Caravel Headlines Highlander

The fleet-footed filly Caravel (Mizzen Mast) rides a hot streak into her first try for Graham Motion and first at the highest level in the GI Highlander S. at Woodbine. Bred and raced by her previous trainer Elizabeth Merryman, the gray captured The Very One S. at Pimlico May 14 and followed suit with a win in Monmouth's Goldwood S. June 25. Bobby Flay bought into the filly after that score and she carried his silks to victory in Saratoga's GIII Caress S. July 24. While Merryman remains part-owner, Caravel was transferred to Motion after that win as previously agreed upon in the terms of Flay's purchase.

Turned Aside (American Pharoah) seeks redemption in this first try in Grade I company. The handsome bay won four of nine starts for previous trainer Linda Rice, including Saratoga's GIII Quick Call S. and culminating with Aqueduct's Turf Sprint Championship S. last November. Sent through the ring at Keeneland January as part of the dispersal of his late owner Paul Pompa's stock, the 4-year-old summoned $725,000 from West Point Thoroughbreds and D J Stable and was sent to Mark Casse. Turned Aside has not been quite the same horse since leaving New York, finishing fourth in Tampa's Turf Dash S. Feb. 24 and failing to fire when ninth in Keeneland's GII Shakertown S. Apr. 3. He has run well off the layoff in the past and displays a series of strong works over the local synthetic in preparation for this.

City Boy (City Zip) represents the estate of late Woodbine legend Gustav Schickedanz in this event. The hard-knocking 7-year-old has not seen the winner's circle since the 2019 GII Nearctic S., but has finished a close second in this last three outings, most recently in a five-panel turf event here Aug. 1.

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Graded Stakes Trio Part Of Woodbine’s Stellar Queen’s Plate Card

A trio of graded stakes, the Highlander (G1), Dance Smartly (G2), Ontario Colleen (G3), complement the 162nd running of the $1 million Queen's Plate, Sunday at Woodbine.

Seven fillies and mares, 3-year-olds and up, will vie for top spot in the $175,000 Dance Smartly Stakes, a 1 ¼-mile test over the E.P. Taylor Turf Course.

Graham Motion will send out Blame Debbie, a 4-year-old daughter of Blame, as the multiple graded stakes winning trainer looks to notch his first Dance Smartly crown.

Owned by Eclipse Thoroughbred Partners, Michael Cloonan and Timothy Thornton, the well-traveled bay has assembled a 4-1-3 mark from 13 career starts.

Having raced at Delaware, Keeneland, Aqueduct, Tampa, Belmont, Saratoga, Kentucky Downs, Del Mar and Pimlico, Blame Debbie's racetrack passport will now include Woodbine.

Bred by Tim Thornton and Tony Holmes, Blame Debbie won her debut at Delaware Park on August 29, 2019, finishing second in her next start at Keeneland, prior to a third in the Grade 2 Demoiselle at Aqueduct to close out her rookie campaign.

Last year, she went 2-0-2 from eight starts, the back-to-back victories coming at Keeneland, including her first stakes win, the Grade 3 Rood and Riddle Dowager on Oct. 18.

After a victory in the Searching Stakes this June at Pimlico to launch her 2021 campaign, Blame Debbie was fifth in her most recent start, Grade 3 Robert G. Dick Memorial Stakes.

“She ran well first time back at Pimlico, then she was a little disappointing last time at Delaware,” offered Motion. “Maybe the first race took something out of her.”

Motion thinks the Kentucky-bred will fare well running over the Toronto oval grass.

“She's training well, and I think she'll like the turf course up there.”

The race is named after the Sam-Son Farm superstar who went undefeated in 1991 while taking the Canadian Triple Crown, and becoming the first horse bred in Canada to win a Breeders' Cup race (G1 Distaff, 1991). She is a member of both the Canadian and American Racing Halls of Fame.

Sam-Son Farm has three wins – tops among all owners – in the race that was inaugurated in 1986 (Bessarabian won the first edition).

The race is also the first event in Woodbine's Ladies of the Lawn Series, in support of ReThink Breast Cancer. Next up is the $250,000 Canadian Stakes (G2) on Saturday, September 18, culminating with the $600,000 E.P. Taylor Stakes (G1) on Sunday, October 17. At the conclusion of the points-based series, the winning connections will receive a $50,000 bonus. The inaugural winner of the 2019 Ladies of the Lawn Series was Starship Jubilee, Canada's reigning Horse of the Year.

