Juddmonte Farms’ Cityscape, a British-bred son of Selkirk, will try to give
his owner a second win in the Woodbine Mile when he goes postward Sunday in the
Grade 1, C$1 million Breeders’ Cup ‘Win and You’re In’ event.
Trained by Roger Charlton, Cityscape, who earlier this year captured the
Group 1, $5 million Dubai Duty Free at Meydan in March, arrived at Woodbine from
England last Saturday. In his latest outing, the chestnut six-year-old finished
second to Excelebration in the Group 1 Prix Jacques Le Marois at Deauville on
August 12.
“He’s been very consistent,” Charlton said about Cityscape, a career earner
of more than $4.2 million, with six wins and eight seconds in 20 outings.
“Excelebration’s been second to (Juddmonte’s undefeated wonderhorse) Frankel
a couple of times. Frankel is about seven or eight lengths better than the rest.
We’re a bit behind that.
“He (Cityscape) obviously ran a fantastic race at Meydan (breaking the course
record for about nine furlongs). And in many ways, Woodbine is a
similarly-shaped track — with a long straight and sweeping turns. He’s
responded well to his trips. We went into Meydan just the week before. So he’ll
have a week at Woodbine, too.”
Cityscape, along with the other European raiders for the Mile, Dance and
Dance and Worthadd, arrived late Saturday night at Woodbine. That trio was
accompanied to Toronto by weekend competitors Wigmore Hall (defending champion
of the Grade 1 Northern Dancer), Barefoot Lady (Grade 2 Canadian) and Fearless
Jacq (Grade 3 Natalma).
Juddmonte won the 2009 Mile with another homebred, Ventura, the only mare to
win the race, while Labeeb is the sole British-bred to record a victory, taking
the 1998 edition.
Cityscape will be ridden once again by James Doyle.
In other Woodbine Mile news:
His price tag was $3,500, he could have been claimed on three occasions but
wasn’t. Now, Riding the River will contest Sunday’s Woodbine Mile for the second
consecutive year.
Riding the River, who finished fifth to Turallure in the 2011 Woodbine Mile,
has exceeded expectations at every turn of his 19-race career for trainer David
Cotey, who co-owns the five-year-old bay with Hugh Galbraith and Linmac Farms.
“We didn’t pay much for him, but I liked his look,” Cotey recalled. “Now, if
you asked me if I would have ever dreamt he’d turn out to be this good, I would
have said, ‘No way.'”
The Kentucky-bred gelding could have been claimed off his first two starts in
2010, both wins, but didn’t attract any attention. He also could have been
claimed in his fifth start, in September of 2010, but stayed in Cotey’s barn.
An eight-time winner from 19 starts, along with nearly $650,000 in career
earnings, Riding the River isn’t going anywhere these days, other than in the
starting gate for the Mile.
“It’s never really dawned on me that someone could have claimed him and we
wouldn’t be where we are. All I can say is that I won’t be doing that again.”
To be ridden by champion jockey Todd Kabel, Riding the River comes into the
Mile in solid form. He took the Grade 2 King Edward on June 24, Queen’s Plate
day, at 13-1, then followed it up with another neck win, at 9-1, in the Grade 2
Nijinsky. He comes into the Mile off a runner-up finish to rival Big Band Sound
in the Grade 2 Play the King on August 26, where he closed strongly despite
being blocked at the head of the stretch.
“He’s a small horse, but he’s got a big heart,” Cotey said of the son of
Wiseman’s Ferry, who just happens to be the sire of likely Woodbine Mile
favorite, Wise Dan. “He’s been in tight spots, tough situations, yet he still
manages to find a way to gut it out. It doesn’t always make it easy on the blood
pressure, but I’ll tell you this, you wish you had 20 of him in your barn.”
Aside from Wise Dan, the European trio and Riding the River, the Woodbine
Mile field is also expected to include Artic Fern, Big Band Sound, Hollinger and
Hunters Bay.
Rosie MacLennan, Canada’s lone gold medallist at the recent 2012 London
Olympics, will draw post positions for the Woodbine Mile at a noon (EDT) press
conference on Thursday at Woodbine’s east-end VIP tent.
MacLennan, from King City, won her gold in the Individual Trampoline, an
event in which she is a three-time Canadian champion.
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