Percy Bluechip might have been racing for different connections than she was in last year's C$225,000 Ontario Sires Stakes Super Final for 2-year-old pacing fillies, but the result was the same Saturday night at Woodbine Mohawk Park as she defended her title with a 1:52 win in the race for sophomore filly pacers. Driven by Yannick Gingras, Percy Bluechip was on point through fractions of 27 1/5, 55 4/5, and 1:24 1/5, then dug in under urging through the lane and won by a length over a rallying Kendall Seelster (Randy Waples).  Quints Dream (Joe Hudon) collected third. "I thought she raced good," stated Gingras.  "I thought maybe she'd kick clear a little easier in the stretch, but it's cold and I'm not sure the front has been that good all night.  She dug in and got the job done." Previously campaigned by Dr. Ian Moore for owners Shadow Two Stable, James & Wilma MacKenzie and Hudson Standardbred Stable Inc., Percy Bluechip was making her third start for trainer Ron Burke and owners Burke Racing Stable LLC., Weaver Bruscemi LLC., Purnel And Libby LLC., and Donald Emond.  The daughter of Shadow Play scored her ninth career win, and she has now earned C$710,829.  She paid $3.50 to win. In the Super Final for 3-year-old colt and gelding pacers, Jimmy Freight (Louis-Philippe Roy) won in 1:50 2/5.  Jimmy Freight pulled first-up from sixth going to the 55 4/5 half, and got side-by-side with fellow Richard Moreau trainee Backstreet Shadow (Gingras) at the 1:23 3/5 three-quarters.  The Moreau trainees raced in close quarters through the lane, briefly hooking wheels at one point, but Jimmy Freight overcame the long outside trip and the tight racing, winning by half a length.  Backstreet Shadow wound up second, and St Lads Neptune (Jody Jamieson) was elevated from fourth to third after original third-place finisher The Downtown Bus (Doug McNair) was deemed to have caused interference in the lane.  "It's not the driver, it's the horse that did it tonight," said Roy. Moreau trains Jimmy Freight, a Sportswriter colt, for owner Adriano Sorella.  Jimmy Freight made his 16th appearance in the winner's circle, and he pushed his bankroll to C$877,791.  He returned $4.50 to win. "This horse has been gutsy all year-round," said Sorella. "He's been on a truck and trailer a lot this year, so that gutsy performance there, it was all horse. Run Director (Sylvain Filion) was also out a long time in the Super Final for sophomore trotting males, but ended up with a 1:54 2/5 score.  After being outside the entire mile, Run Director caught a break on the far turn as he was able to duck in behind leader Stormont Ventnor (Phil Hudon) going to the 1:25 4/5 three-quarters.  After the tuck, Filion angled his charge back out for the drive, and he was able to out-foot Stormont Ventnor, winning by a length and a half.  Jula Downton (Chris Christoforou) was a long ways back in third. "I was just taking it easy out there, and man he raced good.  He raced awesome," said Filion.  "We were out there the whole mile, so I thought maybe we could duck him behind Phil a bit, braven him up, and give him another shot down the lane.  He just responded real good." The victorious Kadabra colt is trained by Ben Baillargeon for breeders/owners Tom and Elizabeth Rankin.  After just one successful start as a rookie, Run Director has a record of 6-4-1 from 15 appearances this year, good for C$394,955 in the bank.  He paid $3.30 to win. "He's eligible to the Breeders Crown and we might take a shot.  I'll see how he comes out on Monday," offered Baillargeon. The Super Final for sophomore trotting fillies began the card, and it was 16-1 shot Smoke And Mirrors (Trevor Henry) pulling the upset with a 1:55 3/5 mile. The complexion of the race changed early when favored Sorceress Seelster (Scott Wray) made a break.  That allowed Smoke And Mirrors to make front, lead through easy fractions of 29 2/5, 58 2/5, and 1:27, and win by 2 3/4 lengths over Superlative (Waples).  Illusioneesta (Christoforou) got third. "It didn't hurt when the favorite made a break," remarked winning trainer Richard "Nifty" Norman.  "Obviously we were planning to follow her, but they weren't going much and she made a break.  That left us on a soft lead, got away with a soft middle-half there, and finished it off.  She raced really good, probably her best run of the year.  It was a good night to show up. "She's been disappointing all year.  She's run a lot of times going for good money and let us down.  She was in a good spot tonight with the rail, and I know she trained really good during the week.  She looks fantastic.  She doesn't look like she's had a long year, so I was really happy with her when I got here the other day.  All credit goes to Anthony (Haughan) and Meg (Crone).  They do a fantastic job for me, and they really did a good job with her this week." Norman trains Smoke And Mirrors, a daughter of Kadabra, for co-owner/breeder David McDuffee and co-owners Mel Hartman and Little E LLC.  This was her fourth career victory, and she has now earned C$370,219.  She returned $34.10 to win.