FIELD FOR THE GRADE 2 $175,000 DANCE SMARTLY

POST – HORSE – JOCKEY – TRAINER

1 – Blame Debbie – Kazushi Kimura – Graham Motion

2 – Merveilleux – Rafael Hernandez – Kevin Attard

3 – Afleet Katherine – Justin Stein – Kevin Attard

4 – Al Naseem – David Moran – Edward Vaughan

5 – Etoile – Irad Ortiz Jr. – Chad Brown

6 – Mutamakina – Dylan Davis – Christophe Clement

7 – Court Return – Luis Contreras – Josie Carroll

Trainer Mark Casse, a four-time winner of the Ontario Colleen Stakes, will be launching a three-pronged attack on Sunday's renewal with Our Flash Drive, I Get It and Salty As Can Be heading postward in the one-mile turf race for 3-year-old fillies.

The Ontario Colleen, which offers Grade 3 status and a purse of $150,000, attracted eight entrants.

Our Flash Drive, a Live Oak Plantation homebred, is the only graded stakes winner in the Ontario Colleen lineup, having annexed the Grade 3 Selene over 1 1/16 miles of Tapeta last time out. The runner-up there, Munnyfor Ro, came back to take the Woodbine Oaks Presented by Budweiser and is a leading contender for Sunday's Queen's Plate.

“She's done everything right this year,” said Casse, who had also watched Our Flash Drive win her maiden in authoritative fashion here at seven furlongs in her first appearance this year, but will be racing the Florida-bred on grass for the first time.

“We've breezed her a couple of times on the turf; she gets over the turf really well. She'll be extremely tough, I think.”

I Get It was purchased privately for owner Gary Barber prior to winning the listed Sanibel Island Stakes over one mile of firm turf at Gulfstream on March 27.

In her only subsequent outing, the Maryland-bred was well-beaten In Belmont's Grade 3 Wonder Again over 1 1/8 miles of “good” going.

“I probably shouldn't have ran her,” said Casse, recently inducted into the Hall of Fame at Saratoga to match his Canadian honors. “She wasn't a happy horse at the time. We've just kind of given her a break; she's doing much better now. I think she should run well.”

Salty As Can Be, owned by Gary Barber and Baccari Racing Stable, is a half-sister to Salty, who was a Grade 1 stakes winner for the same connections.

“She's a beautiful filly,” said Casse, who has seen the Kentucky-bred sandwich two wins around a disappointing stakes try. “She had to have throat surgery after her poor performance at Churchill.”

Salty As Can Be, who had debuted victoriously at Churchill Downs, returned to win a six-furlong Tapeta sprint at Woodbine. The Ontario Colleen will be her first try on grass.

“She ran really well there,” said Casse. “She's breezed well on the turf. She's a bit of a guess… I think she's good enough, but we'll just see. This is not an easy race.”

Chad Brown, who captured the 2019 edition of the Ontario Colleen with Seek and Destroy, will be looking to duplicate that feat with Misspell, who was supplemented at a cost of $3,000 including the $1,500 entry fee.

Seasons, third in the Grade 1 Natalma over one mile of turf here last September, adds to the depth of a field which also includes stakes winner Sweet Souper Sweet, third last time out in the Selene, plus Speightstown Shirl and Perseverancia, both maiden winners on the turf at the current meeting.

Trainer Michael Doyle currently holds the Ontario Colleen record with five wins, the latest in 2001.

The most famous alumnus of the race is the Casse trainee Got Stormy, who captured the 2018 renewal and recently notched her second win in Saratoga's Grade 1 Bernard Baruch, defeating males in that one-mile turf race.

FIELD FOR THE GRADE 3 $150,000 ONTARIO COLLEEN STAKES

POST – HORSE – JOCKEY – TRAINER

1 – Sweet Souper Sweet – Antonio Gallardo – Michael Trombetta

2 – Our Flash Drive – Patrick – Husbands – Mark Casse

3 – Salty as Can Be – Rafael Hernandez – Mark Casse

4 – Perseverancia – Luis Contreras – Darwin Banach

5 – I Get It – Kazushi Kimura – Mark Casse

6 – Seasons – Shaun Bridgmohan – James Toner

7 – Speightstown Shirl – Emma-Jayne Wilson – Roger Attfield

8 – Misspell – Irad Ortiz Jr. – Chad Brown

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Caravel, winner of three straight including Saratoga's Grade 3 Caress at 5 ½-furlongs on the turf last time out, will be cruising into Woodbine on Queen's Plate day seeking a grand slam in Sunday's Grade 1 Highlander Stakes.

