Woodside Charm and Verlin Yoder didn't have to travel to the New York Sire Stakes Final to win a major race this weekend, as the freshman daughter of Chapter Seven was dominant in a 1:55 triumph in the $236,000 Kentuckiana Stallion Management event Friday night at Hoosier Park. Woodside Charm overcame post eight by leaving alertly and taking control from second choice Starita early on the opening bend. After a 27-second flat opening quarter, Yoder had no trouble rating his filly through fractions of 58 1/5 and 1:27 3/5 with little in the way of real threats forming on the outside. Woodside Charm turned it up while bearing out a bit in early stretch, and Yoder did not move a muscle as the powerful filly strode out effortlessly through a 27 2/5 final quarter. Special Honor rallied late to nail the place spot ahead of Starita. Sent off as a 1-5 favorite, Woodside Charm won for the fifth time in as many starts for Yoder, who doubles as trainer and owner of the filly. Lightly staked this season, Yoder looked out at the next four weeks with Woodside Charm. "We'll see how it goes. I might have to qualifier her," Yoder said, likely pointing the filly towards Breeders Crown eliminations a month from now. The win pushed Woodside Charm's first-year bank account over the $200,000 mark. Warrawee Ubeaut made up for a mistake in last week's She's A Great Lady trials with a powerhouse performance in the $207,000 Jate Lobell (Kentuckiana Stallion Management) for freshman pacing fillies. The filly from the first crop of Sweet Lou sprinted home in 25 3/5 off a pocket trip to score in a 1:51 3/5 mile. Yannick Gingras pushed Warrawee Ubeaut to the lead quickly before yielding readily to the 4-5 favorite Zero Tolerance prior to the 27 2/5 opening quarter. The favorites remained in line through the 56 1/5 half, but Gingras, sensing the slowness of the impending 1:25 4/5 three-quarters clocking, pulled pocket early and roared right on past the favorite entering the homestretch. Dave Miller tried to keep Zero Tolerance in contention, but she was clearly no match, finishing second. Pace Baby Pace followed the top pair home for third. Ron Burke trains Warrawee Ubeaut, a now a five-time winner in 2018, for owners Burke Racing, Collura, J & T Silva, Purnel & Libby and Weaver Bruscemi. "We don't know what happened last week," said Jerry Silva following the race. "But she made up for it tonight." Fresh off a solid victory in the Pennsylvania Sire Stakes championship, Proof was effortless in capturing the $120,000 Elevation for juvenile male pacers. Scott Zeron wore the familiar colors of Diamond Creek Farm to the 1:52 victory as the 1-10 betting choice. Proof, a son of A Rocknroll Dance, took a seat early as Loutenant blasted to the early lead but moved before the 26 4/5 opening panel to gain control. Zeron rated the half and three-quarters to fractions of 56 1/5 and 1:25, with Actor Hanover applying mild pressure on the turn. Proof was well in-hand through the lane, drawing off with a 27-second flat final quarter as Loutenant rallied for second, with Pure Rock earning the final board position. Brian Brown trains Proof for owner-breeder Diamond Creek Farms. Proof won for the fifth time in seven career starts, upping his first year earnings to $272,591. "He tries hard and that's 90 percent," said Brown following the race.