Breeders Crown Returns To Woodbine’s Mohawk Park In 2022

The $6.7 million (USD) Breeders Crown, harness racing's richest and most prestigious year-end divisional championship series, returns in the last weekend of October 2022 to Woodbine Mohawk Park in Campbellville, Ontario, Canada.

Eliminations, if necessary, for freshman races will be held Friday, Oct. 21, with three-year-old and older eliminations raced Saturday, Oct. 22. Finals for two-year-olds get underway the next Friday, Oct. 28 with sophomore finals and open events following on Saturday, Oct. 29. All Breeders Crown divisions are now guaranteed at $600,000, with the exception of the Open Mare Pace and Trot which have been raised to a minimum of $350,000.

Woodbine Entertainment last hosted all 12 events in 2019, smashing handle and attendance records at the seven-eighths mile track, with $11.1M wagered over the four fall nights. The 2019 events were capped by a sensational victory in the Crown Trot by French star Bold Eagle, who retired with earnings of $5,878,322.

The 2019 Breeders Crown at Woodbine Mohawk Park also initiated the successful and subsequent three-year sponsorship of the Libfeld-Katz Breeding Partnership, which was also responsible for creating and executing the Breeders Crown Charity Challenge. The Breeders Crown Charity Challenge, brainchild of breeder/owner Marvin Katz, has since raised over $800,000 in three years, supporting numerous local charities in Crown host track communities.

Woodbine Entertainment has hosted more Breeders Crown events than any other venue at their tracks of Woodbine, Mohawk and Greenwood, for a total of 152.

“The Woodbine name is recognized as one of harness racing's leading brands and we are excited and proud to partner with them and bring the Breeders Crown series back to Canada,” said John Campbell, President & CEO of the Hambletonian Society, which owns and administers the races.

“Woodbine is thrilled to welcome back the Breeders Crown to Woodbine Mohawk Park this October,” said Jim Lawson, CEO of Woodbine Entertainment. “Hosting the Breeders Crown continues our commitment to a world-class racing product, and we're focused on once again producing an exceptional two-night event showcasing the very best in our sport.”

The Breeders Crown series has typically crowned champions in every division for trotters and pacers and been the deciding factor in Horse of the Year honors.  A Breeders Crown title is one of the most coveted honors in harness racing.

The Hambletonian Society is a non-profit organization formed in 1924 to sponsor the race for which it was named, the Hambletonian Stake. The Society's mission is to encourage and support the breeding of Standardbred horses through the development, administration and promotion of harness racing stakes, early-closing races and other special events.   For more information, visit www.hambletonian.com.

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Woodbine’s 5 Furlongs With Steven Chircop: On Hockey, The Beatles And TVG

Each week until opening day of the 2022 Woodbine Thoroughbred meet (April 16), a familiar name in the sport will be in the spotlight, answering some fun, offbeat questions, giving readers a unique perspective into their personality.

Steven Chircop (twitter.com/chircopracing) launched his training career in 2009. Since that time, he's become a graded stakes-winning conditioner, and racked up nearly 160 victories. His biggest highlight to date came with Kara's Orientation, a dark bay son of Orientate who captured the 2011 running of the Grade 2 Sky Classic Stakes. A former hockey standout, Chircop has passed down his love of racing to his 2-year-old daughter, Ava, something he recently shared on Twitter.

You take on one NHL player in an all-star competition. Who do you choose and why?
“I'd go with [Edmonton Oilers superstar] Connor McDavid because he's Canadian and the best player in the world. But no chance that I'd be able to take him in any event I'd face him in. I played defense and I was a pretty good passer, but there's no way I'd be able to get the better of him in anything.”

You get backstage passes at any concert for a singer/group, past or present. Who do you choose?
“I'd have to go with The Beatles. So much of their music were classics and they had so many hits. That era was a great one for music. My favorite song by them would be 'I Wanna Hold Your Hand.' I sing along when I hear them in the car, but I don't want anyone, myself included, to have to hear me sing. That wouldn't be good for anybody.”

