• 2 Year Olds | Trot

  • Peter Haughton & Jim Doherty Memorials

  • Hoosier Park

  • Anderson, IN

  • Purse $390,000 & $305,000

all stakes playlist

all pdf results charts

stakes Recaps

Peter Haughton

  • Driver Dexter Dunn made his way to Harrah’s Hoosier Park on Friday, Sept. 13 and swept the two richest races in the state of Indiana, taking the $390,000 Peter Haughton Memorial with Maryland, before Champagne Problems scored in the $305,000 Jim Doherty Memorial.

    The two-year-old trotting colts stepped into the spotlight first in the Haughton, with Maryland sent off as the 6-5 favorite in the field of 10.

    Leaving from post eight, Maryland and Dunn found themselves the widest of a four across battle for the lead going into the first turn, with Father TJ (driven by Tyler Buter) first to the quarter on the inside in :27.1. Hidalgo (Yannick Gingras) pressed on to the lead briefly before Maryland assumed command and slowed the tempo to the half in :57.4. The top trio remained in straight alignment on the final turn, with Maryland leading the field to three-quarters in 1:27.

    Maryland began to assert himself at the top of the stretch, trotting clear by three lengths midway through the lane with Hidalgo fending the others off for the minor spoils. Sprinting home in :27.1, Maryland crossed the wire 3-1/4 lengths clear, stopping the clock in 1:54.1. Hidalgo held for the place position, with Eugene The Genius (Mike Oosting) beating out Father TJ for show.

    “Quite a few sprinted out of there which you expect in a race like this,” said Dunn in the winner’s circle. “ Once we got to the front, we got things pretty cheap and he sprinted home and felt great tonight.”

    Trained by Marcus Melander, Maryland entered the Peter Haughton off of a 17-1 score upset score in the $425,500 William Wellwood in a career best 1:53.4. Bred by Hanover Shoe Farms, the son of Chapter Seven-Crucial is owned by Courant Inc., Pcw Racing LLC., Holly Lane Stud East LTD., and Sstewartrthorn Stable. Now a winner of three of six, Maryland sports a career bankroll of $425,378.

    “He’s been such a good horse from the start,” said trainer Marcus Melander. “He felt like a good horse when we trained him down, he’s classy and did it easy tonight.”

    “We gave him a little bit of time off this summer but feel like he’s coming into the fall extremely sharp.”

    Driver Dexter Dunn hinted that Maryland will have his sights set on another major prize next weekend, as the star rookie will head back north of the border for The Mohawk Million. In addition, Maryland secured his spot in the $700,000 Breeders Crown Final and a starting gate position between one and five with the victory in the Haughton.

  • Description text goes here
  • Kilmister remains perfect with Haughton score

    by Mike Farrell, Meadowlands Media Relations

    EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. — Kilmister extended his undefeated streak to four with a potent rally to win the $337,000 Peter Haughton Memorial, the first step on the unofficial “Road to the 2023 Hambletonian,” on Saturday afternoon (Aug. 6) at the Meadowlands.

    The Haughton, for 2-year-old trotters, provides an early clue — and establishes a long-range favorite — for next year’s trotting classic, contested over this same track. While it is a long 12-month journey to next year’s Hambletonian, a Haughton win is an early indication of class and talent.

    Kilmister has displayed both in abundance. Starting from the rail, Kilmister and driver Brian Sears took a brief early lead before yielding to Carter Michael Deo, who in turn let Oh Well dictate the pace.

    On a day when speed seemed golden, Sears let Kilmister bide his time in third before unleashing the colt in the lane. He surged to a four-length victory over stablemate Oh Well, giving Marcus Melander a one-two finish. Melander almost completed a clean sweep as his third entrant, Upstaged, finished third but was disqualified to fourth for a break in the lane.

    “We could have been first, second and third,” Melander said. “They raced very well, all the horses. Sadly, one of them made a break right before the finish line.”

    That was the only blemish on an otherwise sensational stable performance, topped by Kilmister, named for the late founder and lead singer of Motorhead.

