No Worries For Obrigado

Obrigado might have a little Alfred E. Neuman in him. One gets the feeling after talking with the seven-year-old trotter’s regular driver, Mark MacDonald, that an appropriate caption under the horse’s photo would be “What -- me worry?” just the same as the cartooned Neuman on the cover of MAD magazine.

Going back to July 2014, Obrigado has won 18 races. Excluding one victory in which he was second-placed-first, the gelding has won 11 of the remaining 17 by a half-length or less. And the vast majority of those triumphs, nine to be exact, were by a neck or less.

Those 17 wins, by the way, were worth nearly $1 million.

“He never overdoes it,” MacDonald said with a laugh. “He takes care of himself. He makes you kind of sweat it out a little bit. Me, not so much now, because I know him and I’m confident he’s always going to give you that last little lunge at the end. But I’m sure for Paul and the other owners watching it probably makes them a little nervous.”

Paul is trainer Paul Kelley, who owns Obrigado with Lennart Agren’s SRF Stable, Linwood Higgins, and the multi-partner Stable 45. The group is preparing for more edge-of-your-seat excitement as Obrigado makes his seasonal debut in Saturday’s $200,000 Charlie Hill Memorial Trot at Eldorado Scioto Downs in central Ohio. Hill was the founder of Scioto Downs and president of the track from 1959-1989.

Obrigado, who received the 2016 Dan Patch Award for best older male trotter, is the 5-2 morning line favourite and will start from post one with MacDonald in the sulky. Maxie Lee Memorial Invitational winner Crazy Wow, starting from post eight with Chris Page at the lines for trainer Ron Burke, is the 4-1 second choice while 2015 Dan Patch Award honouree JL Cruze is 9-2 from post five with Ronnie Wrenn Jr. driving for Eric Ell.

“That’s a pretty good group,” MacDonald said. “It should be a good race.”

Last year, Obrigado won eight of 17 races and earned $873,300. He hit the board a total of 13 times and his victories included the Hill Memorial, TVG Free For All Series championship, Dayton Trotting Derby, Crawford Farms Trot, John Cashman Memorial, Cleveland Trotting Classic, and Maxie Lee Memorial.

For MacDonald, the win in the Crawford Farms Trot exemplified Obrigado’s toughness and determination. Obrigado was in the outer flow in an opening quarter-mile of :26, cleared to the lead at the halfway point and then battled stride-for-stride with Resolve for nearly the final three-eighths of a mile before winning by a quarter-length in 1:51.2.

“I think that was the best race last year, maybe the best race of his life since I’ve been driving him,” said MacDonald, who took over the driving duties behind Obrigado at the beginning of the horse’s five-year-old season. “Man, that was a great race. They fought all the way down the stretch. Getting down by the wire Obi came back on and won. That was just a crazy mile.

“He brings his lunch pail every night and goes to work. He’s tough. He’s got no quit in him. It’s kind of hard to give him a bad trip; I’ve been parked with him, I’ve been in bad spots with him, but he always gives 120 percent. He’s just a good horse. You look forward to his races. He’s always made a good account of himself.”

MacDonald was happy to see Obrigado honoured with a Dan Patch Award last year. Obrigado, who has won 42 of 79 career races and earned $1.6 million, was a star in Maine at ages two and three before being sold to the New York-based Kelley and partners in November 2013.

“That was cool,” MacDonald said. “I was really happy for Paul and the owners. He was so good all year. I think maybe winning the TVG at the end of the year put him over the top, but to me he had such a great year. He won so many big races and he showed up to work every night.

“You have to give Paul credit. I think he protected (Obrigado) a lot as a four-year-old. He kept him out of the spotlight, away from the Grand Circuit horses. He kind of aimed for him to peak as an older horse and the patience paid off. He let him mature and grow into his own and he turned into a great aged racehorse.”

Racing begins at 6:30 p.m. at Scioto Downs and the Hill Memorial is race eight, with post time set for 8:50 p.m. Following is the field for the Hill Memorial.

Post-Horse-Driver-Trainer-Line
1-Obrigado-Mark MacDonald-Paul Kelley-5/2
2-Natural Herbie-Verlin Yoder-Verlin Yoder-8/1
3-Musical Rhythm-Peter Wrenn-Benoit Baillargeon-15/1
4-Hemi Seelster-Brent Holland-Richard Banca-10/1
5-JL Cruze-Ronnie Wrenn Jr.-Eric Ell-9/2
6-Centurion ATM-Aaron Merriman-Ake Svanstedt-10/1
7-Muscle Diamond-John Campbell-Brett Bittle-15/1
8-Crazy Wow-Chris Page-Ron Burke-4/1
9-Homicide Hunter-Tyler Smith-Chris Oakes-12/1
10-Major Athens-Jody Jamieson-Jeffrey Gillis-6/1

Major Athens starts in the second tier.


This story courtesy of Harness Racing Communications, a division of the U.S. Trotting Association. For more information, visit www.ustrotting.com.

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