You get to star on any TV show. Which one do you choose?
“I would love to be on TVG. I really enjoying watching it. I would love to do commentary on any racing. The documentaries on TVG are amazing. There is so much more to horse racing that people have no idea about it. The documentaries on the Breeders' Cup that I would watch when I was growing up, they got me so hooked on horse racing. Maybe I could guest host with Jeff [Bratt] and Jason [Portuondo] this year on the Woodbine shows.”

What's your favorite distance and course to watch a race at Woodbine?
“I like long races. I would say a mile and an eighth to a mile and a quarter on the E.P. Taylor Turf Course. The thing about it is, for the most part, when it comes to those long races on the turf at Woodbine, usually the best horse wins. I do like the Inner Turf at Woodbine, but you have to get a trip. When it's the long distances on the E.P. Taylor, there is so much room for the horses to run and for the riders to maneuver. You have so much time to not get yourself into trouble. I love those kind of races.”

What is your most memorable win at Woodbine?
For sure, it has to be the 2011 Sky Classic when Kara's Orientation won. I think about it often. I watch the video of the race on YouTube every now and again. It's unbelievable. To think how far that horse came, how young I was, how great the horse was, and how he won the race – it still amazes me. Everything was happening so fast for me when I started training. You almost don't appreciate … I knew how fortunate I was, but the more time goes on, the more you cherish those moments. You look at the trainers that had a horse in that race, people like Graham Motion, Roger Attfield, Mark Casse – to be able to be in a race against them and show that you could run with their horses is an unbelievable feeling.”

Kara's Orientation winning the Sky Classic

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Racing in Canada Remains Resolute Amid COVID Turbulence

by Nigel Reid

The memory of what COVID-19 restrictions did to Canada's racing industry during the past 18 months, allied to the looming spectre of the troubling new variant, has done little to dispel the general uncertainty surrounding the sport north of the 49th parallel.

However, if the results of what was a truncated season are to be believed, there is cause for optimism over the manner in which the sport, especially at the country's flagship Woodbine facility in Toronto, bounced back in 2021.

Indeed, rumours of Canadian racing's demise appear to have been largely exaggerated. Most provinces, and especially Ontario/Woodbine, demonstrated impressive tenacity to not only survive the COVID-19 onslaught but also begin to 'build back better'.

Woodbine did an extraordinary job under the guidance of Woodbine Entertainment Group (WEG) CEO Jim Lawson–initially turning the world-class Toronto facility into something of a poster boy for how sports could continue to operate under COVID-19 protocols, and then doggedly lobbying for some common sense when the government temporarily shut down the track.

Fortunately, the two-month delay to the start of the Woodbine campaign could not prevent the 2021 Thoroughbred season generating an all-sources handle of more than $505 million, the third-highest season total in Woodbine Thoroughbred history.

Woodbine's stellar facilities helped ensure trainers were happy and that contentment resulted in an enviable average field size of nine. In turn, that helped generate a 4.8% increase in average per-race handle–an impressive $534,194 in 2021.

Talking at an end-of-season meeting, Lawson said: “Our racing team did a great job in creating appealing and competitive races throughout the entire season. The support of the owners and trainers through these hard times deserves recognition and our commitment to providing the best overall experience to those racing at Woodbine will only heighten in 2022.”

He continued: “Growing and strengthening the Woodbine brand across North America has been a focal point of our day-to-day activities over the past several years and we're proud of our success in this area, as it's evident these efforts continue to raise the profile of our world-class racing product at Woodbine.”

Woodbine racing | WEG/Michael Burns

Away from Woodbine, and despite the sudden and permanent closure of Marquis Downs in Saskatchewan, there were some positive signs for Canada's supporting cast of racing venues.

Century Mile Racetrack, Alberta's fledgling facility in Edmonton, continues to bed in and, conveniently located by an international airport, is slowly building a facility that has impressed the local horseracing community and attracted plenty of raiders from further afield. Century Mile hosts the Canadian Derby, which this year fell to Uncharacteristic (Texas Wildcatter), a horse claimed for $8,000 by his connections earlier in the season and whose victory in the Grade III contest came on the heels of a Manitoba Derby win the previous month.

