• All 2 Year Olds + 3 Year Old Trotters

  • The Meadows

  • Washington, PA

  • Purse $257,204 (10 Divisions)

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Stakes recaps

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  • $36,873 James Manderino Trot — 3-Year-Old Colt & Gelding Trot

     

    Parked every step, Splendid somehow found more for Chris Lems and collected his eighth straight win. The son of Father Patrick-Long Island Tea triumphed in 1:54, a head better than the rallying Father Mike, with Blockchain third.

     

    “He got a little rough behind the gate, which is why he couldn’t make it to the lead or get into a hole ” said Todd Rooney, who trains Splendid for Rooney Racing and Trotting For Bourbon. “But I was pretty shocked when he just kept right on going.”

     

    Rooney said that, because Splendid is dually eligible in Pennsylvania and Kentucky, several options are available for his next start.

  • $44,254 James Manderino 3-Year-old Colt and Gelding Trot

     

    The James Manderino was a showcase for Anthony MacDonald and trainer Tim Twaddle, who swept the two divisions with Crantini and Austral Hanover, both campaigned by MacDonald’s fractional ownership groups.

     

    After winning more than $182,000 last year, Crantini was said to be on the Hambletonian trail. But after exhibiting fractiousness and other bad habits, MacDonald relocated the International Moni-Peach Martini gelding to a new base at The Meadows and some softer engagements.

     

    “He’s always been a little bit of an idiot, to be honest,” MacDonald said. “We brought him back here to maybe do exactly what he’s been doing, finding his best foot. Tim’s done a great job keeping him quiet. I had to work on him today. You never used to do that; you’d be very careful with him. He’s probably rounding into the horse we hoped he would be.”

     

    Austral Hanover, an International Moni-Aspidistra Hanover gelding, brushed confidently around the leaders in the lane and prevailed in 1:55.2.  Momoni De Vie was second, beaten 1-3/4 lengths, while Big Boy Earnest earned show.

  • $35,698 James Manderino 3-Year-Old Colt & Gelding Trot

     

    This stake also was pretty much over early, as Guido Di outduelled Rose Run Xtra for the early lead and would not let him cut into the margin. Guido D defeated Rose Run Xtra by 2-1/4 lengths in 1:53.4, fastest win of his career. Andoverthewinnings finished third.

     

    “I got into him a little bit in the last turn just to get him in gear and get him to sprint away,” said winning driver Brady Brown. “After that, it was all him. He was impressive in his last start, so I was pretty confident with him going into the race.”

     

    The Wishing Stone-Focus On Me gelding now has banked $161,950 for trainer Steve Schoeffel and owners Virginia Schoeffel, Kathy Schoeffel, Lewis Falton and Sara Zidek.

  • Whiskey Blu survived a demanding opening panel and rolled to a comfortable victory in Saturday’s James Manderino, a $36,995 Arden Downs Grand Circuit Stake for 3-year-old colt and gelding trotters, at The Meadows.

     

    Capstone, the 3-5 favorite, parked Whiskey Blu past the quarter in 27.3, but winning driver Ronnie Wrenn, Jr. indicated he wasn’t unduly concerned about that tough early journey.

     

    “I had to steady him to make sure he got through the first turn,” Wrenn said. “But once I got to the lead, I was pretty confident in my horse. I kept his attention late, but he had a lot more trot. He’s nice. There’s a reason he’s already won 11 times this year. I imagine he’d be really good on a big track, but he was strong today.”

     

    Indeed, the 3-year-old Southwind Frank-Kendall Blue gelding never let a threatening outside flow develop, and he held off the Lightning Lane charge of Flemsteen to prevail by a length in 1:54.3. Capstone saved show.

     

    Ron Burke trains Whiskey Blu, who was unraced at 2 but now has banked $137,077, for Burke Racing Stable, Kitefield Stable and Weaver Bruscemi LLC.

  • $42,610 James Manderino — 3-Year-Old Colt & Gelding Trotters

     This event, an Arden Downs stake, was over early. Although Patriarch Hanover needed more than a quarter to get the lead from post 8, the son of Father Patrick-Personal Style cruised from there, defeating Romanee Blue Chip by 2 lengths in 1:54.1. Beyond Ordinary was third.

     “He’s a nice little horse,” said winning driver Kakaley. “He’s probably not as good as the top few — he’s just a little too small. But he tries his heart out. He gives it his all no matter what.”

     Burke trains Patriarch Hanover, who now has banked $145,225 for Burke Racing Stable, William Switala, Joseph Martin and Weaver Bruscemi.

  • $40,000 James Manderino — 3-Year-Old Colt & Gelding Trotters

    Goes Down Smooth prevailed from post 8 with a two-move victory . . . and may have punched his ticket to the Hambletonian. Said winning driver Matt Kakaley: 

    “I think they want to give him a shot there, although I don’t know for sure, but he’ll be okay there,” Kakaley said. “He’ll hold his own. He’ll definitely step up on a bigger track.” 

    The Muscle Hill-Peach Martini gelding got away third, quarter-poled to the front and downed Mass Fortune K by 2 lengths in 1:54. The pocket-sitting Kate’s Massive earned show.

     Ron Burke conditions Goes Down Smooth, who lifted his career earnings to $146,053, for Burke Racing Stable, Weaver Bruscemi LLC, William Switala and James Martin.

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  • $43,816 Roy Davis — 2-Year-Old Colt & Gelding Pace

     

    In the first of two divisions, Papi’s Rocket was sent off as the heaviest of favorites, and he repaid the confidence of his backers by taking a new mark of 1:53.2.

     

    First and second in overnight events before closing for third after a shuffle in a PA Sire Stake last week, Papi’s Rocket got away fourth in the seven-horse field, but driver Ronnie Wrenn Jr. had the son of Papi Rob Hanover–Real Touch (the dam of World Champion Summer Touch) on the move as second choice Wild Bill Wyatt was in front of the field past the quarter in :27.3, taking over command and getting a breather to a :57 half. No one mounted an outside threat before or after the 1:25.4 three-quarters; the only real test came up the inside from pocket-sitter Wild Bill Wyatt, but Papi’s Rocket held that rival safe by 1-1/4 lengths.

     

    “I thought the horse was much the best,” Wrenn said, “so I just wanted to make that quarter-pole move and make sure he didn’t make a mistake. He’s definitely a sires stake colt. He’s getting better and better every week.”

