Midway Road | |
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Sire | Jade Hunter |
Grandsire | Mr. Prospector |
Dam | Fleet Road |
Damsire | Magesterial |
Sex | Stallion |
Foaled | 2000 |
Country | United States |
Colour | Bay |
Breeder | William S. Farish |
Owner | William S. Farish |
Trainer | Neil J. Howard |
Record | 17: 7-2-2 |
Earnings | $695,060 |
Major wins | |
Fayette Stakes (2004) Preakness Stakes 2nd (2003) |
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Last updated on September 12, 2009 |
Fayette Stakes (2004)
Ben Ali Stakes (2004)
Tenacious Handicap (2004)
Midway Road (foaled April 11, 2000) was an American Thoroughbred racehorse. A descendant of Mr. Prospector, he was sired by Jade Hunter and bred by Will Farish. Midway Road was a multiple graded stakes winner besr remembered for his two grade one runner-up finishes in important stake races during his career. Most notably, he finished second in the 2003 Preakness Stakes.
Trained by Neil Howard, Midway Road won four of six races early in his career. He broke his maiden at Arlington Park in Chicago, Illinois at age two. As a sophomore, he won two allowance races at Keeneland before his connections entered him in the 2003 Preakness Stakes. He was listed as the longest shot in the field on the morning line at 20-1 along with New York Hero and Kissin Saint.
Midway Road broke in good order and settled in sixth of ten runners going into the first turn of the Preakness. He was squeezed in tight and then piloted by jockey Robby Albarado along the inside path early. Just after the five-eighths pole, Midway Road made his move to engage the top three. With only one furlong to go, he skimmed the rail just to the inside of Louisiana Derby winner Peace Rules and hooked up with him in a head-to-head battle. In the meantime, Kentucky Derby winner Funny Cide pulled away from the rest of the field and won by 9-3/4 lengths (the second largest winning margin in 128 years at that time). Midway Road finished second and earned $200,000. He beat Peace Rules by 3/4 of a length and also finished ahead of Scrimshaw, Senor Swinger, local favorite Cherokee's Boy, Foufa's Warrior, New York Hero, Kissin Kris and Ten Cents a Shine. Trainer Neil Howard said, "He had a good trip but he may have been in a little too tight. He was forced to take the inside path about mid-race."