Manitoba, like Alberta, endured stop-start scenarios of its own. But, when the province was finally up and running, organisers at Assiniboia Downs were rewarded with more of the eye-catching handles ($2.5 million on Derby Day alone) that began the previous year when the track benefitted from a continental shutdown of most other sports.

West of the Rockies, Hastings Racecourse also endured the shuttering of casinos that, in turn, temporarily halted virtually all funding for the sport across Canada. Thanks in large part to the lobbying by the British Columbia Horse Racing Industry Management Committee and other industry groups, there was a significant cash injection from the government ($3 million, divided equally between the Standardbred and Thoroughbred disciplines). The initiative enabled the picturesque track not only to keep racing going this summer, but also plan for a full slate of stakes races for 2022 and two days racing a week between May and October.

It was touch and go at Hastings for a while, with one industry stalwart needing to personally underwrite the season with his own money.

Glen Todd | Horsephotos

A self-described “glass half-full” man, Glen Todd, owner, trainer, breeder and the man behind the North American Thoroughbred Horse Company (NATHC) that remains such a driving force in BC racing, shrugged off the need to dig into his own pocket in typically modest fashion. Todd said he was content that, after a lot of hard work behind the scenes, the 2021 season, albeit severely truncated, was saved and the immediate future of the sport in BC secured.

“There were obviously moments when it was very dark,” Todd told the TDN this week, “but I'm not a doom and gloom person and I was always confident that we'd be back.”

Todd said he is also optimistic that the new owner of Great Canadian Gaming Corporation, which was bought out earlier this year by Apollo Global Management, represents an opportunity to press the reset button on the relationship between Hastings' front and back sides.

“We've had a few meetings already,” explained Todd, “and I'm optimistic. Talks about the future have been positive and encouraging, but only time will tell.”

Although not unique to Canada, the horse population, along with owner numbers, continues to be a concern in every racing province, even Ontario, and it's fair to say that the country's breeding sector was navigating turbulent seas even before the pandemic hit.

However, imaginative and generous breeding incentives in the four main racing provinces continue to help underpin a delicate sales market after several worrying years. This year's yearling sale in British Columbia, for instance, offered bonuses for BC-bred yearlings that will add as much as 50% to winning purses for qualified horses. The result saw the strongest demand for locally bred runners in years, and will hopefully result in a much-needed boost in backstretch numbers for 2022.

There are a variety of schemes across the provinces and, while some in the racing community have doubted the sustainability of these 'walled garden' incentives, there seems little doubt that, in the short-term at least, they have helped to shore up the residual value of bloodstock.

The average cost of a yearling at September's Canadian Thoroughbred Horse Society (CTHS) Yearling Sale in Toronto was, at $20,027, marginally up on the previous year. Averages at the equivalent CTHS sale in Alberta, meanwhile, rose to more than $10,500 from $8,350 in 2020 and, at the CTHS auction in BC, results were even better, with an average price of $15,959 representing a near 20% boost on the same sale 12 months ago.

Like many jurisdictions around the world, Canadian racing has endured a torrid 12 months. However, with the commitment of many and the assured steering of a few others, the sport has, so far, withstood the many blows from COVID-19 and can begin once more to consider the future with real hope.

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The Determined Horsewoman, The Diva, And A Dream Come True

Five days removed from her biggest horse racing highlight, trainer Laura Krasauskaite channeled her inner Snoop Dogg.

There is no trace of conceit in her voice, nor is there any want of adulation in the aftermath of her milestone moment, the one delivered by Silent Causeway, the filly she also owns, in the stakes race on the penultimate day of the 2021 Woodbine Thoroughbred meet.

“Just like Snoop Dogg talked about on the day he received his star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame, I'm proud of me,” started Krasauskaite, referencing the rapper, songwriter, actor, businessman and entertainer. “Winning my first stakes race, the La Prevoyante, I am very proud of that accomplishment.”

