Bulldog Hanover Recognized With Cam Fella Award For ‘Extreme Meritorious Service To Canadian Harness Racing’

Standardbred Canada is pleased to announce that Bulldog Hanover has been voted the 2022 recipient of the Cam Fella Award.

The Cam Fella Award will be presented to the connections of Bulldog Hanover at the annual O'Brien Awards Black Tie Gala on Saturday, February 4, 2023, at the Hilton Mississauga / Meadowvale Hotel in Mississauga, Ontario.

Named in honour of world-class Standardbred horse Cam Fella, the award recognizes extreme recent meritorious service to the Canadian harness racing industry.

Bulldog Hanover adds the prestigious Cam Fella Award to a lengthy list of accolades and awards earned not only for his on-track performances during the 2022 racing season, but also as an ambassador of harness racing, generating an incredible amount of media attention, publicity and fan following for the sport.

'The Bulldog' was Standardbred racing's biggest story of the year, and no horse could match what Bulldog Hanover accomplished over the course of 2022.

The Jack Darling-trained son of Shadow Play captured the hearts of harness racing fans across the continent, becoming the fastest Standardbred in the sport's history when he stopped the clock in 1:45.4 in the William R. Haughton Memorial at The Meadowlands on July 16 for driver Dexter Dunn. During the season, Bulldog Hanover won 14 races in 16 starts with more than $1.8 million in earnings for co-owners Jack Darling and Brad Grant, making him the richest Standardbred of 2022. Dexter Dunn and Jody Jamieson handled the driving duties, and his devoted caretaker was John Mallia.

Bulldog Hanover boasts an impressive resume of accomplishments including victories in the Dan Patch Stakes and Hoosier Pacing Derby at Hoosier Park, the Dayton Pacing Derby, the Canadian Pacing Derby, the Breeders Crown and the TVG Open Pace, just to name a few.

The racing community, racing fans, and casual spectators were in awe of Bulldog Hanover, who would draw crowds and media to wherever he raced. Woodbine Mohawk Park honoured the winner of the Canadian Pacing Derby and Breeders Crown by hosting a retirement ceremony for him in December.

Following the end of his phenomenal season, Bulldog Hanover was retired from racing and will soon start his second year at stud at Seelster Farms in Ontario, for partners Darling, Grant and Diamond Creek Farms.

In addition to the Cam Fella Award, Bulldog Hanover is a divisional finalist for an O'Brien Award, the unanimous choice for the Dan Patch Award and will also be honoured with the Stan Bergstein Proximity Award.

Standardbred Canada established the Cam Fella Award in 1997, and fittingly its namesake was the first recipient acknowledging Cam Fella's unparalleled contributions to the sport of harness racing. The most recent winner of the award was Anthony MacDonald in 2019. The complete list of winners is available here.

A national committee of 16 individuals representing the Standardbred community vote by secret ballot to determine the Cam Fella Award winner. A winner must receive 75 percent of the Yes votes to win.

Canadian-owned, trained and driven, Cam Fella was an outstanding racehorse in the early 1980s, winning 56 races, over $2 million in purse money and two consecutive Horse of the Year titles in North America. As a stallion, 'Cam' sired numerous world champions and horses with earnings in excess of $107 million. In early 1997, Cam Fella was diagnosed with testicular cancer and was retired from breeding. He died in May of 2001 at the Kentucky Horse Park, where he had lived for several years and served as an outstanding ambassador of the standardbred breed.

The creation of the Cam Fella Award was the harness racing industry's way of ensuring that Cam's contribution to the sport is never forgotten.

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Pegasus World Cup Recognizes Thoroughbred Aftercare Alliance As Charitable Partner For Seventh Straight Year

As part of 1/ST's mission to prioritize the care and safety of Thoroughbred racehorses before, during, and after their racing careers, the 2023 Pegasus World Cup presented by Baccarat will recognize the Thoroughbred Aftercare Alliance (TAA) as its Charitable Partner for the seventh consecutive year. The 2023 Pegasus World Cup will feature three Grade 1 stakes races – the $3 million Pegasus World Cup presented by Baccarat, the $1 million Pegasus World Cup Turf presented by Qatar Racing and the $500,000 Thoroughbred Aftercare Alliance Pegasus World Cup Filly & Mare Turf presented by Pepsi.

“1/ST is happy to once again welcome and recognize the Thoroughbred Aftercare Alliance as our honored Charitable Partner of the 2023 Pegasus World Cup,” said Nicole Walker, Vice President, The Stronach Group and TAA Committee Member. “Thoroughbred aftercare has always been a top priority for 1/ST. We are proud to support the TAA and the wonderful work they do for our equine friends.”

As part of the Pegasus World Cup race day celebrations on Saturday, January 28, 1/ST will present a check to representatives from TAA's Board of Directors and accredited organizations in the Winner's Circle immediately following the Thoroughbred Aftercare Alliance Pegasus World Cup Filly & Mare Turf race.

