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Sports

THE RUMBLE

Horsefella

Pesci’s filly is won for one

Actor Joe Pesci had a successful day at Keeneland racetrack Wednesday as Teriffany, a two-year-old filly he bred and owns in partnership, won her career debut in the fifth race. Teriffany is by 2000 Kentucky Derby winner Fusaichi Pegasus out of the mare Pesci, a horse the actor raced, still owns, and is pictured with . Trained by 1984 Eclipse award winning apprentice jockey Wesley Ward, Teriffany won by 1½ lengths, running the 4½ furlongs in 50.93 seconds. The following race was not as fortunate for Terryhowieandjimmy. The three-year-old colt is owned by Paul Ross, an Oklahoma businessman and owner of the Tulsa Talons of the Arena Football League. He named the horse in honor of Terry Bradshaw, Howie Long and Jimmy Johnson, the co-hosts of the Fox NFL pregame show. The 3-year-old colt battled for the early lead before grudgingly giving way in the stretch to finish fourth, beaten 13/4 lengths.

Tim Rooney, the president of Empire City Gaming at Yonkers Raceway, will be honored by the N.Y.C. Chapter of the U.S. Harness Writers Association with the “Man of the Half Century” award. He is being given the award for his many contributions to the standardbred game at its 50th Anniversary gala next Sunday night in the Good Time Room. Rooney, also a prominent horse owner and breeder, will be joined as honorees by the legendary “Red Man,” Carmine Abbatiello, cited as Driver of the Half Century, and longtime Yonkers employee Rosa Ferreira, who has served notably for two decades to GM Bob Galterio as executive assistant, receiving the Kay Cisco Award.

Gravy train

Though he is known as a quiet and Thumble person, Adam Graves still has a cult following among Rangers diehards. While riding the N.J. Transit train from Newark after returning from the Rangers’ Game 1 victory over the Devils, some of the Blueshirt faithful spotted their legend. In a matter of minutes, the entire train started chanting “Ad-am Graves!” and then broke into a chorus of “Happy Birthday.” Graves, whose No. 9 will be the next jersey to hang from the Garden rafters, graciously responded by walking up and down the train cars signing autographs and taking photos with the fans.

Hey, where’s Earl?

Everyone knows Earl Monroe’s nickname as “Earl The Pearl,” but he had another moniker – “Puffasmoke.” During a “20 Questions” segment with MSG Network’s Jill Martin, Monroe admitted he wasn’t always punctual for the team flight and got the nickname because, “I wouldn’t be there and then would suddenly appear.”

Martin: “How many team planes did you miss?”

Monroe: “Maybe about 5 or 6 . . . a year.”

Martin: “How many times did a plane have to come back and get you?”

Monroe: “A couple of times.”

The free food at the Garden on Monday night wasn’t satisfying enough for Jared Jeffries and Malik Rose. After their final home game of the season, the Knicks headed over to STK in the Meatpacking District where they dined separately on skirt steaks and rib eyes. While Rose’s table ordered champagne, undoubtedly to celebrate the merciful end of the home season, Jeffries stuck to pineapple juice.

Winnin’ ‘the Vin’

It will be a throwback to the old Brooklyn Dodgers when their Hall of Fame voice Vin Scully is honored by WFUV Radio with an award that will forever bear his name – the Vin Scully Lifetime Achievement Award in Sports Broadcasting – on April 29 at Sotheby’s auction house. Scully will be presented with the honor by his dear pal, Dodgers right-hander Ralph Branca. Branca and his wife Ann have been close friends with Scully since 1950, when the dulcet-toned announcer was a Fordham neophyte working on the air with his mentor, the great Red Barber. Other honorees at the inaugural spring gala: CBS Sunday Morning host Charles Osgood, another WFUV product, and Grammy Award-winning artist Emmylou Harris, who also will perform. For tickets contact Arienne Orozco, (212) 675-9474 or [email protected].

Artfully done

Yankees consultant Ray Negron showed singer Tony Bennett, who’s also a gifted artist, the sketches for his forthcoming HarperCollins book, “The Greatest Story Never Told,” about Babe Ruth and Jackie Robinson. San Francisco’s Laura Seeley did the sketches. Bennett quipped: “I left my art in San Francisco.”

That’s the ticket!

David Wright hasn’t forgotten his childhood. That’s why the Mets third baseman is happy to announce a ticket program that will help deserving children attend games at Shea this season.

The David Wright Foundation 5* Kids program offers 30 tickets, Mets Money, and signature T-shirts to a variety of organizations that aid sick and underprivileged kids.

“I remember how much I idolized major leagues players when I was growing up,” said the 25-year-old Wright. “The purpose of our program to is to offer the experience of going out to the park to kids who might never get the chance.”

The first group to attend a Mets game courtesy of Wright will be children from NYU Neonatal Intensive Care Unit Community of Care, who will be at Friday night’s game against the Braves. The kids will participate in an on-field ceremony, and a representative of the group will throw out the first pitch. Other organizations that will be attending games this season are Madison Square Boys and Girls Club, Sheehan Youth Center, Kids In Crisis, Boys Hope/Girls Hope, Muscular Dystrophy Association, Grenville Baker Boys and Girls Club, Harlem Children Zone, Police Benevolent Association, Sergeant Benevolent Association, Tuesday’s Children, Stamford Boys and Girls Club, Achilles Kids and the Metropolitan Golf Association.

“I know there is more to this game than what goes on the field,” Wright said. “About a month before I came to the majors I had a nice talk with Scott Rolen about the responsibilities of a major league player. He just told me that as a player, you can make a difference in a kid’s life, and that’s what I am trying to do.”

Duaner had help

Duaner Sanchez, who returned to the Mets this week after a 20-month rehab from a shoulder injury suffered in an early-morning taxi accident, said the credit goes to Randy Niemann, the team’s minor league rehabilitation coordinator.

“It’s kind of lonely down there in [Port St. Lucie] Florida,” Sanchez said. “You are away from family, friends and teammates, and there are times you don’t think it’s worth it. Randy never let me pack it in, and for that I’ll always be grateful.”

Said Niemann: “People don’t realize what he went through. I know there were times he didn’t think he would make it. When he got to the mound this week, it was like watching one of my kids walk for the first time.