Shaws Creek Stables

Shaws Creek Stables

About Us

Shaws Creek Stables was bought from Don and Ann Fordham, back in 1999 with only an old barn and a few broken paddocks.


Fast forward 23 years, a ‘royal home’ is built, 5 beautiful paddocks, 5 stall barn, outdoor sand ring and indoor arena. 


Slowly the farm has been improved and upgraded, as the times of horses are always changing. 


Meet Our Team

Shaws Creek Stables current and past broodmares

2 & Up Racing

Harness racing stars bred, raised and/or sold as yearlings by Shaws Creek Stables

Our 2023 yearlings selling this fall at the London Classic Yearling Sale

Big & Small

Goats, riding horses, retired horses all residing at Shaws Creek Stables

About Us

Shaws Creek Stables was bought from Don and Ann Fordham, back in 1999 with only an old barn and a few broken paddocks.


Fast forward 23 years, a ‘royal home’ is built, 5 beautiful paddocks, 5 stall barn, outdoor sand ring and indoor arena. 


Slowly the farm has been improved and upgraded, as the times of horses are always changing. 


Meet Our Team

Shaws Creek Stables current and past broodmares

Harness racing stars bred, raised and/or sold as yearlings by Shaws Creek Stables

Our 2023 yearlings selling this fall at the London Classic Yearling Sale

Goats, riding horses, retired horses all residing at Shaws Creek Stables

Meet the Team

Our News

Featured Articles

By Matthew Lomon December 30, 2024
On its own, the story of a rookie pacer who became the first horse in history to win both the Ontario Sires Stakes (OSS) Grassroots championship and OSS Gold Super Final in the same season is nothing short of remarkable. But it’s the rigorous journey to reach undocumented heights that makes the tale of Crack Shot truly one of a kind. Hopes have always been high for the 2-year-old bay colt, who was purchased for $205,000 (USD) by veteran trainer/co-owner Gregg McNair at the 2023 Lexington Sale. Alongside McNair, Crack Shot’s ownership group consists of partners Dale Hunter (the coach of the OHL’s London Knights), George Kerr, and Frank Brundle. The latter owns and operates a successful family-built tire distribution business based out of Orangeville, ON, Tire Discounter Group. Brundle is also a lifelong harness racing fan. “I love racing,” Brundle said. “It’s a huge passion of mine. That was my first ever Grassroots trophy and it was the first Super Finals I’ve ever been in, and we won it. “It was an amazing night.” Getting to that point, however, was anything but a smooth ride. “We had him geared up to race in the Battle of Waterloo and the Metro Pace,” Brundle said. “He raced in the Battle of Waterloo, but he was just off, he wasn’t pacing right. “Then we thought about taking him to the Metro, but something seemed off. So, we tried him in an overnight [race] about one month later, and he was still out of sorts.” Eager to find the root of Crack Shot’s troubles, Brundle and Co. opted to have their promising freshman evaluated by a veterinarian in the United States. The doctor identified a small pressure point that was bothering the youngster and administered a treatment to alleviate any discomfort. Crack Shot responded well, and after a brief down period, was deemed ready for a return to action. Competing in a qualifier at Lexington, the son of Bettors Delight—Beautyonthebeach looked like the horse that led gate-to-wire to capture a pair of Grassroots legs in July. “He qualified quite well,” Brundle said. “The week after we brought him back up here to try him in another overnight. “He went in :52 that night and we thought, ‘Hey, we got something good here. Let’s try the Grassroots.’” With Crack Shot’s health concerns in the rearview, Brundle’s team knew their prized pacer was well-positioned leading into the Grassroots Championship. “Going in, we believed we had one of the best horses in the race,” Brundle said. And right they were. Crack Shot flew around Woodbine Mohawk Park’s oval in 1:52.1 to claim the top spot over even-money favorite Sauble Wilson for his most impressive triumph to date – a distinction that would be usurped just two weeks later. Thanks to a brand-new feature in the OSS program stipulating that a Grassroots Series champion could enter the Super Final if the division didn’t fill with top point-earners from the Gold Series, the door was ajar for Crack Shot to forever stamp his place in OSS lore. All the resilient racer needed was a stroke of luck. “Chris Matthews, a good friend of mine phoned me up and said ‘Frank, you’re a lucky bugger,’” Brundle said, adding with a laugh, “I said, ‘Of course,’ jokingly. “Then I asked what he meant, and he said we drew into the final. We got a decent post, but we didn’t know what to expect. There were some