The build-up concerning the confrontation between Russell Hill and Donttellmywife in New York Sire Stakes action at Monticello Raceway on Tuesday was everything one could ask for, that is, unless if you were in the latter’s camp since it took every foot of the homestretch for Russell Hill to finally get up and collar the pacesetting Donttellmywife by a head in their $35,843 division of the $178,000 NYSS stakes.
Driver Jeff Gregory sent Donttellmywife to the lead from the pole position as Russell Hill, driven by Jim Morrill Jr., took up chase after leaving from post position eight.
Donttelltellmywife got a soft first quarter in :29.3 and to Gregory’s chagrin Morrill landed in the two hole behind the leader. Both trotters raced one-two around past the half in 1:00.1 and the order remained the same by the third stanza in 1:30.2. At that point Morrill moved Russell Hill out to challenge and the two raced side-by-side around the final turn as Spin Spanky Spin (Dan Daley) joined in the fray.
Russell Hill began to gain with every stride and when the two trotters neared the finish line they were nearly inseparable. But in the final strides Donttellmywife took a misstep and went off-gait but according to the rail-birds Donttellmywife was beaten Spin Spanky Spin finished third.
“We got away cheap and my colt was out-trotted at the finish,” Gregory admitted. “He took a bad step and stumbled near the wire but I think Russell Hill had us beaten anyway. We trotted the last quarter in :28.4 and we’ll get our money this year. We won’t always be in together.”
It marked the second consecutive time that Russell Hill has turned back Donttellmywife. The former outdid the latter by three-quarters of a length at Vernon Downs in 1:57.1 last week in the $206,275 Empire Breeders Classic final.
Asked how good Russell Hill is and is he better than Donttellmywife, who defeated Russell Hill in their first of there confrontations this year, Morrill was reluctant to say much.
“They’re both good colts and I got a good trip. Today was my day,” Morrill said philosophically.
Russell Hill, a son of Conway Hall, now has banked over $130,000 this year for
It was the second driving victory in the NY Sire Stakes for Morrill. In a previous division he drove Jody Weidman’s Rookie Mistake, a son of CR Excaliber, to a three-length victory in a time of 2:00 over Iron Will and driver Stephane Bouchard.
The afternoon got underway with odds-on favorite Judge Joe scoring a 2:00.1 triumph in his $35,142 split for D.R. Ackerman. In from Hazel Park Raceway where the son of Credit Winner was victorious in 1:57.2, Ackerman, knowing he was the best, just had to just keep his colt on gait.
“I was a little cautious leaving the gate since this was his first start on a half-mile track,” Ackerman related in the winner's circle after being joined by Dan and Audrey Henry, the breeders of the horse. “At the quarter when we got alongside Coal Daily I saw that (driver) Toby (Lynch) wanted to be on the front-end so popped Joe in a hole behind him and waited until late to challenge.”
And when Ackerman moved before the final turn he sat quietly as they rounded the bend. When his colt straightened in the lane, Ackerman just fed Judge Joe his head and the colt trotted to an easy victory. Big Sky Domino and Tim Tetrick rallied to finish second while Coal Daily held on for the show dough. Now two-for-two this year, Judge Joe upped his lifetime bankroll to over $330,000 for the Doug Ackerman Stables, Inc. of In yet another division, Steve Reisenweaver scored one for the little guys when he reined his own South Jersey Flash to a gutsy 1:59.2 victory, which was the fastest clocking of the afternoon. The Credit Winner colt went wire-to-wire and had to rebuff challenges the entire way. They turned back Calchips Brute (Jimmy Morrill, Jr.) and Hitontheflipside (Tim Tetrick). But the best- –at least for the bettors—was saved for last when Stephane Bouchard guided Danger Hall up the passing lane to win in 2:02.1 at odds of 27-1 and returned $57.50 for win. Combined with Kash N Credit (Clint Galbraith), the second place finisher, the 7-3 exacta paid $1159.00. But it was the trifecta payoff that was the barn-burner when the 7-2-6 combination paid a whopping $10,898.00
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