Dan Loiselle: Recalling The Thrill Of Canadian Triple Crown Victory

Dan Loiselle's crowning moment calling the thoroughbreds at Woodbine Racetrack is actually a five-part story.

It would seem only fitting that the man called more than 55,000 horse races over his distinguished hall of fame career would have something insightful to say about the Canadian Triple Crown.

Not only because history could be made on Saturday afternoon at the Toronto oval, but also because Loiselle, who retired from the announcer's booth in 2015, brought home multiple Triple Crown winners.

Five of them, to be exact.

Established in 1959, only seven horses have won the prestigious Canadian Triple Crown, comprised of the Queen's Plate, Prince of Wales Stakes and the Breeders' Stakes.

New Providence won in 1959, Canebora in 1963, With Approval in 1989, Izvestia in 1990, Dance Smartly in 1991, Peteski in 1993 and, most recently, Wando in 2003. Three of the winners, namely, Peteski, Izvestia and With Approval, were campaigned by hall of fame trainer Roger Attfield. Five horses also achieved the feat prior to its official recognition 61 years ago.

From his spot on the sixth floor of Woodbine, Loiselle, who began calling thoroughbreds in 1986, was the voice of five of those champions: With Approval, Izvestia, Dance Smartly, Peteski, and Wando.

“What I remember about my first one, in 1989, was that I was just three years into calling races at Woodbine,” he recalled. “There hadn't been a Triple Crown winner in Canada in 26 years. With Approval won the Plate by the narrowest of margins, and a real narrow margin in the Prince of Wales, both of those races contested on dirt. I had spoken to Roger [Attfield] after the Prince of Wales and he told me that the horse will be so much better on grass. And in the Breeders', he was.”

The son of Caro was money in the bank for his connections.

Literally.

“The Bank of Montreal had put up $1 million if a horse won the Triple Crown – 1989 was the first year – and With Approval won it,” noted Loiselle. “And Roger was right… With Approval turned out to be a tremendous grass horse.”

Loiselle didn't have to wait long to call his next Triple Crown winner.

It would be just one year, in fact.

“Izvestia, also trained by Roger, won it in 1990. [Jockey] Don Seymour won it back-to-back, and so did Kinghaven Farms. Izvestia won the Breeders' so easily as well. Again, it was the second straight year for the $1 million Bank of Montreal bonus.”

In 1991, it was a filly's turn to step into the Triple Crown spotlight, a magnificent Sam-Son Farm star who would go on to become a top-tier talent on the world stage.

“Dance Smartly… just a fantastic horse,” praised Losielle. “She won the Woodbine Oaks, the Queen's Plate, Prince of Wales and in the Breeders' Stakes, [jockey] Pat Day didn't even touch her. She won so easily. She went on that year to win the Breeders' Cup Distaff, and was named the Eclipse champion 3-year-old filly of the year, won a Sovereign Award as Canada's horse of the year, and was inducted into both the U.S. and Canadian halls of fame. She was also the dam of two Queen's Plate winners, Scatter the Gold [2000] and Dancethruthedawn [2001]. She was absolutely spectacular.”

Loiselle had to wait only two years to make his next Crown call when Peteski, owned by Earle Mack, delivered Attfield his third trophy.

“He won the Plate – I don't know if [jockey] Craig Perret had a previous commitment – but Dave Penna rode him in the Prince of Wales. In the Breeders' Stakes, on national television, the saddle slipped on Peteski early in the race, so the saddle was up close to his shoulder. He was much the best. Perret, like Pat Day in 1991 on Dance Smartly, he just hand rode him through the stretch. If memory serves me correctly, he was the lowest-priced [$2.20 to win] Breeders' winner.”

Robert Geller, who took over the Woodbine thoroughbred announcer reins from Loiselle in 2015, was at the Toronto oval for Peteski's triple tour-de-force finale.

He can recall the Breeders' victory as though it were yesterday.

