Clayton, Filly Curlin’s Voyage Take On 12 Rivals In Saturday’s Queen’s Plate

Plate Trial champ Clayton and multiple stakes-winning filly Curlin's Voyage will take on 12 other Queen's Plate hopefuls in the $1 million classic set for 1 ¼ miles on the Woodbine Tapeta this Saturday.

The 161st edition of the Queen's Plate, North America's oldest continually run race, is the first leg of the OLG Canadian Triple Crown, a tri-surface series for Canadian-bred three-year-olds.

Wando, bred and owned by the late Gustav Schickedanz, was the last horse to accomplish the feat while becoming the seventh to record the unique triple in 2003. The $400,000 Prince of Wales, run at 1 3/16 miles on the dirt at Fort Erie on September 29, is the second leg. The $400,000 Breeders' Stakes, at 1 ½ miles over the world-renowned E.P. Taylor Turf Course at Woodbine on October 24, concludes the series.

The double-draw format was in place for Wednesday's virtual post position draw, with the order of selection first established and the connections then choosing their post positions. The connections of Glorious Tribute selected first and chose post seven.

This year's edition of the Queen's Plate showcases an intriguing mix of heavyweight contenders, live longshots and emerging stars. Fillies will carry 123 pounds, while all other starters carry 126 pounds.

A son of Bodemeister, Clayton has three wins and one second from four starts for owners Donato Lanni and Daniel Plouffe.

Trained by Kevin Attard, who also sends out the filly Merveilleux, the bay colt arrives at the Plate in sharp form, having won two straight, including the Plate Trial on August 15.

Bred by Bernard and Karen McCormack, Clayton will be piloted by Rafael Hernandez, who won the 2015 Plate with Shaman Ghost.

Attard, who finished second with the late Steve Stavro homebred Alezzandro in the 2007 running, likes what he sees ahead of the big race.

“He's been special from the get-go,” praised Attard. “He was an impressive maiden winner, so once that happened, the bell starts ringing in your head, and you're saying, 'Hey, maybe I've got a good three-year-old here.' He followed it up with a good race first time out this year – didn't win but had traffic trouble – and I think he learned a lot. That was encouraging. Obviously, he's won his last two since then and stretched out. He's doing everything you want him to. Hopefully, he just needs to get a little bit better one more time and maybe he can put everything together.”

Curlin's Voyage, who took this year's running of the $500,000 Woodbine Oaks presented by Budweiser, could deliver Canadian Horse Racing Hall of Fame inductee Josie Carroll her third Plate victory.

Carroll, who won the Queen's Plate with filly Inglorious in 2011 and with Edenwold in 2006, will also have Belichick and Mighty Heart go postward in her quest to net the hat trick.

Named champion two-year-old filly in Canada, Curlin's Voyage is bred by Hill 'n' Dale Equine Holdings, Inc., who co-owns with Windsor Boys Racing.

What's impressed Carroll the most when it comes to the filly that sports a 5-2-1 mark from nine career outings?

“Her consistency. She finds a way to get it done. She always shows up and she's a very, very special filly.”

The multiple stakes winning daughter of Curlin will seek to become fourth filly to win the Queen's Plate in the last seven years.

Over the last 10 years, three Oaks winners have gone on to win the Plate: Inglorious, Lexie Lou (2014) and Holy Helena (2017).

“We've always thought very highly of her after her two-year-old debut,” praised Carroll, of Curlin's Voyage. “She's a very uncomplicated filly and does everything you ask of her.”

Patrick Husbands, who won the Canadian Triple Crown with Wando in 2003, and the 2014 Plate with Lexie Lou, will be in the irons.

Halo Again, trained by Steve Asmussen for Winchell Thoroughbreds and Willis Horton Racing, knows the Woodbine main track well.

Last year, the son of Speightstown took the Coronation Futurity Stakes. This year, the bay colt won the Queenston Stakes, and most recently, finished a game second, a half-length back of Clayton, in the Plate Trial.

