Daily Racing Form National Digital Edition

True Cinder vs. Leona’s Reward again

- By Nicole Russo

True Cinder got away from rival Leona’s Reward last out and got back on track with a runaway stakes victory. The two are reunited in a salty field for Sunday’s $75,000 Buckeye Native Stakes for Ohiobred fillies and mares on the Belterra Park turf.

True Cinder, owned and trained by Michael Rone, won six straight races by a combined 31 lengths from November 2016 through last August. That streak included four stakes – the Glacial Princess, Dr. T.F. Classen Memorial, Cincinnati­an, and a 5 3/4-length romp in the Horizon Stakes against males. The win streak was built on both dirt and turf, at all three of Ohio’s Thoroughbr­ed tracks, and at distances from six furlongs to 1 1/16 miles.

But then, familiar foe Leona’s Reward got the best of True Cinder. Leona’s Reward, who is bred, co-owned, and trained by Tim Hamm, won a series of stakes as True Cinder finished second behind her in the Catlaunch Stakes, third in the Ohio Debutante, second in the Bobbie Bricker Memorial Handicap, and then second in the Classen Memorial on May 5 in the season debut for both.

Getting away from her rival, True Cinder righted the ship with a 6 3/4-length victory in the Michael G. Mackey Memorial Angenora Stakes on June 2 at Thistledow­n.

Meanwhile, Leona’s Reward is exiting a third-place finish in the George Lewis Memorial Stakes last month at Thistledow­n, with the top four finishers all returning for the Buckeye Native. Eighttheha­rdway posted an emphatic 4 1/2-length score in that race, his 11th stakes win or placing. After runner-up Mobil Solution, it was another 2 3/4 lengths back to Leona’s Reward, who nipped Eighttheha­rdway by a nose in the 2017 Lewis Memorial.

Although Leona’s Reward has beaten True Cinder in their most recent meetings, True Cinder may have an edge Sunday since she is 2 for 2 at this 1 1/16-mile distance on the Belterra turf.

◗ Earlier on the card, Missap and Ucantkeepu­p stand out as the only fillies with stakes experience in the $75,000 Norm Barron Queen City Oaks for Ohio-bred 3-year-old fillies on the main track.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States