The good news regarding the Indiana-bred 3-year-old colt Goodlookinjustice is that he came back from a winter break apparently a much faster horse than he went into it. Makes sense strictly from a maturation perspective. Goodlookinjustice in his final start of 2023 equaled his best Beyer Speed Figure with a 66. In his 2024 debut on April 24, Goodlookinjustice showed very good gate speed and led wire to wire in a non-winners-of-three Indiana-bred allowance race with his Beyer jumping to an 85. That kind of figure could allow Goodlookinjustice to close the gap on the leader of his division, Molly’s Town. Three times last year, twice in stakes, Goodlookinjustice finished a distant second behind Molly’s Town. The bad news is that Molly’s Town is also a faster horse at age 3, which means Goodlookinjustice likely will be left looking at his hindquarters again Wednesday in the six-furlong colts and geldings division of the $100,000 Hoosier Breeders’ Sophomore Handicap at Horseshoe Indianapolis. :: Bet the races with a $200 First Deposit Match + FREE All Access PPs! Join DRF Bets. Ten Indiana-bred 3-year-olds are entered in a six-furlong race that’s a handicap in name only. The weights seemingly are set under allowance conditions that would govern the race had it not been renamed a handicap in order to skirt a provision preventing the use of Lasix in stakes. In a true handicap, Molly’s Town would be giving 12 or 14 pounds to his least accomplished rivals. Instead, he’s the 124-pound co-highweight with Cringe, listed at 30-1 on the morning line. Molly’s Town is by Mo Town out of the Curlin mare Molly Slew, a high-end pedigree by Indiana standards. Genaro Garcia trains him for Southwest Racing Stable, and Molly’s Town had no peer among Indiana-bred 2-year-olds of 2023. He went 4 for 4 in Indiana-bred competition winning those races by a combined 24 lengths. Molly’s Town contested a strong pace and held well for fourth facing open company in the Ed Brown Stakes last November at Churchill, and probably was over the top when fifth Dec. 8 in the Advent at Oaklawn Park. Back from a winter break April 16, Molly’s Town won an open first-level allowance by 7 1/2 lengths, his 96 Beyer suggesting he’s more of a threat to open stakes horses in the Midwest than vulnerable to Goodlookinjustice on Wednesday. The pair break from adjacent starting stalls, with Molly’s Town drawn outside, but their win odds figure to diverge far more than the morning line predicts; 8-5 on Molly’s Town, 5-2 on Goodlookinjustice. One short price rather than two comes forth in the fillies division of the Hoosier Breeders’ Sophomore, though Noneofyourbusiness, 6-5 on the morning line, did lose her lone stakes start as a 2-year-old. In April, returning from a layoff, she crushed older Indiana-bred fillies and mares in a second-level allowance and won right back at the next allowance class a month later. Putting forth a similar performance, plausible enough, gives Noneofyourbusiness her first stakes win. :: Want to learn more about handicapping and wagering? Check out DRF's Handicapping 101 and Wagering 101 pages.