Clearfield, PA – The only surviving stop on the Pennsylvania fair circuit that extends more than two days for its meet, the Clearfield County Fair, located about equidistant from The Meadows and Pocono (Philly is a bit more distant), completed a Saturday (July 12) through Tuesday (July 15) stand.
Two-year-olds preceded 3-year-olds, and trotters preceded pacers in the four-day segment, which offered $116,725 in total purses. Here follows a chronological summary.
Saturday’s racing saw the two “A” PA Fair Sire Stakes divisions for both trotting colts and fillies get split between Team Neal/Loughery (driver Eric and trainer Tom Jr.) and team Tn & L Schadel (driver Tony and trainer Linda; the “Tn” differentiates this barn from that of his brother Todd, about whom more soon).
Fastest of all of the 2-year-old trots was produced by the Father Patrick – Tom’s B-day Belle filly Belle’s Victory in 2:06.4. She is a Tony/Linda distaff also owned by them; that team also had a winner in the “B” filly trot for the day’s honors.
The fastest freshman pacer, on Sunday (July 13), was also a filly: the Sweet Lou – Takara Rose miss Vegas Queen, who set a fair season’s record of 2:02.4 in winning for owner George Prushnok and the hot team of driver Joe Chindano Sr. and trainer Neil Balcerak. Chindano and Balcerak were joined by driver Aaron Johnston as doublers for the day.
The racing switched over to 3-year-olds starting on Monday (July 14) with trotting action, and the leading horseman at the Pennsylvania fairs for the last few years, Todd Schadel, drove four winners, three from his own stable. Todd won two of the “A” colt events, with Set The Bar, now undefeated in four fair outings (including his 1:58.4 all-age track record at Hughesville), triumphing in the fastest time, 2:02.4, also the quickest trot of the meet. Trainer-driver Todd is also co-owner with his wife Christine, along with partners Rick and Regina Beinhauer.
Todd’s brother Tony won the other “A” colt race with 2024 Fair Champion Lionheart Hanover, now 4-3-1-0 at the fairs in 2025. And trainer-driver Jim Daugherty swept the two colt “B” events.
The week concluded with sophomore pacers on Tuesday. Fastest mile of the day and the meet came from a filly, a dominant trend at Clearfield, but the source was perhaps not the one expected. It was the Heston Blue Chip miss D’applesrsweet who turned in a terrific 1:58 mile, just two-fifths off the 22-year-old divisional track record of My Gal Phyl, scoring for driver James Dodson, trainer Ron Lineweaver, and owner Steve Wetzel.
Milagro, the ladies’ dominant headline maker with a record 2024 Fair Championship and recently rewriting the Hughesville pacing standard to 1:55.2, quickest mile of the local fair year overall, won again, but “only” in 2:00.2. Driver Tony and trainer Linda Schadel, the co-owners, doubled on the card.
Among the colts, Bettor Not, a son of Captain Crunch, won in 1:59, joining Todd Schadel trotting stablemate Set The Bar at the seasonal-high total of four fair “A” wins, and also raising his 2:00 count to a leading three. The team of driver Jesse Barnard and hot trainer Neil Balcerak swept the “B” colt Sire Stakes; Eric Neal was also an overall doubler on the card.
Tony Schadel won the Buster DiSalvo Trophy as the winningest driver with seven victories during the meet; all were conditioned by wife Linda, the top trainer.
The Keystone fair horses and horsemen are right back in action on Thursday (July 16) and Friday (July 17) at the Bedford Fair, where post time will be at 3 p.m. both days. Bettor Not is right back in to go on Friday.
The Clearfield races were live streamed; anybody who would like to see the action described in this summary can view the races at https://www.youtube.com/@pfhha-tv3905/streams. (If the sound is low, there is usually closed-captioning, and good graphics.)