Schoeffel duo looms large in Friday’s $157,760 PASS at The Meadows

At 2h25, on August 4, 2023 By THE MEADOWS

When the best freshman colt and gelding trotters in Pennsylvania invade Hollywood Casino at The Meadows for Friday’s (Aug. 4) $157,760 PA Sires Stake, they’ll have to get by a pair of locally based youngsters to make off with any booty. Trainer Steve Schoeffel sends out the pair, Reformation and Bird And Grenade, who have been more than competitive in stakes action so far.

The stake, known as the Florida Pro, goes as races one, three and six. The card also features an $80,000 PA Stallion Series event for 2-year-old male trotters. First post is 5:10 p.m.

Schoeffel picked up Reformation and Bird And Grenade, both gelded sons of Father Patrick, at Harrisburg. Each went for less than $30,000, and each has outperformed his auction price. Reformation won a July 3 PA All-Stars split at Pocono in his career debut and followed that up by finishing second in the year’s opening PASS leg at Harrah’s Philadelphia.

“He’s a big, good-looking horse,” Schoeffel says. “I don’t know why he went as cheaply as he did, but we scooped him right up. I thought he’d be more of a frontrunner, but he loves a target. As soon as we put him behind other horses, he came full force. He can really track them down and get them. He’s a little bit bigger and stronger than Bird And Grenade, and it’s starting to show.”

Reformation has a heavy schedule of PA stakes and also is eligible in Kentucky. He’ll go in race three, post two, with Brady Brown driving for owners Kathy Schoeffel, Dan Goehle, Stephen Lander and Maxx Fortune Stable.

For his part, Bird And Grenade hasn’t taken his mark yet, but he’s finished second in all three starts — each a stake.

“He was sick in his last start; his blood work didn’t come back well. Hopefully he’ll be better Friday.”

Kathy Schoeffel and Four Cousins Stable campaign Bird And Grenade, who has PA stakes and the Peter Haughton on his dance card. He leaves from post five, race six, for Brown.

“They both like to close, which is unlike most of my horses,” Schoeffel says. “I like to train them to race from the front. I like to make other horses try to beat me. That’s my mentality, but I’m learning to adjust.”

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