good horses in there, but I knew we had a chance.” Besides the inherent faith that any owner has in one of their own, Brundle’s optimism was further bolstered by what he viewed as favorable circumstances going into the race. “We came in fresh and ready to go, and a lot of the other horses I think we’re just a little bit worn down,” he said. “Also, the times in the Grassroots and Golds were only a couple seconds different, if at all. “It wasn’t like the Golds were going in :49 or :50 every week. They were going :52 or :53 like the Grassroots.” Once again, Brundle’s intuition proved proper. Crack Shot delivered a career-best mark of 1:51.3, rewriting the OSS history books along the way. “It was an amazing night and really a dream come true to race in two Super Finals with the same horse in the same year and win both,” Brundle said. The owner out of East Garafraxa, ON, credited the McNairs and their team for having Crack Shot in peak condition for the Gold final. As for what lies ahead for the rookie sensation, Crack Shot will be spending his winter like many other Canadians – in Florida. “Gregg has a farm in Lake Okeechobee,” Brundle said. “Crack Shot will go down there and hopefully be turned out for the rest of November and December, let him be a horse, run around, go a little bit, or kick and buck. “Then he’ll probably start training in mid-January, February and March. Then we can think about shipping him back up here for April.” Now fully embracing snowbird status, Crack Shot closes the book on a maiden campaign that saw him compile a 5-1-0 record through eight starts and some $238,825 in purse earnings. In a year characterized by luck, both good and bad, Crack Shot fought tirelessly to carve out a pristine position atop Ontario’s sire stakes program. No doubt encouraged by what he’s seen, the high hopes that Brundle held for Hip #297 when he was first purchased have been raised even higher. And why not? “My goal is to win the Little Brown Jug with him,” he said. “This guy is a small, stocky little horse. He went :51 across Mohawk and he looked really impressive. Getting him to win the Little Brown Jug would be a dream come true for me.  “My daughter Camille, who helps look after the horses, wants to win the North America Cup. I just hope Crack Shot comes back fully healthy and stays strong. I’m looking forward to him having a career next year.”
By Melissa Keith December 22, 2024
Woodbine Mohawk Park fan favorite Woodmere Stealdeal (p, 5, 1:48.4s; $290,753) has reached the finish of his five-year racing career. On Thursday (Dec. 19), Camille Brundle told HRU that the decision followed the 6-year-old pacer’s start at Mohawk on Monday (Dec. 16). Despite setting the pace and leading to three-quarters, the Steelhead Hanover—Very Ideal Hanover gelding was overtaken late in the mile, finishing seventh as the beaten 6-5 favorite. “He’s been through so much, we’re just going to retire him now, and maybe in the spring, turn him into a riding horse,” Brundle said. “He’s coming home today [Dec. 19] and he’s going to be at our house, permanently.” Last Friday (Dec. 13) at Mohawk, driver Jonathan Drury remarked on the gelding’s atypical recent performances at Mohawk. “You know, I just don’t think he was himself [finishing sixth on Dec. 9],” Drury said. “He’s back in to go Monday [Dec. 16], but I had schooled him the week before and I was really happy with him. I’m not sure if it was just the ‘off’ [track] conditions or if he had a little sickness or something going on, but he’s a special little horse and I really enjoy driving him. I’m always looking forward to the next time I sit behind him.” Brundle has frequently looked after the record-setting Atlantic Canadian champion ever since Woodmere Stealdeal first came to the East Garafraxa, ON, farm of her father, Frank Brundle, in late 2021. She stressed that the gelding’s retirement was not due to injury or illness. “It’s not because he’s lame or has any issues,” Camille said, as she awaited Woodmere Stealdeal’s arrival at her family’s farm Thursday (Dec. 19). “He’s perfectly sound. He is good and healthy and happy. He’s done so well in his life and paid his way so much in his life for us.” The gelding came to Ontario sporting an impressive resume from the Maritime provinces. He had gone 13-for-13 in an all-stakes season at age 2, setting several divisional track records, that still stand today. In his sophomore season on the track, Woodmere Stealdeal hit the board in all of his 18 starts, winning half. He stepped up from the Maritime stakes circuit to debut at Mohawk on Dec. 4, 2021, leaving the stable of Truro Raceway’s Danny Romo to join new trainer Carmen Auciello. Racing for owners Frank Brundle; Glenn MacDonald of Ajax, ON; and