HOT SPRINGS, Ark. – Trainer Kenny McPeek closed out a career weekend on Sunday with a stakes win in Arkansas, as Frosted Departure led throughout to capture the $200,000 Lake Ouachita at Oaklawn Park. He won by 4 1/2 lengths over Strong Tide and Nautical Star, who finished in a dead heat for second. It was another three lengths back in fourth to McPeek-trained Ben Franklin. McPeek on Friday won the Kentucky Oaks with Thorpedo Anna and on Saturday saddled Mystik Dan to capture the Kentucky Derby. Both horses won stakes during the course of the season at Oaklawn, where McPeek has kept a division. The meet closed Sunday.   Frosted Departure ($11.40) moved to the lead soon after the start in the Lake Ouachita, which was for 4-year-olds and up. He set fractions of 24.81 seconds for the opening quarter, 48.50 for the half-mile and 1:12.73 for six furlongs on a muddy, sealed track that had been upgraded from sloppy one race earlier. Frosted Departure continued to be in control of the race through the stretch, while covering the 1 1/16 miles in 1:43.83. :: Get the Inside Track with the FREE DRF Morning Line Email Newsletter. Subscribe now.  “The plan was to go on the lead and don’t look back,” winning rider Julien Leparoux said in an interview conducted by Oaklawn. “We got pretty good fractions out there and I tried to get running around the three-eighths pole and he kept going all the way to the wire.” Frosted Departure came into the race off an allowance win at Keeneland. He also won an allowance at Oaklawn earlier in the meet for RT Racing Stable. Frosted Departure is a son of Frosted. He has now won 6 of 23 starts for earnings of $736,381. Alexander Helios, a half-brother to Preakness winner Rombauer, was scratched. Court wraps up career Jockey Jon Court, the 63-year-old whose first win came in 1980, closed out his riding career in the sixth race Sunday at Oaklawn Park. He finished sixth aboard League of Legends, who closed well against front-runners who kept going on the sloppy, sealed track. Court is a winner of 4,263 Thoroughbred races in North America, from 35,359 mounts, according to records from Daily Racing Form. His mounts earned more than $114 million. Court also won the Japan Cup Dirt in 2003. His first win came on June 7, 1980, at Centennial.  Court had four mounts on his final day of riding. He said his plans going forward are to be determined, but he does expect to continue his work in real estate as he has been involved in residential and commercial ventures. He also has houses in Arkansas and Kentucky and is determining where he will be based in the future. One thing that will remain a constant, however, is horses. “I’m one of the few riders that off the racetrack, I go horseback riding for pleasure,” he said. “I’m nuts!” Court, a native of Florida, won 66 graded stakes during his career, according to figures from Daily Racing Form. His list of Grade 1 victories includes two runnings of the Arkansas Derby. He is a co-founder of the Permanently Disabled Jockeys Fund.  Court wore a hat bearing the PDJF logo in a winner's circle presentation after the sixth race. Oaklawn put together a video tribute that was played before Court's fellow riders, family, friends, valets and others from the racing community posed for pictures.  *** Indian Gulch ($21) edged Truculent to win the $125,000 Trail's End, a 1 3/4-mile starter allowance that serves as the final race of the meet. Tom Van Berg co-owns and trains Indian Gulch, which gave him one of his most coveted wins as Van Berg long has wanted to capture the Trail's End. Walter De La Cruz was aboard Sunday.  :: Want to learn more about handicapping and wagering? Check out DRF's Handicapping 101 and Wagering 101 pages.