     

    Ron Burke, who had his usual fine Adios Day (three wins and five seconds, including sweeps of the Adioo Volo and Mary Lib Miller for an unofficial $152,939 earnings reckoning), trains the winner for Burke Racing Stable LLC, Weaver Bruscemi LLC, Knox Services Inc. and Slaughter Racing Stable LLC.

     

    The second Roy Davis division also went to a stickout in the Bettor’s Wish–Heavenly Bride colt Wedlock Blue Chip in 1:52.4. Lou’s Albano (no relation to Adios winner Captain Albano) led at the :27.4 opener, but driver Troy Beyer wanted to control his own fate and moved the youngster to the lead, putting up middle fractions of :56.2 and 1:25.1 before marching home in :27.3 to leave Lou’s Albano three lengths in arrears at the finish.

     

    Wedlock Blue Chip, who had sandwiched overnight victories around a miscue in his brief career, now moves to three-for-four for trainer Roland “Polie” Mallar and the ownership of Richard Cortese and Don Hawk.

  • $40,696 Roy Davis 2-Year-Old Colt & Gelding Pace

     

    The splits went to Silken Sweet and Rose Run Zeke.

     

    Silken Sweet hadn’t so much as hit the board in four outings, but he made it look easy for Dave Palone, scoring by 3-1/2 lengths on the front end in an unpressured 1:51.4.  Senditin Jim and Rio completed the ticket.

     

    “This was a case of watching replays from the previous week,” Palone said. “He was loaded last week and never found a way through. He just looked like a big, growthy colt that might just want to stretch his legs out. I figured my only shot was to put him in the hunt and go from there. He was very attentive, and when I asked on him, he was gone.”

     

    Deborah Daguet trains the daughter of  Betting Line-Sweet Body for D Racing Stable Inc. and Donald MacRae.

     

    Rose Run Zeke, meanwhile, stretched his career unbeaten streak to four by downing Solid Character by 2 lengths, with Dream Bird earning show. Hunter Myers piloted the  Stay Hungry-Rose Run Ultimate gelding for owner/trainer Mitchell York.

  • $60,000 Roy Davis 2-Year-Old Colt & Gelding Pace

     

    A fair share of good-paying winners found their way to Victory Lane on Adios Day. Before Chris Page paid $18.20 winning The Adios with Bythemissal, there had been four winners exceeding that price, toting drivers named Gingras, Merriman, Wrenn, and Page himself. But it was “favorites only” parading back after each division of the $60,000 Roy Davis, the Arden Downs Stake for 2-year-old pacing males.

     

    Driver Tim Tetrick, trainer Jim King Jr. and owners Threelyonsracing were the team behind two of the Roy Davis winners. First up was the Stay Hungry-Surfside Sexy colt Lyons Surfing, a $110,000 yearling purchase (his third dam was She’s A Great Lady), who broke his maiden in fine style with a 1:53.2 victory. Lyons Surfing went to the lead in a 27.4 opener, then was content to yield to second choice Crown Of Thorns, who put up middle-race splits of :56.3 and 1:25.4.  But the easy middle half gave no advantage to the pacesetter, as Tetrick moved his charge — fifth and third in Pennsylvania Sire Stakes in his only other two career starts — outside on the turn, went right by the leader, and drew off to win by 7 lengths over Poseidon Deo.

     

    Following the race, King had a bold prediction.

     

    “I think he’s destined to be back here on this date next year (for the Adios),” he said. “I like him a lot; I don’t think he’s come anywhere close to his potential yet, and he doesn’t seem to have any issues. I’ve been pretty kind on him.

     

    “Gotta try for the Adios. I never had me one of those. Gotta bring two next year.”

     

    King’s crystal ball looked even clearer when he and Tetrick/Threelyonsracing came back with the Sweet Lou–Zane Hanover colt Lyons Stealth, as the colt made the top nearing a :28.3 opener, then absolutely shut down the speed, walking to the half in :58.3. Lyons Stealth responded readily when asked for speed after that, going a 28 third quarter (1:26.3) and then zipping home in 27.2 to win in 1:54 and remain perfect in three starts, having won two PA Stallion Series races previously. Pocket sitter Sweet Chilli Heat was 1-3/4 lengths behind the sprinting winner at the finish.

     

    The Lazarus N–Inittowinafortune colt Voukefalas came to The Meadows as the fastest 2-year-old of 2022 after a 1:50 win in a New Jersey Sire Stakes Championship, and he again showed high speed in winning his section in 1:53.2. Jordan Stratton, driving for trainer Michael Russo and owner Michael Pagonas, kept Voukefalas mid-pack through early fractions of 26.3 and 56.3, then gave him his head down the backstretch, with the baby responding to clear to the lead easily before the 1:24.3 three-quarters, then keeping early pacesetter South Point 2-3/4 lengths in the rearview mirror to the line.

  • $42,070 Arden Downs — 2-Year-Old Colt & Gelding Pacers

     

    On a day that The Meadows held a “Dick Stillings Appreciation Pace” for the Hall of Fame horseman, it seemed right to have the Arden Downs stake for next year’s Adios possibles, the 2-year-old pacing colts, renamed the Roy D. Davis Pace after the late veteran owner, who achieved his Hall of Fame Immortal status by campaigning a host of champion horses surnamed “Spur” with Stillings as trainer and frequent driver.

     

    The first division of the Roy Davis saw JM’s Final Treasure installed as the heavy favorite, and Indeed, when he made his move towards the three-quarters after his Ron Burke stablemate Birthday had cut fractions of :27.4, :56.3 and 1:24, he looked like he had a big shot. But track bias was working against him — no horse who had been on the outside entering the final turn had won to that point -— and the streak continued, with Birthday able to hold off JM’s Final Treasure by a head in 1:52. One horse did get by Birthday, pocket sitter All The Chips to the leader’s inside, but just as he grabbed a small margin past mid-stretch, he got rough gaited and lost all momentum, allowing the two Burke horses to beat him to the line.

     

    The victory thus went to the Sweet Lou-Breakheart Pass colt Birthday, who was driven by Ron Wrenn Jr. for trainer Burke and the ownership of Burke Racing Stable LLC and Weaver Bruscemi LLC. Birthday lowered his mark by over three seconds with the quick triumph.

     

    “No one really left out of there, and I was able to get decent fractions,” Wrenn said. “He paced home really strong. I thought someone would quarter-move on me, but when no one did, I was able to get a good breather.”

