ETOBICOKE, Ontario – Josie Carroll’s barn had a very productive hour and change here Sunday, winning the Grade 3, $174,400 Grey Stakes with Ami’s Holiday and, two races later, taking the Grade 3, $155,100 Durham Cup with James Street. Ami’s Holiday, a 2-year-old colt making just his second start in the 1 1/16-mile Grey, earned his first stakes victory, while James Street, a 6-year-old horse making his 27th career start in the 1 1/8-mile Durham Cup, got his third stakes win. Ami’s Holiday, owned and bred by Ivan Dalos, had made a winning debut at six furlongs on the main track here Sept. 1 and was nominated to the Oct. 20 Cup and Saucer Stakes, a 1 1/16-mile turf race for Canadian-bred 2-year-olds with a purse of $250,000. “There didn’t seem to be a need to change surfaces with him at this point,” Carroll said. “I knew this race was going to come up with a short field, the horse was right on track, and I really didn’t want to wait any longer.” The next logical spot for Ami’s Holiday would appear to be the Nov. 17 Coronation Futurity, a 1 1/8-mile main-track race for Canadian-bred juveniles that offers a purse of $250,000. “The Coronation certainly would be a possibility,” Carroll said. James Street, a Kentucky-bred who has earned $635,695 for his owner and breeder, Eugene Melnyk, was being reunited with jockey Patrick Husbands, who has been aboard for all seven of the horse’s victories. “He really responds well to Patrick Husbands, for whatever reason,” Carroll said. “He really syncs with this horse; the horse relaxes and finishes for him.” The next two-turn Polytrack stakes race for the older set here is the Nov. 10 Autumn Stakes, a Grade 2, $150,000 race at 1 1/16 miles that James Street won last year. Alpha Bettor, who was surprisingly aggressive when pressing Delegation in the Durham Cup, held second place, while the favorite faltered to finish last. “You either believe in your horse or you don’t,” said Danny Vella, who trains Alpha Bettor. “I thought he ran a fantastic race. He’s a wonderful horse. He just keeps getting better. We’re going to go in the Autumn.” Delegation, last year’s Durham Cup winner, was sent off at 3-10 on Sunday and was beaten 10 1/2 lengths. “Everybody thought that because he got pressured, he stopped,” said Mark Casse, who conditions the 4-year-old Delegation for Gary Barber. “He bled terribly, a 5 out of 5. He’s going to go home to Ocala, [Fla.], and have a few months off. He bled so badly, it’s going to take some time.” Casse did have cause for celebration here Saturday, when Madly Truly, a Kentucky-bred whom he trains for John Oxley, became a stakes winner in the Grade 3, 1 1/16-mile Mazarine. Husbands, who had ridden Madly Truly to a troubled fourth-place finish in the Grade 2, one-mile Natalma Stakes in her most recent start, was back in the saddle for the $156,000 Mazarine. “She’s probably going to go to Churchill Downs and run in the Golden Rod at the end of the meet,” Casse said. The Grade 2, $175,000 Golden Rod, a 1 1/16-mile race for 2-year-old fillies, will be run Nov. 30. Madly Truly began her career at Churchill Downs this summer, finishing a troubled fourth as the favorite at 5 1/2 furlongs. “She trained really well on the dirt,” Casse said. “We believe she likes it.” Up With the Birds gets rest Up With the Birds arrived at Sam-Son Farms in Florida on Monday, two days after becoming a Grade 1 winner when taking the $500,000 Jamaica at Belmont Park, giving trainer Malcolm Pierce his first Grade 1 score. “He’s gone home for a well-deserved rest,” Pierce said. “He’ll be turned out in a paddock and freshened up for a 4-year-old campaign. He could start at the end of the Fair Grounds meeting or at Keeneland.” Up With the Birds boosted his bankroll to $1,170,641 in the Jamaica, which was his fifth stakes win in a nine-start career that has produced a record of 6-2-1. “He’s never run a bad race in his life,” Pierce said. “It looks like he’ll be a darn nice horse to have here next year. Until Saturday, I didn’t know who the best 3-year-old in my barn was. He took a step forward.” Pierce and Sam-Son have two other talented sophomores in His Race to Win, the winner of the 1 1/8-mile Ontario Derby in his most recent start, and Golden Sabre, who finished first here in the Charlie Barley Stakes at one mile on turf but had his number taken down. “I’ll have trouble keeping them apart next year, but it’s a nice problem to have,” Pierce said. “I don’t mind putting them on a van.”