“My fondest memory of the Canadian Triple Crown was the win by Peteski in the 1993 Breeders' Stakes,” noted Geller. “It coincided with my trip to Toronto and I watched the race on track at Woodbine alongside [Woodbine vice-president of racing at the time] John Whitson. That week, leading Hong Kong jockey Tony Cruz happened to be a special guest with his family, not that either of us had checked in on our off-season plans. The track went out of its way to make him feel welcome and fortuitously, such hospitality was extended to me too.”

His thought that a particular longshot could derail Peteski's bid for the record books didn't go over well with his host, but the English-born, Australian-raised Geller was only too happy to have been wrong with his pick.

“At the time, I didn't fully understand the rigors of the Canadian Triple Crown, but loved the fact that a three-year-old had to win on turf to clinch it,” said Geller. “Being slightly contrarian, I mentioned a possible upsetter to Peteski to John, who didn't seem too impressed by that suggestion. Fortunately, there was never cause for concern as Peteski won as expected, becoming Canada's 11th Triple Crown winner.”

Wando, a horse that would become one of Canada's most beloved racing figures was the country's 12th Crown champion.

Bred and owned by the late Gus Schickedanz, the stunning chestnut's chase for greatness was front-page news in 2003.

For Loiselle, it is still one of his most cherished racing recollections.

“It was really fantastic. He was the people's horse. My biggest thoughts about Wando and the Breeders' – and I have a lot of them – is the hype that surrounded the race. I even did a commercial about Wando before the Breeders'. As the horses are going into the gate – a mile and a half – and they're right in front of me, I said, 'And the people's horse, Wando, is loading into the gate, a couple minutes away from his destiny.' And the people went crazy.”

The deafening roar of the crowd that had packed the grandstand would only grow louder as Wando, under siege every step of the way, finally put away his rivals down the long E.P. Taylor Turf Course stretch.

Said Loiselle over the rising crescendo, “They come to the final sixteenth, and Canada salutes the Breeders' Stakes winner and the Triple Crown champion… Wando was better than wonderful this afternoon, he was magnificent!”

Wando was also the one Loiselle will never forget.

“Of all the Triple Crown winners, that's the one that stands out in my mind because people were absolutely in love with him. When Patrick [jockey, Husbands] came back in front of the crowd with Gus leading him, it was unforgettable. Mike [trainer, Keogh] is a good friend and he did a masterful job with Wando. Of all the five, it stands out as the most treasured one for me.”

No other horse has recorded the sweep since Wando did 17 years ago.

On Saturday, that could change.

Mighty Heart, the one-eyed wonder bred and owned by Lawrence Cordes, humbled his foes in the Queen's Plate before winning the Prince of Wales in similarly impressive fashion.

Now, the Josie Carroll trainee, who has already built a huge fan following, will seek to become No. 13.

Geller is hoping he'll be able to call his first Canadian Triple Crown.

“I am especially looking forward to seeing the rematch between Mighty Heart and stablemate Belichick. Admittedly, Mighty Heart trounced his rivals in the Queen's Plate but runner-up Belichick closed with interest off a light foundation and represents a serious threat to thwart the barn's Triple Crown aspirations, especially since he has proven from his debut that he can handle grass.

“Let me just say, hats off to Josie Carroll on an exceptional season, having brought the best out of her stakes quality runners and kept them fresh. Mighty Heart seemed to sneak under the radar but is now one of racing's most compelling stories at a time when the industry in North America could really do with a feelgood story.”

Woodbine's track announcer would love the opportunity to deliver it, in his way, to racing fans from coast-to-coast and beyond.

It's a moment he's thought of numerous times in the days leading up to the 129th edition of the Breeders' Stakes.

Geller has also recalled where he was nearly 30 years ago, albeit in a different spot from where he'll be at Woodbine on Saturday.

“To be in the position to call the action, 27 years after having witnessed Peteski's victory live, is something I could never have dreamed of. Fingers crossed, this one-eyed wonder and his gifted rider, Daisuke Fukumoto, make racing history.”

Loiselle and a legion of others share that very same hope.

