Friday Show Presented By Woodbine: In Racing, Time Is Of The Essence

More than one Thoroughbred trainer has said that “time only matters if you're in jail,” but try telling that to a horseplayer. In North America, the fractional and final times of every race listed in a horse's past performances can play an important role in a bettor's decision-making process, not to mention the performance ratings – from Beyer and Brisnet speed figures to Thorograph and Ragozin sheets – that many horseplayers use.

The method of timing races at some tracks has changed in recent years from traditional beam systems that are tripped when the first horse passes designated poles to a GPS system based on transponders placed on a horse's saddle towel. The transition has not been seamless, and some tracks are now using a hybrid of both systems to compile accurate race times and running positions. Even that system can produce inaccurate times, as evidenced by several races on the two-day Breeders' Cup world championships at Del Mar on Nov. 5-6.

In this week's edition of the Friday Show, Equibase president Sal Sinatra joins publisher Ray Paulick and news editor Chelsea Hackbarth to talk about the race-timing challenges he inherited when he joined the company earlier this year and how he hopes timing problems will be resolved. Sinatra, a longtime racing executive who worked in the statistical department of Daily Racing Form when he was just getting started in the business, understands the importance of accurate data, including times, in a horse's past performances.

Paulick and Hackbarth review undefeated Woodbine Star of the Week Lady Speightspeare's victory in the G2 Bessarabian Stakes under Emma-Jayne WIlson. Owned and bred by Charles Fipke (who also owned and bred Lady Speightspeare's multiple graded stakes-winning dam), the 3-year-old Speightstown filly is trained by Hall of Famer Roger Attfield.

Watch this week's Friday Show, presented by Woodbine, below:

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Francine Villeneuve Seeks Second Frost King Crown, This Time As Trainer

Classy Whisper chases his second straight score when he takes on six rivals in the $100,000 Frost King Stakes, Sunday at Woodbine.

The son of Silent Name (JPN) heads into the 6 ½-furlong main track event for Ontario-sired 2-year-olds off two strong performances to start his career, including a mettlesome head victory at one mile and 70 yards over the Tapeta on Oct. 31, in a race originally slated for the turf.

“He's been really exciting,” said trainer and former jockey Francine Villeneuve, who rode Copper Trail to victory in the 2003 edition of the Frost King. “He's been precocious right from the beginning. He was a little difficult at first, but he's just taken everything in stride.”

The win came three weeks after Classy Whisper, owned by T and T Racing Team, debuted at the Toronto oval.

With Rafael Hernandez in the irons, the bay gelding, sent off at 18-1, held a head advantage at the stretch call of the 6 ½-furlong main track race, going on to finish second, a neck back of the winner Hunt Master.

Villeneuve, who enjoyed a successful career in the irons prior to her training career, is buoyed by the pair of gritty efforts ahead of her rookie's first added-money test.

“He's learning and getting better and better all the time. When he ran the first time and showed all that speed and determination, I was pleasantly surprised. I didn't really expect that from him. On the second asking, when we stretched him out, we still didn't know what to expect, thinking that he might be just speed. But apparently, he's the kind of horse you can put where you want. He just has the will to win. That's why we made the decision to go in this race. I don't like to shorten him up again after going long, but I don't think it's going to be a big problem for him.”

Villeneuve, who received the 2004 Avelino Gomez Memorial Award (contributions to the sport on and off the racetrack), is expecting another game showing from her rookie charge.

“Like I said, he looks like a horse that you can kind of put wherever you want. He doesn't need the lead, he doesn't have to be right up there… he's pretty agreeable. And Rafael [jockey, Hernandez] now knows him better as well, so I feel pretty confident in him. There are some tough ones in there, but we'll get an idea of what he's made of. It's been a long year, but he's very encouraging.”

Classy Whisper will be fashioning a similar look from his previous start.

“His first race, we had him closed up, his blinkers, and the second race, I opened them up because maybe if he could see the other horse, it might help him a little bit, and I think it did. So, we're going to keep it that way and let Rafael make a decision, based on the pace, of where he wants to be.”

Villeneuve is hopeful the journey finishes with a return trip to the Frost King winner's circle.

“To win this race with Classy Whisper, 18 years after winning it as a rider, that would be amazing.”

The race is named after Canada's 1982 Horse of the Year, a winner of 21 stakes, who was inducted into the Canadian Horse Racing Hall of Fame in 1986.

The $100,000 South Ocean Stakes is also on tap for Sunday. Seven two-year-old Ontario-sired fillies will travel 6 ½-panels on the Tapeta.

Trainer Mark Casse is represented by Lois Len and Ya Mar. A chestnut daughter of Hunters Bay, Lois Len is 1-0-1 from five starts and will contest her fifth straight stakes race. A dark bay daughter of Silent Name (JPN), Ya Mar is 1-0-1 from three starts.

