Burke prefers post four for Sweet Lou in NA Cup final

by Evan Pattak, for the Meadows

Washington, PA — When Sweet Lou powers from the gate in Saturday’s (June 16) C$1.5 million final of the Pepsi North America Cup at Mohawk Racetrack, he likely will be leaving from post four or three.

Under NA Cup rules, the connections of last week’s elimination winners, Sweet Lou and Dapper Dude, select the post positions of their choice before the balance of the final is drawn. Ron Burke, Sweet Lou’s trainer, already is pretty sure of his preferences.

Chris Gooden photo

Sweet Lou has banked $810,775 in his career.

“We’ll probably take post four,” he said. “If Dapper Dude picks first and takes four, I’ll take post three. I want him somewhere where he can sit in the middle of the track and make his own decisions on where he’d like to go.”

In the elim, the son of Yankee Cruiser-Sweet Future set a Canadian and track record of 1:47.4 for Dave Palone and owners Burke Racing Stable, Weaver Bruscemi LLC, Larry Karr and Phillip Collura. Yet Burke said he hardly seemed taxed by the effort.

“That’s maybe his best quality — his ability to recover immediately. Two minutes after he’s off the track, you never would know he’d been on the track. I think there are horses that can go with him, but his ability to shut himself down and be at rest will separate him from other horses.”

Following the elim, Burke shipped Sweet Lou, the 2011 Dan Patch award winner who now has 13 wins in 15 career starts, back home to his base near The Meadows. He said he’ll ease Sweet Lou’s usual training regimen before traveling to Mohawk on Thursday.

“We’ll back off training a little bit,” Burke said. “Last week, I tuned him up less than other horses. He doesn’t require a ton of work, so I’ll back off even a little more this week. He trains well but not great. But when you put him in a bike, he’ll do things that make you stare and say, ‘Is that even possible?’

“There’s never been a doubt in my mind that he could pace as fast as we saw him go last Saturday. I don’t think we’ve seen yet how fast he can go.”

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