Daily Racing Form National Digital Edition

Mr. Money deserving of his favoritism

- By Marcus Hersh

In April, Mr. Money wasn’t even the best 3-year-old in trainer Bret Calhoun’s barn, but come August he has emerged as the Midwest’s leading sophomore and is a deserving shortprice­d favorite Saturday in the Grade 3, $500,000 West Virginia Derby at Mountainee­r Park.

Mr. Money was to make a seven-hour van trip from Calhoun’s Churchill Downs base on Friday for the 1 1/8-mile West Virginia Derby and, if form holds, will come back home with another rich paycheck. Already this spring Mr. Money has won the Pat Day Mile by 5 1/4 lengths, the Matt Winn Stakes by 6 1/2, and the Indiana Derby on July 13 by 2 1/2, running his 2019 bankroll to more than $600,000 for the Allied Racing Stable.

Mr. Money, regular rider Gabe Saez named, drew post 9 in a 10-horse field and was installed as the 6-5 morninglin­e favorite. He’ll probably go to post an odds-on choice while facing no more than eight foes since Grumps Little Tots starts this weekend in a Saratoga allowance race, per trainer Jason Servis.

Mr. Money capped his 2-yearold campaign with a decent fourth in the Breeders’ Cup Juvenile, but got off to a slow 2019 start. He was scratched from the Lecomte Stakes in January after getting sick the day before the race, and a minor injury sustained a couple of days out compromise­d his performanc­e in the Feb. 14 Risen Star, where he was seventh. Mr. Money improved in the Louisiana Derby, but finished fifth, beaten eight lengths by the Calhoun-trained By My Standards. But while By My Standards has been sidelined this summer, Mr. Money has flourished.

Mr. Money possesses the most dangerous of racehorse attributes – rateable speed. He used it to overcome a wide draw in the Indiana Derby, taking control around the far turn and going on to a comfortabl­e victory, and Mr. Money, who worked a fast half-mile for this start, has shown no sign of losing his edge.

“He can settle, rate, and relax off a moderate pace,” said Calhoun, who expressed no concern about his horse getting nine furlongs in his first try. “He’s matured mentally, put it together, and learned to be a racehorse now.”

The third- and fourth-place Indiana Derby finishers, Math Wizard and Chess Chief, will try Mr. Money again, and Math Wizard isn’t without a chance. Second to Travers Stakes-bound Owendale in the Ohio Derby, Math Wizard was compromise­d during the Indiana stretch run by a loose horse more than Mr. Money or runner-up Gray Magician. He, too, worked a fast half-mile in his final drill for Saturday’s start.

Top Line Growth was placed first through Winning Number’s disqualifi­cation in the July 5 Iowa Derby but was probably third best in a modest renewal of that fixture.

Plus Que Parfait beat Gray Magician while winning the $2.5 million UAE Derby on March 31 and finished a respectabl­e ninth, beaten 5 1/4 lengths, in the Kentucky Derby. He returns to dirt after trying grass in the Belmont Derby Invitation­al last out.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States