LOUISVILLE, Ky. – Kentucky Derby winner Country House returned to Churchill Downs Wednesday after clearing an examination at Rood & Riddle Equine Hospital in Lexington, Ky. He had been sent there by trainer Bill Mott to get a full checkup after becoming ill in the days after the Derby.“He looks good and I think the plan is to start him back with some light training,” assistant trainer Kenny McCarthy told Churchill publicity. “We’ll start him off lightly jogging and go from there.”Country House, promoted to first in the Derby upon the disqualification of Maximum Security, is expected to be aimed for a summer and fall campaign.Conning a commuter jockeyYoung jockeys have to go where the opportunities take them, and Thursday, over a pair of tracks, apprentice Crystal Conning parlayed two opportunities into victories. After winning the second race at Belterra Park on Steels Run early Thursday afternoon, she traveled from Belterra in Cincinnati, Ohio, to Louisville, where she rode Into a Hot Spot to a fifth-race victory on Churchill’s twilight card. Her win on Into a Hot Spot was her first at Churchill Downs and improved her U.S. record to 3 for 10. A native of Australia, she began riding in the U.S. in late April.“Have saddle, will travel – that’s the mantra,” she said.Conning, 27, is not new to riding, having begun her jockey career in Australia, where she had “maybe a 100 rides, rode a handful of winners,” she said. She was an exercise rider for Rusty Arnold this winter in Florida before deciding to return to race riding. She still breezes horses for Arnold, among other trainers, at her regular base at Keeneland, before plying her afternoon trade. Most often that has taken her to Belterra, where she recorded her first win aboard Gogetter May 10. Her next ride comes there Saturday in the seventh race aboard the Arnold-trained Miss O’Hara.