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Melanie Plourde and Sabrina Clevenger each had special wins on Sunday night at Pompano Park as the South Florida oval celebrated St. Valentine’s Day with two events featuring the ladies.


The first St. Valentine’s Day event — The Sweetheart Trot — went to Back To Peace, handled by Melanie Plourde for owner/trainer Shane Arsenault.


Plourde sent Back To Peace, a seven-year-old altered son of Angus Hall, right to the front and posted fractions of :30, :59 and 1:29 before a :29.1 sprint home sealed the deal measuring three-quarters of a length over Well Connected Kid, driven by Maria Howard. Magic Cheque, with Brooke Nickells in the sulky, rallied with a :28.4 closing panel to be third, just a nose back of Well Connected Kid. M C Felix was fourth while Jailhouse Lawyer finished fifth in the field scratched down to a field of eight.


The win for Plourde was her 174th lifetime, but the very first on U.S. soil as all of her other wins were at Canadian tracks.


Back To Peace won for the initial time in 2016 in six starts and now has eight wins in 120 lifetime journeys to the starting gate, good for just over $120,000 in career bounty.


As the 9-5 second choice, Back To Peace paid $5.80 to win.


In the Sweetheart Pace, Sabrina Clevenger, driving Normandy Invasion, wasted no time blasting from the wings of the Hummer Starting Gate with her 1-5 toteboard favourite as this six-year-old gelded son of Somebeachsomewhere zipped through panels of :28.2, :55.4 and 1:25 before gliding home a 10-length winner in 1:55.2 over Jet Er Done, handled by Anne Turenne, with Vals Way and Melanie Plourde teaming up to be third. Winning Solution finished fourth while Master Of Puppets was fifth in the field of nine.


Owned by Yves Sarrazin along with Allard Racing, this Rene Allard trainee earned his first win of the season in four starts after having been absent from the racing wars for a year and a half.


Coming into the race with five lifetime wins and a mark of 1:48.4, Normandy Invasion, now with lifetime earnings of $134,744, was promptly claimed out of the event for $4,000.


The many $2 investors on Normandy Invasion’s nose were rewarded with a dividend of $2.60.


For Clevenger, this was also a milestone win — her first at Pompano Park.


Meanwhile, the $15,000 Open Handicap Pace featured a stellar field with combined earnings of over $3 million and, at the wire, it went to Bluehourpower, handled by Ricky Macomber Jr., to keep his 2016 scorecard perfect — now at four-for-four.


The five-year-old gelded son of Sand Shooter made a very sharp and confident quarter-move, brushing by Bandolito after a :27.4 opener from two and a half lengths out of it during a second panel, officially timed in :26.4. Then he posted fractions of :54.3 and 1:22.1 before stopping the timer in 1:51, his margin a half-length over Arthur Blue Chip (Wally Hennessey), with Bandolito (George Napolitano Jr.) third, two and a half lengths away. Panocchio rallied to finish fourth after beginning from the outside post while Duc Dorleans was fifth in the field scratched down to seven.


In a post-race interview, Macomber Jr. said, “I was confident that he’d be good off of his short rest. He trained back very well and all I had to do was give him a couple of soft reminders in the lane.


“This was a pretty good group of pacers assembled here tonight so I was very proud of his performance.”


Trained by Jamie Macomber for owner Wilbur Eash, Bluehourpower now has lifetime earnings of $536,881.


As a very slight 2 to 1 favorite in this evenly matched field, Bluehourpower paid $6.20 to win.


The $12,500 Open 2 Pace went to Dedis Dragon, driven by George Napolitano Jr., in 1:51.2. Johnny Grippa, handled by Dan Clements, finished second after battling the entire route through panels of :26.3, :54.4 and 1:23.1 — finishing a length away at the line. Whogoesfirst, with Wally Hennessey in the bike, was third while Four Socks rallied stoutly in the lane to be fourth. Maddysonofagun picked up the minor award in the field of nine.


Dedis Dragon, fourth early on, brushed up strongly on the backside to engage Johnny Grippa in battle, finally forcing that one into submission in deep stretch.


Owned by John McGill, along with Brian Carsey and the J L Benson Stable, Paul Holzman trainee Dedis Dragon won for the 19th time in 97 career starts with this win pushing his lifetime bounty over the $750,000 plateau.


The 2-1 second choice returned $6.20 to win.


Also on Sunday night, the $12,100 conditioned pace went, in an upset, to Bunkerhill Bill, handled by Mike Micallef for owner/trainer Gene Miller.


This five-year-old son of Voracious Hanover, a winner in his last start at even-money, successfully jumped up a couple of notches in class to score a 1:52.2 win at 25-1 odds this time around, using a late burst to collar the pacesetting Mister Virgin (George Napolitano Jr.) by a neck, with Teranadawn (K