King Of The North and Venerable capture NJSS finals

East Rutherford, NJ — King Of The North and Venerable both impressed in taking their respective $200,000 finals of the New Jersey Sire Stakes for 2-year-olds on the trot Friday night (July 16) at The Meadowlands as Walner continued his dominance in the series by siring both winners.

King Of The North hit the wire first in the New Jersey Sire Stakes final for 2-year-old colts and geldings on the trot. Lisa photo.

King Of The North completed his sweep of the three colt and gelding races (two preliminaries plus the final) after following perfect cover from the five-eighths from the first-over Looks Like Moni before driver Mark MacDonald tipped off that tow as they turned for home.

King Of The North had to deal with a stubborn Looks Like Moni through most of the stretch drive before finally putting that one away inside the sixteenth pole. Temporal Hanover and Majestic J finished well to grab second and third, respectively. Looks Like Moni was fourth. When King Of The North, a colt, stopped the clock in 1:52.4 — a new lifetime best — he was 1-1/4 lengths ahead of his closest pursuer.

“He’s got a good kick,” said winning trainer Ray Schnittker. “They want to go better if they come from off the pace. He’s in the (Peter) Haughton and all of the major stakes moving forward.”

King Of The North paid $6.40 as the 2-1 favorite while staying perfect in three lifetime starts.

Venerable cruised to victory in the New Jersey Sire Stakes final for 2-year-old trotting fillies. Lisa photo.

Venerable, also three-for-three lifetime, was a dominant winner in the split for fillies as she lowered her previous lifetime best by two seconds to 1:52.2 in completing her three-race sweep. Jiggy Jog S was second with Delilah Hanover third.

Driver David Miller was content to sit fourth early with Venerable before darting to the top at the half in :56.3 and the Nifty Norman trainee never had an anxious moment from there, as Miller gave an ultra-confident steer through a final quarter of :27.1 to win by two lengths.

“I talked to Nifty all winter and they were together from the get-go,” said David McDuffee when referring to Venerable and Delilah Hanover. McDuffee is part of the group that owns both fillies. “They both have the (Jim) Doherty in two weeks. The good thing about Venerable is she’s a Kentucky bred, so she’ll be down there for a while in the sire stakes.”

How does one go about acquiring such good horses?

“It wasn’t hard,” said a smiling McDuffee. “All you have to do is spend $600-$700,000.”

Venerable returned $3.60 as the 4-5 public choice.

Keeping Pace: In a pair of non-betting events contested before the regular program, Great Vintage sired both winners of the $100,000 NJSS finals for 2-year-olds on the pace.

Not So Evil, driven by Pat Berry and trained by Pat’s wife, Traci, completed a sweep of the two preliminary legs as well as the final with a third straight open-length score in the filly division, hitting the wire five lengths to the good over Dry Ridge Cutie in a lifetime-best 1:56.2.

Polaris Breech took the colts and geldings split to record his first win in three lifetime outings for trainer Chase Vandervort. Tim Tetrick guided the gelding to a 5-1/4 length score over Dry Ridge Caldwell in 2:00.2. Vintage Valentino was seeking a three-race sweep of the series but was scratched lame shortly before the start.

A Little More: Lovedbythemasses rocked the clock in a high-end conditioned trot. The Jeff Cullipher trainee came from off the pace to score in a lifetime-best 1:50.2 to equal Beads’ mark for the fastest trotting mile of the year in the sport.

Todd McCarthy guided three winners on the card.

All-source handle totaled $2,681,103.

Racing resumes Saturday with a special early post time of 6 p.m. The $700,000 Meadowlands Pace tops a stakes-laden 14-race program. Fox Sports 2 will have a live telecast of The Pace plus three other stakes events, starting its two-hour presentation at 8 p.m.

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