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One Horse May Stand Between Mighty Heart and the Canadian Triple Crown and It’s His Stablemate

The tale of a one-eyed horse who has come from nowhere to sweep the first two legs of the Canadian Triple Crown has been the feel-good story of the year at Woodbine, but the next chapter could end with an uncomfortable twist. Mighty Heart (Dramedy) is the even-money favorite in Saturday’s Breeders S., a role he earned after decisive victories in the Queen’s Plate and the Prince of Wales S. But there’s a rapidly improving, dangerous horse in the field named Belichick (Lemon Drop Kid) who should relish the mile-and-a-half on the turf and is the second choice at 7-2 in the morning line. Like Mighty Heart, Belichick is trained by Josie Carroll. That means that the Canadian Hall of Fame trainer will be in the unenviable position of perhaps costing herself and Mighty Heart a Triple Crown sweep.

“I think I would have really mixed emotions if that were to happen,” she said. “Putting it in human terms, it would be like you coaching two kids and one has a chance to do something extraordinary but it’s the other one that you are bringing along who steps up. You are proud of both of them but there’s going to be a bittersweet factor, of course.”

Owned by NK Racing and LNJ Foxwoods, Belichick is still a maiden after three starts, but showed dramatic improvement when second behind Mighty Heart in the Queen’s Plate when he was beaten 7 1/2 lengths. Carroll kept him out of the Prince of Wales and should have a fresh horse who has continued to get better as the races have gotten longer.

“Belichick is a strong, athletic horse.,” she said. “He is a horse I expected from his first start would be a dominant horse on this circuit. It ended up taking him longer to come around than I expected. Certainly, he’s just coming into his own.”

Neither of Carroll’s horses were considered serious Queen’s Plate contenders as late as early July. After finishing out of the money in his first two starts, both of them at the Fair Grounds, Mighty Heart broke his maiden July 11 at Woodbine. After finishing third in an allowance race, he was dismissed at 13-1 in the Queen’s Plate and was overshadowed by still another Carroll horse, Curlin’s Voyage (Curlin). A filly, she finished fifth as the 5-2 favorite as Mighty Heart ran away from his competition.

“He really enjoys running and once he figured out what it was all about he just steadily improved,” Carroll said. “I don’t think it was one thing that suddenly turned him around. He just got better.”

Seventeen days later and now the 4-5 favorite, Mighty Heart, who is a homebred owned by Lawrence Cordes, had no problem winning the second leg of the Canadian series, the mile-and-three-sixteenths dirt race at Fort Erie. That put him within one win of a Triple Crown sweep. The Canadian Triple Crown has been won seven times and not since 2003 when won by Wando (Langfuhr).

Mighty Heart became an easy horse to root for. He lost his left eye in a paddock accident when he was just 2-weeks-old, but has overcome that setback for Carroll and Cordes, a small owner/breeder. His sire, Dramedy, stood in two different states, Kentucky and Oklahoma, during four years of study duty in North America before being shipped off to Saudi Arabia. Mighty Heart is one of only 17 foals from his first crop.

Mighty Hearty grew to be so popular that Woodbine set up a special media day for the horse on the backstretch Monday and Carroll, Cordes and jockey Daisuke Fukumoto were on hand to answer questions.

“It’s wonderful when our sport gets a horse that captures the public’s imagination,” Carroll said. “It lets people see the human side of racing, that it’s more than just a sport. It is these wonderful animals and the wonderful people that are involved with them. You’ve got this horse that came into Queen’s Plate as the underdog and won it decisively. He overcame the one eye. He’s got as small owner who only owns a couple of horses but is intense about racing. I think the whole story has caught on with everybody. And the name. The name is exactly who he is.”

There is some question as to how Mighty Heart will handle the switch to the turf. He has raced on the surface once, in a Mar. 21 maiden at the Fair Grounds where he finished 11th. He bore out badly in that race, which Carroll said, was due to the fact he has just the one eye.

“He got some kickback in his face,” she said. “He has only the one eye, so I think when it hit his blind side it really startled him and he ran to the outside. Since then has had a lot of schooling in behind horses and after that race we put a one-eyed blinkers over that eye. There’s a cup we put on that covers the sensitive area and that helped turn him around a lot. I don’t think it was the surface that time. I think it was the kickback.”

