Hightstown, NJ — After being limited to three starts last season, Dynamite Dylan (Downbytheseaside-Dobre Povedane) exploded on the scene at Miami Valley Raceway this month by breaking his maiden with a 1:50.4 win in the first start of his sophomore campaign and following with a victory last week in his elimination of the James K. Hackett Memorial for Ohio-sired 3-year-old male pacers.
On Thursday, the homebred colt will try to make it 3-for-3 in ’23 when he faces eight rivals in the $50,000 Hackett championship. Ronnie Wrenn Jr. will drive Dynamite Dylan, who starts from post two and is the 3-1 second choice on the morning line, for trainer Brian Brown and owners David Prushnok and John Prushnok.
“What I see from him I love,” David Prushnok said, adding for emphasis with a laugh, “I don’t like it, I love it.
“Those (first two) races speak for themselves. He looks like a pretty darn nice horse. We’ll just see where it goes. It looks like he might be the fastest horse I ever owned if he stays healthy and does what 3-year-olds usually do.”
Dynamite Dylan, named for Prushnok’s 8-year-old grandson, caught the attention of his connections last spring when he won a qualifier in a sharp 1:55.4 on the half-mile oval at the Delaware County Fairgrounds in central Ohio, where Brown’s stable is based. He then finished second in his career debut in a conditioned race but was no better than fifth in two Ohio Sire Stakes starts that followed.
“When he was starting races, he would do some skipping and bobbing and then settle down, but we knew something wasn’t right,” Prushnok said. “We discovered he had chips in his ankle. We removed those and brought him back at 3.”
Dynamite Dylan’s 1:50.4 victory in his first start this season is tied for the second-fastest mile by a 3-year-old pacer on a five-eighths mile track this year. Last week in his Hackett elimination, he scored in 1:52.1, beating Wicked Character by 1-1/4 lengths.
“He’s going faster than we want him to, but he looks great,” Prushnok said. “We’re excited.”
Dynamite Dylan’s mom is a stakes-winning daughter of Vysoke Tatry, a Prushnok family homebred (under Andray Farm) who was a Grand Circuit winner and earned $641,837 lifetime. The family also includes Grand Circuit winners R J P, Karpathian Kid, and Dragon Again — all also bred by the Prushnoks. Dragon Again was an O’Brien Award winner in 1999 and sired harness racing’s all-time richest performer, Foiled Again.
Another member of the family is Always B Nicky, who is named after Prushnok’s son. The 3-year-old pacer, sired by Always B Miki and out of Vysoke Tatry, raced once last year. He is in the stable of trainer Erv Miller.
“I told him he’s got to wait on Nicky,” Prushnok said. “He’s coming, according to Erv.
“We raised (Dynamite Dylan and Always B Nicky) on the farm, so the boys watched them grow up. It’s been fun.”
Other breeding credits for the Prushnoks include pacer McWicked, who was the 2018 Horse of the Year, and Dan Patch Award-winning pacer Boston Red Rocks. Prushnok said a McWicked-sired filly out of Dobre Povedane born last year named Tricky Wicky brought to a close the family’s breeding endeavors.
“We did pretty good over the years for a small operation,” said Prushnok, whose family also is known for owning Dan Patch Award-winning trotter Lucky Jim. “Pound-for-pound I don’t think anyone outperformed us.”
The 5-2 morning-line favorite in the Hackett championship is Act Fast, who captured the event’s other elimination by a half-length over Mossy’s Dragon in 1:51.2. The colt, trained by Ron Burke, will have Chris Page in the sulky and leaves from post six.
Last year, Act Fast counted the Matron Stakes among three victories. He is one of four Burke-trained horses in the Hackett championship, along with Br Kruser, The Real Way, and Wicked Character.
Dynamite Dylan is one of two horses from Brown’s stable, joined by Mossy’s Dragon.
“We loved Dylan and we’re looking forward to taking on all comers,” Prushnok said. “It’s a fun game when you have some success. Hopefully, Dylan can add to that page of ours.”
Racing begins at 4 p.m. (EDT) at Miami Valley Raceway.
For complete Thursday race entries, click here.
by Ken Weingartner, for the USTA