Queen's Plate 2019: Contenders & Odds at Woodbine
Avie's Flatter, Canada's champion two-year-old male, looms as the horse to beat when he faces 13 other Queen's Plate hopefuls in the $1 million showpiece at Woodbine Racetrack over 1 1/4 miles on their Tapeta surface this Saturday, June 29.
The 160th edition of the Queen's Plate, North America's oldest annually run race, is the first leg of the OLG Canadian Triple Crown, a tri-surface series for Canadian-bred three-year-olds which will offer a new $500,000 bonus for a sweep.
2019 Queen's Plate Odds & Entries
Race 10 at Woodbine on Saturday, June 29 - Post 5:36 PM
Entry | Horse | ML Odds | Jockey | Trainer |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Desert Ride | 8-1 | Steven Bahen 121 Lbs |
Neil Howard |
2 | Moon Swings | 30-1 | Jesse Campbell 126 Lbs |
Michael De Paulo |
3 | Krachenwagen | 50-1 | Jeffrey Alderson 126 Lbs |
Angus Buntain |
4 | Pay for Peace | 15-1 | Rafael Hernandez 126 Lbs |
Rachel Halden |
5 | One Bad Boy | 7-2 | Flavien Prat 126 Lbs |
Richard Baltas |
6 | Lucas n' Lori | 50-1 | Kazushi Kimura 126 Lbs |
Kevin Attard |
7 | Federal Law | 15-1 | Jamie Spencer 126 Lbs |
Mark Casse |
8 | He's a Macho Man | 15-1 | Patrick Husbands 126 Lbs |
Josie Carroll |
9 | Suitedconnected | 50-1 | Gary Boulanger 126 Lbs |
Robert Barnett |
10 | Skywire | 4-1 | Eurico Da Silva 126 Lbs |
Mark Casse |
11 | Tone Broke | 6-1 | Luis Contreras 126 Lbs |
Steven Asmussen |
12 | Jammin Still | 30-1 | Alan Garcia 126 Lbs |
Kevin Attard |
13 | Rising Star | 30-1 | Justin Stein 126 Lbs |
Michael De Paulo |
14 | Avie's Flatter | 5-2 | Javier Castellano 126 Lbs |
Josie Carroll |
Wando, owned and bred by the late Gustav Schickedanz, was the last horse to accomplish the feat while becoming the seventh to pull off the unique triple in 2003. The $400,000 Prince of Wales, run at 1 3/16 miles on the dirt at Fort Erie on July 23, is the middle leg and the $400,000 Breeders' Stakes, at 1 1/2 miles on the turf back here at Woodbine on August 17, concludes the challenge.
Avie's Flatter, a homebred who races for owner Ivan Dalos and is trained by Josie Carroll, wrapped up his first campaign with back-to-back wins over fellow Canadian-breds in the Cup and Saucer at 1 1/16 miles on turf and the Coronation Futurity over 1 1/8 miles on the main track. Norcliffe was the last horse to win both the Coronation Futurity and the Queen's Plate, completing that double in 1976.
The Queen's Plate will be the first local appearance this year for Avie's Flatter, whose previous sophomore outings were on turf and yielded a win in the Grade 3, 1 1/16-mile Transylvania at Keeneland and a close sixth-place finish in the Grade 2, 1 1/16-mile American Turf at Churchill Downs.
Javier Castellano, aboard for those two outings, will retain the mount as he comes in from his Belmont base.
Carroll, who won the Queen's Plate with Inglorious in 2011 and with Edenwold in 2006, will be looking to give Dalos his first Queen's Plate score after the owner/breeder fielded runners-up Amis Gizmo in 2016 and Ami's Holiday in 2014.
Trainer Mark Casse will be looking for his second straight Queen's Plate and third overall after clicking with the fillies Wonder Gadot last year and Lexie Lou in 2014. Both raced for owner Gary Barber, who owns Skywire in partnership with Lou Tucci, co-owner of 2013 Queen's Plate upsetter Midnight Aria.