     

    Boardwalk Bet was the favorite in the second stake division, but leaving from the outside post against several determined rivals forced him to take an early tuck, and his uncovered bid suffered the same fate as did all the other outside challengers of the day. (To be fair, he did suffer broken equipment.) Victorious was another son of Sweet Lou (out of Macharoundtheclock), the Tim Twaddle trainee Fourever Boy, who broke his maiden in memorable fashion with a 1:53.2 triumph. All-time leading Meadows (and world) driver Dave Palone got this colt to the front in the :28 first quarter, got a big breather to a :57.2 half, then took off to a 1:24.3 three-quarters and proved uncatchable in winning by 1-1/2 lengths over Good Deal (another Burke trainee). Twaddle co-owns the freshman with the good timing with Micki Rae Stables LLC.

  • $59,088 Arden Downs — 2-Year-Old Colt & Gelding Pacers

     

    Last week, Southwind Gendry scored with a covered trip. In the Gov. David L. Lawrence, as this stake is known, he needed no help, powering to the point at the quarter for Yannick Gingras and winning in a stake record 1:51.2. That knocked a tick from the mark set by Yankee Bounty in 2014.

     

    “He’s a little bit behind the rest of our colts, but as he figures it out, he’ll be a good colt,” said Ron Burke, who trains the Always B Miki-Gambler’s Passion gelding for Burke Racing Stable, Phillip Collura, Knox Services and J&T Silva-Purnel& Libby. “We knew watching his first qualifier that he’s something special.”

     

    Chase H Hanover was second, 1-1/2 lengths back, with Capt Jack Hanover third.

     

    Meanwhile, another Burke youngster, Lou’s Pearlman, continued to look like the real deal, extending his career unbeaten streak to four for Matt Kakaley and owners Burke Racing Stable, Weaver Bruscemi, Elizabeth Novak and Howard Taylor. Captain Sleaze was second, beaten 2-1/4 lengths, while Great Somewhere earned show.

     

    The son of Sweet Lou was so full of himself that Kakaley had him under a snug hold even while sending him on a quarter-pole move to the top.

     

    “He has a lot of high speed; he’s impressive,” Kakaley said. “In my mind he’s one of the best 2-year-olds out there. He’s absolutely perfect to drive.”

     

    Hellabalou stopped badly last week, and his trainer Eddie Dennis, thinks he knows why.

     

    “He struggled getting off the track last week, and the vet thought it was the heat,” Dennis said. “Once we got him cooled down, he was much better. He rebounded really good today.”

     

    The son of Sweet Lou-Magestic Blue Chip looked quite comfortable on the point, defeating Sweet Angel Boy by a neck in 1:53 for Andrew McCarthy. Mikibytheseaside completed the ticket. Eric Good campaigns Hellabalou.

  • $63,000 Gov. David Lawrence — 2-Year-Old Colt & Gelding Pacers

     Tim Tetrick, red-hot on the other side of Pennsylvania recently, had four wins on the Adios card, including two in the Gov. Lawrence, with the faster of his winners being the Somebeachsomewhere–Persistent colt Seeyou At Thebeach, who broke his maiden in 1:52.2. The pattern of this race was much like that of the Sweet Ace event, with the front pack of four well separated from the rest, and Seeyou At Thebeach

    moving out behind cover at the three-quarters to go up after undefeated favorite Cattlewash, who got the top after a :27.4 quarter and recorded mid-splits of :56.4 and 1:24.3. Cattlewash carried his advantage almost to the wire, but Tetrick rallied the victorious Brian Brown trainee to get a head decision on the money for Country Club Acres, Joe Sbrocco, Richard Lombardo, and Chris Page.

     Tetrick’s other victory in the day’s baby colt action was with the undefeated Adriano Hanover, who at 1-9 made a quarter-move to command and was never in doubt, winning by 2-¾ lengths in 1:53.1, missing his mark by a tick. The son of Western Hanover-A And G’sconfusion added a Grand Circuit triumph to his prior PASS win for trainer Jim King Jr. and owners Jo Ann Looney-King and Joseph Palermo III. 

    “At times, his potential seems unlimited,” Jim King said. “So far, he’s done everything asked of him — and with a lot of determination. When he gets in with his own kind and they put up a fight, we’ll see how he does than.” 

    The third division of the Gov. Lawrence went to the Captaintreacherous– Charisma Hanover colt Hey Run Me Over, who brushed to the backstretch lead and went on to be 3 lengths clear at the finish in 1:52.4 to take a new speed badge. Andrew McCarthy had the sulky assignment for trainer Rollie Mallar, who is also co-owner with Linwood Higgins and Patrick Leavitt.

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  • TRACK RECORD-HOLDER WAPITI BLUE CHIP ADDS STAKE MARK IN MEADOWS GRAND CIRCUIT EVENT

    $60,000 Robert J. Key Colt & Gelding Trot

     

    Hammered down to 1-5, Wapiti Blue Chip was away second before Dave Palone moved him at the quarter. The long-striding International Moni-Make It Blue Chip gelding effortlessly widened his lead thereafter and triumphed in 1:55.2, 8-1/2 lengths better than I’ll Have A Double, with Owls Nest third.

     

    It wasn’t as fast as his 1:54.2 track record, but the time knocked a tick from the stake mark established by Dancinginthedark in 2020. Mahlon Martin, who previously indicated the colt will race primarily in Pennsylvania this year, trains him for Ashley Burslem, Steven Mullen and Gregory Garton.

     

    “I just wanted to babysit him around there so he could do it as easy as he could,” Palone said. “Now I know how he broke the track record. He was well within himself.”

     

    Just how facile was the victory?

     

    “I’m pretty sure you could’ve done that,” Palone teased the local flak.

     

    Bombay Tom found himself in a more competitive split, but the Bar Hopping-Miss Wilia gelding was up to it, using two moves to notch a 4-3/4-length victory in 1:57.2 for Ronnie Wrenn, Jr..  Livin It Up and Manhattan Moni rounded out the ticket.

     

    “He’s shown constant improvement,” said Norm Parker, who conditions Bombay Tom for Bart Brice. Todd Brice, Charles Receski and Ed Receski.  “With his attitude now, he always seems like he wants to go forward. When you ask him, he goes on.”

     

    Parker also paused to remember the contributions of the late owner/breeder Bob Key, for whom the stake is named. Key sent many horses from his large stable to Parker, who hasn’t forgotten it.

     

    “Bob was always good to me,” said Parker as he hoisted his winner’s plaque. “That’s what makes this so special.”

     

    Arrowhead Hanover took the third division for Anthony MacDonald, trainer Tim Twaddle and owner Thestable Arrowheadhanover.

