STRAIGHT
LINE WINS ACK ACK
LOUISVILLE, Ky. -- Straight Line was no
match for Vicarage in the Oct. 14 Perryville Stakes
at Keeneland, finishing second, beaten 10 lengths.
But a change in racetrack and surroundings led
that outcome to be reversed in Sunday's opening-day
$112,200 Ack Ack Handicap at Churchill Downs.
Stalking Vicarage through a pressured pace
of 44.55 seconds and 1:08.89 in the 7 1/2-furlong
Ack Ack, Straight Line was able to easily power
past Vicarage in the stretch to win by 1 3/4
lengths before a crowd of 10,625.
Winning jockey Shaun Bridgmohan, riding at
Churchill Downs for the first time on a full-time
basis, attributed the win to a favorable trip.
"The pace set up for him better than last
time," he said.
A move to Churchill Downs similarly helped.
In his only prior start at Churchill Downs in
the Iroquois Stakes last fall, Straight Line
was a five-length winner. That race, like the
Grade 3 Ack Ack, is a long one-turn race.
Vicarage, the 9-10 favorite, appeared over-eager
early. He dragged jockey Rafael Bejarano to
the lead from the start, and when 42-1 longshot
Britt's Jules came alongside down the backstretch,
he battled head to head with that rival.
The demanding fractions took a toll, with Straight
Line rallying past him in the final furlong.
Vicarage did manage to maintain clear of the
rest of the pack, finishing 1 3/4 lengths in
front of third-place Level Playingfield.
Straight Line, owned by Nancy Vanier and Cartwright
Thoroughbreds, covered 7 1/2 furlongs on a fast
track that played quickly all afternoon in a
stakes record 1:28.34. He paid $20.60.
His win gave 81-year-old trainer Harvey Vanier
his 17th stakes victory at Churchill Downs,
dating back to Admiral's Shield win in the 1970
Derby Trial. "It never gets too stale to
win a race," he said. "It's beautiful."
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