Sundees Son even went two seconds faster than Copy That paced winning the New Zealand Cup on Tuesday, and while the latter was slowed by a cold day and controlled drive, Sundees Son's time was one of the great performances of his gait in this part of the world, earning him a mention in the conversation with Lyell Creek, Maori's Idol and a few others.
"I have never gone into a race more confident with him, so that's why I drove him like I did," said John Dunn, whose family stable trained the quinella with Mataderos, with Bolt For Brilliance 10 lengths away third.
Dunn's drive was a beautiful cocktail of confidence, arrogance and daring.
He could easily have led and dawdled and trotted his last 800m on the lightning fast Addington track in 55 seconds and still won.
But he wanted to sap the sprint out of second favourite Muscle Mountain and he just asked his little horse to go faster and Sundees Son revelled in the challenge.
Just where Sundees Son ends up on the all-time list of New Zealand's greatest trotters, which lives in the imposing shadow of Lyell Creek, may be decided over the next year.
As brutal as he was, there was also raw bravery on display yesterday as Pukekohe pacer South Coast Arden refused to be beaten in the $200,000 NZ Free-For-All.
The Brent Mangos-trained pacer led easily but was attacked by Laver and left a sitting duck for Self Assured, who sprinted past him at the top of the straight but South Coast Arden rallied for a new career high.
"He was gone at the 300m but I just held on to him and asked him for one more effort. That was pretty special," said driver Natalie Rasmussen.
South Coast Arden will return north on Tuesday to Mangos, who was trapped in Auckland and couldn't travel south for the race.
Mangos says he would love to take the giant pacer to Sydney at the end of summer to try to win the Miracle Mile.