One the 38-year-old is still trying to wrap her head around.

Purchased at the 2018 CTHS Ontario yearling sale for $4,000 from breeder Michael Deegan and consignor Bernard McCormack, Silent Causeway was testing the stakes ranks for the second time. Last year, she missed by a nose in the Algoma Stakes.

Runner-up finishes, usually requiring a photo finish, were nothing new for the dark bay who gave Krasauskaite her first training win last June.

Ahead of the La Prevoyante, she spent quality time with her filly and offered up encouragement, actions and words she hoped would spur on the four-year-old to victory.

“We ran in the Algoma in 2020 and she just missed winning. With her, it always seems it's almost. That she has the talent, but something was missing. I had to find the solution, to stop missing by a nose or a hair, or a head-bob. I realized that she just wanted more attention from me. We call her 'Diva' for a reason. She's very needy, kind of like, 'Look at me. I'm special. Me, me, me.' So, I said I will give her that attention. I went into the stall, massaging her, rubbing her legs – she doesn't need that, but she likes to be pampered. It's a spa day. For two weeks, I just gave her that attention and put all the focus on her. And I kept telling her a couple of days prior to the race, 'Stretch your neck, stick your tongue out if you have to.'”

As it turned out, she wouldn't need to go the extra mile.

Sent off as the 9-2 third choice in the field of 10 in the race for three-year-old Ontario-sired fillies, Silent Causeway was at the back of the pack into the first turn. After a quarter-mile in the 1 1/16-mile race, she still had nine rivals in front of her.

Summer Sunday, the multiple stakes-winning champion contesting her final race before heading to Ireland to become a broodmare, then struck the front and led the group through a half-mile in :47.72, as Silent Causeway moved into ninth spot.

November Fog, the slight 2-1 choice, engaged Summer Sunday around the turn for home and seized command while jockey Justin Stein, aboard Silent Causeway, had his charge rolling down the lane.

Fourth and gaining at the stretch call, reached in 1:38.59, Silent Causeway went on to notch a two-length victory in a time of 1:45.62.

Flanked by her two daughters, Karoline, 10, and Deolina, 7, at the rail, the trio energetically, enthusiastically and exhaustingly cheered the filly home.

The decibel level grew louder in the final strides to the finish line.“It was awesome,” recalled Krasauskaite. “The girls were screaming louder than me when she was running down the lane. When she switched leads, I knew that it was going to be okay. That's the first thing I was looking at. I said, 'Switch leads, honey!' And she did. She kicked into another gear and this great feeling came over me. To be able to share that moment with my girls, to have them right beside me, it's something I will always remember.”

Convincing herself it actually did happen wasn't anywhere near as easy as Silent Causeway's winning performance.

It took tangible proof of the win for Krasauskaite to, in racing parlance, make it official.

“When she won, I didn't believe it,” she said of the daughter of prominent Ontario sire, Silent Name (JPN). “I was in shock for two days. I wasn't sure it was really real. “I fell asleep at about one o'clock in the morning because I couldn't sleep. When I woke up, I thought to myself, 'Okay, this is a nice dream, but you still have to work, Laura.' It was this confusion and you wonder if it really did happen. And then I saw the trophy that was right beside her picture, and then I realized, 'No, it's not a dream. This is real.'”

Silent Causeway and Justin Stein power down the Woodbine homestretch to capturing the La Prevoyante Stakes.

It was a goal Krasauskaite wanted to achieve the moment she took out her trainer's license four years ago.

She still has the note she penned to herself on that day.

“That's what I wanted the second I held my trainer's license in my hand for the first time. I wrote a note to myself saying that I have to go up. I don't want to stay steady. I want to go places. So, with my goals, I thought that I would start things with winning an Ontario-sired stakes race. I worked hard for that dream. I bought a nice horse for $4,000, and she won by nine lengths for me last year. I knew that I had a nice horse, but I felt that I had to spend time with her, to be patient and give her everything that she needed. She had a good two-year-old season, but when she turned three, everything just came together for her. I had seven people call me after she won that race so easily, and I said no to everyone. I looked at her and I knew that this was my chance.”

