BENSALEM, Pa. - Paulo Lobo has big expectations for No Bien Ni Mal in 2026 and on Saturday at Parx Racing, the Brazilian-bred ridgling gave his trainer no reason to temper his enthusiasm.  In just his second start of the year and in North America, No Bien Ni Mal won the Grade 3, $200,000 Greenwood Cup by a handy 1 3/4 lengths over a stubborn Double Your Money. It was 7 3/4 lengths back to Praetorian Guard in third.  No Bien Ni Mal came into this race off a first-level allowance win at Saratoga last month, his first start in eight months. Off that race, Lobo thought about the $500,000 Lukas Classic next Saturday at Churchill Downs, but didn’t want too tough a task for the horse at this point.  “It’s his second race, I tried to come a little easy with him,” Lobo said. “I’m building him for next year. We have big races next year. He’s a very good horse.”  In the Greenwood Cup, No Bien Ni Mal got a very good trip under Joel Rosario. Though a bit headstrong early, No Bien Ni Mal sat third, 1 1/2 lengths behind Digital Ops and Double Your Money, who were heads apart through a mile in 1:41.47.  :: Access the most trusted data and information in horse racing! DRF Past Performances and Picks are available now. Tipping out leaving the quarter pole, No Bien Ni Mal confronted Double Your Money at the three-sixteenths pole and gradually drew away in the stretch.   “He was throwing his head a little bit, he wanted to go forward a little bit, but he settled,” Rosario said. “You kind of had to play with him a little bit. When he settled, he just did everything for you. Turning for home, I was still holding him and then as soon as I let him go he just went on. I think he was the best horse in the race by far.”  No Bien Ni Mal, a Brazilian-bred son of Hofburg owned by Duplo Ouro Stables, covered the 1 1/2 miles in 2:31.23 (88 Beyer Speed Figure) and returned $3.40 as the odds-on favorite.  “I was expecting a big race,” Lobo said. “I was worried about the weight - he gave six pounds to almost everybody. “I like the way Rosario set him in the backstretch. He was a little rank, but it worked out well.”  Lobo said he would be willing to take a chance in the $7 million Breeders’ Cup Classic on Nov. 1 at Del Mar, but No Bien Ni Mal is not Breeders’ Cup nominated and would have to be supplemented to the race for a fee of $100,000. Lobo also mentioned the Grade 2, $600,000 Clark Stakes on Nov 28 at Churchill Downs as a potential next race.  Double Your Money, coming out of a second-place finish in an allowance/optional claimer here on Aug. 19, did well to hold second after being part of a contested pace. Double Your Money was sent out by trainer Benjamin Dunn, who, after serving as an assistant to his mother Felissa, recently took out his trainer’s license. Double Your Money was just his second starter.  “I’m tickled to death the way he ran,” said Dunn, who won with his previous starter, Golden Ice, on Tuesday. ”I’ve been looking to run him a mile and half since the first time I breezed this horse. He gallops out like no other horse I see.”  :: Want to learn more about handicapping and wagering? Check out DRF's Handicapping 101 and Wagering 101 pages.