Ever Hoping A Equals Cumberland's Fastest Mile

Ever Hoping winning at First Tracks Cumberland
Published: August 3, 2024 08:15 pm EDT

On Cumberland Raceway’s richest day of the summer meet, Ron Cushing’s Ever Hoping A equalled the all-age track record in the $34,722 Pine Tree Invitational on Saturday, Aug. 3. The race's purse was also the richest of the year at the iconic Southern Maine oval.

Scoring from post four, driver and co-owner Ron Cushing let several of the anxious speedsters blast out to the front. First to the point was 16-1 longshot Skyway Victor and Drew Campbell. Around the turn, Hespoisedtopounce (Andy Harrington) jumped into the two-hole in front of 4-5 wagering favourite Heinikin Bythebay and leading reinsman Kevin Switzer Jr. Switzer wasted no time down the backstretch before moving to the rim and ultimately taking command into a swift 27-second opening panel.

As the field of top pacers moved toward the softer :56.3 half-mile marker, Ever Hoping A flushed the cover of 5-2 shot The Wild Card (Nick Graffam). Pacing down the backstretch for the final time, Graffam urged The Wild Card while Switzer kept Heinikin Bythebay rolling on the lead.

With time running out, Cushing pulled Ever Hoping A three-wide on the backside into a fast 1:24.3 third stanza as the rest of the talented group is stacked up behind him. With the slingshot momentum in his favour, Cushing urged his horse through the lane to prevail by half a length in 1:53.4, resulting in a track record for an aged pacing gelding and equalling the all-age track record at Cumberland. Heinikin Bythebay finished second and Skyway Victor was third.

Co-owned by Cushing with partners Stephen Downey, Ronald ‘Steve’ Ralph and Romanelli Racing, the six-year-old Australian-bred son of Always B Miki picked up his 17th lifetime victory. Ever Hoping A is trained by Carlos Rodriguez. He paid $10.80 to win.

In other signature events, trainer Alison Hynes sent the Walter Case Jr.-driven Lifes A Puzzle out to a 1:55 triumph in the $17,361 Frank M. Dubeuil Jr. Memorial.

At the start, an early tussle between JK Objection (Heath Campbell) and the other Hynes-trained entrant and 7-5 favourite Call Me Maverick (John Beckwith) resulted in a blistering :26.4 opening panel. With his stablemate cutting the fractions, Lifes A Puzzle and Case flushed the cover of Rocksapatriot (Dave Ingraham) while heading into the :56.2 half. While gapping out his cover going down the backstretch, Lifes A Puzzle was forced three-wide around the second-over Bet On Joe (Switzer) past the 1:25 third quarter pole and through the final turn to swoop the leaders and triumph by a tight length. Rocksapatriot and Bet On Joe finished second and third.

Owned by Richard Humphrey with special recognition to the Gordon Corey Institute of Equine Erudition, the four-year-old son of Lazarus N picked up his ninth lifetime win. Scoring from post seven, he paid $13.80 to win.

The victory marked the triumphant return of Walter Case Jr., who was sidelined for the last two weeks by a racing mishap. Proclaimed as the track's local ‘Rocky Balboa’ by announcer Scott Ehrlich, the 63-year-old reinsman had two wins on the card and finished third in the seasonal driver standings behind leader Kevin Switzer Jr. (67) and Drew Campbell (42), who overtook second place with five wins on the final day’s program. 

Campbell’s five winners included Luke McGook (1:54.3, $4), Rose Run Slider (1:57.1, $14.80), Silk Road Smash (1:55.2, $3.80), Little Macabee (1:59.1, $45.20) in the $17,361 Winners Over Trot and Polyester (1:56.3, $6.60) in the finale.

Trainer Marc Tardif, whose powerful Maine Sire Stakes stable concentrates on young horses, finished the meet in first place with 27 victories, with his three afternoon’s victories vaulting him in front of Bob Marston, who finished second in the standings with 25 wins. Early leader Jeff Deslandes was third with 24 trips to the winner's circle.

Track record holder Rys Red Rocket and Bruce Ranger took the $17,361 Fillies and Mares Winners Over Pace in 1:55.2. Owned and trained by Don Richards, the seven-year-old daughter of Sunshine Beach was bred by Linwood Higgins and picked up her 28th career victory, paying $3.40 to win.

