Skowhegan , Maine …. Deal With It Roman (Western Maverick-Deal With Life) reached speeds unknown on Wednesday (August 14) night at the Skowhegan State Fair as he shaved nearly twoseconds off his previous lifetime best while scorching the āSkow-Townā oval with the capable hands- of driver Aaron Hall holding the lines in 1:55.1.
Dismissed at 14-1 odds despite boasting wins in each of his last two starts, Deal With It Roman left aggressively from the gate while securing a pocket trip behind the expected early speed of JK Objection (Heath Campbell). Through reasonably measured fractions (:28.1, :58, 1:26.3), Deal With It Roman dogged the pacesetter in nose-to-helmet fashion before the gears began to shift around the final turn.
As the bright lights of the stands came into view, Hall tipped his charge, quickly coming alongside Jk Objection who dug down deeply in response. A classic stretch duel commenced, with nary a whisker separating the two determined steeds, but it was Deal With It Roman generating one final surge, propelling himself toward the wire, and earning a scant neck advantage over his relentless foe.
JK Objection finished a gallant second while Luke McGook (Drew Campbell), another Tardif trainee, finished third.
The win marked the 18th curtain call for the five-year-old Maine-bred who is owned and trained by Marc Tardif. It also marked the fastest mile recorded over the first four sessions of the seven-day Skowhegan meet. He paid $30.40 to win.
The score afforded Aaron Hall a driving double on the program and elevated him into second place on the Skowhegan leaderboard with seven wins accumulated during the meet. Hall sits two wins behind the current standard bearer, Kevin Switzer, Jr.
Skowhegan State Fair will present racing under the lights once again on Thursday (August 15) evening with post time scheduled for 7:00 p.m. (EDT). The meet will conclude with afternoon programs on Friday and Saturday (August 16-17) with a 1:00 p.m. post time.
Skowheganās simulcast will be available for viewing and wagering on most national ADWs and brick and mortar locations through an agreement with Great Pine Racing.
The Downeast faithful invaded the Skowhegan State Fair on Tuesday (Aug. 13) and Wednesday (Aug. 14) with four $19,000-plus divisions of 3-year-old pacers going postward under the lights in the Maine Sire Stakes.
Seeking and capturing her fifth consecutive stakes victory on Wednesday was Fred Ward Jr.ās Gowestyounggrace (Western Maverick), who hasnāt seen another horseās heels since the month of June.
Regular driver Dave Ingraham wasted no time getting to the top in their $19,922 division for sophomore distaffs.Ā Ā Setting comfortable fractions of 30.2, 101.1 and 1:32, the handy filly was seemingly on autopilot when she threw in a 28 final quarter to cruise home unabated in two-minutes flat.
Also bred and owned by Fred Ward Jr. and his wife Sharon, it was the sixth win of the season and 11thĀ overall for the $111,185 lifetime earner.Ā Ā She paid $2.20 to win.
Pembroke Red (Heath Campbell) finished second; My Sweet Revenge (Kevin Switzer Jr.) was third.
In Wednesdayās second $19,696 3-year-old pacing filly division, 7-1 longshot Mrs Foxy Roxy (Deuce Seelster) went a big mile and scored a big upset over 1-5 favorite Whoās Perfect.
Walter Case Jr. left swiftly and set a demanding 28.3 opening panel, forcing Whoās Perfect (Heath Campbell) to expend considerable energy to take command past that swift first quarter.Ā Ā However, Case and Mrs Foxy Roxy tipped right back out past the 58.4 half and continued applying constant pressure to the favorite.
Through the 1:28.3 third panel track announcer Mike Sweeney proclaimed that the pair were āwhiskers apart and matching strides.āĀ Ā Down the lane Mrs Foxy Roxy continued to advance and prevailed by a measured length over Whoās Perfect in 1:58.1.
Trained by Bob Marston for owners Bill McElvain Jr., Diane Dunn and Brad Veilleux, the filly paid $16.00 to win her second Maine Sire Stake of the year.Ā Ā She was bred by Kristina and Gary Hall.
Animore Sass (Andy Harrington) finished third.
On Tuesday (Aug. 13) both Maine Sire Stakes divisions for 3-year-old pacing colts and geldings were captured by trainer Marc Tardif.
The $19,691 early, non-wagering event was a wire-to-wire tour for Two Fold Cold who grabbed his sixth win in a row.Ā Ā Driven by Kevin Switzer Jr. and tripping the āSkow-Townā timer in 1:57, the son of Deuce Seelster won easily by 2-1/2 lengths for owner-trainer Marc Tardif.Ā Ā He was bred by Gary and Kristina Hall and has amassed $87,496 in lifetime earnings and remains undefeated this season.
Hesjustadelight (Aaron Hall) finished second; Thru The Fire (Case) was third.
In the second $19,916 sophomore pacing colt split Wesās Challenge was up to the task as he rolled through the fractions effortlessly for driver Walter Case Jr. and took his division in 1:59.3.
Trained by Marc Tardif for owner Leighton Property and breeders Gary and Kristina Hall, the son of Deuce Seelster has won his last two out of three starts.Ā Ā He paid $4.20 to win.
Justcallmebuck (Heath Campbell) finished second; Arts Flight (Harrington) was third.
As of Tuesday (Aug. 13) a $3,500 base purse increase was authorized for all divisions of the Maine Sire Stakes.Ā Ā This raised each eventās purse structure to $18,500, plus starting fees.
The Maine Sire Stakes continues into the weekend at the Skowhegan State Fair with the 2-year-old pacing fillies on Friday (Aug. 16) and all four divisions of 2- and 3-year-old trotters on Saturday (Aug. 17).
For more information about the Maine Sire Stakes, follow our facebook page @MaineBreedersAssociation, or go to their website here.
For complete race results, click here: US Trotting results.
by Mike SweeneyĀ and Chris Tully, for the Skowhegan State Fair