Scott Zeron earned the sixth Breeders Crown trophy of his career this past weekend when he guided Treacherous Dragon to victory for trainer Nancy Takter in the final for 3-year-old female pacers at Woodbine Mohawk Park, with the emphasis on āearned.ā
Zeron was sidelined for 10 weeks following an accident on July 26 that left the 33-year-old driver with a fractured pelvis, fractured wrist, and dislocated shoulder. He thought he would be unable to return to action in time for the Breeders Crown but made it back to the races on Oct. 8 at Lexingtonās Red Mile to help set up his Crown opportunities.
And Zeron was appreciative of those who provided those chances.
āI worked hard to get to where I am,ā Zeron said. āBut itās also the support. If roles were reversed, I donāt know how much I would want a guy that had been out for 10 weeks. Even though Iāve had success in a lot of Grand Circuit races, people might question if I was ready.
āTo give me the horses I got, and Iām not going to say just Treacherous Dragon because I drove five really top-notch Breeders Crown horses, to get that support was a little surprising, but I was super grateful for it. The support, even when I was injured, and on my return was very overwhelming.ā
Zeronās recovery progressed in stages, with the wrist taking the most time to improve. Once healed, he also needed to rebuild his strength after a long period of inactivity.
āWhen youāre recovering, youāre not exercising, youāre not getting to the gym, so youāre not really in great shape,ā Zeron said. āWatching muscle deteriorate, and then building it back with the smallest of small exercise, is quite humbling. But on the whole, the strength has come back quicker than I imagined.ā
Zeron headed to the Red Mile with his racing gear but was uncertain whether he would drive. After a talk with fellow driver Mark MacDonald, he decided to give it a go the last weekend of the trackās Grand Circuit meet.
āHe told me, āIāve broken every bone in my body, and you might not think youāre ready, but you are, so get out there and trust me, the best thing you can do is drive on the weekend.ā Thatās when I kind of decided to do it,ā Zeron said.
āAll week I was jogging and training horses for Linda Toscano, so I was trying to get reps in and see where I felt comfortable and where there were things to work on. It was probably instrumental that I came back when the Red Mile was still racing. I got to sit behind some really nice horses, and that really helped. Thatās also when I trained Treacherous Dragon, at the Red Mile. That was my audition.ā
Having passed the audition, Zeron drove Treacherous Dragon in a qualifier before making his first official start with the filly in the Breeders Crown final (there were no eliminations). The duo’s 1:49.1 victoryĀ was just one-fifth of a second off the stakes record.
āIt was extremely exciting to get to the winnerās circle,ā Zeron said.
Zeron, who got his first Breeders Crown in 2016 with Call Me Queen Be, has won at least one trophy in three consecutive years. None of his six Breeders Crown winners was a favorite and he pulled off the biggest upset in Crown history in 2020 with Sandbetweenmytoes at odds of nearly 204-1.
āThatās funny,ā Zeron said. āSome of them were favorites in my mind.ā
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Three years ago, Todd McCarthy made multiple trips to the Woodbine Mohawk Park winnerās circle to celebrate Breeders Crown victories by his brother Andy, who captured four trophies during the championship weekend. Todd, who was visiting from his native Australia, soon thereafter decided he wanted to move to the U.S. to continue his own driving career, which he did the following summer.
This past Saturday, McCarthy visited the Mohawk winnerās circle again. He drove 3-year-old male pacer Pebble Beach to victory for trainer Noel Daley, giving McCarthy his first Breeders Crown.
āI still pinch myself,ā McCarthy said. āItās just a dream come true since making the move. Iāve got people like this to thank for it; fantastic syndicates of owners and trainers like Noel here who have been willing to give me a shot since Iāve arrived.ā
Pebble Beach improved to 5-0 lifetime at Mohawk, with his previous victories including the North America Cup. The colt had a stretch of five consecutive second-place finishes at Lexingtonās Red Mile but saw a victory there in the Tattersalls Pace send him to Mohawk on a winning note.
āThey questioned Pebble, and he did hit a soft spot, and I think most of it was because of Lasix (not being permitted in Kentucky),ā co-owner James Koehler II said. āI think he likes to race at night, and heās just been phenomenal on this track. I donāt think anyone can beat him right now.ā
Koehler also was among the owners of Pebble Beachās sire,Ā Downbytheseaside. Koehler resides in Ohio, whereĀ DownbytheseasideĀ stands as a stallion.
āDownbytheseasideĀ did not win the North America Cup, and he did not win the Breeders Crown, so to see one of his offspring do it is the greatest present ever,ā Koehler said. āTo see Ohio to start to be on the national stage and be able to compete, Iām very happy.ā
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King Of The Northās 1:50.3 win in the Breeders CrownĀ for 3-year-old male trotters put him not only in the record books āĀ the time established a Canadian and stakes record ā but also in elite company.
The colt became the eighth male trotter to be named a Dan Patch Award winner at age 2 and return to win a Breeders Crown at age 3. The list features five Hall of Famers ā Baltic Speed, Mack Lobell, Malabar Man,Ā Muscle Hill, andĀ Father PatrickĀ ā as well as millionaire Firm Tribute and three-time Crown champĀ Gimpanzee.
King Of The North gave Ray Schnittker his fourth Breeders Crown as a trainer and as an owner, and his second as a breeder. He also gave driver Mark MacDonald his fourth trophy. The colt went over the career million-dollar-mark with his triumph, which helped erase a slow start to the season.
āHe just looked like he was an ordinary horse,ā Schnittker said. āNow it looks like heās popping through and showing what I really thought he was.ā
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The top-three finishers in the Breeders Crown for 3-old female trotters were the same top three in the Breeders Crown for 2-year-olds a year ago, albeit in a different order.
Jiggy Jog S, who was third in 2021, came away with the Canadian-record-setting victory this season. Raised By Lindy finished second for the second time and last yearās winner, Joviality S, was third.
The win made Jiggy Jog S a career millionaire.
āShe was great,ā said winning driver Dexter Dunn, who was in the sulky for trainer Ake Svanstedt. āShe was so good (in her elimination) last week and it gave me a lot of confidence coming into (the final). We got away pretty handy, but I had Joviality on my back, so I was always worried about that. But my filly was just extremely strong.ā
by Ken Weingartner, for the USTA