“We feel very good about his chances,” said Asmussen. “I thought he stayed on nicely [in the Plate Trial]. He came out of the race in great shape.”

Jockey Luis Contreras, who teamed with Inglorious to win the 2011 Plate, and partnered Holy Helena to victory in 2017, could give Asmussen his first win in the “Gallop for the Guineas.”

Having never finished lower than fifth in eight career outings, Dotted Line will look to connect the dots for his biggest win to date this Saturday.

Bred and owned by Howard Walton (Norseman Racing Stable), the son of Signature Red has three career wins, including a 49-1 upset in last year's Frost King Stakes.

Dotted Line was third in the Plate Trial, just a shade over a half-length behind Clayton, with Justin Stein in the irons. The British Columbia-born rider won the 2012 Plate with Strait of Dover.

“He's a horse that always tries every time,” said Attard, who won the Atto Mile (G1) with Numerous Times in 2001 and the Northern Dancer Turf Stakes (G1) with Interpol in 2015. “He has run a lot of good races, and hopefully, he comes up with his biggest one on Saturday. He's coming around really nicely.”

Attard, who has started seven horses in the Queen's Plate – his best finish coming in 1992 when Grand Hooley finished second to Alydeed – also sends out Olliemyboy.

Owned by NK Racing and LNJ Foxwoods, Belichick arrives at the Queen's Plate off a second-place effort on August 1 in a 1 1/8-mile main track race at Woodbine.

Bred by Sean Fitzhenry, the bay colt is a son of 1999 Belmont Stakes winner and multiple graded stakes champ Lemon Drop Kid.

Belichick finished third in his career bow on July 4 at Woodbine.

“He came to me in Florida this winter,” noted Carroll. “He's a tremendous-moving horse that impressed from the start. We put the Plate on our radar right at that time. His first two starts, he was very green and unfocused, and he just now seems to be pulling it together. He's a horse that had enough talent to be given a chance in there [Plate].”

Bred by Josham Farms Limited, F F Rocket launches his Woodbine debut in the Plate.

Owned by Frank Fletcher Racing Operations Inc., the son of Curlin broke his maiden in his most recent start, a two-length triumph at 1 mile and 70 yards over Presque Isle Downs' main track.

The chestnut, trained by Albert Stall Jr. (he won the 2010 Breeders' Cup when Blame bested Zenyatta), debuted at Fair Grounds last December, before a pair of races at Oaklawn Park to start his three-year-old campaign.

Glorious Tribute, trained by Barbara Minshall for Bruce Lunsford, finished fourth in the Plate Trial at 62-1.

The son of Congrats, who was third to Halo Again in this year's Queenston Stakes, broke his maiden in the final start of his two-year-old campaign.

Minshall was Canada's champion trainer in 1996. Her top horses include Mt. Sassafras, Strut the Course, Kiridashi, Stephanotis and Stacked Deck. She became the first female conditioner to win a Triple Crown race – in both the U.S. and Canada – when Kiridashi won the Prince of Wales Stakes in 1995.

Holyfield will look to provide a knockout Plate punch for the combination of trainer Catherine Day Phillips and Kingfield Racing Stable Ltd., along with co-owners and breeders David Anderson and Rod Ferguson.

The son of Uncle Mo dug down gamely in a 1 1/16 mile turf race on August 22 at Woodbine, notching a head score at 9-1 to break his maiden.

Al and Bill Ulwelling's Merveilleux endured traffic troubles in the Woodbine Oaks, finishing a game third, 2 ¼ lengths behind Curlin's Voyage.

Fashioning a record of 2-3-1 from eight starts, the daughter of Paynter finished second, a neck and a head back, respectively, in last year's Princess Elizabeth Stakes and Ontario Lassie Stakes.

“I honestly think what has made her special is from day one of purchasing her she has been professional,” said Al Ulwelling. “What I mean is that she has just been all business. She loves her career, loves to train and compete. She has had a few tough beats and it's almost like it has bothered her. She's very smart and tries hard. She will be great addition to our broodmare band when all is said and done.”