Robert Sumarah of Halifax, NS, Woodmere Stealdeal had his first Mohawk victory on Dec. 26, 2021, overcoming older pacers and post position 10 to upset at 10-1 for driver James MacDonald. Woodmere Stealdeal quickly rose to the Mohawk preferred level in January 2022, then ventured to Yonkers Raceway for the MGM Borgata Series, in which he went winless. He finished fifth after experiencing interference in a 2022 Charles Juravinski Memorial elimination at Flamboro Downs. Resting until August, “Steal” came back a winner at Mohawk on Sept. 17, 2022 with Drury in the sulky. In 2023, Woodmere Stealdeal had three wins at Mohawk, taking his 1:48.4 lifetime mark for Drury on a June 24 class drop from the preferred. The pacer was scheduled to make an appearance on a special Woodmere Stealdeal Day at Truro Raceway before going to Red Shores Charlottetown to take his best shot in the 2023 Gold Cup and Saucer Trials, but he was found to have fractured a sesamoid bone in a hind leg. After surgery at Ontario Equine Hospital, in Mississauga, ON, in Sept. 2023, Woodmere Stealdeal gradually recovered with help from his human family. Drury “played a huge part” in the decision to retire the gelding after 92 starts and 30 wins, said Camille. “He’s the driver who knew Stealdeal as well as all of us did,” she said. “[Drury] had him for three or four months; in his first month post-surgery, he did all of that work. Stealdeal was with JD that entire time.” Woodmere Stealdeal won the hearts of racing fans and those who worked with him throughout his career. His final win was Nov. 6, 2024 at Flamboro for driver Travis Cullen. On the pacer’s last trip home from the Auciello Stable, it was fittingly Drury who did the driving. “He’s the one who went to pick him up,” said Camille. “JD and his fiancée, Victoria, they frequently come up to our place to see the horses and hang out, because he and dad are good friends. They have another horse together, Dovuto Hanover [p, 3, 1:48.4m; $680,825], who’s retired at our house. [Drury] drove him a lot as well, and now the two of them [Woodmere Stealdeal and Dovuto Hanover] will be living out their days together.” Camille said she looks forward to Woodmere Stealdeal’s next chapter. “It will be just me who will be looking after him and caring for him, going forward,” she told HRU. “I’m going to break him [to saddle] in the spring. “He’s such a happy-go-lucky, lovable horse that even in the [racetrack] paddock, he would fall asleep, he was so chill. Other horses would be freaking out sometimes, and he would be like, ‘I’m just hanging out. I’m good.’” Camille said that standardbreds are often and unfairly overlooked as potential saddle horses when they retire from harness racing. “My first-ever [riding] horse was a standardbred that I broke, showed, did the green hunter [horse show class] with, and everything; ‘Frankie,’” she said. “I think I was 14, but the first time I sat on a horse, I was 6, and I’m 23 now.” She added that at the age when racehorses’ best performances are in the past, horses are typically just blossoming in other equestrian sports. “Stealdeal is so young, and a lot of riding horses don’t have their big career wins until they’re 13, anyway,” Camille said. “That’s exactly when they start to show their true colors.” Her dad maintains ownership of “about 30” horses currently racing, said Camille. Many are in partnerships with friends. Some recent success stories include a Dec. 7 Mohawk victory by 6-year-old Mystifying (p, 5, 1:49.1s; $219,047), co-owned with Glenn MacDonald, trained by Susie Kerwood, and driven by Tyler Borth. It was the mare’s second 2024 win, in just her eighth start this season. Three-year-old Mikki Sixx (p, 3, 1:52.2s; $51,527) captured the first leg of the Niagara Series Dec. 6 at Mohawk for the same connections, her seventh seasonal win in just 10 starts. “She had an injury, so she was at my house for two or three months, on stall rest,” Camille said. “My dad and his friend Ryan Bender bought her off Chris Bush, raced her once or twice, and then she hurt herself out in the paddock.” Back with a vengeance at Mohawk, the filly Camille called “the big girl” finished second for trainer Gregg McNair and driver MacDonald in the most recent (Dec. 13) Niagara leg. When it comes to standardbred retirement, the experienced English rider said many former racehorses make willing, adaptable saddle horses. Instead of wondering whether they can learn, Camille suggested giving a horse a chance.  “I say do it,” Camille said. “Probably one of the best things for a standardbred is to put them in a second career, because a lot of the time they’re still sound, just older. I definitely recommend it.”
December 9, 2024
