It's My Show gave driver Scott Zeron and trainer Linda Toscano a sweep of this year's Jugette and the Little Brown Jug by winning Thursday's $850,000 Jug final for 3-year-old male pacers at the Delaware County Fair in 1:49 flat. The scene was set for the final by three eliminations that were won by Moment Is Here (Tim Tetrick, 1:50 1/5), Ken Hanover (David Miller, 1:48 4/5) and Cannibal (Yannick Gingras, 1:49 1/5). Ken Hanover's mile in the second elimination was the fastest-ever in the Little Brown Jug and tied the world record for a 3-year-old gelding pacer on a half-mile track. Moment Is Here drew the rail for the final, with Ken Hanover in the two-hole and Cannibal in post three. Moving out from there, Seven Colors (Dexter Dunn), It's My Show, Hungry Angel Boy (Todd McCarthy), Blue Hunt (Andy McCarthy), Redwood Hanover (James MacDonald) and Thunder Hunter Joe (Jordan Stratton) completed the field. Using the pole position to its full measure in the final, Tetrick rocketed Moment Is Here out while Cannibal also showed speed. Cannibal was not able to duck into the two-hole that was closed by Ken Hanover and was forced to drive on, but he found no luck there, either, as Tetrick parked out Cannibal to the quarter in 25 4/5 and the half in 53 3/5, with Seven Colors moving up behind Cannibal into the second-over position and It's My Show set up shop third-over. Dunn fanned Seven Colors out three-wide, with It's My Show sticking right with him, as Cannibal began to back up and Moment Is Here put three-quarters on the board in 1:22. Seven Colors was able to clear Cannibal rather easily to take up the first-over position on the final bend and would then go by the winded Moment Is Here before they turned for home, but Zeron had It's My Show looming to Seven Colors's outside. Seven Colors entered the lane on top and looked to seal the deal under Dunn's urging, but It's My Show kept coming on his flank and was able to chase him down in deep stretch to go by for the victory by about a neck. Ken Hanover finished in the third position, Moment Is Here checked in fourth, and Thunder Hunter Joe was fifth. "This horse has made some amazing races for us. When you add in a trailer, it changes everything about a race. Yannick timed the gate great going out of there, and that made it easy for me to not to try to leave," Zeron said after the race. "Honestly, I've been in the position he was in, which is when you commit to the leave, but there's no give and goes, your two-hole goes by pretty quick. When Dave closed up the hole, it was just tough for him. "They were going at it, but I was still way out of it. I needed a lot of things to go right, and Seven Colors raced sensational. My guy just put his nose out." ► Sign up for our FREE DRF Harness Digest Newsletter Owned and bred by Richard and Joanne Young, It's My Show is a Sweet Lou gelding and is out of their champion mare Put On A Show. This was his ninth victory from 20 starts and made him harness racing's newest millionaire with his bankroll now at $1,124,715. Sent off at 7-1, It's My Show paid $16.00 to win. "I'm ecstatic. I had tears running down my face," said Richard Young when reached at his Florida home. "When you don't have expectations of winning [because of the post draw] and you win it is the best feeling." The Jug victory gave Young the "big three" in the sophomore pacing ranks – North America Cup, Meadowlands Pace and Little Brown Jug. It also checked off a box for Toscano that she has been waiting a long time to complete. "This has been a pretty good week," Toscano offered with a laugh. "This has been a race that has eluded me, and a race that I've wanted for so long that I'm a little choked up." Toscano made a key equipment change to It's My Show after he finished second to Cannibal in his elimination, putting him in a blind bridle. "I've been waiting and waiting to change his bridle," she explained. "When he didn't go by in the first heat I said 'this is the week to do it,' so I put the blind bridle on and he went right by in the final." Steve and Cindy Stewart, who raised It's My Show at Hunterton Farm, accepted the winning owner/breeder trophy for the Youngs. "We bred Rock N Roll Heaven, so we've been here before. This is great for Richard," Steve Stewart stated. "He had a real tough decision to make because this horse was eligible in Kentucky last Sunday for $400,000. He asked me my opinion, and I said 'you should go because you need to support people that support our industry.' "In Ohio, there was a darkness before the dawn. There were a lot of dark days for many years but through Governor Kasich and Governor Dewine, they've stepped up, and I think the industry has really supported it." As far as upcoming plans for It's My Show, Toscano remarked, "We'll probably skip the first week in Lexington, I'm guessing, and then probably go the second." That second week is when the Tattersalls Pace is contested at The Red Mile and could lead to a rematch between It's My Show and divisional leader Confederate. Young is looking forward to the encounter with Confederate and hopes the Jug victory makes it all the more interesting when they do meet. "Maybe we can give him a run," said Young, unwilling to provide bulletin board material to motivate the competition. "We were never avoiding him. There were always multiple options and it didn't make business sense to pay $83,000 to face him in the Meadowlands Pace." --additional reporting by Derick Giwner--