ETOBICOKE, Ontario – Trainer Bill Tharrenos is loaded for the two $200,000 juvenile stakes on Sunday’s Woodbine card for graduates of Canadian yearling sales, the Simcoe and Muskoka. In the 6 1/2-furlong Simcoe for colts and geldings, Tharrenos sends out Bank On Big Winner, Big Bold and First, and Silver Is Best. Bank On Big Winner graduated second time out in front-running style in a six-furlong Ontario-sired and $40,000 maiden-claiming sprint under Omar Moreno, for which he got a 55 Beyer Speed Figure. “He’s moving forward,” Tharrenos said. “It was a very impressive win, and he’s a horse who is just starting to peak. Omar Moreno, unfortunately, got injured, but we are fortunate to have picked up Pietro Moran for him.” Big Bold and First also graduated at second asking in restricted company, doing so over five furlongs with a 47 Beyer on June 29. :: Access the most trusted data and information in horse racing! DRF Past Performances and Picks are available now. “He tried very hard to get that win,” Tharrenos said. “This horse is blooming, and things are definitely going his way. I’m very excited about him.” Silver Is Best should go favored under Pietro’s father, David Moran. The son of Signature Red finished a lapped-on third when debuting in June and then won a five-furlong restricted maiden dash by 5 1/4 lengths with a 76 Beyer on July 13. He was a $20,000 purchase by owner Mike Coll, who paid just $5,000 for Big Bold and First. “He’s doing phenomenally well,” Tharrenos said. “David Moran has great things to say about the horse, so we’re excited about what could be in store for the horse. We have been working with him to keep his focus into the turn for home, so he can come down the lane with some energy and elevate his game on the finish. We had this horse’s full sister, I Love to Win, who was a knockout last year. She won two races for us.” Highwaytothemoon could be the main threat to the Tharrenos trio. He prevailed in a front-end duel before drawing away to land his Aug. 2 opener in a five-furlong auction maiden special weight with a 62 Beyer for trainer Dale Desruisseaux. Muskoka Cayenne Kiss and Japonka both make their stakes debut for Tharrenos in the 6 1/2-furlong Muskoka for juvenile fillies. Cayenne Kiss was bet down to 4-5 when debuting June 28 in a five-furlong Ontario-sired/$40,000 dash, which she won by 4 1/4 lengths with a 56 Beyer. “I get chills thinking about her,” Tharrenos said. “I’m not trying to be overconfident, but I don’t think we have seen the best of her yet. Her last couple works, she’s been playing with company. She has attitude, which I love. If she knows who you are, she’s just a doll to be around.” The maiden Japonka figures to find her niche going long, according to Tharrenos. “There aren’t a lot of distance races for her, but there are signs she’s starting to put things together,” he pointed out. :: Subscribe to the DRF Post Time Email Newsletter: Get the news you need to play today's races!  Trainer Jamie Begg runs the recent maiden winner Sipping History and debut winner Pageant Queen, who’s coming off a third-place finish in the open My Dear Stakes. Sipping History failed to hit the top two just once in four outings, which was a fading fifth in an open maiden special weight on the grass. Elgin The Mark Casse-trained Regal Guest meets upstart Sunday’s Well and the speedy Its Time to Shine in the $100,000 Elgin Stakes, a seven-furlong tilt for male 3- and 4-year-old yearling sale grads. Regal Guest, a full brother to five-time Canadian champion sprinter Pink Lloyd, was scratched from his last scheduled start in the July 20 Plate Trial Stakes after running second to Notorious Gangster in the June 8 Queenston Stakes over seven furlongs. “He just wasn’t 100 percent, so we backed off him,” Casse said. “It’s not the worst thing ever. I don’t know that he could get a mile and a quarter. He’s been training good.” Three weeks after ending up eighth at first asking on June 29, Sunday’s Well won a six-furlong Ontario-sired maiden sprint by nine lengths with an 89 Beyer, the highest Beyer posted by a 3-year-old in Canada this year. The son of Gamble’s Exchange dusted company in a five-furlong breeze in a bullet 58 seconds on Aug. 2. “He’s doing very well,” trainer Terry Brooker said. “After that quick breeze two weeks ago, we took it easy just recently. He’s a very happy horse right now.” The John Ross-trained Its Time to Shine beat older Ontario-sired rivals with the aid of a rail bias after putting away the other speed in the Pink Lloyd Stakes on July 27. ◗ The filly version of the Elgin, the $100,000 Algoma, lured stakes winners Little Teddy and Souper Supreme, who is racing for the first time since October for Casse. “She was ready to run and got sick,” Casse explained. :: Want to learn more about handicapping and wagering? Check out DRF's Handicapping 101 and Wagering 101 pages.