ETOBICOKE, Ontario – Reigning Canadian Horse of the Year Fev Rover makes what figures to be her final career start in Saturday’s Grade 2, $200,000 Dance Smartly over 1 1/16 miles on the main turf at Woodbine. A 6-year-old owned by Tracy Farmer, Fev Rover lost a heartbreaker to Moira two back in the Grade 2 Beverly D. at Colonial. She ran third behind Full Count Felicia and Moira most recently in the E.P. Taylor, a Grade 1 fixture that she won impressively last year. “This is her last race,” trainer Mark Casse said. “She’s going to be sold. She’s run hard. I’m proud of her.” Trainer Chad Brown entered Princess Calla and Tax Implications in the salty 12-horse field. Princess Calla is making her North American debut after winning 12 of 28 starts, including five Group 1s, in her native South Africa. The 7-year-old is racing on Lasix for the first time. :: Bet the races with a $200 First Deposit Match + FREE All Access PPs! Join DRF Bets. Tax Implications captured the Grade 3 Eatontown at Monmouth in June and is coming off a neck loss in a conditioned allowance/optional claimer at Saratoga. There are five other shippers in the lineup, including the Graham Motion trainees Mission of Joy and Sparkle Blue. Both are adding Lasix. Millie Girl, a Canadian champion last year, struggled over yielding ground last out in the Grade 2 Flower Bowl at Saratoga, but was previously in solid Woodbine form. Algonquin Stakes Casse entered five of the eight 2-year-olds in Saturday’s $175,000 Algonquin Stakes, a five-furlong inner turf dash. They include Bullet, French Horn, Mensa, Mi Bago, and Dare to Breeze. Bullet romped in her first two outings, including the My Dear Stakes, before coming up empty most recently in the Catch a Glimpse Stakes. “Bullet was sick,” Casse recalled. “After [her last] race, she never stopped coughing and was full of mucus. We scoped her when she worked a week prior and she was fine. We thought about running her back in the Natalma, but she was still sick. It’s taken her a while.” French Horn started twice in the spring and has been based here since finishing third in the Astoria Stakes on June 6 at Saratoga. “She should be tough,” Casse predicted. “I was going to run her in the Matron” – at Aqueduct – “but with the Algonquin coming up so light, I left her [at Woodbine]. She broke her maiden impressively. When I ran her in a stakes at Saratoga, she came out of it with pretty sore shins. Her work on the grass was awesome. We’ve always thought she was pretty good.” The speedy Mensa, who took the Victoria Stakes on the Tapeta in June, is coming off a fade job over giving ground in the Soaring Free Stakes on the main turf. “I think he likes the ground really hard,” Casse said. “I think he’ll enjoy the inner turf more than the outer course turf.” Mi Bago, by hot freshman sire Vekoma, is changing surfaces after racing twice on dirt. “Gary Barber bought him after he broke his maiden and then he didn’t run any good in a stakes at Saratoga,” Casse said. “A lot of the Vekoma’s are good on the grass.” :: Want to learn more about handicapping and wagering? Check out DRF's Handicapping 101 and Wagering 101 pages.