  • $60,000 Robert J. Key — 2-Year-Old Colt & Gelding Trot

     

    In the Adios Eve co-feature, also an Arden Downs Grand Circuit Stake, Honor Guard, Activation and Memorymimagination took the splits, with the MacDonald-Twaddle team doubling up with Activation and Memorynimagination. Also worth noting is the work of the offspring of Father Patrick, who took four of the five stake splits on the program.

     

    Honor Guard appeared to be in a deep hole, a maiden 2-year-old trailing by 5-1/2 lengths at the half. But he picked up live first-over cover and kept on advancing for Dave Palone, drawing off by an eye-popping 6-3/4 lengths in 1:58.3. Viktory Blue Chip and Five Second Rule completed the ticket.

     

    “He has pedigree,” Palone said, “so I figured somewhere along the line he’s either going to show it or not. I let him stretch out up the back side, which was a mistake. He got lost when he was off by himself. Next week I might not let him move to the point so quick.”

     

    Scott Cox conditions the daughter of Father Patrick-Honor Thy Daughter for Jason Ash LLC.

     

    Activation led for most of the mile after a contested opening panel, but MacDonald indicated it’s wise to stay busy on the Father Patrick-Repentance gelding.

     

    “He never makes it easy on you, that’s for sure,” MacDonald said. “He won’t run usually, but he makes you work for it every inch of the mile. He’s always in neutral, rarely up into fifth gear. He’ll come on when he’s challenged. He’s just a big goof out there, to be honest.”

     

    Put Option was second, beaten 2-1/2 lengths, while Kill A Word earned show.

  • Austral Hanover, whose connections feared that he would never make it as a racehorse, took another step forward in his development Friday when he captured a division of a $40,000 Arden Downs Grand Circuit stake at Hollywood Casino at The Meadows. Open Bar took the other split in the event, known as the Robert J. Key, for 2-year-old colt and gelding trotters.

     

    Austral Hanover is campaigned by one of the fractional ownership groups of Anthony MacDonald, who also pilots the International Moni-Aspidistra Hanover gelding. MacDonald minces no words in his review of the horse’s training performance.

     

    “Our expectations when we got this guy to race were very, very low,” MacDonald said. “It seemed like he couldn’t do anything right. It was the weirdest thing; when he got behind the gate for the first time, he looked like a racehorse. From that very moment he first saw the starting gate, he just decided he would do a good job. He’s the epitome of a hard worker.”

    In the Robert J. Key, Austral Hanover zipped to the lead from post 6, scoring in 1:57.2 to match his career best for trainer Tim Twaddle. Big Baller Beane was second, 3/4 lengths back, with Southwind Distilld third.

    In his four career starts, Open Bar has sampled a variety of race types — a PA Fairs stake, a PA Sire Stake, A PA Stallion Series event and now a Grand Circuit stake. Where does winning driver Brady Brown think he’ll eventually land.

     

    “He’s a little green still, but he’s learning,” Brown said. “But I think he’s a sires stakes colt. When he puts 2 and 2 together, he’ll be a nice horse.”

     

    Brown found the pocket with the Bar Hopping-Lady Sierra Gold gelding, then blew by the leader, Spitfire Oversees, to down him by 1-1/2 lengths in 1:57.4 for his maiden-breaking score. Tailgate Buzz completed the ticket.

     

    Steve Schoeffel trains the winner for Virginia Schoeffel, Kathy Schoeffel, Marian Schilling and Dan Goehle. The late Robert J. Key, for home the stake is named, bred Open Bar.

  • In only his second career start, Fiftyfour K showed the poise of a veteran as he toughed out a 17-1 upset victory in Friday’s $36,122 Arden Downs Grand Circuit Stake for freshman colt and gelding trotters at The Meadows. Hustlenomics captured the other division in the event known as the Robert J. Key.

     

    Winning driver Jim Pantaleano had no idea what to expect from the son of Sebastian K-Westfiftyfirst and so was appreciative of the first-over cover provided by Ginger Tree Brad.

     “I looked at the program before the race, and the race wasn’t laying the way I thought it would.” Pantaleano said. “I quickly grabbed cover when I could. He had a lot of trot the whole way.”

     

    Still looming in the Lightning Lane was early leader Guido Di. Fiftyfour K edged him by a head in the good time of 1:56.4, while Ginger Tree Brad saved show. Ron Burke trains Fiftyfour K for Here’s To Us Stable.

     

    Hustlenomics showed some poise of his own when his first-over cover blew up in his face. Winning driver Mike Wilder said the Full Count-Glisten Hanover gelding “did everything right.”

     

    “He’s one of those horses who wants to get into gear real quick,” Wilder said. “When his cover broke, he did get into gear quick, but I just stayed with him. I’ve driven quite a few Full Counts for Marty Wollam, and they’re iron horses.”

     

    Hustlenomics persevered and downed Rose Run Extra by 1-1/2 lengths, with Armani third. Todd Luther conditions the winner for Black Magic Racing LLC.

     

  • $37,644 Edward M. Ryan — 2-Year-Old Colt & Gelding Trotters

     

    Few freshman trotters have debuted as impressively as Dancinginthedark M. He was sitting fifth at the half when Palone cut him loose. The son of Readly Express-Leila responded by gobbling up the field and scoring in 1:55.3, shattering the previous stake mark of 1:56.2 held jointly by Federalreservenote and Billy Flynn.

     

    “There’s a lot of quality there,” Palone said. “He’s had some learning hiccups. But he was able to sit almost two turns, and when I moved him, he was all business. As soon as he cleared, he was on shutdown.”

     

    To Be Frank was a distant second, beaten 11 lengths, with Clancy’s Bar third. Marcus Melander conditions the winner for Menhammar Stuteri AB.

     

    In the other Ed Ryan split, Make Sure Its Cold moved first over from third and prevailed in 1:59, 3/4 lengths better than Killer Instinct. Flemsteen completed the ticket.

     

    “When we saw him as a yearling, he reminded us of a horse from our past named Dark Magic,” said winning trainer Leslie Zendt, who owns the Bar Hopping-Malibu Breeze gelding with Bill Zendt. “He’s a little green behind the gate, and he’s a little scared of things, but he likes being a racehorse. That’s half the battle.”

  • $60,000 Arden Downs Stake – 2-Year-Old Colt & Gelding Trotters

     Friday’s card also featured the $60,000 Edward M. Ryan, a Grand Circuit event, with the splits going to Stickler Hanover, Town Victor and Penance.

     Brady Brown gave Stickler Hanover a ground-saving trip before the duo poured through the Lightning Lane to prevail in a career-best 1:57.2. I Have A Dream finished second, beaten 1-1/4 lengths, while Bold Moves earned show.