The Ontario Sires Stakes Gold Series Super Finals are set for this Saturday at Woodbine Mohawk Park with six wild-card entries from the Grassroots champions getting a chance to claim part of the $2.4 million purse pool in a twist to the provincial program introduced this year. Post time for Saturday’s 12-race card is 7:10 p.m., with the eight $300,000 divisional Super Finals taking place in Races 2-9. Of the eight Grassroots champions that were crowned on Sept. 28, as many as seven have the potential to participate on Saturday. They are Century Komodo (three-year-old colt pace), Collusion Hanover (three-year-old filly pace), Crack Shot (two-year-old colt pace), Love Those Legs (three-year-old filly trot), Tellers Choice (two-year-old filly trot) and Wendell Blue Chip (two-year-old colt trot) with Pick Me Up Hanover (two-year-old filly pace) is listed as an Also Eligible entry. Horses must have started in a minimum of one Gold Series leg to be eligible for their respective Super Final. Complete point standings can be found on the "Leaderboard" page of the Ontario Sires Stakes (OSS) website. New for the OSS 50th Anniversary season, winners from the Grassroots Championships were allowed to enter and draw into the Super Final if it did not fill with Gold Series point earners. This new twist added to the Gold Super Finals this year, while certainly adding another level of excitement to the racing with a wild-card factor, may not work for everyone, however. “It helps the event itself and makes for better racing … I’m happy with [the new rule] because we got a horse in who made the Gold Finals,” said Gregg McNair, who trains Crack Shot and has locked up his sixth Johnston Cup as the leading trainer in the OSS. “On the other hand, let’s say you had the best Gold horse and some horse from the Grassroots comes along and beats you in the final, you wouldn’t think this was a good rule.” Interestingly, Crack Shot followed up his Grassroots Championship with a second-place finish in last week’s Gold Series leg, meaning the scenario that McNair laid out with a Grassroots horse swooping in during the Gold Super Finals and winning it all could play out with his own horse. “He was second, but he was coming pretty good at the end,” said McNair of Crack Shot’s Oct. 3 performance. “He’s about as good right now as he’s been all year.” Heading into Saturday’s action, the Grassroots invitees will be a very interesting story to watch, along with a tight two-man race for the Lampman Cup between McNair's son Doug, who previously won in 2014, and three-time defending champion James MacDonald. Only 11 points separate McNair from MacDonald and with both men driving in all eight Super Finals on Saturday, the 2024 Lampman Cup could literally come down to the final OSS race of the evening. “It’s always fun when it’s close. We love the competition. That’s what we’re in the game for,” said MacDonald of the tight Lampman Cup standings. “So, it’s a dogfight, but, hopefully, I can come out on top. I’m just happy to drive some great horses.”
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By Matthew Lomon December 30, 2024
On its own, the story of a rookie pacer who became the first horse in history to win both the Ontario Sires Stakes (OSS) Grassroots championship and OSS Gold Super Final in the same season is nothing short of remarkable. But it’s the rigorous journey to reach undocumented heights that makes the tale of Crack Shot truly one of a kind. Hopes have always been high for the 2-year-old bay colt, who was purchased for $205,000 (USD) by veteran trainer/co-owner Gregg McNair at the 2023 Lexington Sale. Alongside McNair, Crack Shot’s ownership group consists of partners Dale Hunter (the coach of the OHL’s London Knights), George Kerr, and Frank Brundle. The latter owns and operates a successful family-built tire distribution business based out of Orangeville, ON, Tire Discounter Group. Brundle is also a lifelong harness racing fan. “I love racing,” Brundle said. “It’s a huge passion of mine. That was my first ever Grassroots trophy and it was the first Super Finals I’ve ever been in, and we won it. “It was an amazing night.” Getting to that point, however, was anything but a smooth ride. “We had him geared up to race in the Battle of Waterloo and the Metro Pace,” Brundle said. “He raced in the Battle of Waterloo, but he was just off, he wasn’t pacing right. “Then we thought about taking him to the Metro, but something seemed off. So, we tried him in an overnight [race] about one month later, and he was still out of sorts.” Eager to find the root of Crack Shot’s troubles, Brundle and Co. opted to have their promising freshman evaluated by a veterinarian in the United States. The doctor identified a small pressure point that