    Kilmister was a $170,000 purchase at Lexington last fall for Courant Inc.

    “This one was quite expensive,” said Courant Inc.’s Anders Ström. “I like this horse’s attitude. He likes to chase them down. He never uses excess energy and I hope he has more energy to use in the future.”

    ... a future that might include a return to the Meadowlands one year from now.

    Kilmister trotted the mile in 1:53.3, paying $7.00 to win as the 5-2 second choice and giving Sears his sixth win in the Haughton.

    Carter Michael Deo was elevated from fourth to third with the disqualification of Upstaged.

  • King Of The North rules supreme in Peter Haughton Memorial

    Aug 8

    by Jay Bergman

    EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. — King Of The North ruled supreme in Saturday's (Aug. 7) $293,450 Peter Haughton Memorial Trot, for 2-year-old colts and geldings, at The Meadowlands, remaining undefeated through five starts with a 1:53.4 win for driver Mark MacDonald.

    King Of The North got away near the rear of the field as Global Pandemic and driver Joe Bongiorno sprinted to the front on the first turn and parked Temporal Hanover through a :26.3 opening quarter before yielding. Temporal Hanover and David Miller didn’t have the lead for very long, as second choice Robertsin and driver George Brennan moved quickly to take control well before the half and were able to back down the pace to a relatively comfortable :56 half-mile clocking.

    Mark MacDonald appeared to be in a very compromised position at the half, as Fast As The Wind and Dexter Dunn pulled to the outside but failed to move aggressively, instead waiting for Letsdoit S and Brian Sears to pull and provide cover. Sears accommodated the outer flow, but was in a grind as Brennan — behind Robertsin — continued to apply the brakes, waltzing to three-quarters in 1:25.2 and appearing to have the race pretty much at his mercy.

    When the field fanned wide, King Of The North quickly made up ground on the leaders, but, in mid-stretch, the son of Walner got a bit rough gaited, forcing MacDonald to collect him and otherwise lose momentum at a crucial time. The Ray Schnittker trainee regained his composure, and MacDonald urged him forward to gain the lead in deep stretch. Scott Zeron and Classic Hill appeared to be a menacing threat, weaving through traffic and rallying to the inside of King Of The North, but would not pass. King Of The North arrived home on top with Classic Hill second and Fast As The Wind third. S I P rallied wide to finish fourth.

    "He overcame it," MacDonald said of the treacherous trip. "It was maybe a little too far back than I would have liked. I should have used him a little bit more early, but when the gate opened, everybody was kind of going hard, so I just retreated. I got a cheap middle half, but he's such a good little horse (that) he just runs them down."

    King Of The North was bred by Steve Jones and Ray Schnittker and is owned by Schnittker Ward, Arden Homestead Stable, Nolamaura Racing and Steve Arnold.

    Sent off as the 1-2 favorite, King As The North returned $3.00 to win. King Of The North is out of the stakes star Check Me Out, who won the Merrie Annabelle in her 2-year-old season.

jim doherty

  • The Nancy Takter trained Champagne Problems followed suit and secured her spot in the Breeders Crown with a front end score in the Jim Doherty Memorial for two-year-old trotting fillies.

    Leaving from post seven as the 5-2 second-choice, Dunn slotted Champagne Problems third early as Royal Mission (Scott Zeron) hustled to the front from post nine to cut the quarter in :27.3. Dunn sent Champagne Problems to the front down the backstretch, taking command before reaching the halfway point in :57.1. No challenge came to Champagne Problems on the far turn who had things her way to the three-quarter pole in 1:26.3.

    Champagne Problems began to pour it on at top of the lane, trotting clear by 2-1/2 lengths with an eighth to go while Royal Mission battled Pink Chou Chou (Gingras) for the place spot. Takter stablemate Pink Chou Chou continued to close in deepstretch, but Champagne Problems coasted to a 1-1/2 length victory in 1:54. Royal Mission held for third to round out the trifecta.

