Woodbine Mohawk Park: Forbidden Trade, Southwind Avenger deliver as expected
There were no surprises at Woodbine Mohawk Park on Monday night as betting favorites Forbidden Trade and Southwind Avenger delivered impressive victories in the second Ontario Sires Stakes Gold Series event of the 3-year-old trotting colt and gelding season.
In the first C$107,200 division driver Bob McClure eased Forbidden Trade away from post one and was content to watch from seventh as Cool Clifford and Dream Nation battled to a 27 1/5 opening quarter. Forbidden Trade was still sitting seventh when Dream Nation hit the half in 56 3/5 and, although in the outer lane, they remained in seventh as the pace-setter reached the three-quarters in 1:25.
Once Forbidden Trade had a clear look at the wire however, the Kadabra colt shifted into another gear and reeled off a 26 3/5 final quarter, reaching the wire 1 1/4 lengths on top in 1:53 1/5. Dream Nation settled for second, and Knight Angel completed the top three.
“Well, he’s got a wicked turn of speed, and he loves to chase them, so I was still pretty confident. He felt really good,” McClure told Woodbine Mohawk Park’s Jason Portuondo in the winner’s circle. “I’d used him two, three times in the last couple weeks and, you know, it’s a long year. I wanted to just try and save one move today, and his one move is pretty substantial. So, I figured the way they were getting out of there, he still had a shot at it.”
McClure crafted the colt’s second win of the season for trainer Luc Blais and owner Determination. Last year’s Ontario Sires Stakes champion, Forbidden Trade came into Monday’s test with a runner-up finish in the June 15 Goodtimes final, a win in his Goodtimes elimination and a second in the Gold Series season opener under his belt.
“I think you can see this year that he is better. You can do lots of things with him,” said Blais. “I think he’s more mature, stronger, and sounder. He’s a very nice horse you know; he’s very handy and very smart, very, very smart.”
Blais said the colt is eligible to most of the major 3-year-old trotting colt and gelding stakes, but noted that they are taking a pragmatic day-by-day approach to his schedule.
“This year is a big year,” Blais. “I know he’s got a Gold at Rideau Carleton, (July) 21 I think, and after that we don’t know if we are going to go to the Hambletonian or something like that; we go week by week.”
In the second division Southwind Avenger left well from post two, and driver Trevor Henry had him on the front soon after the 28 2/5 opening quarter. Through the 57 4/5 half and 1:26 4/5 three-quarters, Southwind Avenger never saw a challenger, and when Henry asked for a little more in the stretch the E L Titan son opened up four lengths on the field, hitting the wire in a personal-best 1:54 2/5. McClure steered Fingals Wave into second, and Manatlas finished third.
Henry steers Southwind Avenger for New Jersey-based trainer Richard “Nifty” Norman and owners Melvin Hartman, David McDuffee, and Little E LLC. Monday’s win was the gelding’s second in Gold Series action this season and boosted his sophomore record to three wins and one second in five starts.
“He’s a pretty nice colt,” said Henry from the winner’s circle.
“I think he’ll be a great 4-year-old, because he’s immature really, like he’s got a lot of filling out (to do), and he’s a tall big horse. In time I think he’ll be a really nice horse,” Henry added.
--press release (Ontario Sires Stakes)--

