Elliott Hoping to Come Out on 'Top' in Indiana Oaks

Trainer Michelle Elliott has been based at Horseshoe Indianapolis since she switched from the world of prepping young horses for sale to opening a racing stable in 2017. She has watched every year as others, most from out of state, compete in Indiana's signature races: the $300,000 Indiana Derby (G3) and $200,000 Indiana Oaks (G3), both at 1 1/16 miles. But July 5 with the 3-year-old filly Top, Elliott will saddle her first starter in the Indiana Oaks. This is a very big deal for a stable largely populated with Indiana-bred horses and claiming horses. Elliott has only twice before competed in a graded stakes, once when she finished third in the 2018 Bashford Manor Stakes (G3) at Churchill Downs with 99-1 shot Overanalyzer, and most recently when Lemorian finished eighth in the 2023 Spinaway Stakes (G1). Top, in contrast, is 5-1 on the morning line, third choice behind favorites Clicquot and Heavenly Sunset in the field of six. Top could give the trainer her first graded stakes win. "It's very exciting because it is my home track and I grew up in Indiana," she said. "It's exciting for this track to have that caliber of race." Elliott owns the Kentucky-bred Top in partnership with Carrie and Craig Brogden's Machmer Hall Thoroughbreds of Paris, Ky. The daughter of the Hill 'n' Dale stallion Army Mule started out with three races over the synthetic track at Turfway Park, her best finish a third. Top thrived once she got on the dirt back at her home track. Top promptly won a Horseshoe Indianapolis maiden race, was second, and then captured an entry-level allowance optional claiming race while sprinting. Should Top win Saturday under Fernando De La Cruz, Elliott could be excused if her reaction is, well, over the top. She's an Indianapolis girl through and through, growing up in Brookston, between Indianapolis and Chicago. Her father, Jim Elliott, was a trainer who also purchased young horses to develop and resell as 2-year-olds, working off his 43-acre farm with a five-eighths-mile track. Michelle Elliott also works with young horses, spending years in Lexington and Ocala, Fla., before returning home to help her mother, Amy, with the farm upon Jim's death. One thing she learned is that Machmer Hall raises a good horse. Elliott said Top, bred by Machmer Hall out of the Unbridled's Song mare Homesteading, was pointed for a 2-year-old in training sale, "and of course something came up and she couldn't go in the sale." "Carrie usually takes them from the sale and lays them off," she said. "Some of them I get, and we go partners with them. I've had Top since she came back from Ocala. I really, really liked this filly from the very beginning. She's just been easy-peasy. Never turns a hair, does everything right. Carrie is a great partner. (After the Turfway races) I said, 'Let's give her a shot on the dirt. I think she's a talented filly because she ran well at Turfway, but she didn't particularly love the synthetic.' Because she was right there every race except for her first time going a mile. When we brought her here for the dirt, that's when she really excelled. "I've done very well with Carrie and Machmer Farm." And Saturday, the partners have a shot at graded success with Top.