While Carroll isn’t too worried about the turf, she admitted that Mighty Heart’s schedule is a concern. Just as was the case with the American Triple Crown, the Canadian races had to be rescheduled because of the pandemic and there are just six weeks between the first leg and the last.

“We are asking a horse who is very young in his career to do a great deal,” she said. “Certainly, it’s a concern. He’s acting great going into the race and his blood work is great. Everything says he is on go but you really don’t know how much those two races took out of him.”

If they did take something out of Mighty Heart that could set things up for Belichick, who has had six weeks off. Carroll will be seeking her second win in the Breeders. She won the race in 2014 with Ami’s Holiday (Harlan’s Holiday). She could get her second Saturday, but the question is, with which horse?

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The Friday Show Presented By Woodbine: Double Your Triple Crown Pleasure

It's not every day you have a chance to watch not one, but two horses race for Triple Crown glory. But that's what we have this weekend as the one-eyed wonder, Mighty Heart, goes for Canada's Triple Crown in Saturday's Breeders' Stakes from Woodbine, and some eight hours later Contrail bids to become Japan's eighth Triple Crown winner in the Kikuka Sho from Kyoto Race Course.

The Canadian Triple Crown requires versatility, going from the synthetic Tapeta track at Woodbine, to dirt at Fort Erie, then returning to Woodbine for the mile and one-half Breeders' Stakes on the E.P. Taylor turf course. Mighty Heart, trained by Josie Carroll, won the first leg with a 13-1 wire-to-wire upset, then scored as the favorite from off the pace at Fort Erie.

Contrail tries to follow in the Triple Crown-winning footsteps of his sire, the Sunday Silence stallion Deep Impact. He won the Oka Sho at a mile in April, cruised in the 1 1/2-mile Tokyo Yushun (Japanese Derby) at 1 1/2  miles this summer and now stretches out for the 1 7/8-mile Kikuka Sho, referred to as the Japanese St. Leger.

In this week's Friday Show, publisher Ray Paulick and editor in chief Natalie Voss discuss the merits of these two horses and other Triple Crown challenges from around the racing world.

Watch this week's Friday Show below.

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Canadian Triple Crown Hopeful Mighty Heart Is ‘Up To The Challenge’ In Saturday’s Breeders’ Stakes

Mighty Heart will continue his quest to join an elite group of horses to sweep all three legs of the OLG Canadian Triple Crown this Saturday in the $400,000 Breeders' Stakes at Woodbine Racetrack.

Trained by Hall of Famer and three-time Queen's Plate winner Josie Carroll, Mighty Heart headlines the final jewel of the tri-surface series for Canadian-bred three-year-olds, which concludes on Woodbine's world-renowned E.P. Taylor Turf Course with the longest leg at the distance of 1 ½-miles.

The son of Dramedy, bred and owned by Lawrence Cordes, is the even-money morning line favorite in the field of 12 having already scored wins in the $1 million Queen's Plate at 1 ¼ miles over Woodbine's Tapeta track on September 12 and the $400,000 Prince of Wales at 1 3/16 miles over Fort Erie's dirt course on September 29.

“He's a little horse that's overcome [a lot],” said Carroll, who won the 2006 Plate with Edenwold and the 2011 running with the filly Inglorious. “There's something in racing we call heart, and horses with heart are what you're looking for more so sometimes than horses with talent.”

Aside from contending with 11 rivals, Mighty Heart could have to contend with turf that has some give to it. The Toronto area has experienced rainy weather in the lead-up to Saturday.

“I can't tell you how he's going to handle a yielding turf,” offered Carroll. “In North America, we very seldom get the chance to run on very soft turf. I believe he'll handle the grass. He's run once on the grass, and we had him up on the E.P. course the other day, and he just skipped across it. Pedigree-wise, we have every reason to think he'll handle it [the 1 ½-mile distance], but until a horse does that, you really don't know. It's a very, very challenging thing to be asking him to do right now. This horse has run two hard races and now you're asking him to go a mile and a half on a possibly tiring course. Hopefully, he's up to the challenge.”

