VANCOUVER, British Columbia – Due to the annual fair held on the same grounds upon which Hastings sits, starting Monday racing will move to Mondays and Tuesdays with the usual Saturday-Sunday schedule returning Sept. 10. Four $50,000 CTHS Sales Stakes top a seven-race Monday card that begins at 2 p.m. Pacific. Be Quick and Nine One One stand out in the 3- and 4-year-old division, which drew five horses going 1 1/16 miles in race 3. The Edgar Mendoza-trained Be Quick should be a slight favorite. After all, the Kentucky-bred 4-year-old gelding by Bodemeister is a winner at the distance and is coming off a victory going 6 1/2 furlongs in the $50,000 Lieutenant Governor’s on July 1, a race in which he dueled through honest fractions and held on to edge Porter Gent by a nose. Porter Gent, who runs in an open allowance race Tuesday, came back to easily win the $50,000 B.C. Cup Classic. Be Quick dumped his rider during the post parade for the Classic and was scratched. “He banged his nose when he hit the pony and there was blood coming out of it,” Mendoza said. “It was nothing special and Amadeo was very happy when he worked him six furlongs.” :: Bet the races with a $200 First Deposit Match and FREE Formulator PPs! Join DRF Bets. Mendoza was referring to leading rider Amadeo Perez who was aboard for Be Quick’s six-furlong move in 1:16.40 on Aug. 13. Perez picks up the mount from Antonio Reyes who opts to ride Nine One One. Nine One One, trained by Robert Gilker, is based at Hastings, but the 4-year-old British Columbia-bred gelding by Maclean’s Music has made all three of his starts this year at Emerald Downs. He used his good speed to win a maiden special weight race May 15, then took them all the way in an allowance race for nonwinners of two or nonwinners-of-three Washington-breds on July 9. In his latest start, he finished second after setting a fast pace in a first-level allowance race with a $40,000 claiming option on July 30. In his only other start, Nine One One finished second in the 2-year-old colts and geldings division of the CTHS Sales Stakes in 2020. Nine One One will be going farther than 6 1/2 furlongs for the first time, and the distance should be within his reach considering he is out of a mare who was a three-time route winner. However, he will need to avoid getting into an all-out duel with Be Quick. Next up in race 5 is the 2-year-old colts and geldings division, where the Mendoza-trained Legacy Square will be favored to win a 6 1/2-furlong dash that drew eight horses. A half-brother to the three-time stakes winner U Did It, who romped in the 2-year-old fillies division last year, Legacy Square is undefeated in two starts. He rallied to win the $50,000 Spaghetti Mouse in his debut July 1 and despite having to steady sharply on the stretch turn, he got up in the last jump to edge his stablemate Bak to Liberty in the $50,000 B.C. Cup Nursery on Aug. 1. Bak to Liberty finished second in his debut in the Spaghetti Mouse and his future looks bright. He is a half-brother to Infinite Patience, a 10-time stakes winner with $450,850 in earnings. Bak to Liberty has speed and figures to be involved early after breaking from post 7 with Perez riding. Legacy Square will be rolling late. He leaves from the outside post with Efrain Hernandez up. The 2-year-old fillies division goes as race 6 and drew eight horses. It is wide open. :: Get Daily Racing Form Past Performances – the exclusive home of Beyer Speed Figures The Dave Milburn-trained Calypso Princess was impressive winning of her debut going 3 1/2 furlongs in a $50,000 optional maiden-claiming race June 18 and has been installed as the 3-1 morning-line favorite. She has been working fast but she does not finish off her works very well and may be suspect at the distance. Her stablemate Filly Fatale might be a better option. A Kentucky-bred daughter of The Factor, Filly Fatale is coming off a runner-up finish behind Loveaboveandbeyond in the $50,000 B.C. Cup Debutante on Aug. 1. The Mark Cloutier-trained Loveaboveandbeyond rallied to win the 6 1/2-furlong Debutante and should be heard from late. The 3- and 4-year-old filly division goes as the last race. The Steve Henson-trained 4-year-old We Be Three, second to Infinite Patience in the B.C. Cup Distaff on Aug. 1, will be favored over Kloepatra. We Be Three, a British Columbia-bred daughter of Teide, is on an upward trend after finishing third to Infinite Patience in the $50,000 Monashee and has a right to move forward in just her second try at a middle distance. Kloepatra is coming off a 7 1/4-length romp for trainer Larry Grieve in the $50,000 Hong Kong Jockey Club for 3-year-old fillies. The Kentucky-bred daughter of Cairo Prince was going three turns for the first time in the 1 1/16-mile race and with just five lifetime starts she has plenty of upside.