Sister Troienne Much The Best in Wait A While S. at Gulfstream Park

Sunday, November 30, 2025

Woodslane Farm homebred Sister Troienne rolled past longshot Day to Day in the stretch and went on to a popular three-length victory in the $100,000 Wait a While for 2-year-old fillies.

The 12th running of the Wait a While headlined an eight-race Thanksgiving Day holiday program that marked the opening of the 2025-2026 Championship Meet featuring 68 stakes, 27 graded, worth $15.2 million in purses.

Early afternoon rain forced the Wait a While, carded for 7½ furlongs on the grass, to the all-weather Tapeta course at one mile and 70 yards. The winning time was 1:40.53.

It was the third straight win for Sister Troienne ($3.40) in her stakes debut. Like her six rivals, she was racing on Tapeta for the first time. She was foaled at Hidden Brook Farm for longtime clients Woodslane Farm and was prepped for her racing career at Hidden Brook Florida.

“There’s always concern [when] you’re backing her up in distance and it’s a new surface,” Lynch said. “There’s a lot of concern, but she’s a beautiful, big, sound filly and she’s always acted like she’s got a lot of talent so it was worth taking a chance.”

Day to Day, sent off at 25-1, raced uncontested on an early lead, going the opening quarter-mile in 25.25 seconds tracked by Backgammon in second with rider Mario Gutierrez and Sister Troienne racing in the clear three wide in third. The pace picked up slightly with a half-mile in 48.73 as Day to Day clung to the lead while R Slew of Cash, Backgammon and Sister Troienne competed on even terms for second.

Day to Day held second, followed by R Slew of Cash, Amberglen, Backgammon, Slippers and Devilish Grin. Our Dear Peggy winner Spirit Doll, Haute Diva, Special Wood and also-eligible Girvana were scratched.

Sister Troienne, a daughter of Munnings out of the Lemon Drop Kid mare Dyna Passer, began her career on dirt, finishing third in a six-furlong maiden special weight Aug. 23 at Ellis Park. She won her next two tries, on the turf at Churchill Downs and Keeneland, by eight combined lengths – all with Gutierrez aboard.

“Mario felt like she would be a lot closer than she has in her previous races, so it worked out perfectly,” Lynch said. “Out of a Lemon Drop Kid mare, she acts like she wants to run a mile and a quarter down the road. We all know when the [Tapeta] gets a little bit wet it can be tiring, and it suits route horses a little bit better. It worked out good today.”

Lynch mentioned the $150,000 Ginger Brew for 3-year-old fillies going one mile on the turf Jan. 3 as a possible next start for Sister Troienne. Her win was the second on the day for Lynch, who won 17 of 106 races and more than $1 million in purses during last winter’s Championship Meet.

“This is where my winter base is, and I love coming back here. We had a good summer and it’s great to just finish off the year like we’re doing it,” Lynch said. “The Ginger Brew would be on the radar. Then you try to look after her during the winter here and point her toward a good spring campaign and hopefully she stays nice and healthy.”

The Wait a While honors the Arindel homebred mare that won 12 of 24 starts and more than $2.1 million in purses from 2005-08. Ten of her 11 stakes wins came in graded company, three of them Grade 1, as well as the 2006 Davona Dale (G2) and 2007 Honey Fox (G3) at Gulfstream Park.

-edited from www.paulickreport.com