Thatsitthatsall, a daughter of Silver Max, was second in both the Muskoka and Victorian Queen. Trained and owned by Debra Rombis, the chestnut is 1-3-0 from four starts.

The Frost King is slated as race nine on Sunday's 11-race card. The South Ocean goes as race three. First post time is 12:55 p.m. Fans can also watch and wager on all the action via HPIbet.com and the Dark Horse Bets app.

FROST KING STAKES

Post – Horse – Jockey – Trainer

1 – Sir for Sure – Luis Contreras – Mark Casse
2 – Where's Neal – Kazushi Kimura – Daniel Vella
3 – J M R Best of Turf – Christopher Husbands – Steven Chircop
4 – Lucys Child (S) – Gary Boulanger – Phil Gracey
5 – Gatling Gun – Patrick Husbands – Barbara Minshall
6 – Silent Runner – David Moran – Michael Doyle
7 – Classy Whisper – Rafael Hernandez – Francine Villeneuve

SOUTH OCEAN STAKES

Post – Horse – Jockey – Trainer
1 – Loaded Vixen – Luis Contreras – Andrew Smith
2 – Allpaidup (S) – Justin Stein – Randy Thompson
3 – Thatsitthatsall – Kirk Johnson – Debra Rombis
4 – Lois Len – Patrick Husbands – Mark Casse
5 – Ya Mar – Kazushi Kimura – Mark Casse
6 – My Girl Sky – Steven Bahen – Katerina Vassilieva
7 – Swinging Mandy – Emma-Jayne Wilson – Dale Desruisseaux

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The Next Jones: 15-Year-Old Barbados Jockey Hopes To Follow In His Father’s Footsteps At Woodbine

When Slade Jones won his first race as a jockey, he felt relief above all else. Having the name Jones in Barbados racing circles brings with it a level of expectation.

Embarking on a career under high expectations can pile high the pressure especially when ambition and drive are proving not be enough to get past the milestone of your maiden win.

On June 18, 2021, at age 15, Slade Jones embarked on his dream to emulate the success of his patriarchs. Lifted into the saddle of Thunder Lady for the fourth race on opening day at Garrison Savannah Racecourse in Barbados, the rookie jockey finished sixth followed by a third aboard Pray For Me in the seventh race and a tenth place finish with Ultimate in the last of ten races that day.

With a few near misses at the wire in his 30 mounts throughout the summer, that maiden win eluded him until Oct. 16, the twelfth race card of the season. Sat aboard the 3/2 favorite, Pitons Punch, Slade says he knew that trainer Robert Peirce had given him a sound opportunity to finally take that walk into the winners circle. Slade's seven-pound apprentice weight advantage was of no use here as the favorite was saddled to carry 123lbs, the second highest weight of the eight competing in the five-furlong handicap event.

Bursting from the gate, Slade found a position on the outside of horses remaining within striking range of the front runners. Bumping and scrubbing his way to the front when it mattered most, Pitons Punch crossed the wire with half a length on the fast closing Super Heights, whose jockey N'Rico Prescod gave Slade a congratulatory fist bump while galloping out after the wire.

“It was the way you would want to win your first one,” exclaimed Slade when asked about the victory, “Bumping, knocking and riding all out for home. Very exciting.

“I felt a lot of relief especially with all the expectations given that my Dad is Jono Jones and my Grandad is Chally Jones,” remarked Slade, “With this first one down I will keep my head down and keep winning. I want to have the same success as them. They believe in me and I have a lot of good backers and everyone is happy for me.”

Being as successful as his father and grandfather is a grand ambition for any jockey never mind for an heir pursuing the throne.

Challenor “Chally” Jones is touted as being among the best jockeys to emerge from the Caribbean and was the first Barbadian Jockey to reach 1,000 wins in Trinidad. Similar to his grandson, the South Caribbean Champion Jockey began his career at the racetrack in his early teens. The talented jockey enjoyed success throughout the 1960s to the early 1980s when he dominated winner's circles in Barbados and Trinidad. He was the winner of the Barbados Derby a record 11 times and holds the Trinidad Derby jockey record (tied with Ricky Jadoo) of six wins.

Chally, who started out at the track as a groom, is one of six jockeys inducted into the Trinidad and Tobago Racing Hall of Fame. On January 1, 1972, he was appointed by The Queen on the advice of Her Majesty's Barbados Ministers to the Most Excellent Order of the British Empire (MBE) for his contribution to horse racing in the role of jockey.

