Riding at Woodbine Racetrack brings out the best in jockey Ryan Moore.
The
32-year-old Englishman guided 5-to-2 favourite Cannock Chase to a 1
1/2-length victory in the $1-million Pattison Canadian International on
Sunday. The victory was Moore’s third in a row in this race – he won
aboard Joshua Tree in 2013 and Hillstar last year – and also rode
British-bred Curvy to victory in the Grade 1 $500,000 E.P. Taylor
Stakes.
Moore became the first jockey to win three
successive International races since 1958 when it became a turf event.
In seven career appearances at Woodbine, Moore has three wins, two
second-place finishes and a third.
“I’ve
been lucky enough to ride horses that have been laid out for the race
and well prepared and the race was chosen carefully for them,” Moore
said. “Yeah, things have worked out well here.”
Moore is also the first jockey since Gary Stevens in 1998 to win the International and E.P. Taylor on the same day.
Cannock
Chase became the 28th American-bred horse to win this event but the
first since Marsh Side in 2008. Winning trainer Sir Michael Stoute, who
didn’t attend, recorded his third International victory, winning in ‘96
with Singspiel and last year with Hillstar.
Cannock Chase won the 1 1/2-mile event in 2:29.26 on a good turf to secure the $600,000 winner’s share.
Up
With the Birds – one of four Canadian-bred horses in the race – was
second ahead of Sheikhzayedroad as the British-bred rallied nicely from a
terrible start that left him last in the 11-horse field.
Moore
said Cannock Chase also started poorly and after a mile the
four-year-old Kentucky-bred stood 10th. But Moore had moved Cannock
Chase to fourth in the straightaway and knew he had plenty of horse left
coming home.
“Once he was off the
fence he travelled very powerfully around the bend and I put him into a
gap,” Moore said. “As soon as we had room he quickened very well and he
won easily.”
John Velazquez, the Hall
of Fame jockey aboard Sam-Son Farm-owned Up With the Birds, was ecstatic
with the second-place finish of Canada’s 2013 horse of the year.
“I
had a perfect trip,” he said. “He tipped out and he was running so well
that I thought they’re really going to have to run hard to beat him.
“He was absolutely rolling down the lane. He ran so well.”
Sheikhzayedroad’s jockey Martin Lane explained why he was forced to go wide down the stretch.
“I
had a wall of horses in front of me going around the bend so I had to
switch wide, which is never ideal,” he said. “With a bit further, we
might have got second but looking at the winner that’s the best we
could’ve done on the day.”
The
remainder of the field, in order of finish, included: Kaigun; Reporting
Star; Triple Threat; Danish Dynaformer; Power Ped; Second Step;
Interpol; and Habibi.
The win was
Cannock Chase’s second in six races this year and fourth in nine career
starts. Bruce Raymond, the racing manager for owner Rabbah Bloodstock
LLC, said he expects Cannock Chase will end his 2015 campaign a
champion.
“I would have to talk with
[Sir] Michael Stoute about that but I would doubt him going,” he said.
“I would think he’d be finished for the year.”
Cannock Chase paid $7.50, $4.60 and $3.40 while Up With the Birds returned $10.10 and $7.10. Sheikhzayedroad paid $6.10.
Moore
and Curvy finished the 1 1/4-mile E.P. Taylor turf race in 2:02.88.
Talmada, at 10-to-1 odds, was second while Rosalind finished third.
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