Mighty Heart Holds Off Sir Winston To Win Autumn Stakes At Woodbine

Canada's one-eyed wonder and 2020 Horse of the Year Mighty Heart showed exactly why he has that name with a gate-to-wire victory in the Grade 2 Autumn Stakes at Woodbine. The 2020 Queen's Plate winner held off a late run from 2019 Belmont Stakes victor Sir Winston to take the 1 1/16-mile stakes by a half-length.

Starting from the far outside of the field of eight, jockey Patrick Husbands hustled Mighty Heart to the lead, with Primo Touch and Embolden following in second and third. Around the first turn and down the backstretch, Mighty Heart was a length to the good, running easily on the lead putting in fractions of :23.86, :47.23, and 1:11.36.

Entering the far turn, the field started to make their move, but Mighty Heart was steadfast in the lead. Sir Winston, sixth early, ran into traffic on the turn, going to the outside in the stretch to find a clear running lane. Special Forces and Halo Again were also challenging Mighty Heart in the stretch, Sir Winston driving late, but the 2020 Horse of the Year held the race safe. He was a half-length in front of Sir Winston at the wire, with Special Forces third and Halo Again fourth.

The final time was 1:42.51.

Mighty Heart paid  $9.20, $4.00, and $2.30. Sir Winston paid $2.60 and $2.10. Special Forces paid $2.20.

Bred in Ontario by his owner Larry Cordes, Mighty Heart is a 4-year-old colt by Dramedy out of the City Place mare Emma's Bullseye. He is trained by Josie Carroll. With his win in the G2 Autumn, Mighty Heart has three wins in seven starts in 2021, for a lifetime record of six wins in 15 starts.

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Canadian Champion Mighty Heart Headlines Saturday’s Seagram Cup

Mighty Heart, Canada's reigning Horse of the Year, is set to tackle 1 1/16-miles on the Tapeta, in Saturday's Grade 3 $150,000 Seagram Cup at Woodbine.

Trained by Hall of Famer Josie Carroll for owner-breeder Larry Cordes, Mighty Heart, a four-year-old son of Dramedy-Emma's Bullseye, will look to deliver his connections a second graded stakes score after taking the Grade 3 Dominion Day on July 1.

The one-eyed colt, who recorded wins last year in the Queen's Plate and Prince of Wales Stakes, the first two jewels of the Canadian Triple Crown, is in the midst of another fruitful campaign, having posted wins in the Dominion Day and Blame Stakes, a second in his most recent engagement, the Grade 3 West Virginia Governor's Stakes on August 7, and a third in his seasonal bow at Keeneland in April.

Mighty Heart brings a record of 5-1-2 from 12 career starts into his latest test.

“His tenacity [stands out],” said Carroll. “The one thing I've always said about this horse is that he's a little scrapper.”

Daisuke Fukumoto, aboard for the Queen's Plate, Prince of Wales and Dominion Day victories, gets the call again on Saturday.

“He made my dream come true so he is special,” said the graded stakes winning rider. “I don't have any particular tension when I ride him. I don't get scared or nervous when we race. I'm always very conscious that I make him run comfortably. I would just like to say one more thing… it's very fun to ride him.”

Mighty Heart launched his career with a pair of starts at Fair Grounds in early 2020. Those efforts, a fourth and a tenth, respectively, eventually led to a discussion between Cordes and a horse chiropractor.

“I knew there was something wrong in those first two races,” recalled Cordes. “The chiropractor was looking him over one day and thought something wasn't right with his jaw. The horse was uncomfortable when he was looking at his face area, so we had a vet come in. He found an inflamed tooth and we took care of it. The rest is history.”

Mighty Heart's next start, last July, resulted in a maiden-breaking performance in what was his first race at Woodbine. He soon grabbed headlines in Canada and beyond after his stirring scores in the Queen's Plate and Prince of Wales.

This spring, Mighty Heart was voted Canada's Horse of the Year for 2020, and champion Three-Year-Old Colt.

“This horse, he has a determination,” praised Cordes. “He is all heart. He started with a big handicap having no eye, but he didn't let it affect him. He has this fight and he has this grit, whether it's on the track or not.

“When he had his eye injury – and we're 90 per cent sure it was the mare who caused it – we took him to the veterinarian in Guelph (Ontario) and they told us they had to take out the eye. But they told us not too worry about it too much. At his age, less than two weeks old at the time, they said that he'll never know he could have had two eyes. When you watch him run – horses have good peripheral vision – he cocks his head just slightly to the left. Not badly, just enough so that he has that peripheral vision to see what's beside him and have a good view.”

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Mighty Heart's story has created a significant following, both on Mighty Heart's Instagram page (mightyheart.tb) and whenever he goes postward.