was bothering the youngster and administered a treatment to alleviate any discomfort. Crack Shot responded well, and after a brief down period, was deemed ready for a return to action. Competing in a qualifier at Lexington, the son of Bettors Delight—Beautyonthebeach looked like the horse that led gate-to-wire to capture a pair of Grassroots legs in July. “He qualified quite well,” Brundle said. “The week after we brought him back up here to try him in another overnight. “He went in :52 that night and we thought, ‘Hey, we got something good here. Let’s try the Grassroots.’” With Crack Shot’s health concerns in the rearview, Brundle’s team knew their prized pacer was well-positioned leading into the Grassroots Championship. “Going in, we believed we had one of the best horses in the race,” Brundle said. And right they were. Crack Shot flew around Woodbine Mohawk Park’s oval in 1:52.1 to claim the top spot over even-money favorite Sauble Wilson for his most impressive triumph to date – a distinction that would be usurped just two weeks later. Thanks to a brand-new feature in the OSS program stipulating that a Grassroots Series champion could enter the Super Final if the division didn’t fill with top point-earners from the Gold Series, the door was ajar for Crack Shot to forever stamp his place in OSS lore. All the resilient racer needed was a stroke of luck. “Chris Matthews, a good friend of mine phoned me up and said ‘Frank, you’re a lucky bugger,’” Brundle said, adding with a laugh, “I said, ‘Of course,’ jokingly. “Then I asked what he meant, and he said we drew into the final. We got a decent post, but we didn’t know what to expect. There were some good horses in there, but I knew we had a chance.” Besides the inherent faith that any owner has in one of their own, Brundle’s optimism was further bolstered by what he viewed as favorable circumstances going into the race. “We came in fresh and ready to go, and a lot of the other horses I think we’re just a little bit worn down,” he said. “Also, the times in the Grassroots and Golds were only a couple seconds different, if at all. “It wasn’t like the Golds were going in :49 or :50 every week. They were going :52 or :53 like the Grassroots.” Once again, Brundle’s intuition proved proper. Crack Shot delivered a career-best mark of 1:51.3, rewriting the OSS history books along the way. “It was an amazing night and really a dream come true to race in two Super Finals with the same horse in the same year and win both,” Brundle said. The owner out of East Garafraxa, ON, credited the McNairs and their team for having Crack Shot in peak condition for the Gold final. As for what lies ahead for the rookie sensation, Crack Shot will be spending his winter like many other Canadians – in Florida. “Gregg has a farm in Lake Okeechobee,” Brundle said. “Crack Shot will go down there and hopefully be turned out for the rest of November and December, let him be a horse, run around, go a little bit, or kick and buck. “Then he’ll probably start training in mid-January, February and March. Then we can think about shipping him back up here for April.” Now fully embracing snowbird status, Crack Shot closes the book on a maiden campaign that saw him compile a 5-1-0 record through eight starts and some $238,825 in purse earnings. In a year characterized by luck, both good and bad, Crack Shot fought tirelessly to carve out a pristine position atop Ontario’s sire stakes program. No doubt encouraged by what he’s seen, the high hopes that Brundle held for Hip #297 when he was first purchased have been raised even higher. And why not? “My goal is to win the Little Brown Jug with him,” he said. “This guy is a small, stocky little horse. He went :51 across Mohawk and he looked really impressive. Getting him to win the Little Brown Jug would be a dream come true for me.  “My daughter Camille, who helps look after the horses, wants to win the North America Cup. I just hope Crack Shot comes back fully healthy and stays strong. I’m looking forward to him having a career next year.”
By Melissa Keith December 22, 2024
