Friday, September 24, 2010

Green, Green Grass of Home

I am happy to report that TripleDeadHeat will be on vacation in various parts of Ireland and the U.K returning October 10th. While I am away fulfilling a lifelong dream to go swimming at the Bushmills Distillery (and possibly visit the National Stud), I invite my readers to take a trip through the archives of this blog (Check out the Google Search bar on the left margin) - or take a flip through the Photo Gallery or Features Archive.

As well, those looking for outstanding news stories should visit Equidaily, Raceday360 and the Paulick Report.

During this time away, features such as Woodbine Entries and the Woodbine News page are unlikely to be updated. I will be checking my Gmail for those that need to reach out.

I'll be back to the green, green grass of Woodbine soon!

I'll be back in time for the Canadian International...until then, cheerio!

Thursday, September 23, 2010

Trainer Profile: Steven Chircop and the Rise of Omnisurface Star Kara's Orientation

At the age of 26, Woodbine-based conditioner Steven Chircop sure has a wealth of racing experience.

“I started coming to the backstretch when I was nine and I got my first hot walker’s license when I was twelve. It’s been awhile, you know,” grinned Chircop as we chatted outside Barn 35 on the Woodbine backstretch.

Steven Chircop and Kara's Orientation


Chircop has a handful of stalls in the barn he shares with his uncle, longtime Woodbine trainer Tino Attard, and it is through this valuable family connection that he felt those first sparks for the game.

“My father (Godfrey Chircop) and my uncle got involved in horse racing and I used to always come around the barn as a kid and I just fell in love with racing at a young age,’ said Chircop. “I used to come by on the weekends and every time I had a chance. On March break I would stay at Tino’s house and he’d bring me here in the mornings.”

What started as an opportunity to simply be near the horses soon turned into on-the-job training as Chircop worked his way through the ranks gaining the sort of experience a college student might seek out through an internship.

“I worked for Tino as a hot walker and then grooming,” began Chircop. “Then I groomed for his son Kevin for a year and eventually Tino needed an assistant trainer and he just put me in and I learned as we went along. I got a lot of experience and you learn fast when put in that position.”

Chircop takes a moment to pick the brains of Sir Heart Throb


And working with Tino Attard meant that the up-and-coming conditioner worked with a string of well-known horses along the way.

“I got lucky to work with some good horses actually. My uncle had Milwaukee Brew who is a great stallion now,” said Chircop. “I worked with Bag Lady Jane (winner of the Princess Elizabeth and Jammed Lovely stakes) and got to ship with her. There was a very nice horse named Kirby’s Song. She won the Woodbine Oaks and the Monmouth Oaks. Back then my uncle had 45 stalls and trained mostly for Stronach so I got to learn with good horses. That was definitely a bonus.”

Chircop has plenty to smile about


Woodbine rail birds have a great deal of respect for the Attard clan, a cast of conditioners which includes Tino’s brothers Sid and Larry, nephews Paul and Steve and even Tino’s son Kevin. And quite clearly, Chircop has a great deal of respect for his Uncle Tino.

“My uncle does things properly,” stated Chircop. “He’s a hard guy to work for so if you can make it with my uncle you can probably make it anywhere… It’s not easy to make it in this business. I’m lucky that I have my father, uncles and cousins behind me because without a lot of help here it’s very hard.”

It was Uncle Tino who introduced Chircop to horse owner Max Berketa and on May 16th of this year, Chircop made a move that has helped launch his burgeoning career when he claimed Kara’s Orientation at an affordable $20,000 for Berketa and Pinnacle Racing.

“We went to go look at him before they came to the front side and I fell in love with him,” chattered Chircop. And then while gesturing with one hand and holding his horse’s lead with the other continued, “Look at him, he’s an amazing animal. You don’t find many horses for twenty thousand that look like this.”

The well-dappled coat of Kara's Orientation


You also don’t find many young folks willing to put in the time and effort that Chircop has into his career. Before he could become a trainer, Chircop’s parents insisted that he not only put in his time in at the barn, but also into his education and the trainer is the proud owner of a business diploma from nearby Humber College. This willingness to study paid off as Chircop did his homework well before the claim of Kara’s Orientation was made.

“With technology these days you’re able to watch all the horse’s races and watching a horse run and their films does a lot more than just reading the form,” explained Chircop. “This horse put together a couple nice races early in his career at Calder and then they started to run him in starter races at Gulfstream in protected spots. The horse came up to Woodbine and ran one race, an allowance, on the polytrack and the horse that beat him by a couple lengths was Big Red Mike.”

Sometimes you have to stop and smell the roses


Kara’s Orientation trailed well behind the leaders from eighth position in that May 2nd allowance route before rallying up the inside to finish fourth just behind the improving Big Red Mike – who would go on to Queen’s Plate glory shortly thereafter.

“I knew Big Red Mike was a highly regarded horse making steps towards the Queen’s Plate,” continued Chircop. “I figured that the horse had come from so far back that it looked like he wanted to go further and I figured the horse had to be worth the money provided there was nothing wrong with him.”

