Noble Moon, third in the Nashua Stakes (gr. II) in November, is the likely favorite as newly minted 3-year-olds dip into the first graded stakes action of the year for their generation Jan. 4 in New York in the $200,000 Jerome Stakes (gr. II) at Aqueduct Racetrack at a mile and 70 yards.
The inner dirt test drew a field of eight sophomores led by Treadway Racing Stable’s Noble Moon, who came from far back in the Nashua to finish three lengths behind
Cairo Prince at a flat mile. The
Malibu Moon colt, out of the
Kingmambo mare Mambo Bell, should be well-served as the distances lengthen. The versatile runner won on the lead at first asking in September at
Belmont Park.
Another Malibu Moon colt,
Lawmaker, was a convincing first-out winner at
Laurel Park in late November and makes the jump to stakes company here for breeder/owner John Gunther, who is enjoying success with Lawmaker's half brother, the graded stakes winner
Last Gunfighter. Lawmaker rallied from mid-pack to score at Laurel and is trained by Chad Brown.
Another shipper is
Classic Giacnroll, who was third in the Marylander Stakes at Laurel in December after scoring a pair of victories at
Parx Racing last September. The
Giacomo colt has five races under his belt and has never been worse than fourth for owners Lisa Guerrero and Joseph Besecker. Guerrero also trains.
Master Lightning also has two wins from five starts, including an inner dirt victory last out in December at a flat mile at Aqueduct. The colt by
Pulpit ran unplaced in both the Nashua and Remsen (gr. II) stakes after having broken his maiden at Belmont in early October for trainer Todd Pletcher.
Although still a maiden,
Scotland figures to take action in the Jerome. The
Horse Greeley colt has rolled a pair of seconds from two starts, most recently at seven furlongs at Aqueduct behind the highly regarded
Surfing U S A. He has come from off the pace in both of his races.
Matuszak broke his maiden in his first race, scoring at
Churchill Downs in September, but has failed to run back to that effort in three subsequent tries, most recently in the Remsen, where he finished sixth nearly 10 lengths behind
Honor Code. The Jerome will actually be the shortest race thus far for Matuszak, who has run between 1 1/16 and 1 1/8 miles in his three starts.
Mental Iceberg came up empty in the Remsen after scoring against state breds last September at Belmont. The New York-bred son of
Freud won from off the pace on the Belmont turf but failed to fire in the Remsen, finishing eighth.
Pin and Win rounds out the Jerome field. The
Stevie Wonderboy colt started his career in Florida, sandwiching a maiden claiming victory between a pair of eighth-place finishes before heading north, where he ran fourth in the Don Rickles Stakes at Aqueduct in December.
The $200,000 Jerome Stakes, Race 8, Sat., Jan. 4, one mile and 70 yards, Aqueduct inner track
post position) horse (rider, weight), trainer
1) Noble Moon (Irad Ortiz Jr., 115), Leah Gyarmati
2) Scotland (David Cohen, 115), Anthony Dutrow
3) Lawmaker (Jose Ortiz Jr., 115), Chad Brown
4) Pin and Win (Abel Castellano Jr., 115), Joseph Lostritto
5) Matuszak (Rajiv Maragh, 115), Bill Mott
6) Mental Iceberg (Angel Arroyo Jr., 115), Gregory DiPrima
7) Classic Giacnroll (Alex Solis, 117), Lisa Guerrero
8) Master Lightning (Cornelio Velasquez, 119), Todd Pletcher