Delaware, OH --- The $63,100 Standardbred for
2-year-old trotting fillies, raced in two $31,550 divisions, led
the Grand Circuit portion of Wednesday’s (Sept. 22) card at the
Delaware County Fair.
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| USTA/Mark
Hall photo |
| Pacific Splash, driven by
Charlie Norris, won the first division in a stakes and
track record-equaling mile timed in 1:59. |
Robert Key’s Pacific Splash, driven by Charlie
Norris, began the Grand Circuit portion of the Little Brown Jug
meet by winning the first division in a stakes and track
record-equaling mile timed in 1:59.
Pacific Splash contested the issue at the
start from post four, but Norris let Lyrical Lady and driver
Roger Hammer set a moderate early pace while the winner
tucked-in second. They remained in that order until the field of
six passed the three-quarter pole, where Norris eased the Rich
Gillock-trained daughter of American Winner-Pacific Kathryn to
the outside.
From there, Pacific Splash moved past her
rival and led the charge for the wire. Jogging Home (David
Miller) came on to finish second and Finaltab Hanover (Luc
Ouellette) was third. Lyrical Lady tired for Hammer and finished
fifth.
“With the issues she has had, she was a little
bit grabby behind the gate and maybe I could float her to the
lead,” Norris said in the winner’s circle. “But Roger Hammer’s
horse is used to racing on the front end at the Pennsylvania
Fairs and he is known for that and his horse is very surefooted,
so I kind of had to go wherever I landed.
“I was pretty confident on the backside when
no one was on the outside of him. I had to give her a shot
because she’s a very game filly and she seemed to handle the
track well.”
Asked whether Pacific Splash has a particular
racing style, Norris said, “No, not really. With all the issues
she’s had -- she has had a limited number of starts -- so you
really can place her anywhere, but on a track like this (a
half-mile track) you want to be close to the front.
“I drove her twice before at Chester and
Pocono, and racing against these Pennsylvania fillies is tough
competition. But there are a couple good fillies she beat today
in Finaltab (Hanover) and Jogging Home, who I drove for three or
four starts -- and they are both very nice fillies.
“After I warmed her up I thought she was
pretty sharp and it’s the best I’ve seen her this year.”
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| USTA/Mark
Hall photo |
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In
the second division, the stakes record set in the first
division fell to Hall-N-Flori and driver Yannick Gingras,
who went wire-to-wire to win in 1:58.3. |
Pacific Flash, a homebred out of the Crowning Point mare Pacific
Kathryn, has had problems staying healthy and flat in her four
freshman starts, but was absolutely perfect on Wednesday while
establishing a new stakes mark, which had last been lowered in
1987 by Anamosa Hanover, who won in 1:59.1 for driver Jan
Nordin.
In the second division, the stakes record set
in the first division fell in short order to Dean Davis’
Hall-N-Flori and driver Yannick Gingras, who went wire-to-wire
to win in 1:58.3 -- which was also a new divisional track record
at Delaware.
Hall-N-Flori (Broadway Hall-Rose Run Flori)
won for the fourth time in eight freshman starts under the
direction of trainer Kent Sherman, but came into today’s race
having made early breaks in two of her past four starts.
She was absolutely perfect today.
Swing Anna Cash and driver Don McKirgan tried
to take a tip from the winner of the first division by sitting
in the two hole, but unlike the earlier winner was unable to
close and finished second, just ahead of Cheetah Hall (Brett
Miller).
“It actually was (easy),” Gingras said. “I
hate to say that but it really was. She just cruised around
there and there was never an anxious moment. I knew they had
broken the track record the race before, and I knew Kent
(Sherman) would be real happy if we could break it, so I just
let her go the last part of it to get the record.”
“(Trainer Kent Sherman) kept telling us she
was a nice filly -- and we knew it, too,” owner Dean Davis said.
“We didn’t think she was going to set all these records. This
was her last race and she is now done for the year and we will
bring her back next year.
“We
are very happy with her. We bought her right before her first
race. We saw her first couple qualifiers and she left real good,
plus she was bred by one of our neighbors down the road (Double
Spring Farm). So we knew about the filly and said this would be
the one to buy. We’ve almost doubled our money back on her
-- usually it goes the other way.”
-- Kim French also contributed to this
report