Warrawee Ubeaut, harness racing's fastest 2-year-old ever, added Breeders Crown champion to her resume with a 1:52 3/5 performance over the sloppy going in the $600,000 2-Year-Old Filly Pace final on Saturday night at The Downs at Mohegan Sun Pocono. The action in this race was hot and heavy pretty much from the word 'go' as there were four leaders in the first half.  First it was Queen Of The Pride (Tony Hall), who took the field to the 26 2/5 opening quarter, but she would be challenged and overtaken by Zero Tolerance (David Miller) past that point.  Zero Tolerance then cut loose St Somewhere (Matt Kakaley), who then released Warrawee Ubeaut (Yannick Gingras) passing the 54 2/5 half. Despite the off going, Warrawee Ubeaut kept the tempo quick up the backstretch getting to three-quarters in 1:22 4/5.  That meant first-up Presicent Beauty (Doug McNair) couldn't really threaten her at that point, and second-over second choice Tall Drink Hanover (Andrew McCarthy) appeared to be struggling and gapping the cover.  Around the final turn Prescient Beauty started to get closer to Warrawee Ubeaut, and McNair was actually able to guide her down to the pocket for a tuck late on the bend before bringing her back to the outside. Through the lane Warrawee Ubeaut was asked by Gingras, and she dug in under urging while Presicent Beauty tried to charge to the outside and Zero Tolerance shot the passing lane.  At the wire Warrawee Ubeaut was still on top, winning by about half a length over Zero Tolerance.  Prescient Beauty was a good third from post eight, with Beautyonthebeach (Tim Tetrick) fourth and St Somewhere fifth. "She's a gutsy filly.  Honestly last week the only thing that got her beat was a bad drive," said Gingras.  "I drove her as badly as a guy could drive a horse.  I told the girl that takes care of her 'don't worry about it.  Since we drew a good post I'll get the job done next week in the final.  I only told her; I'm not as ballsy as Dave Miller (before the Little Brown Jug) and tell the whole world, but I was very confident in the filly. "It just worked out in the first turn.  I had Tall Drink Hanover, who was the horse to beat, and I could keep her locked in and move with the flow.  It worked out anyway because the horse is a great filly, but no it did not play out anything like I expected." Ron Burke trains Warawee Ubeaut, who was bred by Warrawee Farm, is out of the Apaches Fame mare Great Memories, and sold for $70,000 at last year's Lexington Selected Yearling Sale, for owners Burke Racing Stable LLC., Phillip Collura, Jandt Silva Purnel & Libb, and Weaver Bruscemi LLC.  Warrawee Ubeaut has seven wins from 11 tries, and she has now earned $602,393.  She was the even-money favorite and paid $4.00 to win. "It was a weird race, how it set up. Usually you’re not moving from seventh to first from the quarter, but I think Yannick recognized an opportunity to put other horses in bad spots and made a good move," offered Burke.  "She didn’t pace home that great, but she fought to the wire and dhe had been used hard. It’s a victory. I think it shows she’s a resilient horse and down the road she will be a very, very good horse. "I’m torn. She has the Matron and the Three Diamonds. I’m definitely skipping the Matron. I’m 50-50 on the Three Diamonds. I’ve got to decide what I’m doing. I might shut her down, I might go to the Three Diamonds." "I was happy. The post kind of hurt us. I thought my filly could race and win, but you knew it would be who got the trip," said Joe Holloway, trainer of Zero Tolerance.  "Warrawee Ubeaut got a little bit better trip than we did. But no excuses, you’ve got to race them. She got stung a little bit the first quarter, 26 2/5 is not easy. It’s not like it’s a super-fast track. But everyone had to go over the same track. Overall, I’m happy with my horse’s performance and I’m happy with her year." Trainer Gregg McNair was third and fourth with Presicent Beauty and Beautyonthebeach and he remarked, "I thought we were second, but they (Prescient Beauty and Beautyonthebeach) both raced good. The one mare grinded it out first up and the other mare had to come from a fair ways back and raced big too. Going in, if you told me we would be third and fourth I’d have been very happy. So I’m happy."