'The Beach' Leads Hall Of Fame Inductees

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Published: May 19, 2009 02:06 pm EDT

The incomparable Somebeachsomewhere did what he has been doing for the past two seasons when he led seven other inductees into the Canadian Horse Racing Hall

of Fame.

Joining the World Record pacing colt in the class of 2009 will be Gustav Schickedanz, one of North America’s leading breeders the past 10 years, Canadian thoroughbred Triple Crown winner Peteski and three champion fillies – Alywow, La Voyageuse and Maryfield.

The other two standardbred inductees were driver/trainer Keith Clark and the outstanding broodmare Rich N Elegant. The eight inductees were elected by the standardbred and thoroughbred 20-person election committees. The induction ceremonies will be held on Thursday, August 27 at the Mississauga Convention Centre.

North America’s Horse of the Year in 2008 and Canada’s champion for 2007 and 2008, Somebeachsomewhere renewed a lot of people’s passion for the industry with his awesome performances on the racetrack and the great story of how his owners, The Schooner Stable from Bible Hill, Nova Scotia, came together to purchase and race a horse of world champion stature. In rewriting the record book, the son of Mach Three captured almost every award possible during his two-year reign at tracks in North America.

Trainer-driver Keith Clark, 56, of DeWinton, Alta., is one of the most recognizable names in Western Canadian harness racing. Clark has driven 5,598 winners and horses to in excess of $27.8 million while training 3,292 winners and horses with earnings of over $20 million. He was honoured with the O’Brien Award of Horsemanship in 2004 and in 2008 won more than 100 races for the 29th time in the past 30 years. Clark’s most memorable horse was the Abercrombie pacing colt As Promised, a winner of 71 races and over $669,000 who was inducted into the Canadian Horse Racing Hall of Fame in 2006.

Rich N Elegant is the female standardbred horse elected to the Hall of Fame. In 1990, Rich N Elegant started her career as a top ranked broodmare. Bred by Armstrong Bros. of Inglewood, Ont., she earned $96,244 and took a lifetime mark of 1:56.4 during her racing career. She was then purchased by Hanover Shoe Farms and retired to the breeding shed. To date, Rich N Elegant has produced winners of over $8.3 million. She has foaled 12 horses including 8 starters with average earnings per starter of $1,038,759. Three of her offspring have earned over a million dollars, with the top money earner, Rocknroll Hanover, a past O’Brien Award winner, at $3,069.093.

The 80-year-old Schickedanz, who won the Queen’s Plate in 1999 with Woodcarver and in 2003 with Triple Crown champion Wando, sprung into prominence when he bred a mare to one of Northern Dancer’s great sons, Danzig, a mating that produced Langfuhr, a multiple winner of the major sprint races in the United States and one of North America’s leading sires. His offspring included Wando, Mobil, Lawyer Ron, Jambalaya, Kimchi and Marlang. Schickedanz also bred Kentucky Oaks winner Gal in a Ruckus and has a relatively small breeding operation in Nobleton, Ont.

The horse with the meteoric career, Peteski, dominated horse racing locally in 1993 as he swept to victories in the Triple Crown event and then won the Molson Export Million on the grass at Woodbine over Kentucky Derby winner Sea Hero and Belmont Stakes winner Colonial Affair. Bred by Barry Schwartz of Montreal and trained by Roger Attfield, Peteski was owned by Earle I. Mack of New York, a trustee of the NYRA and former ambassador to Finland. Peteski, trained by Roger Attfield, had earnings of only $714 when he began his impressive three-year-old season.

Elected in the Veterans category, La Voyageuse maintained her championship form over a three-year period – 1978 to 1980 – for owner Jean-Louis Levesque and trainer Yonnie Starr. Of classic breeding, by Tentam out of the champion Northern Dancer mare Fanfreluche, La Voyageuse won on the dirt and grass and at distances from six furlongs to a mile and an eighth. She often carried top weight during her three Sovereign Award winning seasons. Alywow was the female sensation of 1994. The first daughter of Triple Wow, she was a triple wow on Sovereign Awards’ night when she was voted Canada’s Horse of the Year, champion three-year-old filly and leading performer on the turf. This award was to be expected after her gallant second-place finish to Raintrap and the males in the Gr. 1 Rothmans International. Owned and bred by Kinghaven Farms, Alywow was trained by Roger Attfield.

Maryfield was bred in Ontario by Mike Carroll and John C. Harvey Jr., and was owned initially by Alice and Jim Sapara of Edmonton, Alta. She raced ten times at Woodbine for trainer Josie Carroll before being claimed by Doug O’Neill for $50,000 in her first start as a three-year-old at Santa Anita. She became a stakes winner for her new owners and was campaigned throughout the U.S., winning stakes races at Santa Anita and Churchill Downs in 2006. In 2007 she won the Gr. 1 Ballerina at Saratoga and Gr. 2 Distaff Breeders’ Cup at Aqueduct before her triumph in the inaugural running of the Breeders’ Cup Filly and Mare Sprint championship at Monmouth Park, N.J. That victory earned her an Eclipse Award. Maryfield was retired and sold for $1.25 million at the 2007 Fasig-Tipton Kentucky November select mixed sales and was bred to A.P. Indy. She foaled a bay colt in February of 2009.

For more information, contact Louis Cauz at Woodbine Entertainment Group by telephone at 416-675-3993 (Ext. 2399) or visit canadianhorseracinghalloffame.com.

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Comments

congrats Bro. You you give 110% always and it shows...mom and dad would be proud...we all are!!!!!

Our congratulations go out to all the inductees to the Hall of Fame, it's quite an honour.

Way to go Keith, Congratulations!!!

The Hainings

I can't believe that a mare like Invitro would not be in the Canadian Horse Racing Hall of Fame. Raced only once out of Canada and made over $2,300,000. She averaged over $20,000 per start in 105 starts. If she don't belong in the Hall of Fame, I question what it is all about. Thanks..

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