The Highlander, a six-furlong turf race, offers a purse of $350,000 and attracted a field of eight.

Caravel, a 4-year-old filly, will be facing males for the first time and making her first start for trainer Graham Motion. Celebrity chef Bobby Flay purchased a majority interest in Caravel following her impressive score two starts back in Monmouth's Goodwood Stakes at five furlongs on the turf.

Breeder/owner/trainer Elizabeth Merryman retains an interest in Caravel, who is Pennsylvania's reigning Horse of the Year and has fashioned a record of 7-0-2, including five stakes scores, from nine starts. Merryman is based at Fair Hill in Maryland, as is Motion.

“I've tried not to change too much, since I've had her,” said Motion. “I kept her at Saratoga, we kind of kept her on the same schedule she would have at Fair Hill with Lizzie.”

The Highlander is the next marker for Caravel on the path which her connections hope will lead to the Breeders' Cup Turf Sprint, which will be run over five furlongs at Del Mar on Nov. 6.

“This is kind of the race we'd planned on, if she ran well at Saratoga,” said Motion. “The six furlongs is a really good distance for her.”

Irad Ortiz Jr., who piloted Caravel for the first time in the Caress, retains the mount.

Looking to hold the shipper at bay will be locally-based Silent Poet and City Boy, who were the 1-2 finishers in last year's Grade 2 Nearctic Handicap over six furlongs of the E.P. Taylor Turf Course.

Silent Poet, a homebred who is owned by Stronach Stable and trained by Nick Gonzalez, also has victories in another pair of seven-furlong Grade 2 turf stakes, the 2019 Play the King and the 2020 Connaught Cup, but has yet to find his best form in two starts this season.

City Boy, conditioned by Mike Keogh for The Estate of Gustav Schickedanz, had become a stakes winner in the 2019 running of the Nearctic. The City Boy gelding will be making his second appearance of this season after opening up with a second-place finish under allowance terms.

“He came out of his first start really well,” said Keogh. “He ran well enough, and I think he needed the race. He missed a bit of time going into it. He always has little foot issues.”

Trainer Mark Casse, seeking his first Highlander victory, will send out a capable threesome in Turned Aside, Chuck Willis and Old Chestnut.

Rounding out the field will be Admiralty Pier, who has kept top company throughout his eclectic career, and Honey Won't, who was supplemented at a cost of $7,000, including the $3,500 entry fee.

The Highlander has been run over its current distance and surface since 2004 when Soaring Free, who went on to be Canada's Horse of the Year, captured his first of two consecutive renewals. The race was not run last year on a COVID-19-impacted stakes schedule.

The Turf Endurance Series also gets out of the gates on Aug. 22. The series is made up of three races, two of which are on the inner turf. The opening leg, at a distance of 1 3/8 miles, is slated for Sunday, followed by a 1 ½-mile trek Sept. 12, and a 1 ¾-mile marathon on the main course Oct. 3.

FIELD FOR THE GRADE 1 $350,000 HIGHLANDER STAKES

POST – HORSE – JOCKEY – TRAINER

1 – Old Chestnut – Patrick Husbands – Mark Casse

2 – Admiralty Pier – Antonio Gallardo – Barbara Minshall

3 – Turned Aside – Emma-Jayne Wilson – Mark Casse

4 – Chuck Willis – Kazushi Kimura – Mark Casse

5 – Honey Won't – Jeffrey Alderson – Angus Buntain

6 – City Boy – David Moran – Mike Keogh

7 – Caravel – Irad Ortiz Jr. – Graham Motion

8 – Silent Poet – Justin Stein – Nick Gonzalez

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Pennsylvania-Bred Stakes Schedule Receives a Boost

The Pennsylvania-bred stakes schedule received a major boost for the remainder of the year, with four stakes doubling in value to $200,000, plus the addition of two $100,000 stakes. A total of $2.6 million in purses will now be paid out in restricted, state-bred stakes in 2021.

