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November 12, 2009

Will Big Mac be Super again?

By Dave Briggs

 

 

 
The latest installment from my weekly Guelph Mercury column…
 
A year ago, four Super Final victories on a single card — including one by the incomparable Somebeachsomewhere — helped Paul MacDonell of Guelph vault to Canada’s driver of the year award.
 
Saturday, MacDonell will be hard pressed to duplicate that impressive haul when the eight $300,000 races return to Woodbine Racetrack in Toronto, but the driver does have a great shot to win two divisions.
 
He’s driving Fast Pay, one of the top three-year-old pacing colts in the province, in the seventh race and millionaire sophomore trotting mare Elusive Desire in the 10th and final Super Final on the card.
 
Click on the words “Guelph Mercury” to read the article in its entirety.
 

 

 
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November 12, 2009

E.P. Taylor slept here

By Dave Briggs

E.P. Taylor slept here

 
It was already past the witching hour when the secret ladder was found hidden behind an ordinary closet door. This could not wait until morning.
 
Muscling open the hatch, Dave Landry and I clambered out onto the roof and into a ghostly night.
 
 
A full moon hung above one of the two chimneys standing sentry on opposite ends of the long, wooden catwalk; the glow diminished by the haze of a warm summer evening.
 
We were not alone.
 
E.P. Taylor’s spirit was palpable on the roof of his former Maryland mansion as we plunked ourselves down on the planks, backs against the wobbly white railing.
 
A handful of fireflies popped in and out like tiny fireworks accompanied by a soft chorus of crickets. Nearby, horses shrouded by darkness, announced their presence with occasional snorts and nickers.
 
We sat in silence for nearly two hours and filled our ears, immersing ourselves in the magic of a farm at night. And not just any farm. The old Windfields Farm, now known as Winbak.
 
Thoroughbreds have given way to standardbreds, but this farm has been home to numerous champions — from the incomparable Northern Dancer to harness stars such as Muscle Hill, Rainbow Blue and Bettors Delight.
 
But it is E.P. Taylor’s former mansion which exudes the most history, particularly for a pair of Canadian boys who appreciate the profound impact he had on horse racing in our country. Built in the 1960s by the same people who constructed Taylor’s Lyford Cay estate in the Bahamas, the current owners have preserved the home much in the manner in which one imagines it was when Taylor haunted the roof with coffee and binoculars, watching his horses train on a nearby turf track.
 
 
That track is gone now, though the dirt track remains. In those days, this farm was Taylor’s private training facility and, it is said, his favourite vista came from this rooftop perch.
 
It is also said, the man who built the modern Woodbine Racetrack is rolling over in his grave now that harness racing has invaded his beloved plant. What then, would he make of his Maryland farm overrun with standardbreds? Or, for that matter, the main entrance road new owner Joe Thomson cheekily named Standardbred Way.
 
Noreen Taylor, believes her late father-in-law would have approved. “He was, above all, a realist,” she said. “This was wonderful horse country. It’s marvelous that it continues to be wonderful horse country, whatever the breed is there.”
 
Landry has mixed emotions about all this. He seems slightly maudlin about the passage of time as it pertains to this farm, yet is delighted Winbak has not discarded its thoroughbred roots; ones in which he happily entangles himself now. Landry spent his childhood tagging along with his father and brother — jockey Rob Landry — to Woodbine. There is no more iconic racing figure in Dave’s life than E.P. Taylor.
 
When the pull of sleep yanks us, grudgingly, from the roof at last, Landry stuffs his hands in his pockets, bows his head slightly and sheepishly asks if he can sleep in Taylor’s old master bedroom, the one festooned with floral patterns. The draw isn’t the pretty sheets. He wants to wrap himself in the warmth of history’s blanket for one night.
 
It is a slightly strange request, but how could you deny the man that? E.P. Taylor slept there.
 
“Whatever,” I said with a shrug. “Knock yourself out.”
 
It is only the next morning, over coffee with Winbak staff, that Landry learns Taylor rarely, if ever, used the master bedroom. Instead, he preferred to bunk in the more masculine guest bedroom next door; the one with the closet containing the secret ladder.
 
The room where I had the accidental pleasure of sleeping.
 
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November 12, 2009

Take these 25 Small Victories and pay them forward

By Dave Briggs and Lauren Lee

Take these 25 Small Victories and pay them forward

We are not naive. We know harness racing has problems. But we are not devoid of decent ideas, either.

We believe the secret to improving our game will come not with huge events and expenditures, but by taking baby steps, so long as we keeping stepping and remain patient.

This is not a feel-good exercise to distract us from some very real, very scary challenges. The hope is to pay these small, but important, ideas forward and have as many of them adopted universally, as possible.