Bred by Mike Carroll, the bay filly is trained by Kevin Attard. Kazushi Kimura, the 2018 and 2019 champion apprentice in Canada, and 2019 Eclipse Award winner as North America's top rider, gets the mount.

“Honestly, I just think she's just been a very unfortunate horse this year, racing luck wise,” said Attard. “Things haven't quite gone her way. I had high expectations for her in the Oaks. She showed a lot of talent at two and we were really excited to have her. With her, we considered the Plate right from the get-go. The mile and a quarter distance is not going to be an issue for her.

“She's just one horse that you're hoping on that day everything goes right for her and she finally gets a clear run, no obstacles, no hurdles – that way she can prove whether she's good enough or not and there's no excuses. She's doing very well and I'm quite please with her. Both horses [Merveilleux and Clayton] are coming into the race as good as I want them to be.”

The Ulwellings are thrilled at the opportunity to have a Plate starter.

“It means everything to us to have a horse in the Plate,” said Ulwelling. “When we started mapping a goal out four years ago, we set out on a mission to try to stay at Woodbine and run in as many big races as we can. When my father and I were getting a plan together, the race that always popped up was the Plate. We honestly just feel lucky to be competing in a race with so much history. We love Kevin, his family, Woodbine, and the people who work there. This will be our goal every year. We are ecstatic to be in the Plate.”

One-eyed Mighty Heart will be making his stakes debut in the Plate.

Bred and owned by Lawrence Cordes, the son of Dramedy has a win and a third from four career starts, those efforts coming in his past two starts.

On July 11, the Josie Carroll trainee broke outward, but recovered and went on to a 4 ¼-length victory at 1 1/16 miles over the Woodbine Tapeta.

“Mighty Heart is a horse that will definitely get the distance,” said Carroll. “He has improved leaps and bounds as he's learned. From his first two starts where he had no clue what he was doing, he's really become professional.”

A dark bay son of Union Rags, Olliemyboy recorded his first career win in his latest start, a two-length triumph at 1 1/8 miles over the Woodbine main track on August 1.

Owned by JMJ Racing Stables LLC, the Ontario-bred colt finished fourth in his debut at Tampa Bay Downs this March before heading north to Woodbine.

Steve Bahen, who won the 2002 Plate with 82-1 T J's Lucky Moon, will get the mount for the Plate for Hall of Fame trainer Sid Attard.

“It was a very good race,” said the trainer of the August 1 score. “He closed very strong and he was full of run. He is learning and getting better with each race. I think the distance is no problem for this horse.”

Trained by Dan Vella, who won the 1994 Plate with Basqueian and the 2012 edition with Strait of Dover, Sweepin Hard, a son of Conquest Curlinate, enters the biggest race of his career on a winning note.

Owned by Borders Racing Stable, Sweepin Hard notched a 1 ½-length score over 1 1/8 miles on the Toronto oval Tapeta on August 16.

Bred by Charles Hayden, the dark bay gelding was unraced at two.

Tecumseh's War, a dark bay son of Summer Front, won his debut last October at Indiana Downs.

Making his eighth career start in the Plate, the Catherine Day Phillips trainee finished second in his latest engagement, a 1 1/8 mile race over the Woodbine main track.

Emma-Jayne Wilson, who draws the riding assignment, is looking for her second “Gallop for the Guineas” victory with the Ilium Stable silk bearer. The champion rider won the 2007 Plate With Mike Fox.

Truebelieve, who sports a 2-1-0 mark from five starts, is owned by Centennial Farms (Niagara).

The bay son of Nephrite (GB), bred by Laurel Byrne, orchestrated a 64-1 score (for different connections) in his debut last November at Woodbine, crossing the wire a 1 ½-length winner at five furlongs on the Tapeta.

Trained by 23-year-old Manitoba native Cole Bennett, Truebelieve earned his second career win two starts ago when the colt rallied for a half-length victory at six furlongs over the Woodbine main track.