“1/ST's dedication to accredited Thoroughbred aftercare is unfailing,” said TAA Operations Consultant, Stacie Clark. “We are honored to be included for another exciting year of the Pegasus World Cup and would like to thank Gulfstream Park for being such gracious hosts to the TAA and its accredited organizations.”

Since the inception of the Thoroughbred Aftercare Alliance in 2012, 1/ST has donated over $1 million to support the TAA's mission to retrain, retire, and rehome Thoroughbred racehorses. 1/ST executive Nicole Walker served five consecutive years as a TAA board member and is currently an active member of the TAA Communications Committee. 1/ST RACING & GAMING's Chief Executive Officer Aidan Butler joined the TAA board and executive committee in 2022.

The 2023 Pegasus World Cup will be broadcast live on NBC with a 90-minute show from 4:30 to 6 P.M. ET and can be streamed live on NBCSports.com and Peacock.

For more tickets and more information about the Pegasus World Cup, please visit Pegasusworldcup.com or follow on social @PegasusWorldCup #AllForOne.

For more information or to donate to the TAA, please visit Thoroughbredaftercare.org.

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‘Good Spot To Try A Stake Again’: 2022 Derby Starter Zozos Returns In Saturday’s Louisiana Stakes

Barry and Jonie Butzow's homebred Zozos will vie for his first stakes score in Saturday's $150,000 Louisiana (G3). The newly turned 4-year-old will travel 1 1/16 miles against a field of nine older runners at Fair Grounds Race Course & Slots.

The 77th running of The Louisiana is slated as race 13 on Saturday's 14-race “Road to the Derby Day” card, which features the Lecomte (G3) and the Silverbulletday, prep races on the Road to the Kentucky Derby and Oaks that will award 20-8-6-4-2 qualifying points to the top-five finishers. First post is noon CT.

Not having started since his 10th place finish in the 2022 Kentucky Derby, Zozos returned in a second-level allowance at Fair Grounds in mid-December. He won impressively after settling as far back as sixth and having to run down a game Treasury. He earned a 94 Brisnet Speed figure. After the race, trainer Brad Cox indicated that there was no rush to enter Zozos in a stakes, and he would likely run through his conditions, but here he is instead in the Louisiana.

“I was pretty happy with his last couple works and just how he looks physically, how he's moving,” Brad Cox said. “I figured it would be a good spot to try a stake again. It's back in five weeks but he's doing well and that's the biggest reason I decided to run him in the (Louisiana).”

Lightly raced, the son of Munnings broke his maiden sprinting last year. He stepped forward nicely winning an allowance at Oaklawn Park, then ran in the $1 million Twin Spires.com Louisiana Derby (G2) where he earned his spot in Kentucky Derby 148 after setting the pace and holding on for second to Epicenter. With three wins in five starts, Zozos will retain the services of Corey Lanerie who has been having an excellent meet. Lanerie is also scheduled to ride Tapit Shoes for Brad Cox in race 9, a second-level allowance on the undercard that has the look of a Derby prep. Drawing post No. 8, Zozos gets the nod as the 3-1 morning-line favorite.

Cox has also entered barn-newcomer Forzo Di Oro in The Louisiana. Don Alberto Stable's lightly-raced 6-year-old horse won the 2020 Discovery (G3) while with Bill Mott. He made one run in the care of Jerry Hollendorfer before being transferred to the Cox barn prior to the Tenacious, where he finished a creditable third.

Bret Calhoun entered three in the Louisiana, including Tom Durant's Run Classic, Jon Lapczenski and JIL Stable's Mr. Wireless, and Martin Mueller, Don Ladd, Richard Reid, Joe Bowley, and Arvydas Cieminis' Gentle Soul, who is cross-entered in the Col E.R. Bradley Stakes.

Run Classic, a colossal 5-year-old horse by Runhappy, was on the Derby trail in 2021, but after finishing 8th in the Louisiana Derby, he developed a sore suspensory. Once back in training, the horse sprained a joint capsule. Eighteen months later, he returned to the track in good form, quickly moving through his conditions winning two in a row, first at Churchill then at Keeneland. Both were sprints and both produced big numbers with his Keeneland effort earning a career-best 103 Brisnet Speed figure.

“He can definitely produce his best run going two-turns,” Calhoun said. “Yeah, if you put a gun to my head and asked 'what's his perfect distance,' I'd probably say seven-eighths or a one-turn mile,” Calhoun said.

Running last out in Oaklawn's 1 1/8-mile Tinsel Stakes, he pressed and weakened, finishing a disappointing fourth as the favorite.

“I don't think he liked the track (at Oaklawn),” Calhoun said. “He never was himself and wasn't comfortable and confident on that track. I don't care. (Even) if that last race was seven-eighths, I don't think the distance had anything to do with it. He's doing very, very well. We'll run him out of his own stall this time, and I think he'll show up.”