     “I didn’t give him a very good trip in the stallion series and wanted to do better with him today,” Brown said. “Up the backside I knew I had plenty of horse. When the horse on the front broke, I decided to stay in. This horse has some potential.” Brown has won many PA Fairs stakes, but this was his initial stakes victory at The Meadows.

     The 4-5 favorite, Town Victor was away third but cleared to the front for Wilbur Yoder and triumphed handily in 1:58, matching his life mark. Werner Hanover was second, 4-1/4 lengths in arrears, with Hennessy AM S third. It was the third consecutive victory for the homebred Winning Mister-P Town Girl gelding.

     “I’m kicking around the idea of putting in the next sires stake (at Harrah’s Philadelphia) because a lot of the good ones will be at the Peter Haughton,” said winning trainer Rich Gillock, who owns Town Victor with Barbara Richardson. “But he’s a big colt, and I’d rather not overdo it with him this year so he can come back a good colt at 3.”

     Saturday’s card at The Meadows features the $400,000 final of the Delvin Miller Adios Pace for the Orchids as well as five other Grand Circuit stakes and the $50,000 Foiled Again Invitational Pace. In addition, the program will offer three total-pool guarantees worth a combined $37,500 and a $5,841.08 carryover in the final-race Super Hi.5. Special post time is 11;25 AM, with the Adios (race 15) projected for 4:30 PM.

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  • $30,098 Dwane Parker Trot — 3-Year-Old Fillies

     

    Diamante Hanover controlled the fractions, then had to dig in to hold off the late charge of Mon Amie Martine. But the daughter of Cantab Hall-Dew To Win was up to the task, downing Mon Amie Martine by a neck in 1:55. Vickis Moni completed the ticket.

     

    “She was trying to wear herself out a little on the front,” said winning driver Matt Kakaley. “She sometimes just wants to go too fast, too early. But she dug in game. She always tries hard.”

     

    Emily Bost trains Diamante Hanover, who soared over $100,000 in lifetime earnings, for Bruce Potter.

  • $34,505 Dwane Parker 3-Year-Old Filly Trot

     

    This stake was renamed to honor the memory of the late Dwane Parker, longtime Meadows trainer who died earlier this year. Parker also was a founder, convener and host of an annual Adios Day event called “Parkerpalooza,” when the extended Parker-Bolon clan — and anyone else who drops by — gathers on The Hill overlooking the back stretch to celebrate family and great harness racing.

     

    Many of the celebrants trekked to the winners’ circle where they joined Angelpedia, who powered off to a 4-length score following a quarter-pole move for Mike Wilder. Truly Relentless and Lillehammer Hall rounded out the ticket.

     

    “She’s eligible to just about everything,” Wilder said. “It’s a matter of what the owners decide to do with her. There are a lot of options with her.”

     

    Dan Altmeyer trains the daughter of Cantab Hall-Baker Blank, who has banked $134,561 for owners Gilbert Short and Rose Stables LLC.

  • $32,323 Ned McCarr 3-Year-Old Filly Trot

     

    Dreamonhigh last year became the fastest freshman ever at The Meadows — regardless of gender — when she trotted in 1:54, so it hardly was a surprise when she dominated this stake.

     

    The daughter of Andover Hall-RC’s Dream seized the lead from post 6, enjoyed a comfortable front half of 58 and triumphed by 9 lengths in a stake-record 1:54, lowering Donato Jewels’s previous mark by 2 ticks. Sabrina Hill and Blue Skies Shining rounded out the ticket.

     

    “We got to float around there pretty cheap and she raced very well,” said Todd McCarthy, who drove for trainer Per Engblom and owner KAT Stables LLC. “She’s a little green still, she’s maturing, and she was very well behaved today. She’s a classy little filly.”

    Dreamonhigh lifted her lifetime bankroll to $317,770.

  • Frankly My Dear saved ground through three-quarters, then moved powerfully first over to capture Friday’s Ned McCarr, a $38,345 Arden Downs Grand Circuit Stake for 3-year-old filly trotters, at The Meadows.

     

    Once Ronnie Wrenn, Jr. asked her for trot, the daughter of Southwind Frank-Temple Of Athena had little trouble overtaking May Karp and downing her by 2-1/4 lengths in a career-best 1:55.1. Dazzling Reign completed the ticket.

     

    Wrenn said it was his plan to put Frankly My Dear in a spot where her brush could be most effective.

     

    “Last time out in the Currier & Ives, she got in a bad spot,” he said. “She was on the right line, and it was a little tough to steer her in the last turn. Today, I just wanted to get away decent. She has one really good move, and I was able to use it. She’s a nice filly, but she’s more of a trip horse.”

     

    Ron Burke trains the winner, who extended her career earnings to $137,458, for Burke Racing Stable, Knox Services, Weaver Bruscemi LLC and J&T Silva-Purnel & Libby.

  • Facing an overmatched field, a stinging rain and a sloppy surface, freshman sensation Sister Sledge kept her “A” game under wraps and fashioned a workmanlike win in her 3-year-old debut in Saturday’s $53,528 Arden Downs at The Meadows.

     

    The stake for 3-year-old filly trotters, known as the Ned McCarr, was contested over two divisions, with 49-1 bomb Dazzling Diva pulling off the shocker in the other split.

     

    Sister Sledge won her first seven races at 2, banked more than $500,000, swept the Pennsylvania Sires Stakes and finished second to Ramona Hill in Dan Patch Award voting. Under ordinary circumstances, the daughter of Father Patrick-Behindclosedoors would have had several starts by this time. But with so many stakes canceled or rescheduled due to COVID-19, trainer Ron Burke found that he needed a race for his budding superstar. The Ned McCarr, usually offered as part of Adios Week, fit the bill.

     

    Dave Palone idled with Sister Sledge before the pair seized the lead past the quarter. Sister Sledge drew off as she pleased and scored in 1:55.3 under a Palone stranglehold. Cocktails N Dreams was 4-1/2 lengths back in second, with Perth Angel De Vie third.

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    Chris Gooden Photography

     

    “She’s like all the great ones,” Palone said. “Not only is she blessed with ridiculous speed, but her manners and her intelligence are what make her a great horse. They’ll put her in the right spot every week. She’s one you remember for sure.”

     

    Burke Racing Stable, Jason Melillo, J&T Silva-Purnel&Libby and Weaver Bruscemi LLC own Sister Sledge, whose career bankroll now stands at $569,195. Her next start is tentatively set for the July 4 Currier & Ives at The Meadows.

