Legendary Hanover
took the lead at the half-mile point of Saturday’s $650,000 Meadowlands Pace
and dominated from there, drawing away in the stretch for a stakes-record
1:46.3 victory in the 48th edition of the one-mile event for 3-year-old pacers
at the Meadowlands.
Legendary
Hanover’s stablemate Nijinsky (6-5), the favorite, finished second, his first
loss in seven races this year. Gem Quality was third. The margin of victory was
5 1/2 lengths.
The previous
stakes record of 1:46.4 was set in 2014 by He’s Watching.
Legendary Hanover
(2-1), the second choice, was fifth as the field reached the opening quarter in
26.2 seconds but on top in a 53.2-second half after a big move on the
backstretch with driver James MacDonald.
He reached
three-quarters in 1:20.2 and was unthreatened the rest of the way as he won for
the fourth time in seven starts this season for trainer Anthony Beaton.
“I don’t know
what to say right now,” Beaton said. “It’s pretty awesome.
“He earned this
race tonight. James made a bold move, but it was the winning move in the end.
He just showed what kind of caliber horse he is.”
MacDonald
admitted the race did not develop the way he imagined before heading onto the
track.
“It was exactly
what I didn’t want to do before the race, but he’s a big, strong horse, and
sometimes he likes to drag me around the track. That’s kind of what he came up
with tonight,” MacDonald said. “I know he’s got the gears to do it. The second
he cleared, it wasn’t like, oh, this is too much. It was like he was going to
jog. He’s a good horse.
“I wanted to give
him a shot, try to put him in position to win. Even if you’ve got to overdrive
a little bit, that’s just how it goes in these big races. You don’t want to be
at the back saying what if?I’m just so proud of the horse, so proud of Tony.
I’m just thrilled.”
Legendary Hanover
came into the Meadowlands Pace final off a 1:48.0 win with a 24.4-second last
quarter in his elimination last week.
“The horse really
solidified last week what he was and what we’ve always thought he was,”
MacDonald said.
MacDonald and
Beaton both won the Meadowlands Pace for the first time.
“I never dreamed
in a million years I’d be winning races like this,” said MacDonald, who has won
Canada’s driver of the year the past three years. “It was a thrill for me to
just watch these races, so to be in them and win them, it’s really special.”
Nearing the
finish line MacDonald gave several celebratory fist pumps.
“A couple times (before)
he would get lost on the front, but he didn’t feel like that tonight,”
MacDonald said about his colt. “He was all business. And when he’s all
business, he’s a scary animal. I’m just so happy to be along for the ride.”
Legendary Hanover
has won 10 of 16 career races and earned $710,959 for owners Eric Good, West
Wins Stable and Mark Dumain. The son of Huntsville was bred by Hanover Shoe
Farms.
“I’ve said from
day 1 that Legendary is a phenomenal animal,” Beaton said. “Nijinsky is a
phenomenal animal. There were others, too, in there. I’m just glad that James
took the shot when he did, and the horse did the rest.”
Although Legendary
Hanover’s time was impressive, Beaton had other numbers on his mind when asked
about the stakes-record clocking.
“We’re just happy
to win,” he said, “whether it’s the fastest, the slowest. As long as the checks
keep coming in.”
Legendary Hanover
paid $6.00 to win.
A total of $5,136,129 was wagered on the 14-race program, the biggest night of business in the sport in 2024 and the third time in the last five years that wagering cleared the $5 million hurdle on Meadowlands Pace night. Wagering on the Meadowlands Pace itself totaled $628,010.
MacDonald recorded four winners Saturday to lead the driver colony.
After Legendary Hanover won the Meadowlands Pace, there was one winning ticket in the 20-cent Pick-6 that was good for a return of $57,497.22.
The biggest 50-cent Pick-4 pool of the year was recorded on races 8-11 after $144,968 went through the windows.
Coverage at Horse Racing Nation of the summer’s top
standardbred races is made possible through a sponsorship by the Hambletonian
Society.