“He has a lot of followers,” said Cordes. “I get calls from the United States all the time and different media people from so many places. It's not attention that's just happening locally. Everybody likes an underdog and the fact he only has one eye makes it a compelling story.”

Cordes continues to receive correspondence from fans, young and old.

“I get letters from children, postmarked to Mighty Heart, not Larry Cordes. They draw pictures and share stories. I send horseshoes to them – everybody who sends something I return something to them along with a letter. Some people send Mighty Heart cookies. I don't know how many times people have sent these cookies, which I guess are supposed to be horse cookies. He has a big following and it just makes me so happy.”

The longtime horseman's biggest joy is in seeing the happiness his star brings to others, especially over the past year and a half.

“What's really fantastic is that during this pandemic, what this brought to people… when I go to the track, many people will stop me and say, 'This lifted us up a little bit.' It's done so much just to lift them up a little bit throughout this pandemic.”

Cordes is hoping there's more reason to celebrate come Saturday.

“When he won the Dominion Day, I was going down the escalator, and a gentleman, three people in front of me, threw up his arms up in the air as far as he could reach and yelled, 'You're great, Mighty Heart!' He didn't know that I was behind him, but it showed me what he has done for people. It's absolutely thrilling. I'm proud of him and I'm so happy. If he never wins another race, I'm still so proud. But he has plenty left in him. He's as sound as sound can be. He's just an amazing horse.”

The Seagram Cup is scheduled as race three of 10 on Saturday's 1:10 p.m. card, which also includes the $150,000 Vice Regent Stakes (race seven), a 5-furlong Inner Turf race for Ontario-breds, three-year-olds & upward.

Fans can also watch and wager on all the live action via HPIbet.com.

$150,000 SEAGRAM CUP STAKES

Post – Horse – Jockey – Trainer

1 – Special Forces – Kazushi Kimura – Kevin Attard

2 – Another Mystery – Antonio Gallardo – Chris Block

3 – Dolder Grand – Patrick Husbands – Mark Casse

4 – Mighty Heart – Daisuke Fukumoto – Josie Carroll

5 – Tap It to Win – Rafael Hernandez – Mark Casse

$150,000 VICE REGENT STAKES

Post – Horse – Jockey – Trainer

1 – Alacritous – Steven Bahen – Ashlee Brnjas

2 – Celebratory – Justin Stein – Ashlee Brnjas

3 – Circle of Friends – Patrick Husbands – Don MacRae

4 – Rockcrest – Keveh Nicholls – Nigel Burke

5 – Souper Hot – Kazushi Kimura – Mike Mattine

6 – Not So Quiet – Rafael Hernandez – Mark Casse

7 – City Boy – David Moran – Michael Keogh

8 – Forester's Fortune – Daisuke Fukumoto – Rodney Barrow

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A Mighty Day for Woodbine Fans

What a singular coincidence, and literally so, that two of the best horses recently bred in Canada–and that has never been a negligible distinction–should both have only one eye. True, the origins of Hard Not to Love (Hard Spun) and Mighty Heart (Dramedy) could scarcely be more diverse. The 2019 GI La Brea S. winner, who was retired a few weeks ago, graduated from one of the most admired breeding programs in North America, which routinely sends yearlings to Keeneland as coveted as any making a shorter trip from the storied Bluegrass farms. Much like the pioneering E.P. Taylor, indeed, Anderson Farms rebukes any condescending misapprehensions about raising top-class Thoroughbreds in “ice and tundra”. The way Mighty Heart has defied their shared adversity, in contrast, confounds the odds in a fashion–out of the only mare then in his breeder's ownership, by a sire since exported from Oklahoma to Saudi Arabia, and named for the eyedropper-fed runt of a Sphnyx cat litter–that nourishes hope for smaller operations everywhere, from Ontario to Ocala.

After a promising spring south of the border, Canada's Horse of the Year resumes his domestic career Thursday in the most auspicious of contexts. He not only lines up for the GIII Dominion Day S., but does so on a Canada Day when fans are finally restored to the Woodbine stands after a second lockdown trauma that brought the local racing community to its knees. Mighty Heart's return to the scene of his runaway success in the Queen's Plate last September, then, serves as the perfect tonic. Even before the pandemic, after all, the Ontario industry had been through years of crisis following the abrupt loss of slots. For all those who have been striving to rally investment, and all those who have resisted fresh despair during the past year, the big heart of this one-eyed wonder has become an inspiration.

“I find it so funny that he got the name he did, before all this,” says his trainer Josie Carroll. “Because it just sums up this horse. Like in his last race, at the head of the lane, I thought: 'Okay, he's going to run a good race.' But he just dug in. He's just a scrappy little horse.”

