Trainer Tony Mitchell late Monday morning was replacing a couple broken fans set up to blow into stalls in his Arlington shed row. The stall of the stable star, Sir Anthony, was never allowed to get too warm. “He’s got the biggest fan – and a big fan club,” said Mitchell, who himself had traveled with Sir Anthony for a successful holiday trip last week to Prairie Meadows, where Sir Anthony won the Grade 3, $300,000 Prairie Meadows Cornhusker on Friday night. Sir Anthony got up by a neck rallying into a fast pace in the Cornhusker, scoring the richest win of his career and earning a career-best 96 Beyer Speed Figure. The 4-year-old ridgling, an Illinois homebred owned by Richard Otto, got back to Arlington very early Saturday morning and was slightly tired from his travel and exertion, but even by Sunday had come back to himself, Mitchell said. No plans are set, but Otto and Mitchell are considering the $200,000 West Virginia Governor’s Stakes on Aug. 3 at Mountaineer Park. Finding a jockey for that race figures to be easier than it was last week. Mitchell said he’d originally lined up Declan Cannon to ride Sir Anthony, and when Cannon had to bow out, Flavien Prat was named at entry time. Prat wound up not coming to Iowa, after which Mitchell proposed to Otto that Pedro Cotto Jr., who had ridden Sir Anthony to a win and is his regular work rider, get a chance. Cotto had mounts scheduled Friday at Arlington, but his agent, Ben Allen, covered those obligations, and Cotto went to Iowa. Cotto, who has ridden nearly 7,600 races in North America, had gone 0-1-2 from his first 25 graded-stakes starters but made all the right moves in the Cornhusker. “He kept a cool head and gave the horse a great ride,” Mitchell said. Lake Ponchatrain not badly hurt Owner-trainer Ernest Haynes reported Sunday evening that Lake Ponchatrain, who was pulled up during the running of the $100,000 Saylorville Stakes on Saturday at Prairie Meadows and vanned off the course, isn’t gravely injured. Haynes said it appeared Lake Ponchatrain had injured a check ligament but that she was “walking sound” on Sunday morning. Further tests in coming days will help determine the extent of the problem and whether Lake Ponchatrain will race again since Haynes said he had already decided his mare would be bred next year.