Jimmy Freight served notice to all 3-year-olds in North America with an imposing 1:50 2/5 score in the third of three $60,000 (Cdn) divisions of the Somebeachsomewhere at Woodbine Mohawk Park on Saturday night. The son of Sportswriter, sent off as the 3-2 second choice, left favored Lost In Time in the dust on the final turn and coasted home impressively for driver Louis-Philippe Roy. Jimmy Freight jetted from post seven to the front and had command through a 26 second opening quarter. Before the half favored Lost In Time began a methodical first-over assault, followed by Pedro Hanover and Levis Day in the outer tier.  After a half in 55 2/5 the pace accelerated through last turn, and Lost In Time had trouble handling the curve, allowing the leader to open up an insurmountable advantage. Jimmy Freight followed the 27 2/5 third quarter with a 27 3/5 final kicker and maintained a large lead to the wire. Once straightened away Lost In Time gamely held the place spot while When You Dance advanced inside for the show spot. "When I saw him open up on the final turn I was hoping he had enough gas to finish," said winning owner Adriano Sorella, who purchased Jimmy Freight from the Iowa Fairs last year. "When we bought him last year he wasn't staked to much. We decided to stake him a little bit this year." Sorella didn't make the payments for the North America Cup. "I've made a lot of stakes payments over the years that didn't work out," he remarked. Jimmy Freight has now won three of his four starts this year for trainer Richard Moreau. Lather Up and Montrell Teague were afforded the ultimate in respect and didn't disappoint as the 1-10 favorite in the second Somebeachsomewhere division. The Ohio-sired son of I'm Gorgeous strolled to the front and rated the mile within himself, scoring in 1:50 3/5 at the expense of St Lads Neptune and Scouts Report. Lather Up, now unbeaten in four starts as a sophomore, had the quarter in 27 seconds and Teague deftly set middle-half fractions of 55 4/5 and 1:23 4/5 with little dispute. Only St Lads Neptune and driver Jody Jamieson were in the hunt, and that pair closed in strongly late to be second and nearly lapped-on the winner. The 1:50 3/5 clocking was slower than the 1:49 1/5 mile paced by Lather Up last week, but it was just as impressive. "He won just as easy," said Teague. "The plugs were in." Clyde Francis trains the homebred for owners Gary and Barbara Iles. Lather Up has come a long way since a disappointing 1:59 qualifying effort at Harrah's Philadelphia in April. "Dad (George Teague) changed the bit on him and he straightened out," said Teague of the adjustment that has led the family to another strong North America Cup contender. In the first Somebeachsomewhere division favorite Nutcracker Sweet cut intense fractions, leaving second choice Summer Travel hung out to dry from post ten. The speed took its toll on both as 28-1 shot Burning Midnight rallied boldly from fourth-over cover to get up on the wire for driver Trevor Henry. Finding a seam between horses at 59-1 was Simple Kinda Man, who finished ahead of Grand Teton, with more than half the field lapped-on each other at the wire. Nutcracker Sweet was parked past the 27 second opening quarter by Hidden Delight, then rolled to the half in 54 2/5, leaving Summer Travel and Roy parked and not pressing aggressively. After a three-quarter clocking in 1:22 1/5, driver Tim Tetrick called on the pace-maker for more and found the tank nearly empty. That set up a calvary charge, eventually won the by 3-year-old son of Mach Three trained by Corey Gilies and owned by Brad Gray and Denise Guerriero. The 1:50 4/5 mile was a career-best for the Ontario-sired gelding and gave his connections all the information they needed to march forward into the North America Cup. "He's in," said Giles. "I told Trevor before the race that he can go for a piece if you keep him brave."