Skywire came into sharp Queen's Plate focus when winning this spring's 1 1/16-mile Wando Stakes and followed up with a good second behind American-bred Global Access in the Grade 3 Marine. Woodbine's leading rider Eurico Rosa da Silva was aboard for those two outings and has won Queen's Plates with Big Red Mike (2010) and Eye of the Leopard (2009).
Desert Ride, the heroine of the June 8 Woodbine Oaks presented by Budweiser, will be looking to follow in the hoofprints of Wonder Gadot and Holy Helena to become the third straight filly to win the Queen's Plate.
Owned and bred by Sam-Son Farm, Desert Ride is based in Kentucky with trainer Neil Howard and was making both her local and stakes debut in the Woodbine Oaks. Desert Ride scored by a neck there under rider Steve Bahen, who guided T J's Lucky Moon to his Queen's Plate $166 record payoff in the 2002 edition.
Sam-Son has owned and bred five previous Queen's Plate winners, the most recent being Eye of the Leopard. Their earlier successes included the superfilly Dance Smartly in 1991; her daughter Dancethruthedawn and son Scatter the Gold, full siblings who won in 2000 and 2001; and Regal Intention in 1988.
Adding intrigue to this year's Queen's Plate will be a pair of invaders, with One Bad Boy on the grounds for trainer Richard Baltas and Tone Broke due in Thursday from his Churchill Downs base for Steve Asmussen.
One Bad Boy will be racing beyond a mile for the first time after finishing second over that distance in the off-the-turf Alcatraz on the Tapeta surface at Golden Gate. Flavien Prat picks up the mount.
Tone Broke finished second last time out in the Sir Barton, a 1 1/16-mile race on Pimlico's Preakness Day undercard, and that performance was flattered when winner King for A Day returned to defeat disqualified Kentucky Derby first-place finisher Maximum Security in the Pegasus Stakes at Monmouth Park. The colt will be making his first start on a synthetic surface.
Luis Contreras, winner of the Queen's Plate with Holy Helena and Inglorious, picks up the mount on Tone Broke.
The last horse to win the Queen's Plate while making his Woodbine debut was Wild Desert, in 2005.
Pay for Peace, who upset the 1 1/8-mile Plate Trial on June 8, and Federal Law, the runner-up there while 1-3/4 lengths back as the favourite, will renew their rivalry on Saturday.
Rachel Halden trains Pay for Peace, who was winning his first stakes race in the Plate Trial. Rafael Hernandez, successful with Shaman Ghost in his first Queen's Plate run in 2015, has the mount.
Federal Law is conditioned by Mark Casse and will be ridden by Jamie Spencer, a go-to rider for Qatar Racing Limited, who will be making the Transatlantic trip. Spencer has won five Grade 1 stakes at Woodbine, all on turf, including Trade Storm in the 2014 Ricoh Woodbine Mile.
Bred in Ontario by Jim Lawson, CEO and president of Woodbine Entertainment, Federal Law was beaten a half-length by Avie's Flatter in the Coronation Futurity and won the seven-furlong Queenston Stakes this April. The last Plate Trial winner to repeat in the Queen's Plate was Big Red Mike in 2010, after Eye of the Leopard pulled off that double the previous year and Not Bourbon in 2008.
He's a Macho Man, a second Queen's Plate entrant from the Josie Carroll barn, is the least experienced horse in the field with just three starts. His only two outings here yielded smart come-from-behind victories over 1 1/16 miles, however, and he is not to be discounted in his stakes debut. Patrick Husbands, who has won Queen's Plates with Lexie Lou and Wando, will ride He's a Macho Man for the first time.
Trainer Mike De Paulo and owner Rob Marzilli will be looking to become the first to capture the Queen's Plate with a maiden since Scatter the Gold, with Moon Swings and Rising Star both seeking their initial victories.