Former national amateur driving champion Todd ‘Too Tough’ Whitney, who finished third in the Hambletonian Amateur Drivers Trot at the Meadowlands on Friday night, was back in Maine the next day to compete in the $11,111 Maine Amateur Driving Club (MADC) final. He went wire-to-wire with Vel Miss Taylor from post three to score by 6-3/4 lengths in 1:59. Trained by Chris Lefebvre for owner Mo Coo Inc., the four-year-old daughter of Ponder grabbed her 13th lifetime win. She paid $11.60 to win. MADC point leader Hunter Lofthus finished second with his own Forrest Blu and Jonathan Bresnahan was third with Fly Away BB.  The MADC is sponsored by the Blue Seal Feed Stores of North Yarmouth and Windham, Maine.

Cheatin Fate Deceived Death To Fight Another Day

Marc and Peggy Tardif’s Maine-bred colt Cheatin Fate refuted his dire diagnosis, brushed off the grim reaper, and went on to win his first Maine Sire Stakes on Saturday at Cumberland Raceway.

While many of the sport’s harness racing fans were anxiously anticipating the start of the Hambletonian at the Meadowlands, Cheatin Fate quietly went about his business and took home his first pari-mutuel victory.  Proving to his naysayers that this colt had much more life in him than some gave him credit for, the son of Thirty Two Red was more or less cast aside by an academic veterinarian when he was afflicted with a bad case of colic.

Raised in Bell, Florida at the Tardif’s farm on the quiet, sandy back roads of Gilcrest Training Center, the colt was in the early stages of breaking and training when he got sick in November of last year.

“Our local vet came to the barn and suggested we take him to the University of Florida Veterinary Hospital in Gainesville,” Marc Tardif recalled.  “So we loaded him up and dropped him off around 1 am the next morning.”

A day later the hospital called and said that the horse had improved dramatically and was ready to come home and could be treated off site.

“Two hours later they called back and said he had taken a turn for the worse,” Tardif continued.  “They said we had to either approve emergency surgery, or euthanize, immediately.”

Neither Marc nor Peggy Tardif agreed with that diagnosis and went back to the hospital and picked up the colt.

“He was never experiencing extreme pain, it simply looked like an average case of colic,” noted Peggy Tardif.  “We just didn’t understand why they would recommend such a dramatic course of action.  So we decided to just bring him home and work on him with our local vet.”

Following some fluids and medicinal treatment while back in Bell (FL), the horse returned to normal in a few days, and has been fine ever since.  Half a year later the colt made his first start in a Learn and Earn baby race at Cumberland. 

During July he made two starts in the Maine Sire Stakes with a second and fourth place finish.  On Hambletonian Day Cheatin Fate lived up to his name and won his $22,446 division for freshmen pacing colts in 2:02.4.

Leaving from pylon position Cheatin Fate got away third and then had to be checked by regular driver Andy Harrington when stable mate Just Aftermidnight (9-2, Kevin Switzer Jr.) made a break right in front of him while heading to the quarter pole in 30.1.

While Cheatin Fate was regaining his ground in the two-hole, I’m Not Maverick (13-1, John Beckwith) arrived first over into a 1:02.2 softer half.  Following that live cover was the headstrong Jax Attack (6-5, Walter Case Jr.) who had since recovered from his earlier rambunctiousness.

With the outer flow fading into that faster 1:32 third panel, Cheatin Fate was poised to pounce in the pocket behind the pacesetting This Dudes Perfect (11-1, Heath Campbell).  Around the final turn Harrington tipped his charge and rolled off the turn and started to bear down on the leader.  Gaining ground with every stride the once discounted equine prevailed by 1-1/4 lengths.

Owned and trained by Marc Tardif, it was the colt’s first lifetime victory and fastest mile here-to-date.  He was bred in Maine by Kristina and Gary Hall and paid $5.00 to win.

This Dudes Perfect finished second; Jax Attack was third.

In the second $22,445 division it was a Tardif Trifecta as the 1-9 favourite Massive Speed utilized a perfect pocket trip to grab his fourth career victory in a new lifetime best 2:00.3.  Undefeated thus far this season, the son of Dudes The Man is trained by Marc Tardif for owner Leighton Property.  He paid $2.20 to win and was bred by Laurie Harding.

Tardif stable mates completed the trifecta ticket with Dawn Two Dark (Harrington) and Ella V Dude (Switzer) caught in an official dead heat photo for second.

The Maine Sire Stakes continues at Topsham with a one day push due to rain on Sunday.  The three-year-old filly pacers were originally scheduled for Monday (Aug. 5) and the three-year-old colt and gelding pacers slated for Tuesday (Aug. 6).  Those divisions are reportedly set to race on Tuesday and Wednesday, respectively.

Harness racing resumes during the annual Cumberland Fair for a week of live action beginning on Sept. 22 and continuing through Sept. 29. The track’s 19-day Winter Festival beginso on Nov. 2 and races through Dec. 22 and will include the popular Au Revoir Retirement Ceremonies.

(First Tracks Cumberland)

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