Daily Racing Form National Digital Edition

One more for Mr. Jagermeist­er

- By Marcus Hersh

Minnesota-bred 3-year-old Mr. Jagermeist­er is looking more and more like a serious racehorse. But trainer Valorie Lund remains serious in her commitment to staying conservati­ve with Mr. Jagermeist­er this year in the hope of having an even better horse next year.

Granted he was beating up on overmatche­d competitio­n, but Mr. Jagermeist­er won the $100,000 Minnesota-bred Minnesota Derby by 10 lengths on Saturday at Canterbury Park. His winning time of 1:40.37 for one mile and 70 yards on a fast track produced a Beyer Speed Figure of 99. That’s a career best for Mr. Jagermeist­er and, beyond a couple outlier figures from Justify and Bolt d’Oro, ranks among the best two-turn dirt Beyers for 3-yearolds of 2018.

Jockey Leandro Goncalves kept Mr. Jagermeist­er wide throughout the trip to avoid being challenged on the outside by a pace rival. That’s what happened in the Mystic Lake Derby, Mr. Jagermeist­er’s only previous two-turn try, where he dueled and faded to fifth on turf.

“It wasn’t the turf so much as there was a horse outside pressuring him and the jock got very aggressive shouting and so on,” said Lund. “He wouldn’t relax – you can’t go two turns if you don’t relax.”

Mr. Jagermeist­er has won all five of his statebred-restricted races by vast margins and is 6-3-0 from 11 career starts. Always fast, Mr. Jagermeist­er wasn’t quick to mature, and even a couple months ago still looked like a weedy colt through his neck and hindquarte­rs. That has changed. Mr. Jagermeist­er is filling into his frame, growing up.

“The last 60 days the horse has just made remarkable transforma­tion physically,” Lund said. “He’s not taller, but he’s wider. And he’s just so much more focused in his races, not acting like a colt. It’s just maturity.”

Mr. Jagermeist­er raced for the first time this year in February and already has made seven starts in 2018. Lund plans to run him Sept. 2 against Minnesotab­reds in the $75,000 Minnesota Classic, another two-turn race. And that will be it for this year. No shipping, no stress – not this year.

“That will be eight races, and that’s enough for this year. We’re going to kick him out for the winter and bring him back. I always thought he was going to be better as a 4-year-old,” Lund said.

Even at 3, Mr. Jagermeist­er is turning out to be pretty good.

Indy-bred stakes reschedule­d

The Governor’s Stakes and the First Lady Stakes, $150,000 Indiana-bred races for 3-year-olds and 3-year-old fillies, respective­ly, were lost to weather when the Aug. 8 card at Indiana Grand was canceled. The races have been reschedule­d for Wednesday. While there were 11 entrants when the First Lady, a one mile and 70-yard dirt race, was drawn, now the field numbers just nine, including apparent standout Piedi Bianchi.

Piedi Bianchi raced in four Grade 1’s as a 2-year-old but this, her eighth start, marks her first in a race restricted to Indiana-breds. She should like that, and with Tyler Gaffalione named to ride, will be tough to handle at a very short price.

As for the Governor’s, three months ago The Money Dance would have spun circles around the 10 horses entered against him. The Money Dance came rapidly to hand early this year for trainer Mike Lauer, but hasn’t been the same horse since. Most recently, The Money Dance floundered as the 3-5 favorite in the Hoosier Breeders’ Sophomore Stakes and was beaten 16 lengths July 14 in the Indiana Derby. Wednesday’s race obviously represents a class drop, but maybe it is too late for that.

Lauer has two other chances, Redyornoth­ereicome and In A Fog, but the pick for an upset is Bandido de Amores, who races in blinkers for the first time and has proven adequately effective in dirt routes.

Also carded is the $50,000 Preston Madden, a turf mile restricted to horses that haven’t won a stakes race.

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