“Our revenue has stabilized and the Race Horse Development Trust Fund has stood strong,” Pennsylvania Horse Breeders Association's executive secretary Brian Sanfratello said. “We wanted to send a message that Pennsylvania is on the move and the premier place to breed and race.”

Purses have been increased for the year-end 2-year-old stakes, the Shamrock Rose for fillies at Penn National Nov. 26 and the Pennsylvania Nursery at Parx Racing Dec. 7, as well as the Alphabet Soup and Plum Pretty for older runners on Parx Racing's rich Sept. 25 Pennsylvania Derby card. Returning to the schedule are two six-furlong 3-year-old stakes cut earlier in the year–the New Start for fillies, and the Danzig–both to run at Penn National Oct. 22.

Elizabeth Merryman, chair of the PHBA racing committee, says the increases come at an opportune time.

“We're making up for last year,” she explained, noting the reductions to the PHBA Breeding Fund due to COVID-19, as well as attempts by the governor to alter the Fund, which have since been resolved. “Now that things have gotten much more stabilized, it's great that we can add stakes and put big purses on the 2-year-old stakes at the right time of the year, where they can catch the attention of people making buying decisions at the sales. Buyers are going to look closer at the PA-breds, which helps the breeders.

She continued, “We're giving away substantial sums of money and the program is getting bigger and stronger. It helps the breeders by advertising the program.”

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Pennsylvania Horse Breeders Association Announces Purse Increases To Stakes Schedule

The Pennsylvania-bred stakes schedule received a major boost for the remainder of the year, with four stakes doubling in value to $200,000, plus the addition of two $100,000 stakes. A total of $2.6 million in purses will now be paid out in restricted state-bred stakes in 2021.

“Our revenue has stabilized and the Race Horse Development Trust Fund has stood strong,” said Pennsylvania Horse Breeders Association's executive secretary Brian Sanfratello. “We wanted to send a message that Pennsylvania is on the move and the premier place to breed and race.”

Purses have been increased for the year-end 2-year-old stakes, the Shamrock Rose for fillies at Penn National on Friday, Nov. 26 and the Pennsylvania Nursery at Parx Racing on Tuesday, Dec. 7, as well as the Alphabet Soup and Plum Pretty for older runners on Parx Racing's rich Sept. 25 Pennsylvania Derby card.

Returning to the schedule are two six-furlong 3-year-old stakes cut earlier in the year – the New Start for fillies, and the Danzig – both to run at Penn National on Friday, Oct. 22.

Elizabeth Merryman, chair of the PHBA racing committee, says the increases come at an opportune time.

“We're making up for last year,” she explained, noting the reductions to the PHBA Breeding Fund due to COVID, as well as attempts by the governor to alter the Fund, which have since been resolved. “Now that things have gotten much more stabilized, it's great that we can add stakes and put big purses on the 2-year-old stakes at the right time of the year, where they can catch the attention of people making buying decisions at the sales. Buyers are going to look closer at the PA-breds, which helps the breeders.

“We're giving away substantial sums of money and the program is getting bigger and stronger,” Merryman added. “It helps the breeders by advertising the program.”

PHBA president Greg Newell says the boost to the stakes program rewards the resiliency of those involved in the breeding and racing industry in the state. “Being wise with our money and managing it carefully and having the resources available, we want to say thank you to our members and to share with the general racing community the strength of the breeding program in Pennsylvania.”

The updated stakes and their conditions are:

Saturday, Sept. 25, Parx Racing

  • $200,000 Alphabet Soup Handicap, 3 & up, 1 1⁄16 miles, turf
  • $200,000 Plum Pretty Stakes, 3 & up, fillies & mares, 1 1⁄16 miles

Friday, Oct. 22, Penn National

  • $100,000 Danzig Stakes, 3-year-olds, 6 furlongs
  • $100,000 New Start Stakes, 3-year-old fillies, 6 furlongs

Friday, Nov. 26, Penn National

  • $200,000 Shamrock Rose Stakes, 2-year-old fillies, 6 furlongs

Tuesday, Dec. 7, Parx Racing

  • $200,000 Pennsylvania Nursery Stakes, 2-year-olds, 7 furlongs

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