Rembrandt Spur, Triumphant Caviar win Currier & Ives elims

by Evan Pattak, for The Meadows

Meadow Lands, PA — Rembrandt Spur painted a pretty picture Monday (June 22) at The Meadows, brushing off the 1-2 favorite and capturing an elimination of the Currier & Ives for 3-year-old colt and gelding trotters. Triumphant Caviar scored a front-end victory in the other elimination. The $119,679 Currier & Ives final is set for next Monday (June 29).

Rembrandt Spur held off Keystone Activator by a nose in 1:55.4 in their Currier & Ives elimination.

Rembrandt Spur, a Pegasus Spur-Marty E gelding, has shown flashes of brilliance as well as troubling breaks in his 15-race career. On Monday, he was all business, powering to the lead from the rail and snubbing the bid of heavy favorite Keystone Activator, a world record holder at 2, in a time of 1:55.4.

“If he had come at the quarter pole, I would have released him,” winning trainer/driver Dick Stillings said. “But when he came at the three-eighths, I preferred to give my horse his head a little bit. You have to give Keystone Activator credit — he just keeps coming at you.”

Although Rembrandt Spur opened a two length lead at the top of the stretch, Keystone Activator persevered but fell a nose short. Magic Carpet Ride and American Journey closed well to finish third and fourth, respectively, and qualify for next week’s final.

“Sometimes the track doesn’t suit him. The track gets to stinging him, and he doesn’t like to pick up his front feet,” Stillings said of Rembrandt Spur, an $8,000 yearling acquisition for Roy Davis. “I was really tickled to get him around the track after he ran last week. I think he’s better out of a hole, but I’ve been able to do that with him only once. Maybe it’s too late to race him from a hole now.”

Chris Gooden photos

Triumphant Caviar was a 1:56 winner in his Currier & Ives elimination.

Despite post position eight, Dave Palone sent Triumphant Caviar to the lead in his elimination. The son of SJ’s Caviar-Ens Tag Session prevailed under wraps in 1:56, a length better than Salutation Hanover. Also qualifying were Knoxtrot Hall and Rompaway Beau.

Trainer Chris Beaver said he didn’t regard the wide post position as a major obstacle for his colt.

“He likes to be rolling when he gets to the gate, so I don’t mind the outside at all,” Beaver said. “He has plenty of go when he gets rolling. He came back really well — a little on the hot side. But he’s starting to calm down now.

“He’s well staked. If he’s good enough, he has the Hambletonian. I tried to keep him away from the biggest horses until the Hambletonian.”

Kerry Beaver, James Gallagher, Luc Ouellette and Paul Bernard own Triumphant Caviar, a $12,000 yearling purchase.

The $27,500 Filly & Mare Preferred Handicap Pace produced a shocker when 21-1 outsider Lucy B closed well to score in 1:52.1, a career best, over Osborne’s Gypsy and 2-5 favorite Jans Luck. Paul Corey trains Lucy B, a 4-year-old daughter of Whelan Willie-Bessie B, for Beulah Bigley.

Stillings and Palone each drove three winners on the 16-race card.

Back to Top

Share via