     

    The other McCarr split was hardly as formful, as 1-2 favorite Dune Hill jumped it off while on a clear lead down the backside. Dazzling Diva, an eight-race maiden entering the stake, already was out and moving and was able to reach the point and open daylight on the field. Yet it wasn’t a spot that winning driver Dan Rawlings coveted.

     

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    “She dehydrated really badly last year,” Rawlings said. “She followed the best fillies in the state, and she was wrapped up doing it. But in both qualifiers this year, when she cleared, she pulled up. I was trying to race hard and drop to the two hole, to be honest. When I cleared, I thought, it’s all or nothing now. I kept screaming at her, and she kept going.”

     

    The daughter of Cantab Hall-Hustle Heart persevered and downed Sentebale by 3/4 lengths in 1:56. Ginger Tree Bren earned show. Norm Parker trains the winner for Jacobs Creek Racing, George Romanoff, Martin Garey and Jon Erdner.

  • $53,468 Ned McCarr — 3-Year-Old Filly Trotters

    Nomo Volo eschewed a potential early seat and needed the opening three-eighths to reach the point. Nevertheless, she prevailed in 1:55.2 for trainer/driver Jeff Gregory, defeating Windy Corner by 2-3/4 lengths.  Ladylilli was third.

     “ I think the opening was big enough (to duck),” Gregory said. “But I wanted to ease her around the first turn and try and get to the front eventually. Last time I raced her here I left maybe a little too hard with her, and she made a break in the first turn. So I didn’t want to take a chance and do that again. She’s eligible to both Pennsylvania and Kentucky sires stakes, so we might try to race her in each.” 

    Jeff Gregory Inc. and Jesmeral Stable campaign Nomo Volo, who now boasts a lifetime bankroll of $154,834.

     The other division went to Magical Beliefs, who quarter-poled to the front for David Miller and triumphed in 1:55.2. Early leader Keystone Abbey was second, a length back, with Southwind Storm third.

     Linda Toscano trains the daughter of Cantab Hall-Frisky Magic, who extended her career earnings to $236,296, for Highland Green Farms, South Mountain Stables and R-and-I Farms.

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  • $36,117 Mary Lib Miller — 2-Year-Old Filly Pace

    In 2023 driver Dexter Dunn won the Adioo Volo 3-year-old filly pace with Always B Naughty in 1:50, and he also won a division of the Mary Lib Miller companion stake for 2-year-olds with My Girl EJ in an outstanding 1:51.1. This year Dunn won the Adioo Volo with My Girl EJ in a track record 1:48.4, so that seems to leave the Dunn-driven Blessed Hanover, winner of the $36,117 single division of this year’s Mary Lib Miller/Arden Downs in 1:51.4, with history on her side, right?

    Dunn did well to get away third with the Burke-trained daughter of Always B Miki–Bettor B Lucky after she was a little steppy as the gate sprang; not so fortunate was her stablemate, the favored Always Ana Hanover, who lost stride before the first turn, although recovering to land seventh early. Daily Double Deo went to the front and set fractions of :27.1, :55.3, and 1:23.1; Always Ana Hanover could find no cover and had to make her challenge from the back without benefit of drafting along.

    Always Ana Hanover had reached the pacesetter by the far turn but had no cover tight on her, which gave Dunn the opportunity he needed as he slipped Blessed Hanover, owned by Burke Racing Stable LLC, Weaver Bruscemi LLC and William Donovan, to the two-path, then wider in the stretch. Blessed Hanover paced home with a 1-3/4-length advantage over her talented but unfortunate stablemate, with Daily Double Deo another length back in third. 

    “Training down, she was way at the back of the group,” Burke said of Blessed Hanover. ”By the time we were qualifying, we thought, she’s all right. Her time today was legit. She’s showed us enough to keep her staked to everything.”

  • $42,496 Mary Lib Miller 2-Year-Old Filly Pace

     

    Speaking of sweeps, trainer Ron Burke accomplished this in the Mary Lib Miller with wins by My Girl EJ and Lousloulemon. My Girl EJ was especially impressive, as she routed the field by 12-3/4 lengths in a stake-record 1:51.1. Stay Lucky and Sonadora were second and third, respectively.

     

    “She’s been very nice, but she’s a little bit fussy about her mouth,” said winning driver Chris Page of the daughter of Sweet-Lou-Lucy’s Pearl, a maiden entering the day for owners Burke Racing Stable, Weaver Bruscemi LLC,  Elizabeth Novak and Howard Taylor. “So I didn’t wrestle with her. I just kind of let her do her thing. I know that’s not that bottom. I know there’s still more left in the tank.”

     

    Lousloulemon also broke her maiden, moving first over to upset at 9-1 in 1:53.1 for Ronnie Wrenn, Jr. Ginger Tree Belle was a head back in second, with Deja Jade third. Burke Racing Stable, Weaver Bruscmi, Purnel & Libby and Larry Karr campaign the daughter of Sweet Lou-Fashion Fluzzy.

  • $35,160 Mary Lib Miller 2-Year-Old Filly Pace

     

    The Always B Miki–Sweet Body filly Ambushed overcame post 8 in the lone division of the $35,160 Mary Lib Miller, the Arden Downs Stake for 2-year-old pacing distaffs.

     

    Ambushed and Nevertellmetheodds, both sent off at 7-5 (with the latter favored by a mere $81), argued through a 27.2 opening panel before the second choice made the top for driver McCarthy. Ambushed went on to mid-race splits of :55.4 and 1:24.2, and there would be no ambush in the stretch from the pocket sitter, as the winner went on to prevail by 1-3/4 lengths in 1:52.3, a new lifetime mark and only a tick off Lyons Sentinel’s stakes record set last year. Hunter Oakes conditions the winner, now with three straight wins including two PA Stallion Series triumphs, for D Racing Stable Inc. and Donald Mac Rae.

  • $49,270 Arden Downs — 2-Year-Old Filly Pacers

     

    Trainer Jim King Jr., no stranger to classy pacing distaffs such as Shartin N and Lyons Sentinel, won both divisions of this stake known as the Mary Lib Miller.

     

    Lyons Serenity set a stakes record of 1:52.2 in taking her division of the stakes as the odds-on favorite. Tim Tetrick tucked third to the :28 quarter, then brushed his filly to the top nearing the :57.1 half. The race became a sprint from that point, and nobody had more sprint than the victorious daughter of Sweet Lou–Southwind Serenity as she passed the three-quarters in 1:24.2 and then came home 2-3/4 lengths ahead of pocket-sitting Allnight Micki while knocking a tick off of Malinka’s stake record set 10 years ago.

