ARCADIA, Calif. – Brown got the green again, but this time it was a 2-year-old male, not female, winning a Breeders’ Cup turf race as Structor captured the $1 million Juvenile Turf over a pair of enormous longshots. Chad Brown trains Structor and after winning the Juvenile Fillies Turf four times, including three years in a row from 2016 through 2018, Brown got his first Juvenile Turf victory. Green is the color of grass and cash, and Brown has delved deeply into both through his Breeders’ Cup history. This was his whopping 13th win in a Breeders’ Cup race, and a dozen of those have come on turf. Structor, though, is headed to dirt racing at some point. Structor won a maiden turf race at Saratoga in his debut and the Pilgrim Stakes at Belmont second time out before ending his 2-year-old campaign with Saturday’s three-quarter-length win. Brown said Structor trains encouragingly on dirt and at some point early in his 3-year-old season will have the opportunity to race on it.   “He’s strong and steady and smooth in his works. He looks like a true two-turn Classic-type horse, so let’s give him a shot and see where he takes us,” Brown said. Structor is by first-crop sire Palace Malice and is the first foal to race out of Miss Always Ready, a daughter of More Than Ready and a sister to Breeders’ Cup Juvenile Fillies Turf winner More than Real. Structor sold for $160,000 as a yearling and was pinhooked as a 2-year-old for $850,000 this past March. Brown trains him for Jeff Drown and Don Rachel, Minnesotans who evidently have done well in the construction business. Billy Batts, who went off at 55-1, finished a close second, while Gear Jockey, still a maiden, was third at 67-1. Peter Miller, Billy Batts’s trainer, was smiling like he’d won the race afterward. “When you run second with a 50-1 shot, it feels like winning,” he said.   Gear Jockey “was a little hesitant,” jockey Tyler Gaffalione said, when Gaffalione tried to wheel him outside on the turn but generally turned in another strong performance after finishing third in the Bourbon Stakes. That race’s winner, Peace Achieved, never reached contention Saturday while the fast-finishing Bourbon runner-up, Vitalogy, was a veterinary scratch Friday morning, allowing also-eligible Deviant into the field. Deviant finished last after Hit the Road and jockey Flavien Prat took away his path at the top of the stretch, causing Deviant to clip heels and leading to Hit the Road’s disqualification from seventh. Jose Ortiz rode Structor to victory Friday after his brother, Irad Ortiz, opted to take the mount on Decorated Invader, who went off as the second choice at 3-1 in the Juvenile Turf. Decorated Invader, who’d won the Grade 1 Summer Stakes under Irad Ortiz in his most recent start, raced in heavy traffic, was shuffled back nearly to last entering the far turn, and eventually had to swing extremely wide to make his run, closing fast to finish fourth. “Irad decided to ride the other horse,” Brown said. “That’s how it goes. Jose obviously is a capable replacement. I have a lot of confidence in him and I can’t say how proud I am of him. Yes, we had a great post, but he was always in the right spots. He rode an outstanding race.” Structor broke from post 2 and briefly led before settling back into a midpack trip. The pace was slow for this fast-playing course, Graceful Kitten leading through an opening quarter mile in 23.15 seconds before backing the tempo to a crawl, racing the next half-mile in a plodding 48.54 seconds. Billy Batts tracked the pace and Gear Jockey also raced close, those two benefitting from the race shape, though the fractions were no help to Graceful Kitten, who briefly went off stride in upper stretch and quickly faded to finish 13th.   Jose Ortiz had Structor in sixth racing along the fence, where the going appeared to be better after the temporary turf rail was taken down earlier this week, but around the far turn, Ortiz had to wait to find a spot to make a run. At the quarter pole, Structor had fallen back to 11th. “At the three-eighths pole I had to wait longer than I wanted to,” Ortiz said. “I wasn’t comfortable where I was. I got pinched on the rail with nowhere to go.” Ortiz said he eased Structor back just enough to let Gear Jockey clear, then took off after him. Structor began to hit his best stride after straightening for the finish, came outside Gear Jockey at about the eighth pole, and wore down Billy Batts five jumps from the finish. Structor ran his final quarter mile in about 22.50 seconds, coming home full of zest for a one-mile clocking of 1:35.11. He went off as the 5-1 third choice and paid $12.60 to win. Just behind Decorated Invader finishing fifth was 2-1 favorite Arizona, whose chances basically were ruined when he broke flat-footed and had to be dropped back to the rear of the field. Jockey Ryan Moore got stuck behind a wall of horses while racing from 12th down the backstretch and by the time Arizona could find room to maneuver, it was much too late. “He broke slow and the pace wasn’t hard enough for him to make up ground. He ran well,” Moore said. Behind Arizona was Proven Strategies, a 116-1 shot who briefly held the lead in midstretch before fading very late. Then came Fort Myers, Hit the Road, Our Country, Andesite, War Beast, Peace Achieved, Graceful Kitten, and Deviant. Fourteen-horse field, tight turf course, and lot of tough-luck stories, but in the end, a very familiar story – Chad Brown winning a Breeders’ Cup grass race.