"Meshuggah" is the Yiddish word for crazy, so if there were a Standardbred named Meshuggah, what images might that conjure up? A fractious young colt trying to dig his way under pasture fences to freedom? A fiery-tempered chestnut filly with a mind of her own?
Actually, there is a freshman colt named Meshuggah, and according to his trainer, Marcus Melander, he’s anything but crazy — a perfect gentleman with talent, in fact. He looms large in Friday’s $163,135 USD Pennsylvania Sires Stakes leg for two-year-old colt and gelding trotters, known as the Hickory Pride, at Hollywood Casino at The Meadows.
The program also features an $80,000 USD leg of the PA Stallion Series for freshman colt and gelding trotters. First post is 5:10 p.m.
Courant Inc., the colt’s owner, acquired the son of Greenshoe-Starita for $120,000 at the Lexington Selected Sale. He sold as Starquake Hanover, but Courant’s Anders Strom renamed him for the Swedish extreme metal band Meshuggah. Biographical material about the band, however, indicates the Yiddish word was the inspiration for the group’s name, so one way or another, that’s where all this craziness begins.
“He’s nice to be around and nice to drive,” said Melander. “He has a good pedigree and he’s a good-looking horse. He’s a big horse who’s come to his speed early.”
Meshuggah debuted in a PA All-Stars split at Pocono and was a strong second, beaten only a neck in 1:57.2. That’s his lone start to date.
“He came home in :27.2 and I was very happy with him,” said Melander. “He’s staked to most of the big races, but we’ll start in PA Sires Stakes and go from there.”
As a game plan, that doesn’t sound meshuggah at all.
Meshuggah goes from post three in race three with Dave Palone aboard.
By the way, the horse that defeated Meshuggah in that PA All-Stars event, the Jim Campbell-trained Fashion Green, also is in the Hickory Pride. He leaves from post two in race one with Palone in the sulky.
(Meadows Standardbred Owners Association)