On
Saturday night at the Meadowlands Racetrack, Big Chocolate looks to go
two-for-two in New Jersey Sire Stakes when he leaves from post two in the
second race, one of two $19,500 divisions.
With
Dave Miller in the sulky, Big Chocolate won the fastest of three opening round
splits last week in 1:54.3 for owner and breeder Richard Keys of Chicago,
Illinois.
As
a two-year-old in 2011, Big Chocolate won an elimination for the Peter Haughton
Memorial in 1:57 over a sloppy track and finished third in the final. The son of 2006 Hambletonian runner-up
Chocolatier took a mark of 1:54.3 in a division of the International Stallion
Stake at The Red Mile.
“He
was a big colt last year and just needed to grow into himself a bit,” noted
Hochstetler, 52. “He didn’t get a whole
lot bigger over the winter because he was big anyway. He’s mentally matured, but never acted
bad. After he won in Lexington
he caught a bladder infection. We
treated it and took him to Canada
for the Breeders Crown. He seemed okay,
but we probably shouldn’t have done that.
Dave [driver Dave Miller] doesn’t know why he made the break in his
Breeders Crown elimination. It was
likely the colt telling us it was time to shut it down for the year.”
Hochstetler
enjoyed his initial experience in the Hambletonian last year with Whit, who
qualified for the final and finished seventh.
“It was exciting as expected, a lot of hoopla, but it would’ve been
better if we hadn’t got run into by a breaker [Manofmanymissions],” recalled
Hochstetler. “We’ve got a much better
chance with Big Chocolate this time around.
He’s a much better horse.”
Big
Chocolate has returned this season with two straight wins, a 1:55.4 blowout at Balmoral
Park with Hochstetler in the
bike, then last Saturday’s 1:54.3 score by a head over Market
Square .
“He’s
obviously come back as a strong horse, who thrives on the mile track,” said
Hochstetler. “We’ll ride out the sires
stakes here, and he’s got the Earl Beal Memorial at Pocono Downs [eliminations
on June 15].”
Big
Chocolate carries the hopes and dreams of Richard Keys, who is retired from the
Chicago Board of Trade.
“I’ve
known Richard Keys for about 10 years,” said Hochstetler. “He decided one day to buy a farm about five
or six years ago and get into the breeding business. He went to Harrisburg
and bought four or five trotting broodmares, and one of them was Shez Mine, the
dam of Big Chocolate. Unfortunately, his
wife had contracted Multiple Sclerosis, and he eventually had to disperse his
stock. So, this is the only horse he has
left.”
Hochstetler
also sends out Mrs D in a $20,000 filly NJSS division. Bred and owned by his wife, Connie
Hochstetler, the Chocolatier filly is out of the dam Quillo. That makes her a half-sister to Kadabra, the
2002 Trotter of the Year Hochstetler developed.
Mrs D leaves from the rail in race five.
“Mrs
D is named after the wife of the late Erwin F. Dygert, who was involved with
Hawthorne Race Course. We didn’t stake
her too heavy. I just don’t think she’s
as good as Check Me Out and Win Missy B.”
Hochstetler
has been a mainstay on the Chicago racing
circuit, and the Bremen , Indiana
native now has a seven-horse stable based at Vernon Downs for the summer stakes
season.