Jockey Feargal Lynch’s Saturday afternoon at Laurel Park wasn’t going very well until Caribou Club came running to win the Grade 3, $200,000 Baltimore/Washington International Turf Cup by a head. Two races prior to the Turf Cup, Lynch had claimed foul against the first- and second-place finishers in the $200,000 Laurel Futurity after finishing third on Doc Boy. His objection was disallowed. In the next race, Lynch crossed the wire first by 1 1/4 lengths on Jais’s Solitude in the $150,000 Bald Eagle Derby. Jais’s Solitude was disqualified and placed sixth for drifting in as he was moving to the lead at the sixteenth pole. Caribou Club, a 5-year-old gelded son of City Zip owned and bred by Glen Hill Farm and trained by Tom Proctor, helped eased some of Lynch’s pain. He paid $9 in the one-mile Turf Cup while timed in 1:33.52. Caribou Club came into the Turf Cup off a 1 1/4-length win under Lynch in the West Virginia Speaker’s Cup at Mountaineer Park. “He won very well last time,” Lynch said. “He’s a nice horse and he’s got a good turn of foot.” Caribou Club raced well off the early pace as Macagone and Glorious Empire pulled away from the field through quick fractions of 46.39 and 1:09.52. Glorious Empire came away with the lead in upper stretch but Caribou Club came calling on the outside as Up the Ante and Just Howard worked their way up the inside. Caribou Club took the lead and then lasted over Frontier Market, who was gaining ground at the wire. Cullum Road finished third, a half-length behind Frontier Market and a neck ahead of Up the Ante. It was another nose back to Just Howard in fifth. Glorious Empire, who was making his first start of the year following a suspensory injury, faded late to finish sixth but ran well in his comeback. He was beaten less than two lengths. Laurel Dash: Dubini breaks losing streak After Oldies But Goodies and Smokin Nitro had run a quarter in 21.64 and a half in 44.27 in the 5 1/2-furlong Laurel Dash, Oldies But Goodies looked like he just might keep going. But then Fielder loomed a winner from third, and then Dirty looked to have the best momentum. But in the end, it was Dubini who fired the final shot under jockey Daniel Centeno to get up for a three-quarter-length victory. The Laurel Dash broke a 13-race losing streak dating back to August of 2017 for Dubini, who always tries hard but had come up just short time and time again. He paid $10.60 in the nine-horse field and was timed in 1:01.71 over firm turf. “He’s been in tough races with nice horses,” Centeno said. “I waited the most I can and then let him go.” Dubini, a 6-year-old is based at Parx with trainer Kate DeMasi, now has a 5-5-1 record from 18 starts. Fielder finished second, three-quarters of a length ahead of Dirty in fourth.