Topville Lucky, Amira Hanover and Nash captured $82,000 Bluegrass Series divisions for rookie pacing fillies on Thursday afternoon at The Red Mile. Kentucky Championship Series winner Topville Lucky (Dexter Dunn) raced in the second split and was victorious in 1:50 4/5. Caviart Amore Mio (Andy McCarthy), Gracious (Todd McCarthy) and Bettor Be A Star (David Miller) all had turns on the lead through fractions of 28 1/5, 56 1/5 and 1:24 1/5 while Topville Lucky came first-over out of fourth on the last turn. It was a three-across battle to the wire among Topville Lucky, Gracious and Bettor Be A Star, and Topville Lucky got to the wire a neck ahead of Gracious, with Bettor Be A Star a close third. Trainer Andrew Harris also co-owns Topville Lucky, a daughter of Sweet Lou bred by Jeremy Yoder, with partners William Pollock and Bruce Areman. Topville Lucky has five wins in six starts, has earned $336,000 and paid $2.26 to win. "I was nervous when we saw the three-quarter pole in 1:24 and you know that they're going to go in [1:]50 and change,” said Harris, who obtained the filly from trainer Erv Miller and co-owner Doug Overhiser ahead of her win in the $400,000 Kentucky Championship Series final on Sept. 14. "It's a little bit iffy when you see those kinds of fractions, but she showed she's got some guts." Back in the opening flight Amira Hanover (Joe Bongiorno) grabbed command passing the 28 4/5 quarter, then yielded to sit in the two-hole behind Big Weekend (Tim Tetrick). 4-5 favorite Big Weekend remained on top at the 56 3/5 half and 1:24 2/5 three-quarters, but Amira Hanover rallied back into the lead in the lane and held sway from there to post a 1 1/4 length victory in 1:51 2/5. Rocksy (A. McCarthy) was next, followed by Kissedbyastranger (Yannick Gingras). ► Sign up for our FREE DRF Harness Digest Newsletter Bred by Hanover Shoe Farms, the victorious daughter of Papi Rob Hanover is also trained by Bongiorno for the ownership group of Let It Ride- Chodash, Patrick O'Brien, Joe Sbrocco and In The Gym Partners. Amira Hanover has a summary of 2-2-2 from six outings, has put away $68,650 and returned $10.72 to win. "I was just glad to have Joey back in the bike," said John Fodera, who shares ownership on Amira Hanover through In The Gym Partners. "The other guys have done a great job with her, [but] Joe knows her so well and has really had a lot of patience with her. We're prepping her for the Kindergarten at the Meadowlands and just spreading out her races. That's the kind of trip she likes - she likes to sit the pocket and pull at the end." The last section saw Hope Hill (Dunn) work her way around On Heir (A. McCarthy) after the 28 second opening quarter, and Hope Hill continued to show the way to the half in 56 1/5 and the three-quarters in 1:23 4/5. On Heir tipped out and went back around Hope Hill in the lane, but Nash (Marvin Luna), who'd sat on the pylons in third throughout, also swung out, and she closed in 26 seconds flat to surge by On Heir late to prevail by a neck in 1:50 1/5. Hope Hill faded to third. A filly by Tall Dark Stranger, Nash is trained by Tony Dinges for owner Jerry Glantz. The Crawford Farms-bred broke her maiden in her seventh chance, has now pocketed $65,550 and paid $30.62 to win. --quotes courtesy of Ray Cotolo--