“I think… it's not proof to other people, but proof to myself that I can do this,” said Bennett. “I started training when I was really young. There was doubt from a lot of other people, but also from myself, in that you can make a living being a trainer and get to bigger places and run in bigger races. It was almost a pipe dream at one point. To be in this race, it really is a dream come true. To win it, that would be the ultimate.”

First race post time for Saturday is 12:30 p.m. (ET), with the featured Queen's Plate scheduled as race 10 (5:41 p.m.). The national Plate broadcast will be televised on TSN and CTV starting at 4:30 p.m.

For the latest information, fans can follow @WoodbineTB on both Twitter and Instagram, and visit QueensPlate.com.

FIELD FOR THE QUEEN'S PLATE

Post – Horse – Trainer – Owner – Jockey – Morning Line

1 – Sweepin Hard (S) – Daniel Vella – Borders Racing Stable – Leo Salles – 50-1

2 – Merveilleux – Kevin Attard – Al and Bill Ulwelling – Kazushi Kimura – 10-1

3 – Belichick – Josie Carroll – NK Racing & LNJ Foxwoods – Slade Callaghan – 30-1

4 – Truebelieve – Cole Bennett – Centennial Farms (Niagara) – Keveh Nicholls – 30-1

5 – Holyfield – Catherine Day Phillips – Kingfield Racing Stable, Roderick Ferguson & Anderson Farms Ontario – Darryll Holland – 30-1

6 – Halo Again – Steve Asmussen – Winchell Thoroughbreds & Willis Horton Racing – Luis Contreras – 5-1

7 – Glorious Tribute – Barbara Minshall – Bruce Lunsford – David Moran – 30-1

8 – Olliemyboy – Sid Attard – JMJ Racing Stables – Steven Bahen – 30-1

9 – Dotted Line – Sid Attard – Norseman Racing Stable – Justin Stein – 8-1

10 – Curlin's Voyage – Josie Carroll – Hill 'n' Dale Equine Holdings & Windsor Boys Racing – Patrick Husbands – 5-2

11 – F F Rocket – Albert Stall Jr. – Frank Fletcher Racing Operations – Sahin Civaci – 50-1

12 – Clayton – Kevin Attard – Donato Lanni & Daniel Plouffe – Rafael Hernandez – 2-1

13 – Mighty Heart – Josie Carroll – Lawrence Cordes – Daisuke Fukumoto – 20-1

14 – Tecumseh's War – Catherine Day Phillips – Ilium Stables – Emma-Jayne Wilson – 12-1

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TOBA Names Officers, Five New Trustees To Board

The Thoroughbred Owners and Breeders Association announced today the re-election of Brant Laue as chairman of its Board of Trustees. Also joining Laue on the Board of Trustees to serve three-year terms as new members are Shannon Bishop Arvin, Jeffrey Bloom, Marette Farrell, Dr. J. David Richardson and Stephen Screnci.

Re-elected to three-year terms were current trustees Robert Devlin, Terry Finley, Brant Laue, Bernard McCormack, Charlie O'Connor and Garrett O'Rourke.

“I am honored to serve another term as chair with this board of trustees,” Laue said. “Our great sport has overcome many obstacles and difficulties in the past, and with their help and support we will again.”

Following its annual members meeting, the TOBA Board of Trustees met to elect officers for the association. Officers named for 2020-2021 are: Brant Laue, chairman, David O'Farrell, vice-chairman, Dan Metzger, president; Doug Cauthen, secretary; and Greg Bensel, treasurer.

The TOBA Board also approved the reappointment of Craig Bernick to the American Graded Stakes Committee. The 2020-2021 committee is comprised of TOBA members Everett Dobson (chair), Barbara Banke, Reynolds Bell, Jr., Craig Bernick, Walker Hancock, and J. Michael O'Farrell and racing officials Kevin Greely (Indiana Grand), Steve Lym (Santa Anita Park), Ben Huffman (Churchill Downs and Keeneland), Martin Panza (NYRA) and Thomas Robbins (Del Mar).

