LOUISVILLE, Ky. – Kentucky Oaks winner Thorpedo Anna and runner-up Just F Y I emerged from their respective efforts in good order and could meet again in some of the major Grade 1 races for their division this summer at Saratoga.Trainer Kenny McPeek said Thorpedo Anna, who pulled away from Just F Y I late to complete a wire-to-wire, 4 3/4-length victory in the Oaks on a sloppy, sealed track, was “a little tired” from her effort, but in good shape. After leaving a bit of feed on Friday night after the race, the filly bounced right back Saturday.“She’s good – she ate up last night,” McPeek said Sunday morning, less than 12 hours after Mystik Dan followed his stablemate to the special infield winner’s circle with his Kentucky Derby victory. “She knocked it out last night. . . . Good chance she’ll go straight up to Saratoga as soon as I get a truckload together.”Thorpedo Anna’s major summer targets are “definitely” the Grade 1 Coaching Club American Oaks on July 20 and the Grade 1 Alabama Stakes Aug. 17, both at Saratoga, McPeek said. He said the filly could have a race in the interim, most likely the Grade 1 Acorn Stakes, this year at 1 1/8 miles on June 7 at Saratoga.“That seems probably the next logical spot,” he said.McPeek, who won the pandemic-shuffled 2020 Preakness Stakes with the filly Swiss Skydiver, had ruled out wheeling back in that race – even before Mystik Dan won the Derby – to give Thorpedo Anna more time to recover. He has not completely ruled out the Belmont Stakes, this year at 1 1/4 miles on June 8 at Saratoga, to which Thorpedo Anna would have to be supplemented for $50,000. It appears likely she would not start if Mystik Dan does, since Brian Hernandez Jr. is the rider for both 3-year-olds.Meanwhile, Just F Y I, who was the post-time favorite in the Oaks, also was recovering from her effort, in which trainer Bill Mott said she was simply second best, in good order.“She’ll go to Saratoga next, I don’t know what we’re going to run her in next, but that’s where she’s going,” Mott said. “She was in position to win and didn’t win.”Thorpedo Anna and Just F Y I, last year’s Eclipse Award champion juvenile filly, both were making just their second starts of the year in the Oaks, and both gave career-best efforts. Thorpedo Anna earned a career-high 96 Beyer Speed Figure, while Just F Y I matched her previous high-water mark with an 89. If the fillies, neither of whom has ever been worse than second, continue to move forward, it makes for a compelling divisional battle. In four of the last seven years, the eventual Eclipse champion 3-year-old filly won the Oaks; two other times, the eventual champion was second in the Oaks but won the Alabama – with Swiss Skydiver winning the latter race first before running second in the delayed Oaks. Malathaat (2021) won both races.Behind Thorpedo Anna and Just F Y I, Chad Brown-trained stablemates Regulatory Risk and Ways and Means were third and fourth, respectively, and also will be stabled in Saratoga this summer. Regulatory Risk, who ran with blinkers off in the Oaks, far outran her 29-1 odds with her effort. Ways and Means, more fancied by bettors at 5-1, gave way grudgingly late after sitting just off Thorpedo Anna’s fractions. Ways and Means, who ran second in the Grade 2 Gulfstream Park Oaks in her two-turn debut, dazzled by 12 3/4 lengths in her six-furlong debut last summer at Saratoga and was second in the Grade 1 Spinaway Stakes at seven furlongs.“I have to think about at this point if she needs to be cut back a little bit because her debut was so breathtaking,” Brown said. “Maybe she’s a seven-eighths horse at the end of the day.”Of the 10 also-rans in the Kentucky Oaks, the majority were reported to be in good order by their connections, with plans to regroup and point toward future races to be determined. Those included morning-line favorite Tarifa, who was never involved while finishing ninth; and morning-line second choice Leslie’s Rose, 13th after not taking to the sloppy track.The only filly to emerge from the race with an issue was 10th-place finisher Where’s My Ring. Trainer Val Brinkerhoff said the filly, winner of the Grade 3 Gazelle Stakes, sustained a minor tendon injury to her right rear leg.“I don’t know if it was coming out of the gate or going into the first turn,” Brinkerhoff said. “It’s not too bad, but it’s something we’ve got to deal with and get right.” Tapit Jenallie was scratched from the Oaks on Thursday with a minor hind-end issue. Trainer Eddie Milligan Jr., said the filly will get a 30-day break. Grade 1-winning juvenile Candied, who did not draw in to the Oaks off the also-eligible list, was reported by trainer Todd Pletcher to have a bruised quarter in her right front hoof later in the week. She also will turn her attention to the Acorn.