One race after sweeping the exacta in the Laurel Futurity on Saturday with Irish Mias and Torres Del Paine - who both had to withstand a stewards’ inquiry and jockey objections - trainer Graham Motion was fortunate enough to have He’s No Lemon placed first in the $150,000 Bald Eagle Derby. The disqualification of Jais’s Solitude in the Bald Eagle Derby gave Motion wins in the first three stakes on Saturday’s eight-stakes September to Remember card at Laurel Park. Zonda set the pace until the final sixteenth of the 1 1/2-mile Bald Eagle. Jockey Feargal Lynch on Jais’s Solitude saved ground to the stretch, angled outward to go around Zonda, and was moving to the lead when Jais’s Solitude drifted inward. Jockey Victor Carrasco, aboard Zonda, grabbed a hold of his mount when Jais’s Solitude came in, and Zonda jumped in the air, appearing startled by the sudden restraint. He went on to finish sixth. Jais’s Solitude won by 1 1/4 lengths. The stewards conducted an inquiry into the incident, and Carrasco lodged a claim of foul against Jais’s Solitude, who is trained by Eddie Kenneally. After reviewing the matter, the stewards placed Jais’s Solitude sixth. He’s No Lemon, well back early under Trevor McCarthy, finished with a belated bid to be second but never was a serious threat to Jais’s Solitude. He’s No Lemon paid $4.80 as the favorite. He was timed in 2:29.09. Motion also won the Selima at Laurel with Sharing. Another Mystery was promoted from third to second via the disqualification. Changi was moved up from fourth to third, Channel Island from fifth to fourth, and Zonda from sixth to fifth. Laurel Futurity: Irish Mias withstands inquiry Irish Mias rallied up the inside in the stretch of the $200,000 Laurel Futurity to defeat pacesetting Torres Del Paine by a head, giving trainer Graham Motion the exacta in the 1 1/16-mile race for 2-year-olds. The win also completed a sweep of the 2-year-old stakes on the card for Motion and jockey Manny Franco, who two races earlier won the $200,000 Selima with Sharing. Motion and Franco had to wait a few minutes before celebrating, however, as both Irish Mias and Torres Del Paine drifted outward in the stretch. Jockey Feargal Lynch aboard third-place finisher Doc Boy lodged a claim of foul against both horses and jockey Alex Cintron on fourth-place Field Pass claimed foul against Torres Del Paine. Doc Boy finished three-quarters of a length behind runner-up Torres Del Paine. It was a nose father back to Field Pass in fourth. Torres Del Paine was rank setting the early pace under rider Wes Hamilton while being prompted from the outside by Benny Havens. Still, the pace was almost two seconds slower than what the fillies in the Selima recorded. In the stretch, Torres Del Paine put away Benny Havens and was joined from the inside by Irish Mias. Nearing the sixteenth pole, Torres Del Paine drifted out four of five paths and soon thereafter Irish Mias came outward about two paths. After reviewing the situation, the stewards, who lit the inquiry sign immediately after the race, ruled the order of finish would stand. Neither Lynch nor Cintron appeared to steady their mounts while racing behind the top pair. “My horse was a little tired at the eighth pole,” Franco said. “When the 1 [Torres Del Paine] go away from him, he kind of followed his move.” Irish Mias, who had finished second in Saratoga maiden races in his first two career starts, paid $8 to win in the eight-horse field. He was timed in 1:44.03, 1.42 seconds slower than Sharing did winning the Selima. Irish Score, the dam of Irish Mias, is a sister to both Irish War Cry and Irish Strait. Irish Mias was bred and is owned by Isabelle Haskell de Tomaso. Selima: Sharing delivers as heavy favorite Heavily favored Sharing improved her record to two wins from three starts after receiving a beautiful stalking trip in the $200,000 Selima Stakes under jockey Manny Franco. Sharing, who had won an off-the-turf Saratoga maiden race by 6 1/4 lengths in her prior start, was only in the gate for a second but broke sharply from the outside post in the seven-horse field. She was rated in third position behind Sunset Promise and Midship Lady, who settled into an even rhythm on the backstretch of the 1 1/16-mile turf race for 2-year-old fillies. Following a half-mile in 48.56 seconds and six furlongs in 1:12.56, Sharing challenged three wide on the far turn, took control of the race from Sunset Promise in upper stretch and went on to score by 2 1/2 lengths. Sharing, who is trained by Graham Motion, paid $3 to win and was timed in 1:42.61. “I think it played in her favor being on the outside so Manny could pick where he wanted to be,” Motion said. A Maryland-bred daughter of Speightstown, Sharing is out of the mare Shared Account, who won the 2010 Breeders’ Cup Filly and Mare Turf for Motion. Sharing was bred by Sagamore Farm and purchased for $350,000 as a yearling at the 2018 Fasig-Tipton Saratoga sale by Eclipse Thoroughbred Partners, which owns her along with Gainesway Stable. Sharing reminds Motion of her Grade 1-winning dam. “Their personalities are very similar,” he said. “Shared Account was very kind and easy to train and so is she.”