TOBA, based in Lexington, Ky., was formed in 1961 and is a national trade organization of leading Thoroughbred breeders and owners. TOBA's mission is to improve the economics, integrity and pleasure of the sport on behalf of Thoroughbred owners and breeders. Projects managed by TOBA include the American Graded Stakes Committee, Claiming Crown, Ownership Seminars, Breeding, Conformation & Pedigree Clinics, TOBA Owners Concierge and the Sales Integrity Program. TOBA, in collaboration with The Jockey Club, has also created a free information resource called OwnerView to provide pertinent information to new, prospective and current Thoroughbred owners. TOBA provides international representation for U.S. owners and breeders on the International Grading and Race Planning Advisory Committee, International Cataloguing Standards Committee and International Breeders Federation. Thoroughbred Charities of America (TCA) is the charitable arm of TOBA. TOBA Media Properties, a subsidiary of TOBA, owns The Horse magazine, Eclipse Press and is co-owner of The Blood-Horse LLC. TOBA is represented on the board of directors of the National Thoroughbred Racing Association and the Racing Medication and Testing Consortium as founding members.

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Breeders’ Cup Presents Connections: Derby Roses For ‘Miss Syl’

Horse racing has long been an integral part of daily life for the neighborhoods near Churchill Downs. Homes full of large, close-knit families surrounded one another, and it seemed everyone knew at least a few people who worked at the track, or later, a few others who owned a couple racehorses. Any time someone got a hot tip on a horse one afternoon, the news spreads like wildfire as the die-hard racing fans gather would beneath the grandstand in an area they called the “snake pit.”

There was camaraderie, a fair bit of rivalry, stories about wagers won (and more stories about those almost won), and if one of the owners' horses was racing that day, there'd be the chance to stand in the paddock and hopefully then in the winner's circle. It was a community beyond that of the racetrack itself, and it had been that way since before 84-year-old Sylvia Arnett can remember.

So, even though spectators were not allowed at this year's Kentucky Derby, the long-time racing fan found a way to use pen and paper to share that community connection with one of the contenders. Much to Arnett's surprise, her sentiment was returned a thousand-fold with a bouquet of red roses even more precious than those on the winner's garland.

Arnett grew up in a house just two blocks from Churchill, which her family still owns today. The youngest of 11 children, she has been watching (and wagering) on races since her earliest Derby day, when Arnett remembers parking cars for a quarter and racing over to the track to get someone to place a bet for her (at six years old, she was too young to do it herself).

Arnett even owned a few racehorses with her late husband, which she recalls was quite a feat for an African-American in the early 1970s, and several members of her family are still involved in the racing business.

For the past 30 years, however, “Miss Syl” has served her community as the owner and operator of the popular Syl's Lounge in West Louisville.

“It's like a 'Cheers' bar, everybody knows everyone, and it's like the 40 and over crowd,” Arnett explained. “They come religiously, and I had gone down to just three days a week, Monday, Wednesday, and Friday, and they'd stay late into the night singing and listening to music.”

The bar has drawn figures like champion boxer Muhammad Ali, former Washington, D.C. Mayor Marion Barry, the first prominent civil rights activist to become chief executive of a major American city, and multiple Grammy Award-winning musical group The 5th Dimension, among many others.

It is simultaneously the kind of place where the community would gather to unwind and where they would go for important local events, including the Kentucky Derby. “Miss Syl” runs it all with the kind of old-school charm and iron wit that makes you feel immediately like part of the family.

This year has been an exception. The coronavirus pandemic has forced the bar to stay shut down since March, so Arnett has found herself with a lot of free time on her hands.

No matter. Tracing back to her roots, she followed this year's delayed Kentucky Derby with even more zealous scrutiny than usual and found herself especially touched by the story of trainer Tommy Drury and his first Derby contender, Art Collector.

“I saw this article in the local newspaper, and it mentioned that he had been working with the horses since he was 18 years of age,” said Arnett. “So, I thought, 'Wow, all that hard work has paid off and he finally made it to the big one. I'm gonna write him a letter and congratulate him.'

“It was something about him, he just worked hard for it and I know what that feels like.”

