Plainville, MA — Fresh off her eye-popping 1:47.4 mile that set a new world record for 4-year-old harness racing pacing mares at the Meadowlands last week in the $178,500 Dorothy Haughton Memorial, JK First Lady will be shipping to Plainridge Park on Sunday (July 25) to compete in the $100,000 Clara Barton Distaff Pace where she has been made the morning line favorite.
Leading up to her record breaking start, JK First Lady was racing very well this year. But she had encountered some very difficult trips that left her winless going into last week. Despite those tough outings her mare had been dealing with, trainer Nancy Takter knew JK First Ladyās fortunes would soon change.
āI was really expecting her to perform well in the Haughton and knew she was sitting on a big race. She was loaded with pace in her last start in the Artiscape but had to move late and a little wide down the stretch. So I knew she was coming in with real good form. Sheās a good mare, she just needed a trip to work out for her,ā said Takter.
JK First Ladyās 2 and 3-year-old years almost mirrored each other for performance and earnings and she was very good in both. But now as an older mare she looks like she could have really moved to the next level based on her performance in that Meadowlands win.
āHonestly we were hoping this could be a career year for her, otherwise we wouldnāt have brought her back at four because sheās very valuable as a broodmare too. The thing was at two and a little bit at three, she was a little hard to manage, a little bratty. We tried to keep her covered u
p a lot and teach her to race because she was a little aggressive early in her career. But now sheās more manageable and can leave and let a horse go. If you would have tried to do that with her at three she would have been off. Sheās matured with age,ā said Takter.
With JK First Lady coming in off such an impressive victory, it could be easy to overlook other mares in this race. And one of those is her Breeders Crown champion stablemate, Peaky Sneaky.
Peaky Sneaky was a bit of a slow starter at two and really never came on strong at three until the last half of her season. In fact she made 80% of her total 2020 earnings in the last six starts of the year.
In her last three of those starts she upset the heavily favored Party Girl Hill in the Breeders Crown at Hoosier Park, finished second to JK First Lady in the USS Indianapolis at Hoosier and finished second in the TVG final at the Meadowlands to stablemate Kissin In The Sand, who was later named the Dan Patch older female pacer of the year.
āPhysical maturity had a lot to do with it, she had a lot of growing pains at two. And she wasnāt always the soundest thing at two either. If you would have told me she would still be around at four and a Breeders Crown champion I would have said you were crazy,ā said Takter.
āLooking back I would have bet my house that she was going to win the Breeders Crown. I told Yannick earlier that week she trained so well and was that sharp. She was racing good horses in that race but also a really good group of older mares in the TVG final the next week. She beat Shartin N and Warrawee Ubeaut and thatās tough for a 3-year-old to do.ā
However this year didnāt start out like last year ended. Peaky Sneaky finished third behind JK First Lady in that record last week and that was the best mile she paced since last November and may have been a turning point of her year.
āShe came back from her vacation very fat this year. She had a good foundation under her but she needed to tuck up and lose a little bit of weight and with the racing so far I think sheās done that,ā said Takter.
āJK and Peaky are very comparable mares and whichever one has the better day, will outperform the other because in ability, I think they are very close.ā
JK First Lady leaves from post two for driver Dexter Dunn at 2-1 and Peaky Sneaky starts from post six with Todd McCarthy aboard at 7-1.
The $250,000 Spirit of Massachusetts Trot is on Sunday (July 25) with post time for the first race set at 2 p.m. The card is also highlighted with the $100,000 Clara Barton Distaff Pace and the $50,900 Bert Beckwith Memorial Pace and with total purses totaling in excess of $500,000, itās the biggest day of harness racing in Massachusetts this year.
By Tim Bojarski, for Plainridge Park