Woodbine Mohawk Park fan favorite Woodmere Stealdeal (p, 5, 1:48.4s; $290,753) has reached the finish of his five-year racing career. On Thursday (Dec. 19), Camille Brundle told HRU that the decision followed the 6-year-old pacer’s start at Mohawk on Monday (Dec. 16). Despite setting the pace and leading to three-quarters, the Steelhead Hanover—Very Ideal Hanover gelding was overtaken late in the mile, finishing seventh as the beaten 6-5 favorite. “He’s been through so much, we’re just going to retire him now, and maybe in the spring, turn him into a riding horse,” Brundle said. “He’s coming home today [Dec. 19] and he’s going to be at our house, permanently.” Last Friday (Dec. 13) at Mohawk, driver Jonathan Drury remarked on the gelding’s atypical recent performances at Mohawk. “You know, I just don’t think he was himself [finishing sixth on Dec. 9],” Drury said. “He’s back in to go Monday [Dec. 16], but I had schooled him the week before and I was really happy with him. I’m not sure if it was just the ‘off’ [track] conditions or if he had a little sickness or something going on, but he’s a special little horse and I really enjoy driving him. I’m always looking forward to the next time I sit behind him.” Brundle has frequently looked after the record-setting Atlantic Canadian champion ever since Woodmere Stealdeal first came to the East Garafraxa, ON, farm of her father, Frank Brundle, in late 2021. She stressed that the gelding’s retirement was not due to injury or illness. “It’s not because he’s lame or has any issues,” Camille said, as she awaited Woodmere Stealdeal’s arrival at her family’s farm Thursday (Dec. 19). “He’s perfectly sound. He is good and healthy and happy. He’s done so well in his life and paid his way so much in his life for us.” The gelding came to Ontario sporting an impressive resume from the Maritime provinces. He had gone 13-for-13 in an all-stakes season at age 2, setting several divisional track records, that still stand today. In his sophomore season on the track, Woodmere Stealdeal hit the board in all of his 18 starts, winning half. He stepped up from the Maritime stakes circuit to debut at Mohawk on Dec. 4, 2021, leaving the stable of Truro Raceway’s Danny Romo to join new trainer Carmen Auciello. Racing for owners Frank Brundle; Glenn MacDonald of Ajax, ON; and Robert Sumarah of Halifax, NS, Woodmere Stealdeal had his first Mohawk victory on Dec. 26, 2021, overcoming older pacers and post position 10 to upset at 10-1 for driver James MacDonald. Woodmere Stealdeal quickly rose to the Mohawk preferred level in January 2022, then ventured to Yonkers Raceway for the MGM Borgata Series, in which he went winless. He finished fifth after experiencing interference in a 2022 Charles Juravinski Memorial elimination at Flamboro Downs. Resting until August, “Steal” came back a winner at Mohawk on Sept. 17, 2022 with Drury in the sulky. In 2023, Woodmere Stealdeal had three wins at Mohawk, taking his 1:48.4 lifetime mark for Drury on a June 24 class drop from the preferred. The pacer was scheduled to make an appearance on a special Woodmere Stealdeal Day at Truro Raceway before going to Red Shores Charlottetown to take his best shot in the 2023 Gold Cup and Saucer Trials, but he was found to have fractured a sesamoid bone in a hind leg. After surgery at Ontario Equine Hospital, in Mississauga, ON, in Sept. 2023, Woodmere Stealdeal gradually recovered with help from his human family. Drury “played a huge part” in the decision to retire the gelding after 92 starts and 30 wins, said Camille. “He’s the driver who knew Stealdeal as well as all of us did,” she said. “[Drury] had him for three or four months; in his first month post-surgery, he did all of that work. Stealdeal was with JD that entire time.” Woodmere Stealdeal won the hearts of racing fans and those who worked with him throughout his career. His final win was Nov. 6, 2024 at Flamboro for driver Travis Cullen. On the pacer’s last trip home from the Auciello Stable, it was fittingly Drury who did the driving. “He’s the one who went to pick him up,” said Camille. “JD and his fiancée, Victoria, they frequently come up to our place to see the horses and hang out, because he and dad are good friends. They have another horse together, Dovuto Hanover [p, 3, 1:48.4m; $680,825], who’s retired at our house. [Drury] drove him a lot as well, and now the two of them [Woodmere Stealdeal and Dovuto Hanover] will be living out their days together.” Camille said she looks forward to Woodmere Stealdeal’s next chapter. “It will be just me who will be looking after him and caring for him, going forward,” she told HRU. “I’m going to break him [to saddle] in the spring. “He’s such a happy-go-lucky, lovable horse that even in the [racetrack] paddock, he would fall asleep, he was so chill. Other horses would be freaking out sometimes, and he would be like, ‘I’m just hanging out. I’m good.’” Camille said that standardbreds are often and unfairly overlooked as potential saddle horses when they retire from harness racing. “My first-ever [riding] horse was a standardbred that I broke, showed, did the green hunter [horse show class] with, and everything; ‘Frankie,’” she said. “I think I was 14, but the first time I sat on a horse, I was 6, and I’m 23 now.” She added that at the age when racehorses’ best performances are in the past, horses are typically just blossoming