SARATOGA SPRINGS, N.Y. – Sculcos Folly continued his winning ways and again did so in dominant fashion, withstanding early pace pressure from the odds-on Bravaro before drawing off to another one-sided victory by 5 1/2 lengths over B Thedonald Wednesday at Saratoga in the $200,000 Mike Lee Stakes for 3-year-old New York-breds. The Mike Lee was the fourth victory in a row, three of them stakes, for the former claimer Sculcos Folly, who has won those races by a combined margin of 29 1/2 lengths. As was the case in each of his three previous tallies, Sculcos Folly was ridden to victory by jockey Jaime Rodriguez. As expected, Sculcos Folly rushed up the rail after breaking from post 1 to duel for the early advantage. The big surprise was the horse he engaged with for command down the backstretch: the 4-5 Bravaro, who had never been on or with the lead in any of his five previous starts, three of which had come around two turns.  Despite contesting a lively 44.36-second opening half-mile split, Sculcos Folly was able to dispose of his early challenger upon cutting the corner into the stretch. He then proceeded to increase his advantage steadily down the lane while kept under vigorous handling and remaining on his left lead the length of the stretch. :: DRF Belmont Stakes Packages: Save big on PPs, Clocker Reports, Betting Strategies, and more. B Thedonald got knocked back to last at the start, remained at the rear of the field down the backstretch, then finished best of all down the center of the track wear down the 39-1 Party in the Army by a half-length to be second best while never menacing the winner. The Grade 3-placed Bravaro, who finished fourth in the Grade 2 Wood Memorial in his previous start, tossed in the towel after five furlongs and finished fourth in a field of nine.  Trained by Rick Dutrow Jr. for owner Michael Dubb, Sculcos Folly completed the seven-furlong distance over a fast track in a lively 1:21.60 and returned $8.32.  “The trainer [Dutrow] didn’t give me any instructions. He just said, 'You know the horse already and you know what to do, just figure it out when the gate opens,' ” said Rodriguez. “Last time he broke from the outside and I had a chance to sit with him. But this time, I had the one hole, so we had to go.”  Rodriguez said Sculcos Folly is a different horse in the morning than he is in the afternoon.  “If you work him, you wouldn’t expect him to be this good. He’s a lazy horse and you have to make him do it in the morning,” Rodriguez explained. “Today, once I got next to the nine [Bravaro], I just let him do his own thing. I hit him once at the top of the lane and he gave me another kick. He does everything so easy. He’s just waiting for you to ask him.” :: Get an edge with DRF Clocker Reports straight from the morning workouts. Available each race day at Saratoga.