If you are going to be the older route champ then you've got to beat the champ and currently that Fair Grounds' title goes to Lothenbach Stables' Happy American. When beating a field of 11 in the $100,000 Tenacious on “Road to the Derby Kickoff Day,” the 5-year-old horse trained by Neil Pessin made his signature late rally, but this time he pulled away from a game Mr. Wireless to win by 2 3/4 lengths.

“He came out of it pulling the hot walker around the barn like he didn't even run,” Pessin said. “He's doing great. He's an improving horse, getting better every day. Happy American's just getting bigger and better and we're looking forward to a big upcoming year with him.”

Tabbed as the 4-1 morning line co-second favorite, Happy American retains the services of James Graham who will guide him out of post No. 5.

Prior to finishing second in the Tenacious, Mr. Wireless got his nose down in front of pacesetter Here Mi Song and a fast-closing South Bend to win an allowance race over a one-turn mile in November at Churchill Downs. The 2021 Oklahoma and West Virginia Derby winner has won six of his 13 races, three of those coming at the Louisiana distance.

“I keep scratching my head about how he got beat in the (Tenacious),” Calhoun said. “He had a little minor external infection on one of his pasterns, so maybe he was a little stressed with that. Maybe we just got outrun, but I thought when he made his move and opened up that we were home. He's coming into the race doing great, and I think he'll run a big race as well (as Run Classic). If it rains, I think Mr. Wireless will run well on an off track.”

Drawn to the far outside in post No. 9, Mr. Wireless will be piloted by Deshawn Parker.

“Ideally we'll run Gentle Soul on the turf, but he'll have to draw in (to the Col E.R. Bradley Stakes),” Calhoun said.

Here's the complete field for the Louisiana Stakes (G3) from the rail out (with jockey, trainer, and morning line):

  1. Business Model (Tyler Gaffalione, Brendan Walsh, 15-1);
  2. Run Classic (Brian Hernandez Jr., Bret Calhoun, 4-1);
  3. Intrepid Heart (Luis Saez, Joe Sharp, 8-1);
  4. Gentle Soul (Jareth Loveberry, Bret Calhoun, 12-1);
  5. Happy American (James Graham, Neil Pessin, 4-1);
  6. Chess Chief (Rey Gutierrez, Dallas Stewart, 20-1);
  7. Forza Di Oro (Florent Geroux, Brad Cox, 9-2);
  8. Zozos (Corey Lanerie, Brad Cox, 3-1);
  9. Mr. Wireless (Deshawn Parker, Bret Calhoun, 5-1).

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Colonel Liam Out Of Pegasus World Cup Turf, Retired To Ocala Stud

Colonel Liam's bid for a third consecutive victory in the Grade 1 Pegasus World Cup Turf Invitational Stakes will not come to be, after the horse was retired on Thursday, BloodHorse and Thoroughbred Daily News report. He will begin his stallion at Ocala Stud for the 2023 breeding season.

The 6-year-old son of Liam's Map finished his career with seven wins in 12 starts for earnings of $1,812,565, racing for owners Robert and Lawana Low and trainer Todd Pletcher.

Colonel Liam would have been among the favorites for this year's Pegasus World Cup Turf, which is set to take place Jan. 22 at Gulfstream Park.

“Colonel Liam took our whole family on quite a ride over a four-year period,” Robert Low told Thoroughbred Daily News. “Ocala Stud has a proven track record of developing young stallions into some of the most formidable stallions in the business and we are excited to be sending Colonel Liam to them. We love the family aspect of Ocala Stud. Their integrity and horsemanship set them apart.”

A $1.2-million purchase by the Lows at the 2019 Ocala Breeders' Sales Co. Spring 2-Year-Olds in Training Sale, Colonel Liam won on debut as a 3-year-old at Gulfstream Park, and he earned his first stakes score at the end of that season, when he took the listed Tropical Park Derby at the same track.

Colonel Liam's Tropical Park Derby score led into his first of two Pegasus World Cup Turf scores to begin his 2021 campaign, besting Largent by a neck at the wire. That race kicked off a run of three victories to start the year, also including the G2 Muniz Memorial Stakes at the Fair Grounds and the G1 Turf Classic Stakes at Churchill Downs.

Colonel Liam premiered in 2022 with another victory in the Pegasus World Cup Turf, this time establishing command earlier in the stretch and drawing off to win by one length.

The horse's final start came in the G2 Fort Lauderdale Stakes at Gulfstream Park on Dec. 31, where he finished a non-threatening sixth. Jacob West, racing manager for the Lows, said that a conversation with Pletcher after that race ultimately steered the decision to retire the horse to stud.

“He has given us so much and if he was not going to have a top campaign, then (racing) made no sense,” West told BloodHorse. “The Lows always do what's best for the horse.”

Colonel Liam will stand his debut season for an advertised fee of $6,500, and West told BloodHorse that the Lows will be supporting him with mares at stud, and with bids at auction when their foals reach the ring.

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