in other equestrian sports. “Stealdeal is so young, and a lot of riding horses don’t have their big career wins until they’re 13, anyway,” Camille said. “That’s exactly when they start to show their true colors.” Her dad maintains ownership of “about 30” horses currently racing, said Camille. Many are in partnerships with friends. Some recent success stories include a Dec. 7 Mohawk victory by 6-year-old Mystifying (p, 5, 1:49.1s; $219,047), co-owned with Glenn MacDonald, trained by Susie Kerwood, and driven by Tyler Borth. It was the mare’s second 2024 win, in just her eighth start this season. Three-year-old Mikki Sixx (p, 3, 1:52.2s; $51,527) captured the first leg of the Niagara Series Dec. 6 at Mohawk for the same connections, her seventh seasonal win in just 10 starts. “She had an injury, so she was at my house for two or three months, on stall rest,” Camille said. “My dad and his friend Ryan Bender bought her off Chris Bush, raced her once or twice, and then she hurt herself out in the paddock.” Back with a vengeance at Mohawk, the filly Camille called “the big girl” finished second for trainer Gregg McNair and driver MacDonald in the most recent (Dec. 13) Niagara leg. When it comes to standardbred retirement, the experienced English rider said many former racehorses make willing, adaptable saddle horses. Instead of wondering whether they can learn, Camille suggested giving a horse a chance.  “I say do it,” Camille said. “Probably one of the best things for a standardbred is to put them in a second career, because a lot of the time they’re still sound, just older. I definitely recommend it.”
December 9, 2024
The Ontario Sires Stakes Gold Series Super Finals are set for this Saturday at Woodbine Mohawk Park with six wild-card entries from the Grassroots champions getting a chance to claim part of the $2.4 million purse pool in a twist to the provincial program introduced this year. Post time for Saturday’s 12-race card is 7:10 p.m., with the eight $300,000 divisional Super Finals taking place in Races 2-9. Of the eight Grassroots champions that were crowned on Sept. 28, as many as seven have the potential to participate on Saturday. They are Century Komodo (three-year-old colt pace), Collusion Hanover (three-year-old filly pace), Crack Shot (two-year-old colt pace), Love Those Legs (three-year-old filly trot), Tellers Choice (two-year-old filly trot) and Wendell Blue Chip (two-year-old colt trot) with Pick Me Up Hanover (two-year-old filly pace) is listed as an Also Eligible entry. Horses must have started in a minimum of one Gold Series leg to be eligible for their respective Super Final. Complete point standings can be found on the "Leaderboard" page of the Ontario Sires Stakes (OSS) website. New for the OSS 50th Anniversary season, winners from the Grassroots Championships were allowed to enter and draw into the Super Final if it did not fill with Gold Series point earners. This new twist added to the Gold Super Finals this year, while certainly adding another level of excitement to the racing with a wild-card factor, may not work for everyone, however. “It helps the event itself and makes for better racing … I’m happy with [the new rule] because we got a horse in who made the Gold Finals,” said Gregg McNair, who trains Crack Shot and has locked up his sixth Johnston Cup as the leading trainer in the OSS. “On the other hand, let’s say you had the best Gold horse and some horse from the Grassroots comes along and beats you in the final, you wouldn’t think this was a good rule.” Interestingly, Crack Shot followed up his Grassroots Championship with a second-place finish in last week’s Gold Series leg, meaning the scenario that McNair laid out with a Grassroots horse swooping in during the Gold Super Finals and winning it all could play out with his own horse. “He was second, but he was coming pretty good at the end,” said McNair of Crack Shot’s Oct. 3 performance. “He’s about as good right now as he’s been all year.” Heading into Saturday’s action, the Grassroots invitees will be a very interesting story to watch, along with a tight two-man race for the Lampman Cup between McNair's son Doug, who previously won in 2014, and three-time defending champion James MacDonald. Only 11 points separate McNair from MacDonald and with both men driving in all eight Super Finals on Saturday, the 2024 Lampman Cup could literally come down to the final OSS race of the evening. “It’s always fun when it’s close. We love the competition. That’s what we’re in the game for,” said MacDonald of the tight Lampman Cup standings. “So, it’s a dogfight, but, hopefully, I can come out on top. I’m just happy to drive some great horses.”
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