July 4 fireworks at the Meadows: $102,245 Currier & Ives, $64,594 Currier & Ives fillies

Washington, PA — Saturday’s Independence Day celebration at The Meadows will be more festive and exciting than originally anticipated. Thanks to a reshuffling of stakes due to the COVID-19 shutdown, the July 4 card features both the $102,245 Currier & Ives for 3-year-old trotters and the $64,594 Currier & Ives filly division.

The Currier & Ives goes as race seven while the fillies will battle in races nine and 10. The 15-race program also features an $8,080.56 carryover in the final-race Super Hi-5. First post is 12:45 p.m.

It’s Academic is the 9-5 morning-line favorite and has banked $160,002 lifetime. Conrad photo.

In the Currier & Ives, Ron Burke will send out It’s Academic (post six, Yannick Gingras), the 9-5 morning-line favorite who has banked $160,002 lifetime and enters the Currier & Ives off two straight place finishes in Ohio Sires Stake legs. But they’ll be coming at him in waves.

Trainer Ake Svansted has four in the race: Steel Schooner (post three, Brady Brown); Coventry Hall (post five, Chris Shaw); Harley K (post seven, Aaron Merriman); and Easter King (post 10, Jim Pantaleano). On paper, at least, the trio looks unprepossessing; they’re a combined 3-19 with nary a stakes win.

More threatening may be the duo representing trainer John Butenschoen. Kyrie Deo, who sprang a 21-1 upset in last year’s $70,000 New Jersey Standardbred Development Fund championship, leaves from post nine for owners Harmony Oaks Racing Stable, David J. Miller and James Crawford IV. The Donato Hanover-Rare Book gelding will have the services of Dan Rawlings.

Swipe Right (post one, Mike Wilder) is an Explosive Matter-Online Exclusive gelding who races for VIP Internet Stable, Lawrence Vincent and Harmony Oaks Racing Stable.

Both Butenschoen charges were inexpensive yearling purchases, and the trainer is realistic about their chances.

“They’re nice horses, but they’re not ‘A’ Class, top-of-the-sires-stakes types,” he says. “They’re good, consistent colts; they’ll show up, and hopefully they’ll be good enough to get some money.”

Butenschoen indicates he kept both horses in training — within limits — throughout the COVID-19 disruption.

“We didn’t quite know what to do with them,” he says. “We kept them in training to see what they could do, but we didn’t want to train them up too hard, but we needed them to be ready to go.”

Currier & Ives Fillies

Burke also figures to have both favorites here. His budding superstar Sister Sledge, last year’s Pennsylvania champion and Dan Patch Award runner-up who rolled to victory a week ago at The Meadows in her season’s debut, leaves from post three in race 10.

Sister Sledge was last year’s Pennsylvania champion. Chris Gooden photo.

The Currier & Ives could be a tougher test for her if only because of the presence of her stablemate, Sans Defaut (post one, Wilder), who kicked off her sophomore campaign with a 1:53.2 win at Pocono.

In the other division, Burke sends out Crucial (post one), a daughter of Father Patrick-Jolene Jolene who boasts a bankroll of $143,439 and a show finish in an International Stallion Series split.

Gingras will steer Sister Sledge and Crucial.

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