That was in the Blame S. at Churchill last month, where Mighty Heart refused to be denied in a three-way photo finish. Having previously made a promising return at Keeneland, he has laid a solid foundation for his second campaign after exploding onto the scene last year, winning the first two legs of the Canadian Triple Crown. Carroll had always planned to get him rolling again in the U.S., but his peregrinations from Florida to Kentucky obtained a melancholy background as the news from the home front became ever more frustrating.

Woodbine finally reopened for business on June 12, albeit behind closed doors, with a jackpot carryover that had been gathering dust ever since Nov. 22. That was when the meet came to a premature end, despite an exemplary record of functioning within COVID protocols in 2020, while a resumption scheduled for Apr. 17 had then been thwarted by government orders that permitted training but not racing. The ensuing limbo became an excruciating new test for the demoralised backside community and its patrons.

Josie Carroll with Mighty Heart | Michael Burns

“You know, I have such a great appreciation for our owners,” says Carroll. “They stuck it out. They had the opportunity to race elsewhere, every other major track was open, but they left their horses here to race. We're all very appreciative, and it makes me so happy to see them coming back to the races, and back to the backside. Some of them haven't even seen their horses for a year and a half, yet they've been hanging in there.”

As Carroll acknowledges, that can represent the entire span of a horse's evolution into a measurable talent. There will certainly have been many a Woodbine project that has run its course in the meantime. And the excitement for many owners, as such, will often be the journey sooner than the destination. “For the majority of owners, half the fun is in the participation,” Carroll confirms. “That's what makes the relationship between the people and the horses.”

But it's a parallel relationship that has been under no less painful strain: the one connecting the morning toil of backstretch workers with the fulfilment available in the afternoons.

“It's been very hard for them, to keep their spirits up,” Carroll says. “Because the fun part, when you have put all that work into your horse, is going over there and seeing them run a big race. That's when you see the excitement on all your people's faces. So just to sit for months and months, without getting the opportunity to run, was very tough on them. And we all know that your basic pay rate, for backside help, is not that strong. They supplement their income with their percentages, from the horses' earnings, so it's a dent in their income too.”

Mighty Heart's Queen's Plate | Michael Burns

Fortunately times of trial will draw the best out in people, too, and fortify a sense of community. “I tell you, everybody in this industry has been great,” Carroll says. “I think we were all shocked when we got shut down at the end of November. Everybody had done such a great job, I think we had two cases out of the thousands of people back here. The same people that were working with these horses in the mornings were also handling them in the afternoons, so it didn't really make a lot of sense. It just felt like we got grouped with a whole lot of other sports and activities, without being looked at individually.

“Since then, everybody has worked so hard together. To get everyone on the backside vaccinated, for instance, so that when we presented to the government we could show them that the majority of people had had their shots. Woodbine did pop-up clinics, for people who live here and don't have a lot of access to transport, so that when Ontario began to open it would have been very hard to deny us, when we could show such a rate of coverage.”

For trainers, of course, the uncertainty created a particular challenge: how do you train up to a target, if the target keeps moving? After all, judging that fever pitch for race day is perhaps the key to their whole profession. But Carroll showed just why she was inducted into the Canadian Hall of Fame in 2019 when priming Boardroom (Commissioner) to win the first graded stakes of the Woodbine calendar, the GIII Whimsical S., after a seven-month absence.

“It's been a very challenging year for all the Woodbine trainers,” she says. “Every other jurisdiction was open. We were aiming for an April start, and getting horses ready for that. But it's very difficult when you haven't got an exact date, and things keep moving, and you're trying to keep horses ready to peak: you don't want to go over the top but you don't want to back off them too much, either.”

Mighty Heart himself was always going to have to regroup, regardless, having disappointed behind barnmate Belichick (Lemon Drop Kid) in the final leg of the Triple Crown before running fourth in the GIII Ontario Derby. Belichick, second that day, will again be in opposition Thursday after an excellent comeback run of his own when beaten a nose in a Churchill allowance.

Michael Burns

“Mighty Heart is not a big horse but he's well put together, very athletic-looking, and he's definitely rounded out into a much more mature shape than he had last year,” Carroll reports. “Mentally, he's always been pretty uncomplicated–for a one-eyed horse! He's got a few little quirks, but if you can deal with those, he will just soldier on.

“I had always intended one start before we got up here, and initially we were going to do that at Gulfstream. But a race didn't come up when he was ready, so we had our one start at Keeneland. The intention then was to come home but when things got delayed, and he was doing so well down there, I just said that now is not the time to backtrack.

“Belichick I sent back down to Kentucky when racing didn't reopen, and he ran a nice race. We're looking at the Niagara S. on the grass [July 25] but he's been 50 days without a run, he needs a race and he's good enough to run in this one.”