A chance she never considered not taking. Just as she did when she made her way to the Woodbine backstretch over 20 years ago.

In 1998, Krasauskaite, along with her family, came to Canada, specifically Etobicoke, Ontario, not far from Woodbine. The young girl who had developed an affinity for horses in her native Lithuania, studying them, riding them and doing some jumping, eventually headed to Woodbine hoping to land a job.

Recollections are many, including the first day she traversed through the expansive Toronto oval backstretch.

“I do remember the first day I went there,” she said with a laugh. “No English. All I knew was, 'Hi, bye, and thank you.'”

Her command of the English language and love of Thoroughbreds grew exponentially.

She was an exercise rider for 20 years for a few trainers, including John McKenzie, and bought her first horse, Sweet Shobiz, for $500. The daughter of Nobiz Like Shobiz finished second for Krasauskaite, which led her to buy a yearling, Vision of Future, in 2016, who would provide her first win as an owner.

Silent Causeway, however, is undoubtedly the star of her barn.

“I bought her blind. I really liked the bloodlines in the catalogue. The mare didn't race, but I really liked Silent Name, so I decided I'd take a chance.”

A low-risk gamble that has paid off handsomely. In 15 career starts, Silent Causeway is 3-5-1, with earnings in excess of $175,000 (CDN).

A horse, just like her trainer, who embodies the spirit of the jockey silks that accompany her every time she races.

The colours, turquoise and white, are partnered with a warrior astride a horse with a sword held aloft.

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“I like turquoise and white because it reminds me of an ocean. When you want to get away and be by the ocean, you see that white sand and blue, blue water that gives you that feeling of calm.”

The image emblazoned on the silks is an homage to her native land.

“The warrior on the horse, with the sword in the air, that's my heritage. That's my people. It is a symbol of strength. We are very stubborn people from Lithuania, and we don't stop working until we achieve what our dreams are. Every time I look at that symbol, it keeps me going.”

And make no mistake, Krasauskaite is just getting started.

Less than 24 hours after the big win, there were moments, even if it was a brief thought, of loftier goals to consider.

There was also a glass, or perhaps two, of celebratory bubbly.

“The first thing I did after the race was call my girlfriends and tell them it was champagne night at my place. So, they all showed up and we had a great night. I called my parents too. My dad screamed very loudly and my mom started crying. It's a great moment, not just for me and for my horse, but for all the people who have supported me, including the people of Nobleton, where I live.

“But now, I'm finally down from cloud nine, and I will turn my focus to next year. We have two months to rest, but there is still a lot of planning. I have two broodmares that I'm planning on breeding and bumping up my bloodlines. Hopefully, we have some babies that can grow up to be stakes winners at Woodbine. One of them, Tell the Duchess, had one of her offspring, Duke of Love, win first-time out for [trainer] Josie Carroll. Hopefully, she can produce many more of those in my stable.”

There are other dreams Krasauskaite will continue to chase, including one of the sport's most high-profile gathering of racing's biggest stars.

“My biggest goal is to have a horse in the Breeders' Cup. I don't care if it takes me two years, three years, four years, five years, maybe even 10 years. I will be there one day. It's my goal and it's my dream. I'm not going to stop until I find that horse who will take me there. I don't want to spin left on the same circle. I want to go outside of that circle, to make Canadians proud, to make Woodbine people proud, to make my family and friends proud.”

The journey to where she finds herself now hasn't been without its hurdles. Yet, even in the lowest of times, Krasauskaite refused to throw in the towel.

“My friend told me, 'Don't quit.' I told her not to worry about that. I'm too stubborn to quit. I will never quit until I achieve what I want. It's in my blood.”

Just like the determined warrior symbolized on her eye-catching racing silks.

“I'll say, like Snoop Dogg said, 'I'm proud of me.' I'm proud of me for not quitting. I went through bad days, stressful days, no money days and I'm proud of me for not stopping, not giving up and thinking positively. I didn't stop and I never will.”

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