     

    “She’s fast, but mentally, I don’t think she’s ready for tougher yet,” Tetrick said. “She’s a little on the hot side. If she gets her own way, she looks good. If she didn’t get her own way, I don’t know if she would look so good.  She has some growing up to do.”

     

    Lyons Serenity now has two firsts and one second in three lifetime starts for Threelyonsracing.

     

    As easily as Lyons Serenity won her division, the victory of Captain Cowgirl was just as difficult. With Tetrick owning another King trainee in this race, Andrew McCarthy got the catch drive, and he tucked his filly in third as favored Hit Me Up, the stablemate of Water Teen Sports who had won two straight since changing barns, made the top and put up fractions of :28.2, :57.1, and 1:25.2, with McCarthy moving the daughter of Captaintreacherous -Rideintothesunset to the outside by the last-named station.

     

    Captain Cowgirl (the $6.60 second choice) and Hit Me Up quickly made the stretch battle a two-horse affair, and the two fillies raced wheel-to-wheel much of the drive. Captain Cowgirl proved a nose better in the photo, then had to survive an inquiry into the tight stretch duel before getting the official decision, keeping her record unblemished after three starts for owners Jo Ann Looney-King and Kenneth Fried.

  • $35,690 Arden Downs — 2-Year-Old Filly Pacers

     

    Uptown Hanover recovered quickly from a brief break in the final turn and went on to cross the wire first. But she was disqualified and placed back to eighth for interfering while on that break, giving the win in the Mary Lib Miller to Fighting Evil and driver Mike Wilder in 1:53.2. Wicked Ways was third-placed second while Southwind Olenna was promoted to third.

     

    “Every once in a while, you get lucky,” said winning trainer Dane Snyder. “She raced very good, but she was lost on the front end. She’d never been there before. She’s not very big, and she has a lot to learn, but she has a big heart.”

     

    The daughter of Sweet Lou-Evil Fight races for Danielle Snyder and Jason Ash.

  • $47,970 Mary Lib Miller — 2-year-old Filly Pacers

     The Sweet Lou–One Ace Too Many filly Sweet Ace made her debut on the national scene an explosive one, taking her division in 1:50.4 – the fastest mile of the year by any 2-year-old, anywhere, on any size track, and a track record for her class at The Meadows.

     Dexter Dunn tucked the filly in fourth early, as Shouldabeenatd and Dance Club took the top two spots in a 27 opener. Silver Tail got restless in the three-hole and came out off the first turn to go to the lead, stringing the field out in hot middle fractions of :54.3 and 1:22.3, with the rest of the field well behind the top quartet. Shouldabeenatd wheeled outside and went right past the pacesetter on the far turn, with the two directly behind her following that move, Sweet Ace swinging three-wide at headstretch. To the wire it was a battle between Shouldabeenatd and Sweet Ace, with the winner drawing clear late to win by 1-¾ lengths, with Dance Club third. 

    “”The trip worked out good,” Dunn said. “We had a live helmet to follow right into the straight. She has push-button speed, and she showed the speed she’s got.”

     Sweet Ace came into the race off a PA Sire Stakes win seven days earlier, and now her future seems even brighter for owners Burke Racing Stable LLC, Lawrence Karr, Jason Melillo, and J&T Silva-Purnel & Libby. Trainer Ron Burke, conditions the 1-2-3 finishers in this race. 

    The other section of the Mary Lib Miller saw the Artspeak-Apippin Hanover miss Aplomp Hanover lower her mark to 1:53.4, making a quarter-move for driver David Miller and going on to a 1-½ length victory over Keystone Eureka, with Sizzling third. Trainer Kevin Lare and owner Frank Chick, who are having a terrific year with their freshman pacing fillies, are the connections behind the winner of three straight races.

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  • $40,000 Edward M. Ryan Filly Trot

     

    On paper, Blueberry appeared to lay over the field, based on her two in-the-money finishes in Pennsylvania Sire Stake splits. The actual race provided no surprises, as the daughter of Father Patrick-Perfect Image jogged in a career-best 1:57. Bringontheconfetti was 3-3/4 lengths back in second, with Dianne Hanover third.

     

    “It didn’t look like she was in tough, so I didn’t want to use her,” said Brian Zendt, who piloted Blueberry for trainer Doug Snyder and owner Geraldine Poerio. “She can save those hard races for later in the year. That was pretty easy on her. She was really hot starting out, but she’s been behaving so well.”

     

    A two-race maiden entering the Ed Ryan, Payback Moni nevertheless attracted 3-5 play. She justified that support by pulling the pocket near the three-quarters for Brady Brown and going on to edge the game Country Victory by a nose in 1:57.2. Can It Be Magic earned show.

     

    “I was out the whole first turn,” Brown said. “I was being a little careful with her because she ran last week. I was confident in her when I pulled the pocket, but the filly on the front end fought on harder than I thought she would.”

     

    Steve Schoeffel trains the daughter of International Moni-Blurred for Kathy Schoeffel, Dan Goehle and Jim Reuther.

  • Passed by a rival entering the final turn, Skyline Seashell dug deep, reasserted in the lane and broke her maiden in Friday’s $40,000 Arden Downs Grand Circuit Stake at Hollywood Casino at The Meadows. Insider Trading captured the other division in the event for freshman filly trotters known as the Edward M. Ryan.

     

    The first-over Better in Aruba edged nearly a full length ahead of Skyline Seashell but could not cross over. That’s when the daughter of Father Patrick-Fate Smiled responded to Mike Wilder and reclaimed the lead, notching her first win in five starts in 1:57.2.  Mon Amie Martine rallied for second, a length back, while Better In Aruba saved show.

     

    “I”ve kind of been flying under the radar with my filly,” Wilder said. “I’ve been real quiet with her, getting good last quarters, and I’ve been wanting to make that move with her that I made tonight, and she showed up.”

     

    Dan Altmeyer trains the winner for Diamond Club Racing, Anthony Capone, Jr., Mark Capone and David Wills.

     

    Insider Trading followed live cover and rolled to a comfortable victory in a career-best 1:56.4 for Anthony MacDonald, trainer Tim Twaddle and owner TheStable Insider Trading Group. Cahira Hanover closed well for second, beaten 1-1/2 lengths, with Freedonia IT third.

     

    “I have all the faith in the world in this filly,” MacDonald said of the daughter of Greenshoe-Topcat Hall. “She’s always been a little fragile, a little fractious, and tonight for the first time, I saw her put it all together for the whole race.”