Even at 25% of capacity, the return of fans on such a resonant occasion will represent another psychological breakthrough as Woodbine horsefolk seek to put a nightmare year behind them. “We've gotten so used to it being quiet over there!” Carroll says. “But yes, the energy of the fans is part of what makes any sport.”

It feels only fitting, then, for this particular race, on this particular day, to be dignified by the participation–besides three runners trained by another great ambassador for Woodbine, Mark Casse, who this summer receives his postponed induction to the Hall of Fame in Saratoga–of a horse who so captured the hearts of the Canadian horseracing public. Nobody could have predicted what lay ahead after Mighty Heart lost his left eye in a paddock accident when just two weeks old. Carrying the silks of breeder Larry Cordes, he won the Queen's Plate by 7 1/2 lengths in the second-fastest time since the race arrived at the new Woodbine racetrack–the opening of which in 1956 was, of course, one of the many benedictions to the Canadian sport owed to the drive of E.P. Taylor–before following up in the Prince of Wales S. on dirt at Fort Erie.

With so many skilled Canadian horsemen doing their utmost to build on Taylor's legacy, they could have no better model for the underdog spirit than Mighty Heart.

“Our breeding numbers are down but if you look at racing in North America, for the foal crop we have, a lot of very good horses come out of Canada,” Carroll says. “I just hope things pick up and our industry starts to grow, because we breed such nice horses here. I think that's what made me really proud, going down there with Mighty Heart as our Horse of the Year. He showed he could really do it on the North American stage, and I just hope that helped showcase Canadian racing, and the quality of the breeders we have.”

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Canadian Horse of The Year Mighty Heart Headlines Thursday’s Dominion Day Stakes

Reigning Canadian Horse of the Year Mighty Heart will return to the scene of his thrilling Queen's Plate triumph that propelled him to stardom last year at Woodbine Racetrack as the Josie Carroll trainee headlines the field for the featured Grade 3 Dominion Day Stakes on Canada Day.

The Ontario-bred son of Dramedy enters Thursday's $150,000 feature event, to be contested over 1-1/16 miles on the Tapeta, fresh off a victory in the Blame Stakes on May 29 at Churchill Downs.

After taking the first two-thirds of the OLG Canadian Triple Crown during his sophomore season, Mighty Heart finished seventh in the Breeders' Stakes final leg, won by stablemate Belichick, and fourth in the Grade 3 Ontario Derby, both at Woodbine.

He opened his four-year-old campaign in mid-April giving way late to finish third in a Keeneland allowance race before returning to the stakes spotlight.

Owned and bred by Larry Cordes, Mighty Heart has four wins from 10 career starts, with his latest earning him millionaire status.

Jockey Daisuke Fukumoto, who was aboard for the popular one-eyed colt's Triple Crown bid, will be back in the irons for the Dominion Day with Mighty Heart starting from post four in the seven-horse field.

The aforementioned Breeders' Stakes champion Belichick will also be competing in the Dominion Day for NK Racing and LNJ Foxwoods. Luis Contreras will be back aboard the Lemon Drop Kid colt, who has finished no lower than third in all six of his career starts while banking more than $500,000 in purse earnings.

A runner-up in the Queen's Plate and Grade 3 Ontario Derby, Belichick also finished second in his 2021 debut, missing by just a nose when running back on the turf, in a 1-1/16-mile allowance race on May 13 at Churchill Downs.

Scheduled as the seventh of eight races on the Canada Day card, the Dominion Day also features the Mark Casse-conditioned graded stakes winners Lookin to Strike, March to the Arch and Skywire.

Returning to action on Thursday following an injury, jockey Rafael Hernandez will partner with Skywire, who was named Canada's 2020 Champion Older Main Track Male thanks in part to a pair of Grade 2 stakes wins, the Eclipse and Autumn, last year at Woodbine for owners Gary Barber and Lucio Tucci.

Other contenders in the field include Malibu Mambo, now trained by Michael Doyle for Stronach Stables, and Atone for trainer Eoin Harty and owner Godolphin LLC.

First race post time is 1:20 p.m., with the Dominion Day scheduled for approximately 4:24 p.m.

$150,000 Dominion Day Stakes (Grade 3)

1 – Lookin to Strike – Kazushi Kimura – Mark Casse

2 – March to the Arch – Patrick Husbands – Mark Casse

3 – Atone – Justin Stein – Eoin Harty

4 – Mighty Heart – Daisuke Fukumoto – Josie Carroll

5 – Malibu Mambo – David Moran – Michael Doyle

6 – Belichick – Luis Contreras – Josie Carroll

7 – Skywire – Rafael Hernandez – Mark Casse

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