Cordes is thrilled to see the outpouring of affection for Mighty Heart, which continues to swell ahead of the Breeders' Stakes.

“In this time of COVID, this is a boost to people,” he said. “The phone calls I get from the west coast to east coast of Canada, my girlfriend and I have had multiple dozens of calls… people are just so excited. I feel the same thing, it just puts the excitement into me, so for all of the racing fans and all of his fans, let's make it happen. Just cheer him on, we need everything we can get.”

Mighty Heart will once again have Daisuke Fukumoto in the irons.

The young Japanese-born rider is still wrapping his head around the significance of what it would mean to come out on top in the Breeders' Stakes.

“It would be very special,” said Fukumoto. “To win the Queen's Plate is already special, but the Triple Crown is the highest. You never think of winning the Triple Crown.”

The pair will square off against some familiar foes on Saturday.

Trained by Kevin Attard, Clayton (6-1), who won the Plate Trial in mid-August, was third in the Queen's Plate and runner-up in the Prince of Wales. Owned by Donato Lanni and Daniel Plouffe, the son of Bodemeister finished second, 2 ½ lengths behind Mighty Heart in the middle jewel at 1 3/16 miles over Fort Erie's dirt track on September 29.

Belichick, who finished a strong second in the Queen's Plate, and is the 7-2 second choice in the morning line, will look to turn the tables on his stablemate.

The son of Lemon Drop Kid, also coached by Carroll, has a pair of seconds and a third in three lifetime starts.

Owned by NK Racing and LNJ Foxwoods, Belichick should appreciate the move to turf and the mile-and-a-half distance.

“This is a really talented horse,” said Carroll, who won the 2014 Breeders' Stakes with Ami's Holiday. “I think from the moment he came in my barn, he showed a great deal of ability. If anything has surprised me, it's that it has taken this long for him to really blossom. I'm not surprised to have him in this position. It's also very rewarding to train a horse of his caliber.”

Other Breeders' Stakes hopefuls include Conrad Farms' Muskoka Giant (20-1), who broke his maiden over one mile of turf two starts prior to his fifth-place finish in the Prince of Wales for trainer Mark Casse.

A two-time (2014 with Lexie Lou and in 2018 with Wonder Gadot) Queen's Plate winner, Casse, who won the 2007 Breeders' with Marchfield and the 2018 renewal with Neepawa, will also send out Deviant (30-1).

A chestnut son of Daredevil, Deviant won last year's El Joven Stakes and Sunday Silence Stakes. The Red Lane Thoroughbreds' gelding will be making his second straight start at Woodbine, after finishing seventh in the Queenston Stakes this July.

Unraced as a two-year-old, English Conqueror (12-1), a chestnut son of English Channel, will make his Triple Crown debut in the Breeders'.

Bred and owned by JWS Farms, the Darwin Banach trainee finished third in his career bow on July 5 at Woodbine, a seven-furlong maiden special weight turf engagement. After a disappointing 10th-place finish next time out, English Conqueror rebounded with a fourth in 1 1/16 mile race run on the E.P. Taylor Turf Course, an effort that saw him display plenty of vigor in the late going.

He arrives at the Breeders' off a maiden-breaking score on September 19, a head victory that was earned over 1 1/16 miles on the Woodbine Inner Turf.

“He's doing really well,” said Banach. “He's like an immature little boy, in that it took him a little while to learn what was going on, and he's still learning. You have to ask him to do what you want him to do. He doesn't just go ahead and do it. I thought Emma [jockey, Wilson] would suit this horse fantastically after he finished fourth, and it did. I was quite concerned in that race because they went so slow early, but he does have a great turn of foot and he was able to kick on from there, get the lead and then get the win. I was very happy with that effort.”

Banach believes the lightly-raced Ontario-bred will be even better on Saturday.

“We always thought he was a good horse. We even considered the Queen's Plate and other races, but he couldn't quite get his game together before that time. So, here we are. We think he can handle a mile and a half and we've got to give it a shot.”