After retiring from the saddle, his success as a breeder and trainer have been just as impressive. Chally Jones has trained five Barbados Derby winners to date including three of his own Blue Ribbon Stud Farm bred horses (alone or in partnership). A filly, Paddy Bird, bred in partnership with his wife Diana, was his first Derby winner as a breeder in 1986. The great Incitatus, who Chally bred in partnership with Jean Louis Beuzelin, was the winner of the Barbados Triple Crown series (ridden by Jono Jones) in 1996 as well as Areutalkintome, another Triple Crown winner in 2009.

The aforementioned Incitatus relocated to Woodbine with trainer Ron Burke in 1997. He won the Grade 2 Connaught Cup followed by a head bob second in the Grade 2 Hong Kong Jockey Club Stakes in 1999 as well as the Grade 2 King Edward Breeders' Handicap in 2000, all with jockey Slade Callaghan in the irons.

Barbados Derby winners Overdraft (1991), Winsome Lass (1992) and Zarmella (1994), were all under the training of Chally and ridden to victory by son Jono.

Another prestigious race at the Garrison Savannah is the Barbados Gold Cup which began in 1982. Chally trained three winners in that race, Vardar with Patrick Husbands riding in 1990; Incitatus with Dale Whittaker aboard in 1997 followed by Federico with Simon Husbands in the saddle in 1998.

Today, Chally no longer breeds horses and has five in training upon which grandson Slade climbs aboard to exercise in the mornings at the Garrison. Three decades earlier, Jono Jones was a teen galloping for his father to gain experience before blossoming in the saddle.

Jono began race riding on May 26,1990 at the age of 14 winning his first race seven months later aboard Ruby Lass on December 8 for owner GH King and trainer Liz Deane.

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The following two years he was crowned champion apprentice in Barbados. In 1991, at the age of 15, he won the first of his five prestigious Barbados Derby races, aboard Overdraft, trained by his father for owner Herbert Gonsalves. His other winners were Winsome Lass 1992; Zarmella 1994; triple crown winner Incitatus 1996 and Alaska Pete 2000.

Riding for Barbadian Trainer Sir Michael Stoute, Jono raced in Europe and England and had a two-year stint in Martinique coming away from that island with riding titles in 1994 and 1995. He won his first journeyman riding title in Barbados in 2000, the same year he won his first Barbados Gold Cup aboard Blast of Storm for trainer William Marshall and owner Sally Arbib.

Jono joined the jockey colony at Woodbine Racetrack in Toronto, Canada and made a splash by winning on his first mount, Annie's Creek, by 6-1/4 lengths for owner, trainer Audre Cappuccitti on May 9, 2001. For the next three years, Jono would continue to ride at both meets during which time he won the 2001 & 2002 Barbados Gold Cup once again with Blast of Storm and again in 2003 aboard Thady Quill for trainer William Marshall and owner Gay Smith.

In 2004 Jono committed to ride the Catherine Day Phillips trained, A Bit O' Gold, owned by the Two Bit Racing Stable, in Canada's most prestigious race, The Queen's Plate, the first leg of the Canadian Triple Crown held at Woodbine Racetrack. After finishing a close second in the Plate, the pair went on to win the other two legs of the series, The Prince of Wales Stakes at Fort Erie Race Track and the Breeders' Stakes on the turf at Woodbine.

Jono won the next year's Breeders' Stakes with the Catherine Day Phillips owned and trained Jambalaya and again in 2009 with the Roger Attfield trained Perfect Shower for owner Charles Fipke. The latter trainer-owner combination had provided Jono with a Queen's Plate victory the year prior in 2008 aboard Not Bourbon.

While Jono was enjoying continued success as one of Woodbine's leading riders, wife Sara gave birth to their twin boys, Slade and Tosh, on May 3, 2006, in Toronto.

On July 8, 2011, Jono conceded to the battle of making weight and rode his last race at Woodbine, ending a twenty-one-year career at age 35. In his eleven years based at Woodbine, Jono rode 658 winners, and garnered more than $40 million in earnings in his 5,602 starts in Canada.

Jono and his family returned to living in Barbados and a short while afterward his marriage to Sara ended.

You will need to look to the ocean to find Jono these days as he now runs a successful long-liner fishing business as co-captain of Legacy Fishing Charters in Barbados.

Growing up, the Jones twins would split their time between parents and while Tosh had no interest in horses, Slade always wanted to become a jockey.

“Ever since I was little I always wanted to be a jockey,” imparted Slade, who mentioned he was named after Slade Callaghan, a family friend and fellow Barbadian who continues to ride at Woodbine. “Tosh is more into shooting clay pigeons but I always wanted to be with the horses.”

Slade Jones began riding at age six at the Barbados riding institution, Big C Stables, owned and run by his Grandmother Diana Clarke and his mum Sara.

