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Cloverdale鈥檚 Fraser Downs still racing strong

As the new season starts, horses and drivers prepare for harness racing glory
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Not all the horses in the barn are readying themselves for a race. Bakardi Gold (centre) will race on Friday, Oct. 20. (Grace Kennedy photo)

The heavy scent of horse drifts through the barn at the back of Fraser Downs racetrack. Birds fly among the rafters, hiding from pearl-grey clouds that threaten rain and twittering at the horses below.

Krystal Pistol, a small Standardbred, barely 15-hands, munches peacefully on hay in her stall. John Chappell stands by her.

鈥淪ometimes it鈥檚 not how tall they are,鈥 Chappell said, looking at the horse he trained and would be driving in a race that night.

鈥淚t鈥檚 the heart and the lungs; the power they have. The desire. That鈥檚 what it takes.鈥

Chappell is a generational horseman 鈥 like his father before him and his son after him, Chappell owns, trains and drives Standardbred horses. He has 15 horses that he races at Fraser Downs. On Thursday, Oct. 19, it would just beKrystal Pistol.

She would be competing in a claiming race for a $4,200 purse. At five or six years old 鈥 Chappell can鈥檛 remember exactly 鈥 she is too old for the big events happening that night: the qualifying races for the 2017 Breeders Stakes.

The Breeders Stakes is the biggest event of the year for Standardbred racing community in B.C.

鈥淭hat鈥檚 where you get your champions,鈥 Dianne Pennington, the breeders and events manager at Harness Racing B.C., said.

On Nov. 11, the best two- and three-year-old B.C. bred horses will compete for $100,000 in prize money. On Thursdays and Fridays in October, the young horses competed to qualify for the final race.

Yoga Pants, a nearly undefeated three-year-old filly, would be racing in one of the qualifiers that night.

鈥淣umber seven in your program, number one in your hearts,鈥 quipped Jim Marino, a Cloverdale-raised owner, trainer and driver. He would be driving Yoga Pants in the stakes race for a $15,000 purse, as well as seven other horses in different races that night.

Marino is currently the leading trainer and the second leading driver at Fraser Downs, with a 26 per cent of horses he trained and 23 per cent of horses he drove coming in first.

Winning race horses have a routine 鈥 breakfast, exercise, brushing, rest, warm-up, race 鈥 and Marino has one too.

鈥淚 like to have a nap,鈥 Marino said. 鈥淚鈥檒l have lunch, go home, have a nap. Then I鈥檒l come back. Then I鈥檓 prepared.鈥

When Marino walked out the barn, perhaps heading home to his pre-race nap, the clouded skies released sprinkles of rain. Six hours later, it was pouring.

The lights around the track cast a harsh glow on the puddled surface, and illuminated the newly painted and repaired fence around the perimeter. Drivers warmed up their horses on the sloppy track, limestone splashing across their faces. Horse-racing fans made their way through the brightly lit casino floor to the Homestretch restaurant.

Normally, Harness Racing B.C. executive director Carla Robin said, the Homestretch would be packed on a race night. But that Thursday, 15 minutes before the first race, there were about 30 people watching. On Tuesday, Oct. 17, there were 140 people. The Thursday before, there were 40.

Normally, racing occurs on Fridays and Sundays, which Robin says are heavily attended events. The Great Canadian Gaming Corporation, which operates the racetrack, changed the schedule for October, allowing races to be run on Tuesdays, Thursdays and Fridays for one month. The motnh鈥檚 four extra race days are meant to make up for nine cancelled days due to winter weather last season.

But the change in schedule means fewer people know when the horses are racing, and some horsemen think Great Canadian isn鈥檛 doing enough to advertise.

鈥淭here鈥檚 no horse racing sign on there whatsoever,鈥 horseman Allan Molloy said about Elements Casino, which fronts the race track. 鈥淭here鈥檚 pictures of people having fun at a casino 鈥 and there isn鈥檛 one with a horse.鈥

Earlier that night, Molloy had set up a sandwich board on the boulevard at the casino entrance. The plain white sign simply read: Live horse racing, 6 p.m.

At 6 p.m., the first race began. In a container-turned-office on top of the casino roof, Dan Jukich called the race, binoculars in hand. He鈥檚 been calling races at Fraser Downs since 1978, and is known unofficially as the voice of harness racing in B.C.

Jukich has a deep understanding of the horses in each race. He knows which horses are 鈥渇ull of beans鈥 and ready to go, and which horses didn鈥檛 perform as well as they could last time they raced.

On days like Thursday night, when dribbling rain turned to torrential downpour, he can pick out which horses don鈥檛 want to be racing on the sloppy track. The splash back created from pounding hooves can bother some horses, although Thoroughbreds tend to be more picky about wet tracks than Fraser Downs鈥 Standardbreds.

鈥淵ou have to remember, horses are pack animals. Most of them will travel in a pack and they鈥檙e happy to do that. There are a lot that want to be very competitive, and 鈥斺 he interrupted himself, switching on the microphone as the starting car began to move and the horses pushed forward for the second race.

Marino, driving two-year-old Dragon Slayer, won that race, bringing in a $15,000 purse. Later that night, he would race three other horses to victory, including Yoga Pants, who won her race by nearly a second.

Chappell also won his race, taking the lead by a hair.

鈥淭here鈥檚 times it looks like it鈥檚 a lot of fun and you make a lot of money, but it鈥檚 a hard business,鈥 Chappell said before the race, back in the barn where Krystal Pistol was chewing her hay. 鈥淭he horses have to perform. They have owners and they pay bills.鈥

But, 鈥渋t鈥檚 exciting,鈥 he continued. 鈥淵ou go out and we race. You do well and you get your picture taken.

鈥淵ou get to feel like a rock star for a while.鈥

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Yoga Pants rests in her stall in the afternoon on Oct. 19. That night, driven by Jim Marino, she won the third leg of the Mary Murphy Breeders Stake and $15,000 in prize money. (Grace Kennedy photo)
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John Chappell, 55, will be Krystal Pistol鈥檚 driver in the evening race at Fraser Downs. The two of them won the final race of the night, with a time of 1:57. (Grace Kennedy photo)
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Racing is a family affair at Fraser Downs. Here Blaine Chappell, son of John Chappell, poses with his horse My Boss, which raced Tuesday, Oct. 17. (Grace Kennedy photo)
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As the night progress, the horses raced in ever increasing rain. (Grace Kennedy photo)
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Grace Kennedy Ron Bakardi, driven by Jim Marino, pushes towards Canadian Pharoah in the third race of the night.
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Canadian Pharoah won the third leg of the Robert Millbank Memorial Breeders Stake for two-year-old colts and geldings on Thursday, Oct. 19, bringing in a $15,000 purse. (Grace Kennedy photo)




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