A total of $1 million was on the line in a quartet of New Jersey Classic finals for trotters on Friday night at the Meadowlands. Yo Tillie dug in through the stretch and overtook a game Champagne Problems in the final strides to extend her winning streak to 11 by capturing the final for 3-year-old females by a neck in 1:50 2/5. Walspea finished third and Conversano was fourth. The winning time was a career-best for Yo Tillie, who is eight-for-eight this season for trainer Andrew Harris after finishing her 2-year-old campaign with three consecutive victories for then owner-trainer-driver Verlin Yoder. "I think she would exceed almost anybody's expectations," said Harris, who joined with Bill Pollock and Bruce Areman to buy Yo Tillie in mid-November. "You don't ever expect a filly to go out there and do what she's doing. "She just does it, she just wants to win. When you get about 10 feet from the wire, she's trying to put her nose out in front. That's all class. You can't teach that, you just have it, or you don't." Yo Tillie and driver Todd McCarthy found themselves in third as Walspea, with Yannick Gingras in the sulky, led to the opening quarter in 26 3/5 while keeping Champagne Problems and driver Dexter Dunn a parked-out second until past that marker. Champagne Problems got the lead on her way to the half in 55 3/5, then faced a first-over challenge from Yo Tillie as they raced to three-quarters in 1:23 3/5. Champagne Problems and Yo Tillie matched strides for much of the stretch drive, with Yo Tillie's race-best 26 3/5 last quarter proving decisive at the wire. "I know all these horses are getting better, and every horse is good right now," Harris said. "I respect every horse. The second you don't respect one of them, they’re going to come up and beat you. They're all super athletes. "That was the fastest mile of (Yo Tillie's) life, so she's not running out of steam, horses are getting better. Kudos to (trainer) Nancy Takter. She's got Champagne Problems 10 times better than what she was, and she was really impressive tonight. It's just kudos to the competition she's racing, and I think it says more about Yo Tillie that she's actually beating these guys when these guys are all trotting in (1):50." Yo Tillie has won 16 of 20 career races and increased her earnings to more than $700,000. The daughter of Tactical Landing-Consolidator was bred by GBW Breeding Farms and Black Creek Farm. She is the No. 3-ranked horse in North America in this week's Hambletonian Society/Breeders Crown poll. "It's unbelievable," co-owner Pollock said. "This is what everybody dreams of, having a horse that wins pretty much week after week." Yo Tillie paid $2.20 as the 1-9 favorite. Earlier in the card, Lipstick and driver David Miller surprised at odds of 44-1 in the final for 2-year-old females. Lipstick, leaving from post two, was first to the quarter by a nose in 28 seconds. Days Away and driver Jason Bartlett were on top to the 57 3/5 half before New Jersey Sire Stakes champion Emmas Mystery CCL and Andy McCarthy led the field to three-quarters in 1:25 3/5. Lipstick was fourth on the pylons at the top of the stretch but found room to the outside and came home in 27 4/5 to win by a head over Southwind Chaska in 1:54. Days Away finished third and Emmas Mystery CCL was fourth. It was Lipstick's first victory in seven starts after four previous top-three finishes. "I raced her a couple starts back, and she was real handy about getting out of there," Miller said. "When the one (Days Away) wasn't right up on the gate, I went around and got around her. It's just kind of how the race unfolded. Jason retook and then Andy went to the lead. I was still pretty happy with my spot and at the head of the stretch I was able to slide over and as soon as I got her plugs out she took right off. She felt really strong at that point. I thought if I could get out that she would give them a good run and she sure did. It worked out for us."  