Slade was a natural rider and excelled in showjumping competitions held at Big C Stables as well as in Canada at Iron Horse Stables until he was 13. His athleticism also made him a fan favorite at the Barbados Ninja competitions winning the competition at age 12 and again at age 13 when he competed against more advanced competitors in the 13-18 years age division.

Slade then began working at the racetrack exercising racehorses for his grandfather Chally, which is where you will find him most days now in between classes during his final year of high-school.

Slade's goal is to follow in the footsteps of his father. He is looking forward to moving his tack to Woodbine Racetrack when he is old enough to race ride in Canada. With the talent and support of his patriarchs, Slade is certainly one more Jones to watch in Barbados and one day soon at Woodbine in Canada.

Update:
November 13, Slade would record bookend wins on the card at Garrison Savannah, winning the first race with the two-year-old, The Code, in a photo finish and the last race aboard the five-year-old horse, San Pedro, with a well timed sprint to the finish.

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Ontario Sire Heritage Series Concludes Friday At Woodbine

A pair of main track stakes, the Lake Ontario and Ashbridges Bay, share top billing on Friday's eight-race card at Woodbine.

The 1 1/16-mile Tapeta events represent the finale of the Ontario Sire Heritage Series, an eight-leg stakes series open to Ontario Sired 3-year-olds, contested at Woodbine and Fort Erie racetracks.

Ontario Racing and its Thoroughbred Improvement Program (TIP) Committee unveiled the series in March. With a total purse structure of $750,000, the Heritage Series showcases a total of four races – three opening legs and one final – for both three-year-old colts and three-year-old fillies who are sustained to the Ontario Sires Stakes program.

The $100,000 Lake Ontario, carded as race seven, has attracted a field of six colts & geldings, including Secret Reserve.

Trained by Mike Mattine for owners Carlo D'Amato and Stacey Van Camp, the son of Giant Gizmo is riding a three-race win streak heading into the Lake Ontario.

After a fifth to launch his 3-year-old campaign, Secret Reserve has made three straight trips to the winner's circle, including victories in the seven-furlong main track Elgin Stakes on August 29, and most recently, a two-length score in the Lake Superior Stakes, run at seven panels over the E.P. Taylor Turf Course on October 22.

“Every one of the wins was different and special,” said Mattine. “He just keeps on improving. Last year as a baby, I could tell he was a good horse, when he started breezing. He's been very good this year. When he goes out and trains, he's all business.”

Friday's engagement marks the first time Secret Reserve, bred by Dr. Brian Van Arem, will test two turns.

The dark bay arrives at the Lake Ontario in good order.

“He's in good shape,” offered Mattine. “Obviously, we'll have to see if he can get the distance. It's going to be his toughest race so far. There are plenty of good horses in here. This is definitely his toughest test. Hopefully, he can perform just like he has in his last three starts.”

Secret Reserve debuted last September at Woodbine, recording a 2 ½-length win at 7-1 in the five-furlong Tapeta race.

The gelding has won his past three starts by a combined 10 lengths.

“He's a nice horse and it helps that he's Ontario-sired because he fits that program very well. He's got good numbers, that part we know, but we'll have to see how he handles two turns. It's a tougher field, too, so we'll hope he comes up with another big effort.”

Five fillies will face-off in the $100,000 Ashbridges Bay Stakes, slated as the first race.

Multiple stakes winner Lorena, trained and co-owned by Stuart Simon, goes after her fourth career added-money title.

A five-time winner from seven starts, the daughter of Souper Speedy won the Fury Stakes in July, the Algoma Stakes in August, and the Thunder Bay Stakes on October 22.

Red Equinox, winner of the Rondeau Bay Stakes on September 14 at Fort Erie, has three victories from seven races. The daughter of Signature Red is trained by Jamie Attard.

First post time for Friday's card is 4:45 p.m. Fans can also watch and wager on all the action via HPIbet.com and the Dark Horse Bets app.

FIELD FOR THE LAKE ONTARIO

Post – Horse – Jockey – Trainer

1 – Secret Reserve – Rafael Hernandez – Mike Mattine

2 – Artie's Storm – David Moran – Paul Buttigieg

3 – Jelgo – Sahin Civaci – Matt Douglas

4 – Perfect Crime – Eswan Flores – Patrick Dixon

5 – Avoman – Patrick Husbands – Don MacRae

6 – Dragon's Brew – Kazushi Kimura – Robert Tiller

FIELD FOR THE ASHBRIDGES BAY

Post – Horse – Jockey – Trainer

1 – Jolene Jolene – Justin Stein – Harold Ladouceur

2 – Jilli Marie – Steven Bahen – Katerina Vassilieva

3 – Lorena – Gary Boulanger – Stuart Simon

4 – Practical Gizmo – Jodeien Anderson – Marjorie Paterson

5 – Red Equinox – Luis Contreras – Jamie Attard

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