A victory would be even more special considering the sire of English Conqueror's dam, champion Sky Conqueror, was bred and owned by William Sorokolit, Sr., who recently passed away.

Banach trained the multiple graded stakes winning son of Sky Classic for Sorokolit. Sky Conqueror's victories included consecutive (2006-07) editions of the Northern Dancer Turf Stakes (G2T) and the 2007 running of the Woodford Reserve Turf Classic (G1T). Multiple graded stakes winner Classic Stamp was also another a horse of note for Sorokolit.

A successful businessman and entrepreneur, Sorokolit won 212 career races along with over $10.1 million (U.S.) in purse earnings.

“Emma rode Sky Conqueror, so maybe this is meant to be,” said Banach. “We loved training for Mr. Sorokolit and he'll be dearly missed. I believe he started owning horses in university, so for 70-some years he owned horses.”

Enchant Me (50-1), Glorious Tribute (30-1), and Olliemyboy (12-1) will also go postward after making an appearance in the opening legs of the Triple Crown.

Told It All (12-1), Meyer (30-1) and Kunal (50-1) complete the field.

In 2018, the Casse-trained filly Wonder Gadot won the first two Triple Crown races but did not compete in the Breeders' Stakes. Casse sent out Neepawa to victory in the final leg that year.

The last Triple Crown contender prior to Wonder Gadot was the great Wando, just the seventh horse to complete the series sweep since it was established in 1959 when he won the 2003 Breeders' Stakes with jockey Patrick Husbands aboard for trainer Michael Keogh and the late owner/breeder Gustav Schickedanz.

Since then, A Bit O'Gold (2004), Pender Harbour (2011) and Tone Broke (2019) also claimed two-thirds of the Triple Crown by taking the last two legs.

The longest shot to win the Breeders' was Miami Deco in 2010. The Ontario-bred son of Limehouse returned $132.10 for a $2 win bet. Catherine Day Phillips became the first female trainer to win the race courtesy of A Bit O'Gold in 2004. One year later, she was in the winner's circle again, this time with Jambalaya. Roger Attfield holds the record for most wins by a trainer with nine. His first came with Carotene in 1986. Jockey Rafael Hernandez has won three of the past four runnings.

“This is a great time for racing in Ontario,” said Woodbine Entertainment CEO Jim Lawson. “It's fun. It's a wonderful opportunity for us to promote the sport of horse racing. We're thrilled that there is this opportunity.”

Post time is set for 1:10 p.m. ET, with the Breeders' Stakes scheduled as the ninth race (approximately 5:39 p.m. ET). The historic event will be broadcast live from 5 p.m. to 6 p.m. ET on TSN. Coverage is led by Canadian broadcasting legend Brian Williams, alongside TSN's Laura Diakun and Woodbine Entertainment's Jason Portuondo, with Brodie Lawson contributing reports from track level.

FIELD FOR THE BREEDERS' STAKES

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

1 – Meyer – Sahin Civaci – Martin Drexler – Bruno Schickedanz – 30-1

2 – Enchant Me – Steven Bahen – Santino Di Paola – York Tech Racing Stable – 50-1

3 – Clayton – Rafael Hernandez – Kevin Attard – Donato Lanni and Daniel Plouffe – 6-1

4 – Olliemyboy – Patrick Husbands – Sid Attard – JMJ Racing Stables LLC – 12-1

5 – English Conqueror – Emma-Jayne Wilson – Darwin Banach – JWS Farms – 12-1*

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

7 – Deviant – Jerome Lermyte – Mark Casse – Red Lane Thoroughbreds LLC – 30-1

8 – Mighty Heart – Daisuke Fukumoto – Josie Carroll – Lawrence Cordes – 1-1

9 – Belichick – Luis Contreras – Josie Carroll – NK Racing and LNJ Foxwoods – 7-2

10 – Kunal – Emile Ramsammy – Steven Chircop – Bruno Schickedanz – 50-1

11 – Told It All – Kazushi Kimura – Norm McKnight – Rainbow Stables – 12-1*

12 – Muskoka Giant – Justin Stein – Mark Casse – Conrad Farms – 20-1

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