A seven-month layoff. A distance at which he has yet to run. These are only minor inconveniences for Minorinconvenience, according to trainer Amelia Green, who brings the colt back to the races in Saturday’s $135,000 Gander Stakes for New York-bred 3-year-olds at Aqueduct. The Gander and the $135,000 Maddie May for New York-bred 3-year-old fillies – both run at one mile – highlight a nine-race Saturday card. Minorinconvenience, a son of Mendelssohn, went 2 for 3 as a 2-year-old, winning both of his starts on dirt including the Funny Cide Stakes by four lengths last Aug. 27. Minorinconvenience was training toward a start at Aqueduct in the fall when he was found to have minor bone bruising. He got 60 days off before resuming training in December. Minorinconvenience has nine workouts since Jan. 3. “I don’t think I can get him any more fit in the mornings,” Green said. “He looks fit, he’s acting fit, he should be fit enough for his first race off the layoff.” Before he won the Funny Cide, Minorinconvenience won an off-the-turf maiden race by 10 1/2 lengths going seven furlongs. That victory and the way the horse trains led Green to believe Minorinconvenience will be able to handle the mile. :: Access the most trusted data and information in horse racing! DRF Past Performances and Picks are available now. “I’ve always thought he’s a horse that wants to go longer, he never struck me as a sprinter,” Green said. “The way he’s been breezing you’d have to agree with that too. . . . I think the mile is going to be right up his alley.” Green noted that Minorinconvenience has been breezing with her better horses, including recent maiden winner Easy Decision and turf stakes winner On Command. Green will also send out You’re Lookin Good, who is coming out of a six-length win for maiden $40,000 claiming. Green said, other than Minorinconvenience, the prospective field she was given seemed like the type one would find in a starter-allowance race, which is the type of race You’re Lookin Good was going to run in. Sculcos Folly, a 9 3/4-length starter-allowance winner on Jan. 22, was supplemented to the Gander by trainer Rick Dutrow and owner Michael Dubb. Sculcos Folly has won three of his last four starts, a run that began in a maiden $25,000 claiming race. This will be his first start beyond six furlongs. Dutrow also sends out The Obliterator, who was beaten 10 1/2 lengths by Minorinconvenience last July. Mission Critical, fourth in the Damon Runyon for New York-breds, Wamo, and Anyway complete the field. Maddie May Galinda will eventually get a chance to run in an open-company stakes race, but her connections opted to keep her with New York-breds for the time being and she is very much the one to beat when facing seven rivals in the Maddie May. Galinda, a daughter of Good Magic owned by Waterville Lake Stables and trained by Miguel Clement, won her six-furlong debut by three-quarters of a length over stubborn first-time starter Princess Jane, who finished eight lengths clear of the third-place finisher. Galinda came back 31 days later and had a much easier time dispatching her four rivals, cruising to a front-running 9 1/4-length victory in the East View at seven furlongs. :: Subscribe to the DRF Post Time Email Newsletter: Get the news you need to play today's races!  “She dazzled us in the morning at Payson Park,” said Clement, referring to the training center where Galinda trained from October through early January. “We knew from Day One she was very talented. Can you run one more furlong? Against [New York-breds] at least, I think she should be able to.” Three of the rivals Galinda defeated in the East View – Rina’s Revenge, Victory Hall, and Purple Divine – are back in the Maddie May. Blue Note and Mathea may provide the tougher tests for Galinda. Blue Note beat Mathea in a one-mile maiden race on Jan. 16 and Mathea came back to win her maiden by 5 3/4 lengths on Feb. 12. Velocity Girl, last of four in the Wide Country Stakes at Laurel Park on Feb. 21, would be facing New York-breds for the first time if she ships in from Maryland. :: Want to learn more about handicapping and wagering? Check out DRF's Handicapping 101 and Wagering 101 pages.