Bit Of A Legend N crept closer to the $2 million mark in lifetime earnings with a dominant performance in the first of three $50,000 divisions of the George Morton Levy Series at Yonkers on Saturday night. The imported son of Bettor's Delight, sent off as a solid 1-10 favorite, cruised to the top late on the first turn and put the field to sleep, scoring in 1:53 2/5 for driver Jordan Stratton. Bit Of A Legend N set fractions of 28, 57 2/5, and 1:25 3/5 on the way to his second score of 2018 in just his fourth appearance. Chumlee A yielded to the winner early and stalked him the distance, finishing second, with Killer Martini taking a close show photo from Long Live Rock, who had made a brief bid on the backstretch to no avail. Peter Tritton trains the 2016 George Morton Levy final winner for the Vonknoblauch Stable LLC. It was the 43rd lifetime victory for Bit Of A Legend N, who likely secured a spot in his third consecutive Levy final with the victory. Somewhere In L A, another of last year's Levy finalists, secured his place in the April 21 final with a powerful performance in the second Levy division. With 95-1 shot Evenin Of Pleasure blasting to the front from post eight early, driver Jason Bartlett calmly regained the front in the 26 4/5 opening quarter, then backed the half to a crawl in 56 3/5. Somewhere in L A, the 6-5 favorite, was never threatened as second choice Rockin Ron made a very weak uncovered bid, stalling the outer flow, particularly leg winner Missile J. Without any outside advance, Somewhere In L A hit three-quarters in 1:25, and then shifted into high gear on the final turn, leaving his rivals battling for minor spoils in a 1:53 clocking.  Evenin Of Pleasure gamely held on to the place spot, with Christen Me N coming inside for third. Rich Banca trains Somewhere In L A, a 7-year-old by the late Somebeachsomewhere. D'Elegance Stable, Carmen Iannacone, T L P Stables and Gandolfo Stables share ownership in Somewhere In L A, now with in excess of $1.4 million lifetime earnings. Mach It So closed out the chalky Levy divisions with a 1:53 1/5 tally in the final $50,000 stanza. With David Miller at the controls, Mach It So stung last year's Levy champion Keystone Velocity through a 27 second opening quarter before releasing him. Miller wasted no time to regain the front off the second turn, then cruised to the half in 56 4/5 with most of the field reluctant to move. Always At My Place went first-up for the third time in four Levy legs, and clearly it wasn't to his liking on this night as Mach It So, an 8-year-old by Mach Three, sprinted the third quarter in 27 4/5 and gained some separation, Miller worked aggressively behind Mach It So, keeping his attention, and that earned him a very safe margin at the wire. The battle for place saw Keystone Velocity gamely hold sway, with Bettor Memories charging to the wire belatedly after a stalled outer flow hampered his advance. Mach It So, with his second Levy leg victory, likely joined the other division winners in this year's final with the win. Jeff Bamond Jr. trains the winner for the Bamond Racing LLC.