STANDARDBRED BREEDERS & OWNERS ASSOCIATION OF NEW JERSEY

Representing the drivers, trainers, caretakers, breeders and owners of New Jersey

64 Business Route 33

Manalapan, NJ 07726

Phone: 732-462-2357

Fax: 732-409-0741

STANDARDBRED BREEDERS & OWNERS ASSOCIATION OF NEW JERSEY

Representing the drivers, trainers, caretakers, breeders and owners of New Jersey

64 Business Route 33, Manalapan, NJ 07726 

Phone: 732-462-2357 | Fax: 732-409-0741

BACK

ALAGNA HOPES PAIR COMES UP ACES IN PACE

Ken Weingartner, USTA Media Relations Manager • July 12, 2023

HIGHTSTOWN, NJ — July 12,2023 — Tony Alagna will send two horses to Saturday’s $668,000 Meadowlands Pace, and although neither of his 3-year-old colts has posted a win this season, the trainer is happy with the way El Rey and Hungry Angel Boy have raced heading into the weekend.

El Rey was second in last week’s second of two Meadowlands Pace eliminations at The Meadowlands, finishing a half-length behind Confederate in 1:47.3. El Rey, who capped his 2-year-old campaign with a victory in the Governor’s Cup at the Big M, will start Saturday from post seven with Scott Zeron in the sulky. He is the 9-2 third choice on the morning line, behind 6-5 favorite Confederate and 7-2 Voukefalas.

For his career, El Rey has won five of 18 starts, hit the board an additional six times, and earned $310,650. The colt is winless in six races this season, but also dropped his first six starts in 2022 before reeling off victories in five of six to close out the year.

“He was excellent; I couldn’t be happier with how he raced,” Alagna said about El Rey’s performance in his Pace elim. “He had a little road trouble, but he was very good. I wish he was one number in (for his post Saturday) but it is what it is. With his kind of trip, third-over is a great spot. Hopefully, that’s where he’ll end up, but it will be up to Scott to see what he can do depending on what the outside horses do.”

Zeron has driven El Rey in his past eight races dating back to the Governor’s Cup and decided to stay with the colt for the Meadowlands Pace final after also driving Cannibal in last week’s elims. Cannibal, trained by Nancy Takter, was a winner in 1:48.1.

“Scott is a great fit for the horse,” Alagna said. “He’s done a great job with him. I’m so happy he had confidence to stick with him going into the final. I know he likes the horse. We both felt going into the elimination of the Pace that it was going to be his night to get his respect back. Even though the trip didn’t work out to win, I think with the way he raced to be second, he opened a lot of eyes.

“I hadn’t lost confidence, Scott hadn’t lost confidence, he just needed to show everybody he’s every bit the horse he was last year when we put him away.”

As for El Rey’s season prior to his Pace elim, Alagna said, “I think he’s raced very good, he just hasn’t had the best of luck. He’s been a victim of the trips, through no fault of anybody, that’s just the way it’s worked out.”

El Rey is a son of Captaintreacherous, who won the 2013 Meadowlands Pace for Alagna, out of the mare Mystery Game. He was bred by Riverview Breeding and is owned by Brittany Farms and El Rey Racing.

Hungry Angel Boy has five top-three finishes in six races this season. He finished fourth in his Meadowlands Pace elimination, beaten by 2-1/4 lengths. He settled in second after Bamboozler took the lead in a :26 opening quarter-mile. He was shuffled back to sixth by the head of the stretch but rallied to advance to the final.

“I was very happy with him,” Alagna said. “He got stuck behind Bamboozler and lost some momentum, but when he shook loose, he had good pace. It was a very good effort. It was his first start on Lasix, we put aluminums (shoes) on him for the first time, so I think he’ll be nothing but better (in the final).”

Todd McCarthy will drive Hungry Angel Boy in the Pace final, starting from post six. Hungry Angel Boy is 20-1 on the morning line.

Hungry Angel Boy entered his Pace elim off a third-place finish in his North America Cup elimination on June 10 (he lost a draw among third-place finishers to reach the final), was second behind Stockade Seelster in the NA Cup consolation on June 17, and second in a conditioned race on July 1.

“He’s been good this year,” Alagna said. “He had an unlucky draw or he would have made the North America Cup final. Then he got blocked in the stretch in the consolation but was a good second to Stockade Seelster. He’s been knocking on the door. He shouldn’t be winless this year, but it’s just the way it is. Hopefully, he’ll get a big one.

“He’s in good shape. He’s very versatile. He’s just a great little horse to be around. He’s got a great attitude, loves his job.”

Last year, Hungry Angel Boy won a division of the Kindergarten Classic Series in his debut on July 15 at The Meadowlands, then won a leg of the Dream Maker Series on July 28 at Woodbine Mohawk Park. He finished eighth in the Dream Maker final on Aug. 13 in his last appearance for the season.

“He got a little sore, so we just shut him down,” Alagna said. “We liked him very much, and he’s come back well.”

Hungry Angel Boy, a son of Stay Hungry-Angel Scent, was bred by Doug Millard and Spring Haven Farm. He is owned by Alagna Racing, Pryde Stables, Pit Bull Stable, and Brittany, Head, Riverview Racing.

Meadowlands Pace Night at the Big M begins at 6:20 p.m. (EDT). The card also includes the Hambletonian Maturity for 4-year-old trotters, the William R. Haughton Memorial for older male pacers, Dorothy Haughton Memorial for older female pacers, Mistletoe Shalee for 3-year-old female pacers, and two divisions each of the Stanley Dancer Memorial and Delvin Miller Memorial for 3-year-old male and female trotters.

