Tuesday, 03 October 2023 13:01

Alberta's Top Racehorses Prepare for Showdown: G TS Skyla and Virtual Horizon Dominate Preps, but Challengers Loom

Virtual Horizon (top) and G TS Skyla in past Saturday’s final prep races at Century Mile Virtual Horizon (top) and G TS Skyla in past Saturday’s final prep races at Century Mile Coady Photo/Ryan Haynes

It’s interesting. Very interesting.

As expected, G TS Skyla and Virtual Horizon - the favourites for Alberta’s most prestigious races - the October 21 $110,000 Western Canada Pacing Derby and the $110,000 Century Casino Filly Pace - both won this past Saturday’s final prep races at Century Mile.

G TS Skyla won the $55,100 Princess Final by 7 1/2 lengths; Virtual Horizon won his 13th race in a row taking the $56,300 Plainsman.

G TS Skyla paid just $2.30 to win. Virtual Horizon paid $3.10 to win.

But reinforcements are on the way.

B.C. trainer Jim Marino is sending out Side Piece from British Columbia’s Fraser Downs for the Century Casino; Kelly Hoerdt has already shipped in Mickie Mantle from B.C. to see if he can end Virtual Horizon’s long winning streak in the Derby.

“I can’t wait for another try at G TS Skyla,” said Marino, who finished second to the McGinn’ family’s big filly in the Gord and Ila Rumpel stake in August.

“We tried a first-over trip in the Rumpel but we couldn’t get by her on the outside. G TS Skyla had the inside post and got the jump on us and beat us,” Marino said of the race where Side Piece finished second but more than four lengths behind.

Since the Rumpel, Side Piece has been very good at Fraser Downs winning both elimination legs of the Mary Murphy stakes series. The last win came in a lifetime mark of 1:52 4/5 while winning by seven-and-a-half lengths.

The fastest G TS Skyla, who has won 10 of her 14 career appearances, has gone is 1:53 2/5.

But Marino noted that the track at Fraser Downs in Side Piece’s latest appearance was “lightning fast.”

Side Piece has won nine of her 12 lifetime starts.

“Maybe the mile track will help her; I think it will,” said trainer Marino, who also owns Side Piece with the JJJ Stable.

“More straightaways; less turns. And they’re both big, strong fillies.”

“I know G TS Skyla is a great filly; but I think ours is too. I hope they both meet in the Final. It would be a great race.”

The eliminations for the Century Casino Pace are October 14th.

As for Mickie Mantle, Hoerdt said he’s not coming to Edmonton to finish second even if his three-year-old has lost to Virtual Horizon three consecutive times.

“I never enter a race thinking I’m not going to win,” said Hoerdt, who couldn’t get past Virtual Horizon in the $59,000 Maverick on July 23, an elimination leg of the Ralph Klein on August 5 or the $114,250 Klein final on August 12.

“We had outside posts in the Maverick and the Ralph Klein Final and it was too much to overcome.”

Mickie Mantle came back from the Klein to win his last start - a leg of the Robert Murphy Memorial - at Fraser Downs in a new mark of 1:52 1/5.

“I don’t like going back and forth over the mountains but his last race made my decision to bring him to Alberta for the Derby,” said trainer/driver Hoerdt who also owns Mickie Mantle, who has won eight of his 18 starts, with Fred Gilbert.

“Mickie Mantle won that leg of the Robert Murphy comfortably. We battled with the co-favourite and pace-setter Rum N Raisins down the lane and Mickie drew clear.”

“He has some talent for sure. He’s a full brother to Joe Dimagio,” he said of a four-year-old, who is still racing in Ontario and who has won $172,000. A $52,000 Yearling Sale purchase, Joe Dimagio won the $62,000 Keith Linton stakes last year at Fraser Downs.

Hoerdt bought Mickie Mantle for $27,000 at the Alberta Yearling Sale.

“Mickie Mantle had some issues getting around Century Downs. The track was loose and deep,” said Hoerdt, who has 15 horses in B.C. and 15 horses in Alberta. “I think a mile track will be more to his liking. He’s not a big and rugged individual but he has lots of speed and he’s versatile.”

“The big, wide turns on a mile track help a horse that maybe doesn’t get around tighter tracks as well.

“I’m looking forward to starting him at Century Mile. He’s in great shape.”

“Virtual Horizon is a nice horse but they’re all beatable. That’s why I’m entering. I’m expecting good things,” said Hoerdt, who is also considering supplementing Matts Gem, who has been racing in Ontario, to the Derby.

Like the Century Casino Pace, the Derby eliminations will also be on Oct. 14.

As for G TS Skyla and Virtual Horizon, they remain the horses to beat.

Virtual Horizon, who hasn’t lost since April 8th, tried to get beat again in the final of the Plainsman but trainer/driver Brandon Campbell refused to let that happen.

“Once again he waited for another horse to come at him,” said Campbell, who had to stay busy all the way down the stretch as longshot Blue Star Mercury came at him from the inside.

“That’s just (Virtual Horizon). I thought he was beat. But that’s just him playing games. He gives me a heart attack and then he just digs in and trucks on again.”

“He just doesn’t do any more than he has to do.”

Campbell, who was able to give Virtual Horizon a breather down the backstretch said he would like to see Vertical Horizon race on a fast track.

“The rail was was deep and slow. It was like quicksand. We all had to race two to two and a half lengths off the rail.”

“It was a good thing for me that Blue Star Mercury had to race through the deep stuff,” he said of the runner-up who came up a length short.

“Virtual Horizon is going to get this week off - just some light jogging. He holds his shape well.”

As for G TS Skyla, trainer Scott McGinn, who owns GT S Skyla with his father, Terry, and grandfather and grandmother Gerald and Marjorie McGinn, said he was “definitely very happy” with the filly’s victory in the Princess Final which she won easily.

“She raced great.”

“The five horse (Outlawabovenbeyond) went quick and we were able to stay close on a tiring racetrack,” McGinn said of the fractions of :27 3/5; :57 4/5 and 1:23 2/5 which culminated in a winning time of 1:54 2/5.

The victory came after G TS Skyla finished second in the elimination losing by a head to You Promyst, who, in turn, came from well back to finish second in the Princess Final.

“(G TS Skyla) definitely needed that race. She hadn’t raced since the August 12 Rumpel.”

“Because of a mixture of rain and smoke she didn’t get the training I wanted and she ended up being a head short.”

“In the elimination she had to go three wide down the backstretch and then finish against a strong head wind. A lot of factors led to her just getting nipped at the wire.”

“But she was real good on Saturday and she came out of that race really good too.”

STOCK REPORT Last week this space dealt with the outstanding standardbred yearling sale with two babies going for over $130,000 and a third going for $90,000.

In all, 50 yearlings sold for a staggering $1,222,197 which was up 17 per cent over last year making it the highest standardbred yearling sale ever in Western Canada.

The CTHS Alberta thoroughbred Yearling Sale was also a resounding success with 44 yearlings going for $635,800 - a big jump from last year’s total of $443,600 spent on 40 yearlings.

The average price was up 27% to $14,135 while the median increased over twofold to $10,000, from $4,750 in 2022.

The sale topper was Hip #59, a Counterforce gelding out of the Katowice mare, Chilli Chines, consigned by Highfield Investment Group, Agent and selling for $46,000 to purchaser, Curtis Landry.

The second highest selling yearling and top selling filly was Hip # 38, a Fed Biz filly out of the Captain Bodgit mare, Tell Me Lies, consigned by Bushido Stables and sold for $40,000 to Everblack Cattle Company.

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