Saving his best for last, at least when it came to elimination races, defending George Morton Levy Series champion Keystone Velocity made good on a pocket trip and advanced into the $532,000 final on April 21 at Yonkers with a sharp 1:52 1/5 victory on Saturday night. Trainer Rene Allard likely saved his best as well, as two from his powerful stable scored in successive divisions with Long Live Rock finally breaking his Levy O-for in the first $50,000 division. For the 10-year-old Keystone Velocity, position mattered, and he got away well enough for driver Dan Dube to be seated behind 9-5 second choice Evenin Of Pleasure heading into the first turn. Joe Bongiorno guided last week's 95-1 shot, who received more support in this six-horse collection, to the quarter in 27 2/5 and half in 56 2/5 with little dispute. On the backstretch Evenin Of Pleasure kept separation from his rivals, with a spirited 1:24 2/5 three-quarters allowing Keystone Velocity ample room to make a move. On the final turn Keystone Velocity put his 10-year-old legs in motion, gamely went by the leader, and strolled off to an easy victory ahead of Christen Me N and Mach It So. Evenin Of Pleasure faded to fourth, and in the process finished in a Levy series dead-heat with the winner (and Western Fame), with all three advancing to the final. Allard, Singh, Hill Jr. and VIP Internet own Keystone Velocity. Dube began his Levy double with Long Live Rock.  The 9-year-old had been burdened by bad trips and tough racing luck throughout the series, but with one crack of the whip leaving from the pole in the first division, Long Live Rock had control of the six-horse field. The first quarter was 27 3/5 for Long Live Rock, but Dube got him a soft 57 2/5 half, and then saw himself under little dispute, holding rivals in arrears through a 1:25 3/5 three-quarters and being driven out to a 1:53 3/5 mile time. Bettor Memories vacated the pocket behind the winner at three-quarters and gave Western Fame, the eventual runner-up, cover. Missile J rallied boldly late for third but was a nose back, and that cost him a spot in the final. Long Live Rock is owned by Rene Allard and returned $16 with his third win in 2018. With three of his competitors already assured a spot in next week's final, Killer Martini took complete advantage at 7-1 in the third Levy division. The 6-year-old, driven by Yannick Gingras, waited for Luciano N to seat Always At My Place off the first turn before brushing to the front in a 27 1/5 opening quarter. Killer Martini had a half in 56 2/5 before being put under pressure by Always At My Place, who was making his second move.  Killer Martini kept separation in a 1:24 2/5 three-quarter clocking and had a commanding lead on the final turn before the closers began to move. Dr J Hanover came wide off cover and looked to be secure for the place spot, but 2016 Levy champion Bit Of A Legend N stormed home on the far outside to nail him. Two-leg winner Somewhere In L A took the short route home late as no threat. Killer Martini is owned by trainer Ricky Bucci and will likely be in next Saturday's consolation after winning in 1:52 4/5. The winner returned $16.40. Unofficially, the horses making next Saturday night's $532,000 Levy Series final are:  Bit Of A Legend N, Somewhere In L A, Dr J Hanover, Mach It So, Western Fame, Evenin Of Pleasure, Keystone Velocity, and Rockin Ron.