Fortunately, for Chircop, Kara’s Orientation came out of the race well and two week’s later was entered back in a claiming event – another route on the Woodbine poly.

“I knew the trainer that had him (Mike McDonald) was a good trainer and he runs his horses where they belong,” said Chircop, before revealing that his studious claim almost never came to fruition.

“I was the only person in for him that day and he actually got stuck in the gate and he spotted the field ten lengths,” laughed Chircop. “At odds of 2-5 he came running, but got blocked at the three eighths pole and he just kept on running and got beat a head. He was so far out of it that when I went to claim the horse they wouldn’t let me leave as they had to review the race to make sure it wasn’t an unfair start he was left that far behind. After that race, I knew we had a good horse.”

Sir Heart Throb needs to eat his greens if he's going to keep up with his stablemate


Since the claim it’s been quite a journey for both the horse and his conditioner.

“His first start I run him allowance and he ran second to probably the best three year-old here, a horse named So Elite, a Mark Casse horse,” started Chircop. “Next start I run him for $40k and he beat older horses by five lengths and for a three year-old to beat older that says something. Especially the way he did it.”

As Chircop talks, Kara’s Orientation continues to enjoy her late-morning treat and the owner is only too happy to walk about the yard and let his star pupil have a pick of grass.

“His third start he got beat a half length to Stormy Lord (in the Toronto Cup), who is probably the best three year-old turf horse here at Woodbine,” said Chircop. “And then he went to the Canadian Derby (at Northlands Park) and got beat a length to the best western Canadian horse (No Hesitation.) He’s got beaten by credible horses and he’s come a long way.”

Kara's Orientation finishes second in the Toronto Cup at odds of 15-1


The Kentucky-bred son of Orientate has proven to be something of an omnisurface star and the relevance isn’t lost on Chircop.

“That’s something with decent horses. You want to keep him to one surface but I’ve been fortunate he runs well on all three,” said Chircop, while running his fingers through the colts mane appreciatively. “On poly, he won by five. In the Toronto Cup on turf he was beat a half-length. In the Canadian Derby on dirt he got beat a length and a half. Three starts, three different surfaces, three different distances and the horse doesn’t stop trying. He tries and tries right to the wire.”

And Chircop is trying to help Kara’s Orientation maintain that form through the end of the Woodbine meet.

“He’s peaking at this time and I’ve got a smaller barn so I can do a lot more with him. He’s out of his stall two hours a day,” exhaled Chircop. “He’s been out here 40 minutes before you came. He’s definitely come a long way.”

Sir Heart Throb and Kara's Orientation stir up a bit of mischief


Chircop sees nothing but good options for his omnisurface star which explains why Kara’s Orientation is cross-entered this Saturday in the Kent Stakes on the turf at Delaware Park and the Ontario Derby over the Woodbine polytrack. At the time of this interview, a few short weeks ago, the young conditioner was still at a crossroads as to the next start.

“It’s very tough to say. I’d love to put him back on turf. He’s got a lot of turf breeding. His mother’s full sister produced With Anticipation who made $2.6M running long on the turf,” touted Chircop. “I’d love to keep him on turf but then I’d love to run him against straight three year-olds but I don’t think there’s a straight three year-old turf race left at Woodbine. The Ontario Derby, at a mile and an eighth on the poly, is coming up. I might try and lead him towards that.”

Move Kara's Orientation to the head of the class


Picking the right race this weekend for his up-and-coming horse will be a difficult decision for Chircop, but the conditioner demonstrates solid recent form in the decision-making department. And what bodes well for his future is that despite his good fortune in the claiming game, Chircop’s feet are planted firmly on the ground - be it poly, dirt or turf.

“I try and set high goals for myself because it makes you work that much harder,” stated Chircop. “Right now I’ve met expectation. I’m not winning a lot of races (15-2-2-1 at Woodbine) but my in-the-money percentage is very high. I’d like to win five races by the time the years done but my main concern is that I’ve got horses that stay healthy and try.”

Keep your head up for Kara's Orientation!


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As always, keep track of the latest goings on in the world of horse racing by clicking into TripleDeadHeat's Woodbine News page or join in on the conversation by following TripleDeadHeat on Twitter.

Wednesday, September 22, 2010

Photo Essay: Some Squirrely Moments at Sunday's Woodbine Mile and Much More...

On Sunday, I enjoyed an incredible day of racing at Woodbine topped by Court Vision's spectacular return in the Woodbine Mile. Other big winners on Sunday included Redwood in the Northern Dancer and Miss Keller in the Canadian.

Flower Power! Court Vision and Robby Albarado tiptoe through the tulips


Along the way, I snapped hundreds of photos and particularly enjoyed watching Spice Route challenge patrons making their way to the slots instead of the track and the well-behaved Victor's Cry who made a furry new friend in the walking ring! I hope you enjoy the photos below from Sunday's extraordinary card at Woodbine.

As always, double-left click on the photo to enlarge the picture and use your "Back" button to return to the photo essay.

First stop on this day was the Canadian Stakes.

