EARLY LOOK AT THE GRADE 1 RICOH WOODBINE MILE (9) Horse / Owner / Trainer / Jockey Delta Prince / Stronach Stables / James Jerkens / Javier Castellano Divisidero / Gunpowder Farms LLC / Kelly Rubley / Jevian Toledo Good Samaritan / WinStar Farm LLC, China Horse Club International,SF Racing LLC, Head of Plains Partners LLC / Bill Mott / Joel Rosario Irish War Cry / Isabelle de Tomaso / Graham Motion / Jose Ortiz La Sardane / Team Valor International / Neil Drysdale / Rafael Bejerano Lord Glitters / Geoff & Sandra Turnbull / David O’Meara / Jamie Spencer Mr Havercamp / Sean & Dorothy Fitzhenry / Catherine Day Phillips / Eurico da Silva Stormy Antarctic / Mr. P K Siu / E.C.D Walker / TBD Vanish / Eight Star Racing Stables Inc. / Vito Armata / Ademar Santos VANISH HOPING TO PULL A DISAPPEARING TRICK ON RICOH WOODBINE MILE RIVALS Trainer Vito Armata already has enjoyed previous graded stakes success here with a claimed horse, sending out $32,000 acquisition Ikerrin Road to capture last year’s Grade 3 Bold Venture on Woodbine Mile Day. Armata will be looking to pull off a much more audacious coup when he saddles Vanish for the Ricoh Woodbine Mile itself after claiming the 4-year-old gelding for $40,000 on July 28. Vanish… (Michael Burns Photo) And while Armata dropped the claim slip he gives full credit to owner Joe Mazarese for selecting Vanish. “I’d been watching him, and when he dropped in for $40,000 I talked to Vito, and my other partners,” said Mazarese, who races as Eight Star Racing Stables with friends Lorenzo Scala, Michael Dattoli, and Michele Fronte. Vanish, who was coming off a first-level allowance win at on a mile on turf when victorious on the day of his first start in the claiming ranks, reappeared four weeks later with a second-place finish in the Play the King Stakes. “He (Mazarese) had wanted to claim the horse, with the stakes already on his mind,” said Armata. The Grade 2 Play the King, a seven-furlong turf race won by Mile rival Mr Havercamp, is the major local prep for the Ricoh Woodbine Mile. “He loves the turf, and he loves Woodbine,” said Mazarese. Ikerrin Road, meanwhile, will be looking to double up in the Bold Venture, a 6 ½ furlong race for 3-year-olds and upward which again part of the Woodbine Mile Day undercard which also includes the Grade 1 Northern Dancer Turf and the Grade 2 Canadian Stakes, presented by the Japan Racing Association. After finishing off his very productive 4-year-old campaign with a second-place finish behind subsequent Canadian Horse of the Year Pink Lloyd in the Grade 2 Kennedy Road at six furlongs, the gelding was slow to his best stride this season. “He got sick on me in the springtime; he almost died,” said Armata, who watched Ikerrin Road get back on target here August 18 with a sharp score in a $60,000 optional claimer. “Now, he’s back. Hopefully, I can repeat what I did with him last year.” IRISH WAR CRY IN WITH A SHOUT FOR RICOH WOODBINE MILE Trainer Graham Motion, perhaps best known for saddling Animal Kingdom to a famous score in the 2011 edition of the Kentucky Derby, has really made a name for himself in Canada where he has 15 stakes wins to his credit at Woodbine. Motion already has two graded stakes wins this year at Woodbine including the Grade 3 Singspiel with Shahroze and the Grade 2 Sky Classic with Utmost and is a fan of the expansive E.P. Taylor Turf Course. “It works well for us with the turf horses we have and the fact that Woodbine runs a lot of distance races, it’s been a big plus for us,” said Motion. “We have a lot of horses in that category between Mekhtaal (2nd in the Grade 2 Nijinsky) and Utmost who won last time and Shahroze who won earlier in the year. We have got a nice group of distance horses and Woodbine has a really good program.” Irish War Cry… (Chelsea Durand/NYRA Photo) The veteran conditioner will be looking for his first Ricoh Woodbine Mile win when he saddles Irish War Cry for his turf debut in the one-turn event. The four-year-old Curlin chestnut has competed primarily over a distance of ground on the dirt including wins in the 1 1/16-mile Grade 2 Holy Bull and 1 1/8-mile Grade 2 Wood Memorial as a sophomore. However, the talented colt has won at sprint distances in the past including a six-furlong score on debut and a victory in the seven-furlong Marylander Stakes, both at Laurel Park. Motion isn’t concerned about a turnback in distance. “I think it’s something he can handle. He’s got a great turn of foot. At the beginning of the year, I considered keeping him at a mile,” said Motion. The New Jersey-bred Irish War Cry sports a record of five wins and two seconds from 13 career starts and has banked $1,257,060, despite some notable blips on his past performances. “To be honest, he’s one of the most confusing horses I’ve ever had to train. I think it’s very hard to put his poor performances down to distance or anything like that as I think weather has played a huge part in his disappointing performances,” said Motion. “His poorer races were in very hot, uncomfortable circumstances that we now know he does not tolerate. In some ways, we’re starting over with him.” Irish War Cry has trained well since being pulled up last time out in the Grade 1 Stephen Foster Handicap on an excruciatingly hot card at Churchill Downs and Motion believes the September weather in Toronto should suit the Isabelle de Tomaso homebred. “The idea is to get him something later in the fall, whether it will be a return to dirt or depending on how he runs up there, keep him on the grass,” said Motion. “He could even run well on the grass and we could still return to dirt. This is not the way he’ll go for the rest of his career by any means. I just want to get him back on track.” Share This:Share