Six Acceptances in Plymouth Rock: Suffolk Meet Ends with Sprint Stake, Daily Racing Form, 1947-05-31

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Six Acceptances in Plymouth Rock Suffolk Meet Ends j With Sprint Stake Agrarian-U to Rule Strong Favorite in Spite of Weight Assignment of 126 Pounds SUFFOLK DOWNS, East Boston, Mass., May 30. Already having created a yardstick by which the other New England tracks can be measured this season, popular Suffolk Downs rings down the curtain on its 38-day meeting here tomorrow. With the established trend very definitely on the upgrade, Narragansett Park will pick up the cudgel Monday at its Pawtucket course, after which the sport will return here for a summer season on July 7. The finale will be something of an anticlimax, after todays great Memorial gathering, but the tremendous appeal of the thoroughbred sport once again will be demonstrated by a crowd that probably will exceed 30,000. - Headlining theattractive program will be the tenth running of the Plymouth Rock Handicap, a dash of six furlongs that finds a field of six Yankee circuit perennials competing, with J. L. McKnights very consistent and shifty Agrarian-U holding down the spotlight. The handsome and sturdy five-year-old son of Agrarian June F., must shoulder "championship" weight of 126 pounds, which means he will concede up to 24 pounds to his foes. Next in line, according to racing secretary John Purcell Turners weights, is the Frances Stables Tarpan, 119, with H. Ted Darlings West Fleet, pegged at 117; Kenmore Stables Hi-Charlie, 113; Mrs. Thomas Has-kos Windmill, 107, and the Prisjoe Stables Prince Favor, 102. Ran Three-Quarters in 1;10 Because of Agrarian-Us brilliant New England record this season, there was no other alternative for Turner than to weight him down. In the Lexington Handicap here a couple of weeks ago he shouldered 122 pounds and virtually "lost" his rivals as he sped three-quarters in 1:10, the fastest time of the meeting. Prior to that he tried going over a distance, but finished far back after being carried wide on the far turn. In his two other New England starts he handled top weight and won nicely. Regarded as the geldings main foe is the sleek, black mare Windmill, who often proves she is aptly named by the manner in which she bounces to the front early and then strides along in a machine-like style. She returned to the peak of her form in her last start, when she led a merry chase on the backstretch, then held on courageously in the stretch to score by a half length. In her only other start of the meeting she appeared to be short and tired badly after holding an early advantage. With a pull in the weights, she proved herself capable of outrunning Agrarian-U several times last season. Those who watched her perform in her last outing voiced the opinion that she may make the champion step fast to defend his laurels. Tarpan at his best also would be hard to beat. The Swashbuckler gelding performed in unusually dull style against Agrarian-U the last time they met, folding badly after displaying sharp early speed. In the Paul Revere Handicap, the first stakes of the meeting, he just failed to beat Agrarian-U under a different weight arrangement. He carried 121 pounds against his foes 118, which means that there will, be a switch of 10 pounds. Tarpan was beaten only a nose in the Paul Revere. West Fleet, winner of the Plymouth Rock last season, has not been showing his usual consistency, but figures well under the weights and on his best races. Outsiders in the field are Hy-Charlie and Prince Favor.


Persistent Link: https://drf.uky.edu/catalog/1940s/drf1947053101/drf1947053101_2_2
Local Identifier: drf1947053101_2_2
Library of Congress Record: https://lccn.loc.gov/unk82075800