Six Pack lowered his own world record for a 3-year-old colt trotter on a mile track and became the fastest sophomore trotter in harness racing history regardless of track size or sex by winning the $434,000 Kentucky Futurity final on Sunday evening at The Red Mile in 1:49 1/5. The stage was set for the final with a pair of eliminations earlier on the card, and they were won by Tactical Landing (Jimmy Takter) and Six Pack (Ake Svanstedt) in matching 1:50 2/5 miles.  One horse (Fashionwoodchopper) scratched from the final, leaving nine to contest the big-money event. Crystal Fashion (Tim Tetrick), who had finished third in Tactical Landing's elimination, would go to the front in the final, chopping out an opening quarter in 27 1/5.  Six Pack and Svanstedt got away third from the pole position, but made the decisive move down the backstretch, brushing and clearing as they passed the 54 4/5 half-mile marker. Svanstedt hit the gas pedal on the final bend, trotting a 26 3/5 third quarter to open up a gap on the field, and a 27 4/5 final kicker got him to the wire a length and three-quarters ahead of Crystal Fashion.  Met's Hall (Andy Miller ) was third, You Know You Do (Yannick Gingras) fourth, and Tactical Landing fifth. The 1:49 1/5 clocking bettered Six Pack's own clocking of 1:50 from earlier this year at the Meadowlands, and it also beat out fillies Plunge Blue Chip (Six Pack's stablemate) and Impinktoo, who had both gone 1:49 4/5. "It was amazing.  If he had company I could have gone faster.  He's lazy when he's alone," said Svanstedt.  "I was surprised he was going so fast with no one coming.  He did a very good race.  When I came to the front he felt very good, and in the last turn I had a lot of horse in my hands.  I pulled the shoes for the second heat.  He couldn't race two times with no shoes. "No, it doesn't make up for the Hambletonian (where Six Pack had an adventurous trip and didn't make the final).  The Hambletonian is the Hambletonian." Svanstedt trains Six Pack, a Muscle Mass colt, for owners Ake Svanstedt Inc., Little E LLC., Stall Kalmar Ff, and Lars Berg.  Six Pack now has 13 career wins and his career earnings surged past the $1 million mark.  He was the 7-5 favorite in the final, and he paid $4.80 to win. "I've hooked up with some good trainers, and it's made a big difference," said Jeff Gural of Little E LLC.  "I basically take pieces of horses, and it gives me a better chance instead of owning five or six myself I own a piece of 20.  The hard part is to guess which ones.  Ake buys a bunch of horses and he says 'which ones do you want?'  It's just a guess, so it's a little bit of luck.  "I will say this about Ake, last year after he won the sire stakes championship at Yonkers, he was eligible to the Valley Victory at the Meadowlands.  When I saw that he wasn't in, I thought 'gee, what happened?'  I called him, and he said 'he's fine, but I think this is a Hambletonian horse, and I don't think we should race him two more starts.'  For someone to be able to tell a horse is a Hambletonian horse at two is pretty good horsemanship.  He's a great trainer." Gural also explained how he ended up with horses in Svanstedt's barn. "I was at Lexington at the sale arena, and he bought a horse of mine," he recalled.  "I didn't know who he was.  Usually if I see somebody nearby that buys a horse I walk over and say 'good luck.'  His son was there with him, and I said 'I think I read about some famous trainer from Sweden coming, this must be him.'  I said to him, 'if you want I'll take 25 percent of the horse, and if you want I'll take a piece of other horses.'  I figured Takter's got owners that have been with him for a long time and Burke also.  I figured the guy is coming to America, he's going to be looking for owners, and I'll get in on the ground floor.  We've had a lot of good horses together.  "One of the better decisions I've made, but really it's luck because if he didn't buy that horse off of me, I probably would have never met him.  I didn't know who he was, but I asked Per Eriksson and Takter 'should I buy horses?,' and they both said 'yes, he's a top trainer in Sweden.'  That's good enough for me."