A pair of Buckeye horses, one an Ohio-bred and the other owned in the After the two elimination divisions were completed the fact remains that the half-mile track is an equalizer. The speed horses on the single ovals, and other bigger racetracks, give a little to those pacers who have proven that they can negotiate the turns at high speed. Case in point: The Ohio bred-Buckeye One, owned by Canadians Ian Fromowitz and John Fielding, came into the contest off a 1:51.1 victory at Yonkers Raceway, and turned back some of the top pacers in the country; ones that have made their mark racing on bigger racetracks. Western Ace, who owns a 1:48.4 record in his last start at the Meadowlands, chased Buckeye One home and finished second for driver Daniel Dube. The third-place finisher, Mister Big, driven by David Miller, won the $650,000 W.R. Haughton Pace in 1:48.2, also at the Big M, and Maltese Artist,(Brian Sears) who owns a 1:49.2 record taken at the Meadowlands, finished fourth in that event. Granted, the most important thing that any of the pacers could accomplish in their elimination splits was to qualify for the $480,000 final and as long as they were among the top four finishers they earned the right to come back next Tuesday in the stakes rich finale. In the second split, last year's Pacer of the Year, Total Truth (Ron Pierce), didn’t make the cut after he went offstride twice in the 1:52.3 mile that was won by My Panmar. And, Astronomical (Jody Jamieson), a 1:50 winner over Mohawk Racetrack’s seven-eighths mile oval, also went offstride in the mile and finished out of the money. My Panmar, owned by the Peter Pan Stables of As it stands, Miller, Dube, Morgan and Sears all qualified a horse from each division, will have to choose which one they will drive in the final next Tuesday, July 24. (Monticello)
To see the video of Buckeye One's victory, click here
To see the video of My Panmar's victory, click here
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