Free TrackMaster past performances for the Big M can be found here.

Following is the field for the $668,000 Meadowlands Pace final in post-position order, with drivers, trainers, and morning-line odds:

1 – Fulton – Dexter Dunn – Linda Toscano – 8/1
2 – Voukefalas – Jordan Stratton – Michael Russo – 7/2
3 – Christchurch – Yannick Gingras – Nancy Takter – 10/1
4 – Cannibal – Andrew McCarthy – Nancy Takter – 6/1
5 – Confederate – Tim Tetrick – Brett Pelling – 6/5
6 – Hungry Angel Boy – Todd McCarthy – Tony Alagna – 20/1
7 – El Rey – Scott Zeron – Tony Alagna – 9/2
8 – Its A Me Mario – Lauren Tritton – Shane Tritton – 20/1
9 – Ammo – David Miller – Joe Holloway – 30/1
10 – Save America – Matt Kakaley – Nancy Takter – 30/1

By Meadowlands Racetrack April 7, 2026
he Meadowlands Racetrack's annual Beerfest takes place on Saturday, May 16th, which is also Preakness Stakes Simulcast Day. Doors open for VIP admission at 4:00 pm with General Admission at 5:00 pm, and beer is poured until 9:00 pm. It is an afternoon and evening of great craft beer and horse racing, both live harness racing and the Preakness Stakes ...
By Dave Little, Meadowlands Media Relations April 5, 2026
Typhoons can produce destructive winds that exceed 150 miles per hour, and while the Joe Bongiorno trained and driven Typhoon Banner N comes nowhere near that speed at his fastest, his incredible early foot got him into perfect position Saturday night when he won the featured $19,000 claiming handicap for a third time in his last four tries ...
By Dave Little, Meadowlands Media Relations April 4, 2026
Bravo Angel S was handled cautiously by driver Brett Beckwith in the Friday night feature at The Meadowlands ...
By Courtney Stafford April 2, 2026
Gaitway Farms, Manalapan, N.J., will once again be hosting qualifiers/2-year-old races ...
March 31, 2026
Join us for an evening with Carmine’s at the Meadowlands in honor of the late, great Carmine Abbatiello! This event is a one-night celebration that brings Carmine’s signature abundant, family-style favorites to the Meadowlands community, while honoring Carmine Abbatiello. Carmine’s was named in his honor by restaurateur Arthur J. Cutler —making this partnership and tribute especially meaningful for fans and guests. The Buffet is a display of Carmine’s favorites: Caesar Salad Spaghetti & Meatballs Guest Favorite – Chicken Parm Tiramisu Dinner is $54.95 plus tax and gratuity ($70.13) and includes a live racing program. https://events.ticketleap.com/tickets/meadowlandsracetrack/an-evening-with-carmine-s-at-the-meadowlands A portion of the proceeds ($20 per ticket) will be donated to the Purple Haze Adoption Program – created to ensure that retired Standardbred horses find a second career. Alicart/Carmine’s has generously donated the food for this one-time event. The Meadowlands will also have a tribute to Abbatiello and speak to some of his family and friends throughout the evening. Horsemen and Trotters members looking to dine in Trotters can call 201-460-4079. About Carmine Abbatiello – Hall of Fame driver Carmine Abbatiello, one of harness racing’s most successful and popular drivers throughout a career that spanned more than four decades, passed away Tuesday (Jan. 27), his family announced. He was 89. Mr. Abbatiello, who drove in his first race in 1956, was a fixture on the New York-New Jersey circuits, and over the years captured numerous driving titles in the region – most notably a combined total of nearly 20 at Roosevelt and Yonkers. He attended high school on Staten Island and from there worked eight years with his brother Anthony, another Hall of Famer, before going on his own in 1964. In 1959, Mr. Abbatiello tied for the driving title at Freehold Raceway before winning multiple crowns there in the early 1960s. He also was a driving champion at Monticello Raceway during the early days of his career. Mr. Abbatiello enjoyed his first top-25 finish in the national driver standings in 1962, with his 83 victories ranking No. 21. He ranked in the top 20 the next four seasons before breaking out in 1968 with 237 triumphs and $854,482 in purses to finish No. 3 and No. 6, respectively, in those categories in the national standings. Mr. Abbatiello led the sport in purses in 1975 ($2.27 million) and again in 1978 ($3.34 million), when he shared Harness Tracks of America’s Driver of the Year Award with Herve Filion. In addition, Mr. Abbatiello ranked among the top five in purses on 11 other occasions. He had a total of nine years among the top-five winningest drivers, including second-place finishes in 1970 (with 294 victories), 1978 (387) and 1979 (393). His final year with more than 1,000 drives came in 1989. At the end of that season, Mr. Abbatiello ranked No. 2 all-time in wins, with 6,944, and No. 4 in purses, with nearly $47.7 million. He ended his career with 7,170 victories and $50.3 million in purses. Known as “The Red Man” because of his bright red driving colors, Mr. Abbatiello was elected to the Harness Racing Hall of Fame in 1985. Among other accolades, he received Harness Horsemen International’s Man of the Year Award in 1982, the same year he was feted with Carmine Abbatiello Night at Roosevelt Raceway – only the second driver, after Billy Haughton – to receive the honor. Such was Mr. Abbatiello’s popularity that he appeared in a beer commercial and had a restaurant – the famed Carmine’s in New York City, launched by Arthur J. Cutler – named in his honor.
By Meadowlands Racetrack March 30, 2026
Beginning this Friday, April 3, the Meadowlands Racetrack will move its post time back to 6:35 pm ...
More Posts