Off a superb second-place finish at the hands of 1-9 favourite Winter Soldier, there was little doubt that the betting public would bet Finite with both hands in the featured $25,362 conditioned trot at The Meadowlands on Friday night, and the Ron Burke trainee delivered with ease as the 1-5 public choice in 1:54.4.
“I thought he was much the best,” said winning driver Brett Beckwith. “He just got beat last week by Winter Soldier. I drove him like he was the best, and he was.”
Voss Blue Chip, the 8-1 second choice who defeated Finite at Harrah’s Philadelphia on Dec. 27, left alertly and had the lead at the quarter in :28.4. Beckwith wasn’t interested in taking his time with the heavy chalk and moved Finite to the lead, hitting the half in :58 and three-quarters in 1:27. After a middle half of :58.1, Finite had things well under control.
Beckwith wasn't concerned that the horse that beat Finite recently was right behind him at the head of the stretch.
“Not really,” said Beckwith. “This horse is pretty good, so I wasn’t all that worried. After I popped the plugs, he came home really well.”
A final quarter of :27.4 wrapped up an easy 4-3/4-length win for Finite, who racked up his fourth career victory in 31 tries. Caviart Irish Luck, a 50-1 longshot, took an inside route to nudge past Voss Blue Chip for second.
A four-year-old gelded son of Resolve-Awesome Chrissy, Finite returned $2.40 to his backers while increasing his lifetime earnings to nearly $160,000. He is owned by Burke Racing Stable, Weaver Bruscemi and Phil Collura.
Braxten Boyd had the hottest hands in the driver colony by piloting five winners on the card. Only one of the 24-year-old’s winners went off as the post-time favourite as his victorious horses ended up at odds of 5-2, 7-2, 9-2, 8-5 (favourite) and 2-1.
Nick Montemurro and Gary Scogna were the big winners in the first of The Big M’s monthly $1,000 USD handicapping contests. Montemurro and Scogna actually finished in the top four. Montemurro was first and third, finishing with $361 and $247, respectively, while Scogna ended up with $284.36 and $241.05, respectively. By finishing in the top two, the duo qualified for the $10,000 USD contest that will be held in December. The next $1,000 USD contest takes place on Feb. 14.
There were no winning tickets sold on the 10-cent Hi-5 (or, if you prefer, Pentafecta), creating a carryover of $12,939 for Saturday’s 14th race.
Track announcer Ken Warkentin had his followers wear out a path to the windows to collect. The U.S. Hall of Famer picked seven winners on top and four cold exactas. His value play, Pattycake Mooss, returned $12 to win.
All-source handle on the 14-race card totalled $2,578,613 USD.
Racing resumes on Saturday at 6:20 p.m.
(With files from Meadowlands Racetrack)