Maine’s Wolverina continues her ferocity

Farmington, ME — The Maine-bred sophomore pacing filly Wolverina has yet to be tested since June. Having won every race that she has been entered since Independence Day, the 3-year-old daughter of Cheyenne Hollywood has racked up eight consecutive victories at every oval from Cumberland to Skowhegan, and all points in between.

But, up until this week, Wolverina had not entered the burrow of Pembroke Legacy, the other here-to-fore unbeaten filly in the division. That homebred daughter of Baron Biltmore had never tasted defeat in a Maine Breeders Stake, reeling off nine wins like a knife through butter for trainer Valerie Grondin and owner/breeder Bill Varney. That is until Wednesday (Sept. 21) at Farmington, in a rare combining of the leaders of the division, which pit the two superstars against one another.

Wolverina scored in 1:59 over Pembroke Legacy by 1-3/4 lengths. Shelley Gilpatrick photo.

Going for $18,211, and scoring from post five, Wolverina and driver Nick Graffam left hard and gained 2-1/4 lengths on Pembroke Legacy, who had pylon position at the start and settled into the garden spot for driver Heath Campbell.

Wolverina maintained well-rated opening fractions of :30 and 1:00.2. No movement allowed Graffam to maintain his position and conserve energy into a modest 1:30.2 third panel. Without any earlier pressure, Graffam let out a notch and posted a :28.3 final quarter to score in 1:59 over Pembroke Legacy by 1-3/4 lengths. Cowgirl Rides Away (Shawn Thayer/James Smallwood) finished third.

Bred, trained and co-owned by Mike Graffam (with Bill Arnold), Wolverina paid $3.40 to win.

In Wednesday’s second $18,211 MSBS division for 3-year-old pacing fillies, Sweet Baby G came from off the pace to score in 2:01.2. Driven by Walter Case Jr. for trainer, co-breeder and co-owner Fred Ward Jr. with Sharon Ward, the daughter of Baron Biltmore paid $3.60 to win. There was a dead heat for second between Sheza Rebel (Andy Harrington/Marc Tardif) and CBF Fin (Dave Ingraham/David Crochere).

Farmington welcomed the freshmen colt and gelding pacers on Tuesday (Sept. 20), with trainers Valerie Grondin and Marc Tardif grabbing the lion’s share of the prize money.

In the $18,008 MSBS event the victor was Two Towns Over who won by 7-1/2 lengths in 2:01.3. Driven by Aaron Hall for trainer/owner Valerie Grondin, the son of Deuce Seelster was bred by Andrew Bustard. Tardif Taskforce stablemates Rockaroundsam (Andy Harrington) and Twice The Ice (Walter Case Jr.) finished second and third, respectively.

The second event, racing for $18,009, witnessed a Tardif exacta as Luke McGook (Kevin Switzer Jr.) won by a neck over stablemate So Rock N’ Roll (Andy Harrington) in 2:04.3. Mattucci (Heath Campbell/Grondin) was third.

Luke McGook, a son of Rock N’ Roll World, is owned by Leighton Property and was bred by Erika Saucier.

Next Sunday (Sept. 28) harness racing returns to the Cumberland Fairgrounds, and continues through Oct. 2 for eight days of pari-mutuel action. The 150th annual Cumberland Fair and First Tracks host the Maine Breeders Stakes 2-year-old finals on Saturday (Oct. 1).

The final stop on the Pine Tree State fair circuit is historic Fryeburg, Oct 6–8. The Maine-sired sophomore finale returns to Bangor for all of the 3-year-old MSBS divisional finals on Oct. 15.

For more information about the Maine Standardbred Breeders Stakes, follow our Facebook page @MaineBreedersAssociation, or go to the Maine State website.

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