'Madness' Front And Centre At Titan Cup Prep

Arch-Madness-02_1.jpg
Published: June 20, 2011 02:54 pm EDT

Arch Madness will make his first start since May’s Elitlopp when he faces five foes Friday, June 24 in a prep race for the Titan Cup at the Meadowlands

Racetrack.

Ten older trotters entered the Titan Cup, so eliminations are unnecessary. Arch Madness will start the prep from Post 6 and will be joined by, from the rail, Buck I St Pat, Pilgrims Chuckie, Enough Talk, Slave Dream, and Four Starz Speed.

Skipping the prep, but participating in the $235,000 Titan Cup final on July 2, will be Corleone Kosmos, Lucky Jim, Neighsay Hanover, and Sir Caviar.

Arch Madness has won five of six races this year and earned $341,545. He won three times in the U.S. before heading overseas and winning the $480,647 Oslo Grand Prix on May 15. He then won his elimination for the Elitlopp, on May 29 in Sweden, before finishing sixth in the same-day final.

2011 Oslo Grand Prix - Arch Madness

“He seems good,” trainer Trond Smedshammer said. “He came back from Sweden real good; good and sound, healthy. The only thing that I could see that went wrong over there is it looked like he tied up a little bit for the Elitlopp. That’s the only thing I could see that was wrong there.”

A seven-year-old gelding, Arch Madness has won 24 of 64 career races and earned $2.8 million for owners Marc Goldberg and Willow Pond.

Smedshammer won the Titan Cup with Sand Vic in 2006. This year’s edition will feature the three most recent winners of the race: Enough Talk (2010), Lucky Jim (2009) and Corleone Kosmos (2008).

Corleone Kosmos’ appearance in the Titan Cup will be his sixth in the event. The nine-year-old gelding, who has won just under $2.01 million lifetime, is coming off a 1:53 win in the Open Handicap on June 17 at Chester Racetrack.

Lucky Jim notched his first win of the year when he was victorious in the June 17 Invitational at the Meadowlands. He won by three and a quarter lengths over Four Starz Speed in 1:52.3. Enough Talk was sixth.


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

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