This is just the beginning of what we hope will be a long-running feature with 25 Small Victories to celebrate and, hopefully, spread. But we need your help, too. To nominate something for a Small Victory, please click the red Comment button at the end of this list.

And now, 25 Small Victories for harness racing (in no particular order):

• The Ontario SBOA New Owners program.
Since 2005, the Standardbred Breeders of Ontario Association (SBOA) has introduced 72 first-time standardbred owners to the sport through its New Owners program and purchased eight yearlings. For more information click follow this link: SBOA.

• Legends Day
Every two years, tiny Clinton Raceway plays host to some of the greatest drivers that ever lived and allows fans the rare chance for personal interaction.

• Youth Camps
The ultimate example of growing the game one child at a time, traveling youth camps created by the Harness Horse Youth Foundation and adopted by the Ontario Harness Horse Association give kids hands-on experience with standardbred racehorses.

• Youth Beats
Sticking with our future fans and participants for a moment, how about some applause to the USTA and Hoof Beats for being the first to produce a harness racing magazine just for kids. Check it out here.

• CRIBS
Kelly Spencer’s homage to the MTV show brings us wacky video adventures with harness racing personalities. The result is low-budget magic. Check out this latest one starring Randy Waples.

• Standardbred Adoption Agencies
Groups such as New Jersey’s Standardbred Retirement Foundation, the Ontario Standardbred Adoption Agency and New Vocations are essential to finding good homes for retired racehorses.

• National Handicapping Challenge
Standardbred Canada deserves kudos for this contest which featured a $25,000 prize and was incentive enough for a bunch of punters to truck it up to Ottawa to match handicapping wits.

• Limousine Starting Gate
Speaking of Rideau Carleton, the track takes the concept of giving patrons a ride in the starting gate to a new level, using a modified limousine to start races.

• New Whipping Rules
Sharply decreasing abusive whipping won’t cause a sea-change in terms of the sport’s popularity, but forbidding drivers from taking the reins in one hand and whipping with the other certainly is better for the horses, heads off an inevitable animal rights protest and makes racing more palatable for the squeamish.

• OSS Super Finals
Eight $300,000 year-end races, all on one card in Toronto, for Ontario-bred horses? OSS founding fathers such as Lloyd Chisholm never dreamed of such riches when they came up with the program more than 35 years ago.

• Breeders Crown all on one card
While we’re throwing out kudos for all-on-one-card mega-events, how about a standing ovation to the Breeders Crown for putting all 12 of its divisions on a single night in 2010 at Pocono Downs.

• Breeders Crown program insert
While we’re throwing around credit to others, how about a little self love? The Canadian Sportsman’s full-colour insert of handicapping, stories and photos in the Woodbine program for Breeders Crown night was not only informative, it helped elevate an already-great event.

• The Score national television coverage
Seriously, does anyone do a better harness racing television show than the team at Woodbine and The Score? In Canada, we’re blessed more than many realize to have this national TV presence for our sport.

• The Turf Lounge
Sticking with WEG for a second, the company deserves kudos for trying to expose Toronto’s Bay St. crowd to racing in an upscale restaurant with tremendous food and atmosphere.

• The Fab Five
Hoosier Park’s marketing initiative to try and turn five of its drivers into NASCAR-style stars is a worthy attempt at fan-building.

• Crazy Good
Charlie Leerhsen’s fabulous book on the great Dan Patch brought our sport to the mainstream — and was better than the Sea Biscuit book, too.

• Common Pool Wagering
Finding a way to grow pool sizes is a good thing at any time, but particularly when there’s an international border between racing jurisdictions.

• HPI Rewards
For a host of reasons, it’s virtually impossible for tracks to decrease takeout significantly, but WEG’s HorsePlayer Rewards program at least gives its loyal bettors something back as thanks for their business.

• Free Admission and Parking
It’s hard to believe tracks once charged for parking and admission — some still do — but the removal of the turnstiles at most plants was necessary to put us on par with casinos.

• Free Programs at Pompano
Pompano Park has taken the next step by providing its customers with free betting programs.

• Jug and Jugette Barns
Building accessible barns — like those at the Delaware County Fairgrounds — that allow fans to get close to the horses is crucial for growing the game.

• Experimental Rankings
Much debated every year, Stan Bergstein’s annual educated guess in Hoof Beats about what will be this year’s fastest three-year-olds is critical for building buzz.

• Equi-Challenge
The inaugural Equi-Challenge not only took human stars from different horse disciplines out of their element, it was a hit with fans and a fund-raiser for the University of Guelph's Ontario Veterinary College.

• Proper Winner’s Circle Attire
Led by the Hambletonian Society, the trend of giving caretakers nice shirts to wear on our biggest stakes days is a crucial one for our image.

• Industry Websites
Face it, there’s more information about harness racing available today than ever, thanks to the Internet and a number of quality sites.

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