The Columbus Dispatch

Lou’s Pearlman takes race by a nose

Burke, Gingras win title again at Little Brown Jug

- Nicole Kraft

It has been quite a year for Ron Burke. In addition to training nearly 700 winners to earnings in excess of $15 million, he was elected this month to the Harness Racing Hall of Fame. On Wednesday he won the Jugette with Scarlett Hanover.

And Thursday at the Delaware County Fair, his year got even better.

The Burke-conditione­d Lou’s Pearlman grabbed the lead down the stretch and nipped the favorite, Perfect Sting, by a nose to win the 76th Little Brown Jug in 1:52.4 on a windy, 55-degree day. Whichwayto­thebeach finished third. The win was the third in seven years for the team of Burke and driver Yannick Gingras, who won the 2014 Jug with Limelight Beach and the 2017 edition with Filibuster Hanover. It marked the first time since 1998 that a trainer captured both the Jug and the Jugette in the same week.

“To win the Jug and the Jugette in the same year, it’s hard,” Burke said. “It’s hard to win one of these things, and to win them both, it’s very special.”

Lou’s Pearlman, who paid $5.20 to win, is owned by Burke Racing Stable, Weaver Bruscemi LLC, Elizabeth Novak and Howard Taylor, who also owned and raced his sire and dam, Sweet Lou and Lucy’s Pearl.

“This is the first one we ever bred,” he said. “That makes it special.”

The Jug seemed to be a match race between Lou’s Pearlman and Perfect

Sting from the moment the pair were installed as dual 2-1 morning line favorites.

Lou’s Pearlman got on the board first, capturing his division of the first heat by a widening 1-3/4 lengths in 1:54 for Gingras, despite being challenged much of the mile by Whichwayto­thebeach, who ended up second.

“We love this race,” Burke Stable assistant trainer Micky Burke said. “We are a very traditiona­l barn. We like heat racing, and we prepare horses for this race.”

Perfect Sting showed he was also ready for the challenge, capturing his eliminatio­n heat by half a length over a fast-closing I’ll Drink To That, also in 1:54.

Perfect Sting had faded late in three of his most recent losses this year, but

trainer Joe Holloway predicted that heats might be just what the pacer needed to “break him loose.”

The race appeared to be his to lose when Perfect Sting drew the rail and driver David Miller, seeking his recordbrea­king sixth Jug win, sent him straight for the lead with Lou’s Pearlman tucked in second.

Gingras pulled his horse and was quickly joined on the far outside by Whichwayto­thebeach.

“I was surprised a little bit, but on the flip side, I could feel [Whichwayto­thebeach] on my helmet,” Gingras said. “I was going slow because I was trying to control the pace from being first up.”

Down the stretch it was a dual of the two favorites, with Perfect Sting hanging tough — just not tough enough.

“I was thinking we were home free, even as they collared us in the last turn,” Miller said. “At the head of the lane, he sprinted away. He got a half a length on Yannick and kept pacing right to the wire. He just got caught.

“It’s tough to take. With his fractions and everything, I thought we were in good shape.”

The win was the fifth in a row and seventh of the year for Lou’s Pearlman, who was named for Lou Pearlman, founder of Backstreet Boys and ’Nsync, who died in 2016 serving prison time for a Ponzi scheme. He has now earned $510,032.

For the Burke family, the win capped quite a week. Counting the Jug and the Jugette, the stable won 15 races — the most in the fair’s history. In addition, Burke’s parents, Mickey and Sylvia, were inducted into the Little Brown Jug Wall of Fame.

In the winner’s circle, as he pondered the magnitude of the moment, Burke’s eyes welled with tears. He stared off into the distance, seeking composure and the words to express how far he and his operation had come. He also expressed appreciati­on for the team that built it, which includes his parents, siblings, assistants, caretakers and drivers like Gingras.

“Our barn isn’t one person,” he said. “It’s all of us. No one person can do this. Not that I’m saying I’m not good at what I do. I am very good at what I do, but I have everybody with me that is very good at what they do.

“It’s a whole family thing…every year gets harder and we just keep plugging along. And if we keep getting the horses, we’re going to keep coming here.”

Ohio State sports journalism students Kole Emplit, Ashley Grimmer and Sophie Yates contribute­d to this article.

 ?? NICOLAS GALINDO/THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH ?? Yannick Gingras drives Lou’s Pearlman (2) across the finish line in first place with driver Andrew Mccarthy and Which Way to the Beach (5) close behind on Thursday.
NICOLAS GALINDO/THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH Yannick Gingras drives Lou’s Pearlman (2) across the finish line in first place with driver Andrew Mccarthy and Which Way to the Beach (5) close behind on Thursday.

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