Rising Star finished third and Moon Swings fourth in the Plate Trial. Their respective riders, Justin Stein and Jesse Campbell, have Queen's Plate wins under their belts with Stein's success coming with Strait of Dover in 2012 and Campbell's with Midnight Aria the following year.
Krachenwagen and Jammin Still also raced in the Plate Trial, finishing fifth and seventh, respectively.
Owner/trainer Angus Buntain and jockey Jeffrey Alderson will be making their Queen's Plate debuts with Krachenwagen. Alan Garcia regains the mount on Jammin Still for trainer Kevin Attard.
Lucas n' Lori and Suitedconnected both enter the Queen's Plate off fringe finishes in a 1 1/16-mile turf race and will be making their stakes debuts.
Canadian champion apprentice jockey Kazushi Kimura will be contesting his first Queen's Plate aboard Lucas n' Lori, who like Jammin Still is trained by Kevin Attard.
Gary Boulanger, winner of the Queen's Plate with Dancethruthedawn, gets the call on Suitedconnected, the second career Queen's Plate entrant for veteran conditioner Earl Barnett.
Woodbine To Open New Inner Turf Course for Queen's Plate
Woodbine Entertainment is elevating its game when it comes to turf racing with the grand opening of its new inner turf course scheduled for the first day of the Queen's Plate Racing Festival on Friday, June 28.
Woodbine will host its first race on the brand new seven-furlong Kentucky Bluegrass course during the Friday afternoon program. The new inner turf course will compliment Woodbine's all-weather Tapeta racetrack and world-renowned E.P. Taylor Turf Course that opened September 1994 and boasts popular wide sweeping turns and the longest stretch in North America.
"Opening our new state-of-the-art inner turf course during the Queen's Plate Festival is the perfect compliment to this event's rich history," said Jim Lawson, CEO of Woodbine Entertainment. "It's a demonstration of our commitment to growing the sport of horse racing towards a future that is bright and proud as the 159 years that have preceded it."
The transformation of the former seven-eighths-mile Standardbred track into a second Thoroughbred turf course began in the spring last year.
The track has undergone constant monitoring and evaluation with horses galloping, breezing and working over it in the weeks leading up to the opening, culminating with a full-dress rehearsal. Woodbine conducted timed trial races including participation by the track and gate crews, broadcast team, AGCO stewards as well as security and emergency personnel.
"The safety of the horses and participants is a top priority for Woodbine and the new inner turf course has undergone thorough inspection by our racing executives and track specialists as well as a third-party laboratory to be deemed safe and ready for racing," said Jonathan Zammit, VP of Thoroughbred Racing Operations. "Woodbine is excited to celebrate the opening of the new inner turf course as we endeavour to become the premier turf racing destination in North America. Our team has worked tirelessly to bring our vision to life and we look forward to elevating our world-class racing product to a new level."
Once both turf courses are fully operational, Woodbine will look to card five to six racing opportunities every race day through the 2019 meet.
The distance of races, including stakes opportunities, that will be carded on the new inner turf course will range from five furlongs to 1-1/2 miles.
The new inner turf course will host this year's Grade 3 Ontario Colleen Stakes (July 20), Eternal Search (August 14), Vice Regent (September 7) and Ontario Damsel (September 22), plus two new five-furlong stakes for two-year-olds on September 15: the Ontario Racing Stakes and the filly companion Woodbine Cares Stakes.
An official ribbon-cutting ceremony will be held at 2:30 p.m. prior to Friday afternoon's racing program to celebrate the historic launch of racing on the new inner turf course at Woodbine Racetrack.
Woodbine Inner Turf Course Specs:
Distance: 7 furlongs
Length of Stretch: 978 feet
Width: 90 feet
Banking: 6 per cent banking on turns
Base: Limestone
Drainage Layer: 4 inches
Growing Medium: 4 inches of sand with fiber over 8 inches of sand
Turf: Kentucky Bluegrass
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