by Ken Weingartner, Harness Racing Communications
Freehold, NJ — For a horse that was reluctant to go forward, Hugadragon has shown signs of advancing for trainer Ron Burke.
Hugadragon was one of 12 3-year-old male pacers entered in Thursday’s (Sept. 22) $526,800 Little Brown Jug at the Delaware County Fairgrounds in central Ohio. A rare homebred for the Burke Stable, Hugadragon has won two of 12 races this year and earned $219,260. He is winless since June, but is coming off a second-place finish to Big Bad John in the $200,000 Pennsylvania Sire Stakes championship at Harrah’s Chester.
He also was third from post seven at Chester in the $200,000 consolation for the Battle of the Brandywine, second to Shadyshark Hanover in a $102,750 division of the Oliver Wendell Holmes in August at the Meadowlands and fourth from post eight at The Meadows in the $500,000 Adios.
“Every time we race him he gets stronger and better,” said Burke, who is trying to win the Little Brown Jug for the first time. “The last couple races he’s actually been really good.”
The Little Brown Jug is the second jewel in the Pacing Triple Crown. The first jewel, the Cane Pace, was won by Jug hopeful Betterthancheddar. The Jug field was divided into two six-horse first-heat divisions, from which the top four finishers will advance to the second heat.
If one of the first-heat winners also wins the second heat, he is the Jug winner. Otherwise, the three heat-winners will return for a race-off. The last time a race-off was necessary was in 2000, when Astreos won over Gallo Blue Chip, George Scooter and Profita.
Hugadragon is a son of Dragon Again out of the Burke’s mare Hip Huggers. He is a half-brother to Relaxed Fit, who was a stakes winner, and his mother made $221,417, mainly in the open ranks.
“We decided if there was one mare we were going to keep, we would keep her,” Burke said. “We knew what kind of mare she was, but nobody else would have cared. She was a tough mare.”
Hugadragon was a tough horse, particularly when it came to getting hitched and willing to go.
“He’s the only yearling we couldn’t break ourselves; we had to send him to the Amish,” Burke said. “He just wouldn’t move. He didn’t care. The minute you put the lines through the harness and they touched him, it was on. He wasn’t going, no matter what.
“They ended up hooking him between plow horses. Within a month or so, they said they thought he was good enough. Now, he’s more annoying. He’s not perfect, but he’s not bad. He just does annoying things.”
As a 2-year-old, Hugadragon won divisions of the Pennsylvania Sire Stakes and Keystone Classic. He was second in his elimination for the Breeders Crown, finishing between winner Shadyshark Hanover and third-place Big Jim, before suffering from breathing trouble in the final and finishing eighth. He had throat surgery and did not race the remainder of the year.
“At the end of his 2-year-old year he was really good,” Burke said. “He improved every day.”
In the Pennsylvania Sire Stakes championship on September 5 at Chester, Hugadragon and driver Yannick Gingras went to the front with an opening quarter-mile of :25.3. It was the first time this year the gelding led a race at that point. He held the lead until the stretch, when he yielded to Big Bad John.
“I think people saw the other day a little of what he can do if we leave with him,” Burke said. “Our whole thought has been if we drew inside in the Jug we’re going to cut him loose and see what happens.”
Burke said Hugadragon reminds him of Foiled Again, the 7-year-old that Monday night became the oldest pacer to ever have a million-dollar season, which he accomplished by winning the Bobby Quillen Memorial for the second consecutive year.
“He’s got the same gait and the same tenaciousness,” Burke said.
In addition to sending Hugadragon into the Little Brown Jug, Burke has three fillies — Myluvmylife, Rocklamation and Rockratese — in Wednesday’s Jugette. With wins in each event, he would join Brett Pelling and Billy Haughton as the only trainers with victories in both races in the same year.
“I’m excited,” Burke said. “I think we have a good chance.”
Following are the fields for the Little Brown Jug in post position order, with listed drivers and trainers.
Heat One, Division One: 1. Something For Doc, Ron Pierce, Brian Brown; 2. Big Bad John, David Miller, Ron Potter; 3. Powerful Mist, John Campbell, Wayne Givens; 4. Foreclosure N, Tim Tetrick, Chris Ryder; 5. Custard The Dragon, Montrell Teague, George Teague Jr.; 6. High Noon, Mark MacDonald, Jimmy Takter.
Heat One, Division Two: 1. Rollwithitharry, Brett Miller, Jimmy Takter; 2. Hugadragon, Yannick Gingras, Ron Burke; 3. Wink N Atcha, Brian Sears, George Teague Jr.; 4. Betterthancheddar, George Brennan, Casie Coleman; 5. Roll With Joe, Ron Pierce, Ed Hart; 6. Up The Credit, Jody Jamieson, Carl Jamieson.
- Field of 12 drawn for Little Brown Jug (Saturday, September 17, 2011)
A field of 12 sophomore pacers have dropped into the box for the $526,800 Little Brown Jug, the second leg of Pacing’s Triple Crown, set for Thursday (Sept. 22) at the Delaware County Fair.
- Name change has worked for Big Bad John (Monday, September 19, 2011)
In the fall of 2009, Ed Telle of Powell, Ohio, purchased the yearling pacing colt Blank Canvas for $130,000 at the Lexington Selected Yearling Sale.
- Coleman seeks rare Jug-Jugette double (Monday, September 19, 2011)
Casie Coleman won the Jugette last year with Western Silk. This year, she is aiming to win the Jugette again and has one of the top contenders — Betterthancheddar — in the Little Brown Jug.
- New connections seek Jug glory with Foreclosure N (Tuesday, September 20, 2011)
The same connections that sent out last year’s Dan Patch Award winning 3-year-old pacing filly Put On A Show have a Little Brown Jug entry, just in time for Thursday’s race.
- Jug win with Up The Credit would be extra special for Jody Jamieson (Tuesday, September 20, 2011)
Jody Jamieson knows what it is like to win the Little Brown Jug. Still, a victory in Thursday’s 66th edition of the storied race for 3-year-old pacers would carry additional meaning.