By Dave Little, Meadowlands Media Relations
EAST RUTHERFORD, NJ – It was one for
the chalk players and one for those who like bombs in the two $17,500 Play
Meadowlands Series Finals at The Meadowlands Friday night.
In the division for pacing fillies
and mares, Its Mesmerise N completed a two-race sweep of the event for trainer
Darran Cassar and driver Scott Zeron.
Sent to the gate as the 1-5 public
choice for a second straight start despite facing a tougher field this time
around, Zeron had the 7-year-old daughter of American Ideal-Cullens Charm in
the three-hole early before brushing to the top at the half, which was clocked
in a quick :54.2.
Windsong Parisian, the 10-1 fourth
choice in the 10-horse field, applied pressure to the leader while first-over
past the half and three-quarters (1:22.1) and appeared to be done off the turn
as they straightened away in the stretch, but she kept on digging all the way
to the wire through a slow final quarter of :30.2 to come up a neck short of
pulling off an upset. Misty Memory N was third.
“I wish I could have bided my time a
little more,” said Zeron of moving Its Mesmerise N to the lead. “She raced
unbelievably given the pressure and the fractions. When I had to move as early
as I did at the half, it was a bit of a concern and the immediate pressure
didn’t help. [Windsong Parisian] raced well. Both fillies cruised around the
last turn and both hung in there down the lane. I think my horse is classier
than these horses. I had been racing her from off the pace because she likes a
target but had been a victim of being too far back. She showed tonight she can
do it any which way.”
Its Mesmerise N paid $2.60 to win
after completing the mile in 1:52.3 for her 18th lifetime win from
69 starts. She now has earnings of $117,364.
Longshot lovers got their way in the
Play Meadowlands for trotters as driver Steve Smith saved ground with Take A
Wish from start to finish before bursting through between rivals late to score
at 30-1 in 1:55.2.
After racing Take A Wish at the rail
in eighth in the 10-horse field in the early going, as the flow developed on
the rim, Smith advanced the Dawn Anderson trainee to the four-hole along the
inside at the half. Remaining glued to the cones around the far turn, Smith
waited until there was room and came with a rush in deep stretch to score the
upset by a head and return $62.40. Life Well Lived closed well on the far
outside to get second while third-place finisher Gruden, the 2-1 favorite,
failed in a second straight attempt to go wire-to-wire.
Take A Wish, a 6-year-old mare by
Wishing Stone-Take A Taste, won for the 12th time from 85 lifetime
outings and upped her earnings to $210,836.