Trained by Anette Lorentzon, Lipstick is owned by Anvil And Lace Farm and Girlz Just Wanna Have Fun. The daughter of Tactical Landing-Non Stick was bred by Ake Svanstedt Inc. and Little E LLC. The $16,000 Lexington Selected Yearling Sale purchase has earned more than $160,000 this season. Lipstick paid $91.60 to win. ► Sign up for our FREE DRF Harness Digest Newsletter Apex took full advantage of a pocket trip behind rival Diabolic Hill before lifting in mid-stretch en route to a dominant 1:52 2/5 score - his fourth in-a-row in New Jersey - in the final for 2-year-old males. Dexter Dunn kept Apex out of trouble on the first turn as both Maga Hill (driven by Yannick Gingras) and Practical Man (Todd McCarthy) broke stride in pursuit of the early lead. Captain Jordan (Tim Tetrick) inherited that lead from the pole nearing the completion of a 29 second first quarter before yielding to Apex, who in turn yielded control to Diabolic Hill (Andy McCarthy) upon reaching the backstretch. "We had enough room on the first turn when they both made the breaks to handle it," said Dunn of Apex, who had floated just behind the front flight in the race's initial stages. "To the horse's credit, he handled it like a professional." After ceding the lead to Diabolic Hill, who was unopposed for the entire middle-half, Apex drafted through splits of 56 4/5 and 1:25 2/5 before angling off the pegs turning for home. And while McCarthy had to ask Diabolic Hill for his best stretch effort, Apex's mind was already on business, and the Walner-Mission Brief colt rolled to the lead with 150 yards to go and drew clear handily by 5 3/4 lengths while also shaving a full second off his previous lifetime-best. Captain Jordan and Southwind Alamo (Johnathan Ahle) overtook a breaking Diabolic Hill in deep stretch and rallied to finish second and third, respectively. "He felt super tonight; he traveled terrific throughout the mile," continued Dunn. "When I moved him at the top of the straight, he was doing it easy at the end. He seems to be learning all the time; I couldn't be more pleased with how he's progressing." As the 2-5 favorite, Apex returned $2.80 to win. Marcus Melander trains the four-time winner, who has earned $272,100 for the partnership of Jeffrey Snyder, SRF Stable and Steve Stewart. The final for 3-year-old males proved markedly more eventful: Second choice The Rogue Prince broke behind the gate, 1-2 favorite Onajetplane stalled turning for home after a long first-over grind, and first-place finisher Mountcastle switched to a pacing gait four strides before the winning post, all leading to unofficial runner-up Camera Man being elevated to a 21-1 upset. Jason Bartlett spotted Camera Man in seventh early as 50-1 pace-setter Go Boom (Dunn) controlled early splits of 27 1/5 and 55 3/5. As Onajetplane and Andy McCarthy began their first-over ascent out of fifth midway up the backstretch, Mountcastle (Scott Zeron) angled second-over and Bartlett landed Camera Man third-over into a live tow that picked up considerably through the far turn. Onajetplane worked forward steadily to offer mild pressure to Go Boom past three-quarters in 1:23 2/5 but stalled upon cornering for home, prompting Zeron to slingshot Mountcastle three-deep in the final furlong. But as Mountcastle struck the front and picked up speed nearing the winning post, he switched into a pace, resulting in his demotion to second behind Camera Man, who slipstreamed his bold mid-stretch move and finished two lengths in arrears before being promoted to victory. Go Ahead Makemyday (Gingras) emerged from traffic to save third over an engulfed Go Boom. Onajetplane faded to finish ninth in the 10-horse field. Camera Man, a Six Pack-Cameron Hill colt with five career wins and $201,927 in total purses earned, is trained by Bruce Saunders for Randy Zane. He paid $44.00 to win, and his race time of 1:51 2/5 knocked over two seconds off his previous lifetime mark. "We got multiple breaks in there," admitted Saunders. "We were lucky two times, and you've got to be lucky in this game. He got a very good trip tonight. The flow was perfect, and Jason did a great job with him. "He's improved each start. He's a happy horse; we couldn't be any happier for him. Great owner, great caretaker - that's what's necessary to be successful in this game." --edited press releases (Meadowlands)--