[bc_video_id:309773:]ETOBICOKE, Ontario – No older male has won back to back in open two-turn stakes on the main track at Woodbine this year. On Sunday, trainer Josie Carroll will look to end that trend when she sends out James Street for the 1 1/16-mile Autumn, which offers Grade 2 status and a purse of $150,000. “He’s in good order; he’s ready to roll,” said Carroll, who sent out the Kentucky-bred 6-year-old to win the Grade 3, 1 1/8-mile Durham Cup on Oct. 6. The Durham Cup was the fifth start of the meeting for James Street, a homebred who races for Eugene Melnyk. In his earlier stakes starts this year, James Street finished a close third behind Alpha Bettor in the Grade 2 Eclipse at 1 1/16 miles, a distant second behind Delegation in the Grade 2 Dominion Day at 1 1/4 miles, and an even seventh behind Alpha Bettor in the Grade 3 Seagram Cup at 1 1/16 miles. Alpha Bettor is back Sunday, along with the ultra-consistent Ultimate Destiny and the now in-form Pender Harbour. “It’s a pretty solid bunch,” Carroll said. “My horse has been all around, but I think he’s really on his game right now.” Patrick Husbands, who missed almost four months after suffering a broken leg May 20, was reunited with James Street for the Durham Cup and now has been aboard for each of the horse’s seven career victories. Ami’s Holiday eyes Coronation Carroll also is looking forward to next Sunday with Ami’s Holiday, the homebred colt whom she trains for Ivan Dalos, looming as the one to beat in the $250,000 Coronation Futurity. Ami’s Holiday, perfect in two starts including the Grade 3, 1 1/16-mile Grey here Oct. 6, will move from open to Canadian-bred 2-year-old company in the 1 1/8-mile Coronation Futurity. On Friday, Ami’s Holiday breezed six furlongs in 1:15 under his regular rider, Luis Contreras, while going in company with stablemate Avie’s Quality and exercise rider Paul Ravera. “I think, on the day, it was a good work,” Carroll said. “The track wasn’t very fast.” Avie’s Quality, a Kentucky-bred who races for Dalos, was an impressive winner of the 1 1/16-mile Display here last Dec. 1. In his next start, which came in the Grade 3 Lecomte over a mile and 70 yards at Fair Grounds, Avie’s Quality was sent off as the 8-5 favorite but finished a distant eighth and has not seen action in the interim. “He hurt himself there,” said Carroll, who has been breezing Avie’s Quality since mid-September. “He’s close to returning.” Pender Harbour improving Pender Harbour has yet to find the handle in his five starts this season but has been getting closer with each appearance. In his last outing, which came in the restricted Bunty Lawless at 1 1/16 miles, Pender Harbour cut out all of the pace but was caught by Ultimate Destiny in the closing strides. “He ran a really good race; he just got beat,” said Michael DePaulo, who trains the Ontario-sired 5-year-old gelding for Denny Andrews, Sandra Lazaruk, and Bob and Roberta Giffin. “He’s been showing a little more speed. I might cut his blinkers back a little bit and see if he can sit off it a bit.” Chantal Sutherland, who is in town for the weekend, will ride Pender Harbour in the Autumn. The California-based Sutherland’s only previous partnership with Pender Harbour yielded a third-place finish in the Queen’s Plate. Philzana seeks first stakes win Philzana, owned by Andrews and Lazaruk and trained by DePaulo, should be looking for her first stakes score in next Sunday’s $150,000 Jammed Lovely, a seven-furlong race for Ontario-bred 3-year-olds. “She should have a decent shot, if she runs back to her last race,” DePaulo said. “She finished third, in a pretty salty race.” That effort came here in the Oct. 26 Ruling Angel, an open 6 1/2-furlong overnight stakes for 3-year-old fillies won by the ship-in Native Bombshell. Ida Bambina impressiveIda Bambina, who recorded her second consecutive runaway victory here Wednesday meeting, is another resident of the DePaulo barn who should have stakes in her future.Owned by Charles Buscaglia and Michael Samotowka, Ida Bambina scored by 7 1/4 lengths in a restricted first-level allowance at six furlongs after graduating by 4 1/2 lengths at the same distance under her regular rider, Justin Stein.“I always thought she’d be a good horse,” said DePaulo, who had watched Ida Bambina perform inconsistently in her first four starts. “She’s been very impressive in her last couple of races. She finally figured it out.”Ida Bambina has been nominated to both the Glorious Song, an open seven-furlong race for 2-year-old fillies here Nov. 23, and the following day’s South Ocean, at 1 1/16 miles for Ontario-sired 2-year-old fillies.