Backers of Latin Love hoped for a little Carpe Diem


This Greg De Gannes trainee is more than just good


Roger Attfield makes a few last minute adjustments to Miss Keller

Possibly the best looking horse at Woodbine

What's not to like about Latin Love


Chantal Sutherland takes a ride on her Magic Broomstick


Points of Grace is all sorts of graceful

I really did like this one a lot didn't I?


Garret Gomez concentrates on the task at hand


Miss Keller wins the Canadian


The walk to the winners circle


Congratulations to the good folks at Three Chimneys Racing


Miss Keller wins the Canadian Stakes


Up next was the Northern Dancer!


Redwood doesn't normally experience traffic trouble in the walking ring!

Redwood hoped to be the tallest tree in the forest


The connections of Spice Route had a good laugh as their horse stared down all the folks walking towards the casino...



Fifty Proof had a strong shot to win this race


The eyes have it!


For the Perfect Shower...wear goggles


Memorial Maniac (19-1) thought the odds on the tote board were crazy


The experts searched the walking ring for answers


Mike Smith's a diamond jock


Expansion wanted to extend his earnings in this event


The fans were up for this one


Chantal Sutherland absolutely beaming aboard Windward Islands

Up close and personal with Fifty Proof


Jockey James Graham makes a rare Woodbine appearance


And they're off!



The Juddmonte fellow was last early but it was not a sign of things to come


Redwood surges to the lead


At the wire, it's Redwood!


Jockey Justin Stein and exercise rider Tyler Gaskin celebrate Fifty Proof's first stakes effort


The Woodbine faithful salute Redwood


That long Woodbine stretch run is no walk in the garden...


Happy connections pose in the winners circle


Squeaky clean!


Michael Hills signs an autograph for horse racing's latest lifelong fan


Redwood wins the Northern Dancer Stakes


Up next was the Woodbine Mile!

I had a vision...but in mine it was Famous Name. Oops.


Many a bettor though he'd be home soon(er)


Don't you know who I am?


This adventure wasn't so grand, but the multiple stakes winner will be back in the winners circle soon enough


Julien Leparoux looking for an opening...


Edgar Prado surges into the walking ring


The railbirds drink up a little Riviera Cocktail


A pat on the back is better than...Eurico shows a little love to Signature Red


Jono Jones stretches out aboard red hot Smokey Fire


Straight Story might not have liked the bends on Woodbine's turf course


A patient and behaved Victor's Cry kept an eye on the fans around the walking ring, while his wee Canadian friend squirreled in and around his hooves...


Woodbourne found a field he could sink his teeth into


The Usual Q.T gets down to business


Zifzaf ain't no riff raff


Zenyatta even has fans at Woodbine!


Chantal Sutherland and Woodbourne prepare for a big surprise


Mike Smith on tour with Auteur


Court Vision surges to the lead


Court Vision hits the wire first...and look at ex-claimer Woodbourne (yellow cap) getting up for show!


Albarado shows off some new silverware


Court Vision wins the Woodbine Mile


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A little bit of news to report before signing off. In case you missed Tuesday's post, Woodbine-based Stormy Lord and Kara's Orientation are on their way to Delaware Park for the Kent Stakes. Click the link above for more on that race.

The DRF reports that Prince of Wales mystery horse Golden Moka returns in the Louisiana Derby:

In just one start, Golden Moka has placed an ownership group led by retired jockey Rene Douglas in an enviable position. The horse more than paid for himself when he handily knocked off a $500,000 stakes in July. And by virtue of that win, he could go favored Saturday in the Grade 2, $500,000 Super Derby at Louisiana Downs.

Undefeated in three starts in Panama, Golden Moka has been a mystery horse since he arrived in North America. He was 10-1 when he rallied from off the pace to win the second leg of the Canadian Triple Crown, the $500,000 Prince of Wales on July 25. The Prince of Wales was Golden Moka’s first race in eight months and his first test at two turns. Now undefeated in four starts, he has left many curious as to the full scope of his talent.

“The Super Derby is the next step to get a gauge on him,” said Brian Lynch, who trains Golden Moka for Good Friends Stable.


I highly recommend clicking into the link above to read the full story which includes some very kind words regarding Woodbine's Brian Lynch.

Pachattack is on her way to Woodbine for the E.P. Taylor Stakes according tothis Sportinglife.Com report:


Gerard Butler will be on his travels again next month with Dansant and Pachattack booked for overseas dates.

Dansant has already raced in America and Dubai, won a conditions race at Deauville in August and finished fourth in a Group Two race in Turkey a few days ago.

Pachattack, a Listed winner at Newbury during the summer, is an experienced flyer herself having finished sixth in last month's Beverly D. Stakes at Arlington Park.

"Dansant is going for a race at Dundalk, the Diamond Stakes on October 1 (a Breeders' Cup Challenge race)," said Butler.

"We're going to keep Pachattack back for the EP Taylor at Woodbine on October 16.

"She was very, very unlucky in America but she has come back to me and is in very good form."


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As always, keep track of the latest goings on in the world of horse racing by clicking into TripleDeadHeat's Woodbine News page or join in on the conversation by following TripleDeadHeat on Twitter.