Her hand-written letter, the first Arnett had ever written to a Derby hopeful, took a slightly convoluted journey across town to get to Drury's barn at Churchill Downs.

As it turns out, Art Collector's groom Jerry Dixon was staying in the same hotel at which Arnett's son is employed. Dixon, a lifetime racetracker, happened to mention to Arnett's son that the colt was going to win the Ellis Park Derby, and after that, hopefully the Kentucky Derby.

“We bet the Ellis Park Derby, bet it good, and won good,” Arnett said, smiling big. “We was ready for the Kentucky Derby, we were gonna put money on the Kentucky Derby!”

Arnett gave the letter to her son, her son gave it to Dixon, and Dixon finally dropped it off at Drury's office at the track.

Unfortunately, Art Collector's eleventh-hour scratch from the Run for the Roses ended the dream prematurely. Though she couldn't have known about the scratch when she penned her letter, Arnett had made the fortuitous decision to include the story of her brother-in-law and his horse that almost ran in the Derby; it became a balm for Drury's disappointment in more ways than one.

Jacob Bachelor was an African-American Thoroughbred trainer by passion, but with a wife and five kids, he worked a day job at International Harvester in Louisville. In 1975, he had a horse named Naughty Jake who won the Spiral Stakes at what was then Latonia (now Turfway Park), and then ran third in the Derby Trial at Churchill Downs.

Arnett, the youngest of 11 children, remembers that most of her family, along with the rest of the neighborhood, wanted Bachelor to enter the horse in the Kentucky Derby, but he didn't have the money for the nomination and entry fees.

“If we had gone around the neighborhood and taken up a collection, I think we would have come close to getting whatever he needed to get that horse in the race, because it was such an exception and such an opportunity for an African-American,” Arnett said. “I just think my brother-in-law should have taken the chance and run that horse. Just think, he would have been the owner and trainer. That would have been something.”

Bachelor had other successes, like winning the 1972 Debutante at Churchill with the filly “Sylva Mill,” named after Arnett and her sister, Mildred. That day, nearly the entire neighborhood gathered in the winner's circle to celebrate the win; it felt like the filly belonged to all of them.

The horses Arnett and her husband owned were never major stakes contenders, but she clearly remembers the feeling of walking into the paddock on race day.

“You would hear people say, 'Those African American people over there, they own that horse!'” Arnett said, closing her eyes and reliving the moment. “Man, we thought we were celebrities. We may not have had much, but those were big days.”

The neighborhood has changed over the ensuing years. Most of the big manufacturing companies have shuttered their doors, homes are now boarded up and in disrepair, and the community has lost a lot of the institutions that used to make it unique. Civil rights movements have grabbed hold of west Louisville, and the entire country, once again.

Nonetheless, Syl's Lounge has persevered.

“Those of us who remember west Louisville when there were movie theaters, restaurants and more strong, stable families” view Syl's as “a throwback to what we used to have,” Rev. Kevin Cosby told the Louisville Magazine in 2018. “And I think maybe psychologically people see in her institution the hope of what is yet possible.”

Arnett has continued to carry out her role as a pillar of her community, even without the physical space of the bar. She calls the regular patrons on a weekly basis, just checking in, and looks forward to a time they can be together in person once again.

When Drury read Arnett's letter, the community sentiment really hit home. He was reminded just how lucky he was to have the horse and the ownership to make it as far as they had, and that Art Collector would go on to fight another day.

Drury, his teenage daughter Emma and her friend Molly Andrews, decided to take a trip to the florist. They picked out a bouquet of red “Derby” roses for Arnett, and sent them over to the extraordinary woman who'd been able to share both Drury's excitement and his disappointment, without ever having met in person.

“I couldn't have been more happy had it been the whole garland of roses,” Arnett said, a sparkle in her eye as she showed off a photograph of her with her bouquet just after it arrived. “As for Mr. Drury, I'm going to write him another letter and tell him it's okay he had to scratch, we'll just have to settle for Black-Eyed Susans on Preakness day!”

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