    “She was a little fired up in Canada her last couple starts,” Dunn continued, “Nancy made a few changes since then and she was back to normal tonight and raced great.”

    The daughter of Tactical Landing-Miss Caviar was a $35,000 yearling purchase has banked $327,504 for owners Rojan Stables, Family Business, Patrick Hoopes and Caviart Farms. Bred by Southwind Farms, Champagne Problems has won four of seven in her debut season.

  • Description text goes here
  • Instagram Model stuns in Doherty Memorial
    by Ray Cotolo, Meadowlands Media Relations

    EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. — Instagram Model floated off the pegs and powered to the lead to land the money shot in the $355,000 Jim Doherty Memorial, for 2-year-old trotting fillies, on Saturday afternoon (Aug. 6) at the Meadowlands.

    Instagram Model settled in third while Royal Filly left for the top to a :27 first quarter. Una Madonna rode the pocket while the field raced mostly in file to a :55.1 half. Andy McCarthy made his move with Instagram Model heading to the far turn and marched forward to press Royal Filly to three-quarters in 1:24.3.

    Royal Filly folded spinning for home, and Instagram Model powered to a widened lead entering the final eighth. Mambacita, the 4-5 favorite, motored from third-over down the center of the course to secure second by a diminishing one length behind Instagram Model's 1:53 lifetime best effort. Una Madonna shook loose from the pocket to take third, and Graceful Patty rallied for fourth.

    “It was perfect today,” said McCarthy, who acquired the drive after Instagram Model’s usual driver, Scott Zeron, was injured in a recent racing accident. “Post nine last week was just really hard; I didn’t want to overuse her last week. But I was happy with the spot today and the way the fractions set up. We got to kind of hide her for a little bit and move her when we needed to. It was great.”

    “I take no credit,” trainer Annie Stoebe said after the race. “For the first time training her, I told Lynn [Curry], ‘You know ... she’s different.’ She’s been nothing but a professional from day one and she’s all about doing her job.”

    Collecting her second win from three starts, Instagram Model has now banked $178,625 for owner R. Lynn Curry. The daughter of Chapter Seven returned $10.40 to win.

  • Venerable sets stakes record in Doherty

    Aug 8

    by Ken Weingartner

    EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. — Venerable remained undefeated Saturday (Aug. 7), winning the $326,850 Jim Doherty Memorial, for 2-year-old female trotters, by 2-1/4 lengths in a stakes record 1:52 for driver David Miller and trainer Richard “Nifty” Norman at The Meadowlands.

    Brickhouse Babe finished second at 90-1, and Delilah Hanover was third.

    Venerable’s time bettered the previous stakes record, 1:52.2, set by Mission Brief in 2014. The clocking was one-fifth of a second off the track record for a 2-year-old trotting filly, also held by Mission Brief.

    Sent off as the 3-5 favorite, Venerable took the lead following the half, fended off a challenge from Jiggy Jog S on the final turn, and pulled away in the stretch to pick up her fourth win of the season.

    Mon Cheval led the field to the quarter in :27 and Joviality S was on top at the half in :55 before Venerable and Jiggy Jog S hit three-quarters side-by-side in 1:23.4.

    “I think I was doing more work than her; I was very nervous at the three-quarters,” trainer Norman said with a laugh. “But Dave said he kicked the (ear) plugs and she found another gear. She was very, very impressive.

    “She just keeps getting better, it seems like.”

    Venerable, the New Jersey Sire Stakes champion, is owned by David McDuffee, Mel Hartman, Paul Bordogna and Steven Arnold. She was purchased for $210,000 at the Lexington Selected Sale and has earned $280,254.

    “Oh, boy, that was quite a performance,” McDuffee said. “She’s really pretty special.”

    Venerable, a daughter of Walner out of Jolene Jolene, was bred by Maumee River Stables, Black Creek Farm, Martin Schmucker and Steve Stewart. She paid $3.40 to win.

Previous
Previous

Caesar's Trotting Night

Next
Next

Sun Stakes