History was made in the $600,000 Breeders Crown 2-Year-Old Colt Pace on Friday night at Harrah's Hoosier Park as the first dead-heat in a final in the event's history occured when the camera could not separate Perfect Sting and Summa Cum Laude.  Perfect Sting's share of the victory improved his record to ten wins from ten starts. The colts came out with all guns blazing right away as Perfect Sting (David Miller) and Southwind Gendry (Yannick Gingras), the two elimination winners, smoked an opening quarter in 25 3/5, with Southwind Gendry landing on the point.  Miller decided he didn't want to sit, though, and brought Perfect Sting to the outside.  He paced up to and then around Southwind Gendry, clearing as they passed the half in 54 1/5. Perfect Sting successfully dealt with a first-over attack from Abuckabett Hanover (Andrew McCarthy) on the final turn, and then that foe broke stride just before the 1:22 4/5 three-quarters, jamming up the outer tier a bit and allowing Perfect Sting to turn for home first.  However, the horses on the inside began to fan out and look for room in the lane, setting the stage for a thrilling finish. Southwind Gendry had dead-aim at Perfect Sting after angling out two-wide from the pocket, but when he came up to the leader, Perfect Sting responded and managed to hold him off, and Perfect Sting also did the same to Indiana Sires Stakes Super Final winner JK Going West, who had swung out three-wide from third.  While those two challengers were getting the cold shoulder, Summa Cum Laude and Sears, who had tucked in fourth from post six, then waited on the inside and gotten shuffled back some on the final bend, were finishing full of pace on the far outside late, and it was desperately close when they hit the wire.  After a lengthy look at the photo, it was determined that Perfect Sting and Summa Cum Laude had tied for the victory, with Southwind Gendry a head back in third.  JK Going West was fourth, and Caviart Lotus (Tim Tetrick), one of the horses in the cover flow that was bothered by the breaking Abuckabett Hanover, ended up fifth. "As soon as Yannick crossed over, he grabbed up pretty good.  He was going to get a real easy middle-half, so I said 'You know what?  I'm going to take my chance going down swinging,' so I moved back," stated Miller about the decision to take Perfect Sting to the point in the backstretch.  "I thought all the way until that flagpole right there that we were home-free, but then at the last second I saw the other horse come up on the outside." "I was just trying to take what I could get out of the gate, be as aggressive as possible, and they were pushing out of there pretty good," said Sears about his strategy.  "Getting away fourth wasn't, I didn't think, the worst spot.  Yannick was pushing the pace a little bit going to the half.  I thought LeWayne's horse could follow along pretty good.  I sat in fourth, figured I'd be able to shake loose, and I was following the right horses.  It worked out. "I was just counting them as I was going by.  I knew I was closing in, and the stretch is really long here, so I thought I was never quite out of it until it was over." Joe Holloway trains Perfect Sting, a homebred for Brittany Farms LLC. and Val D'Or Farms.  Perfect Sting is a colt by Always B Miki and his dam is the world champion Bettor's Delight mare Shebestingin (1:47, $759,522).  Perfect Sting returned $2.20 to win and was the 1-2 favorite. "It means a lot.  I had the mother and the father.  We talked the talk early and said he was going to be the best, and he backed it up," remarked Holloway.  "He raced really huge tonight.  Early on, I said that this could be the best I ever had, and I think he's proven it.  None of my others ever went undefeated at 2." Summa Cum Laude, a Somebeachsomewhere colt, is trained by Ron Burke for owners Burke Racing Stable LLC., Phil Collura, J&T Silva- Purnel & Libby, and Weaver Bruscemi LLC.  Summa Cum Laude, a $260,000 acquisition at last year's Standardbred Horse Sale, now sports a record of 4-5-0 from 13 starts, and he is out of the Western Hanover mare Western Graduate (1:51 1/5, $1,305,072), making him a full brother to I'm Some Graduate (1:50 2/5, $532,993).  He returned $11.20 to win after being sent off at 21-1. "These are the best of the best, and these 2-year-olds are just getting better and better every year.  These guys just go now," said assistant trainer Mickey Burke Jr.  "(Brian) just did a great job.  He got the horse angled out, the other two horses were racing great, and then for him to come up and catch them is an accomplishment."