She ran so good she needed every bit of her [winter] break to get over it. She was flat out after that race,” said Brown. “Now, she’s really come around the last 30 days.” Brown thinks the Jenny Wiley’s 1 1/16 miles is Fluffy Socks’s ideal distance. The excuses have been piling up in recent starts for the 6-year-old mare, still seeking her first Grade 1, but Fluffy Socks did handle wet turf courses early in her career. :: Bet the races with a $200 First Deposit Match + FREE All Access PPs! Join DRF Bets. Another French import, Beaute Cachee ran better on firmer footing than soft during the overseas portion of her career. She’s also a cut below the best horses here and is drawn wide. Surge Capacity stands a strong chance. Quietly, this 4-year-old filly has demonstrated star potential. She only debuted last summer at Monmouth Park and won four of five starts during 2023, showing tactical speed, a willingness to race inside and between rivals, and an increasingly powerful finishing kick. She overcame trouble winning the Valley View at Keeneland last fall and turned in an electric final half-furlong capturing the Grade 1 Matriarch in her most recent start. And history suggests one of these Browns is going to wind up in the winner’s circle. :: Want to learn more about handicapping and wagering? Check out DRF's Handicapping 101 and Wagering 101 pages.