  • $40,000 Arden Downs Stake — 2-Year-Old Filly Trotters

     

    Uno Mas Blue Chip and Sweet On Her took the divisions of this Grand Circuit stake known as the Edward M. Ryan, the co-feature on Adios Eve.

     

    A three-race maiden entering the stake, Uno Mas Blue Chip was confident and professional when Mike Wilder sent her first up from fourth.

     

    “The trainer told me to be careful from the gate, get her out of there on the right foot, and she’ll do the rest,” Wilder said. “I thought that if she stayed on her feet at the three-quarters, she wouldn’t lose. She just felt that good.”

    The daughter of International Moni-Make It Blue Chip cruised past the leader, Goo For Broke, and defeated Fortune Forecast by 2-1/2 lengths in 1:57.3 for her maiden-breaking voyage. Goo For Broke saved show. Clifton Green trains the winner for Ashley Burslem and Steven Mullen.

     Sweet On Her had a pair of seconds on her card but no victories. She took care of that when she moved second over for trainer/driver Wilbur Yoder and drew off to prevail by 4 lengths in 1:58.1. I’m Amused and Cando Volo finished second and third, respectively.

     

    “All winter long I thought she was one of my better ones, then she had growing pains,” Yoder said. “Now she’s putting it all together. Hopefully we have her on the right track.”

     

    Bob Troyer owns Sweet On Her.

  • In an exciting battle of promising youngsters, Tie One On outkicked Dreamonhigh in the slop to capture the fastest division of Thursday’s $54,000 Arden Downs Grand Circuit Stake at The Meadows. The event for 2-year-old filly trotters, known as the Edward M. Ryan, was contested over three divisions, with Gumdrop Hanover and I’m Happy Hanover taking the other splits.

     

    Tie One On had broken her maiden on the front end, but in the Ed Ryan, she yielded to the pocket for Hunter Myers and allowed Dreamonhigh to do the heavy lifting. The daughter of Bar Hopping-Twin B Alibi rated kindly and sailed home in 1:55.2 — a tick off the stake record — downing Dreamonhigh by a head. Miss Principle finished third.

     

    “She’s wonderful to work with, a sweet disposition,” said trainer Tim Twaddle, who trains Tie One On for Thestable Tie One On. “Anthony MacDonald gets all the credit for buying her and developing her. She’s the full package. This race was a measuring stick for whether she was a stallion series or a sires stake filly. This performance showed she’s a sires stake-caliber horse.”

     

    Gumdrop Hanover needed the entire opening panel to reach the point for Mike Wilder, but the daughter of Bar Hopping-Grits’ N Seven had little pressure thereafter, defeating Sister Swell by 4-3/4 lengths in 1:58. Sabrina Hill completed the ticket.

     

    “Nothing phases her; she’s a gutsy little filly,” said winning trainer David Wiest. “She’s not a big, strong filly, but she’ll fill out real nice next year. Right now, she’s doing a perfect job.”

     

    Edward Kimmel and David L. Wiest Stables campaign Gumdrop Hanover, a $27,000 yearling acquisition who’s likely to remain in Pennsylvania stakes for the balance of the season.

     

    I’m Happy Hanover was making her first start in the Mike Palone stable, so Thursday was the first time winning driver Dave Palone got a look at her. He liked what he saw . . . and how she performed.

     

    “I’d never seen her until I went out to pick her up for the post parade, so I really didn’t know what to expect,” Dave Palone said. “She did everything, ear plugs still in. It was a pretty good mile for these conditions.”

     

    The daughter of Muscle Hill-I’m On Cloud Nine quarter-poled to the top, yielded the lead, then powered through the lane to triumph in 1:59. Early leader Shayna Rosa was second, beaten 1-1/4 lengths, with Curry Hanover third.

     

    I’m Happy Hanover races for Yves Sarrazin, Kapildeo Singh, Dumain Haven Farm and Danielle Henri.

     

  • $38,244 Judge Joe McGraw — 2-Year-Old Filly Trotters

     

    Flawless Country zipped to the front from post 4 and had nary an anxious moment, downing the pocket-sitting Lexa Hanover by x lengths in 1:56.1. Dearly S earned show.

     

    “I was able to get her around the track in our own fractions,” Palone said. “There was plenty left in the tank.”

     

    Ake Svanstedt conditions the daughter of Southwind Frank-Aleah Hanover and owns with Wolfgang A Stable and Borje Nasstrom.

     

    It was much the same scenario for Palone and Gimme Shelter. The daughter of Father Patrick-Skara Brae won on the front in 1:58 for trainer Mike Palone and owners Lone Wolf Stable and Nick Catalano.

     

    “Mike has liked this filly all along,” Palone said. “She’s been push button since the word go. I think she has a good future. She responded when I spoke to her at the head of the stretch and did it all on her own.”

     

    Myreanna was 5 lengths back in second, with the rallying Mother Lin third.

  • Sister Sledge and Caviart Guilia each extended her career unbeaten streak to four with Dave Palone piloting — and Sister Sledge matched the stake record to boot — in Friday’s $60,000 Arden Downs Grand Circuit event for freshman filly trotters at The Meadows. Sorella took the third division of the stake known as the Judge Joe McGraw. 

    Sister Sledge, who went in 1:53.4 in a PA All-Stars split at Pocono, didn’t have to go quite that fast Friday, as she took the lead at her leisure and drew off thereafter. But her performance impressed Palone.

     “When do I ever come to you and just have ‘wow’ to say?” Palone said. “I actually started shutting her down in the middle of the last turn, 28 flat, ear plugs in. They’ll have a lot of fun with her; she’s a special filly.”

     The daughter of Father Patrick-Behindcloseddoors scored in 1:55.1, equaling the stake record Dangle Then Deke established in 2016. Perth Angel De Vie was 5-3/4 lengths back in second, with The Next One third. Ron Burke trains Sister Sledge for Burke Racing Stable, Jason Melillo, J&T Silva-Purnel&Libby, and Weaver Bruscemi LLC.

     Caviart Guilia took a different path, getting away sixth for trainer Brian Brown before launching an effortless first-over move that carried her to victory in 1:57.1, 2 lengths better than Miss Wilia. Aqua Lillies completed the ticket.

     “ I touched base with Brian today,” Palone said. “He told me from the rail, she has plenty of go. Don’t get in a hurry with her and she’ll give you a good try.”

     Caviart Farms campaigns the daughter of Explosive Matter Gossip Hanover.

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