Sometime about a decade ago, a meeting of the minds took place. The purpose of the skull session was to put an end to rampant equine gender discrimination and 'invent' a companion event for Yonkers Raceway’s George Morton Levy Memorial Pacing Series.
The Levy, honouring the memory of harness-racing visionary and Hall of Fame founder of Roosevelt Raceway, was and remains a staple stop for the sport’s best free-for-allers. The event, started in 1978 (as a one-dash affair), had been resurrected in 2007 after a decade-long hiatus, and the brain trust decided there was no reason the guys should have all the fun.
Accordingly, Yonkers Raceway race secretary Steve Starr reached out to the good folks at Blue Chip Farms in not-too-far-away Wallkill, N.Y., with the idea of putting together a "ladies only" Levy companion event for standout pacing mares.
Hence, 2009 saw the beginning of the Blue Chip Matchmaker.
It was and is as long (five preliminary legs) as the Levy Series, also for serious coin ($40,000 per division, per leg) with a rich, added-money final. Then, there’s the "Matchmaker" part of the equation, a lovely carrot at the end of the stick where the first three finishers in the final get a free breeding to one of the farm’s pre-selected roster of world-class stallions. The winner gets first choice, runner-up gets second choice, third gets third.
With this Saturday night’s (April 21) $373,000 final going as the 10th Matchmaker, what better time—with apologies to Mr. Peabody and Sherman—to make use of the Wayback Machine?
It was the first Saturday in May 2009, merely hours after Mine That Bird pulled off a 50-1 stunner in the Kentucky Derby. The first belle of the ball turned out to be a five-year-old daughter of Noble Ability named Pancleefandarpels.
“(The) first time I drove her came after Jason (Bartlett) picked off in an Open Handicap here,” Jordan Stratton said. “She was a fairly big mare who could take air and was easy on herself.”
Stratton and Pancleefandarpels won consecutive local distaff derbies—the latter from an assigned eight-hole—leading into the 2009 Matchmaker. Competing in the all five prelims, the duo went 1-3-1-5-1 before drawing post position 3 in the $229,000 final.
Stratton, who hadn’t turned 22 years of age, remembered that night.
“There was an early breaker (2-5 favourite Chancey Lady [Cat Manzi]) and I had to go a bit wide,” he said. “I was able to get in (fourth), then moved first-up. As I said, she could take air. She put away the leader (Omen Hanover [Eric Abbatiello]) and was sharp.”
Pancleefandarpels defeated Double Dream N (Brent Holland) by a length and a quarter in 1:54.4, becoming the first name in the annals.
After winning his second Matchmaker last season with Mackenzie A, Stratton tries for the hat trick Saturday with Sell a Bit N from post position 2.
Now an "over-the-hill" 30, Stratton has fond memories of Pancleefandarpels.
“It was my first big stakes win, so definitely,” he said. “People sort of forget about her, but she was very talented.”
Pancleefandarpels, a Peter Pan Stables homebred trained by Erv Miller, raced through 2012, ending her career with 35 wins and earnings of $1,057,244.
This Saturday’s Matchmaker goes as the ninth of a dozen races, right before the culmination of the 31st Levy, worth $532,000. First post for the $1.3 million card is the usual 6:50 p.m.
(Yonkers)