Immersive might have scored the highest-profile victory winning the Breeders’ Cup Juvenile Fillies, but she’s far from the only talented Brad Cox-trained 2-year-old filly heading into winter. Good Cheer has started her career with three wins, the most recent a romp in the Rags to Riches Stakes at Churchill Downs. Stunner lost her debut at Saratoga before bouncing back with two easy wins at Aqueduct, capturing the Tempted Stakes there last weekend. Muhimma followed up on a debut romp with another easy win last week in a first-level Churchill allowance, and Eclatant, another 2-for-2 filly, waits in the wings. “It’s a very promising group this year,” Cox said Wednesday. Immersive, who has gone 4 for 4 with three Grade 1 wins and ought to be a unanimous choice as champion 2-year-old filly, has returned to Cox’s string at Churchill and will ship to Fair Grounds late this month or early next. If all goes well, Immersive will make her 3-year-old debut in February and have two starts leading into the Kentucky Oaks. The others probably aren’t done racing this year. While Godolphin homebred Immersive started her career at Saratoga, Godolphin homebred Good Cheer debuted Aug. 5 at Horseshoe Indianapolis, where she proved more than eight lengths best in a two-turn maiden mile. Cox said the barn liked the filly, by Medaglio d’Oro, who worked at Churchill and Keeneland before debuting away from the main stage. :: Subscribe to the DRF Post Time Email Newsletter: Get the news you need to play today's races!  “We wanted a two-turn race, and she was ready to run,” Cox said. Good Cheer, out of the Grade 1 winner Wedding Toast, beat first-level allowance rivals by more than 17 lengths, then romped in the Rags to Riches. She’s a possible runner, Cox said, in the Nov. 30 Golden Rod at Churchill or the Demoiselle the next week at Aqueduct. Stunner, by Girvin, won the Tempted by 3 1/2 lengths, her 88 Beyer Speed Figure four points higher than Immersive’s Juvenile Fillies number and two higher than Good Cheer’s Rags to Riches. Stunner is eligible to the $300,000 My Dear Girl division of the Florida Sire Stakes and could wind up at Gulfstream Park for that Nov. 30 contest. Muhimma, a Munnings filly who campaigns for Shadwell Stable, debuted over 6 1/2 furlongs and won by 7 1/2 lengths. She returned to defeat first-level allowance foes by 5 1/2 lengths Nov. 1 in a seven-furlong allowance race, and while her Beyer dipped from 83 to a 79, Cox remains confident in the filly and believes she’ll stretch out to two turns. That chance might come in the Golden Rod, though Cox said the race came back sooner than ideal after Muhimma’s last start. Eclatant, an Into Mischief filly who has yet to race beyond six furlongs, also will get the chance to try two turns, Cox said, though race plans aren’t yet set. The older males Cox ran in the Breeders’ Cup – Highland Falls, who was ninth in the Classic; Saudi Crown, all but distanced in the Dirt Mile; and Federal Judge, fifth in the Sprint – all are expected to return for 2025 campaigns. Highland Falls, winner of the Grade 1 Jockey Club Gold Cup, won’t start again until next year. Saudi Crown could run Dec. 7 in the Cigar Mile. :: Bet with the Best! Get FREE All-Access PPs and Weekly Cashback when you wager on DRF Bets. And finally, 3-year-old filly Emery, winner last month of the Raven Run at Keeneland, has the Grade 1 La Brea on Dec. 26 at Santa Anita as a near-term target. ◗ A second-level allowance race restricted to fillies and mares, open to $80,000 claimers, and carded at 1 1/8 miles on dirt as race 8 headlines Churchill’s nine-race Friday card. The talented Indiana-bred Under the Palms starts for trainer Kenny McPeek and jockey Brian Hernandez, fresh off their Breeders’ Cup Distaff triumph with Thorpedo Anna. :: Want to learn more about handicapping and wagering? Check out DRF's Handicapping 101 and Wagering 101 pages.