Sunday Silence: The Star No One Wanted
Storms Force Cancellation of King's Plate card at Woodbine, Rescheduled for Aug. 23
RacingContent provided by BloodHorsePounded by heavy rain on Saturday, Aug. 17, Woodbine was forced to cancel racing for its King's Plate card after the fifth race. The King's Plate and four other stakes will now be run on Friday, August 23.
That date would avoid weekend conflicts with other major stakes races, such as the loaded stakes card on Travers Stakes Day, Aug. 24, at Saratoga Race Course.
Lightning and heavy rain had caused weather delays earlier in the day. The sixth-race horses were in the paddock, and then unsaddled moments before the cancellation announcement was made.
"Late in the day, there was just so much rain that came down in such a short amount of time. It was pooling the track," Woodbine CEO Michael Copeland told reporters. "There was some safety concerns. Whenever there are safety concerns ... the decision is always made with safety as a priority. So we consulted with our vets, with our jockeys, and we made the determination that was unsafe to continue racing.
"And then the next step was to say, OK, well, this is a big day for racing in Canada. How are we going to make sure the 165th (King's Plate) continues to be run? So we made the decision, we're going to run it on Friday. We're going to carry over the four stakes races and the King's Plate and reschedule them for Friday. So, Friday will now be a spectacular card. We had hoped it would be today, but Mother Nature had other plans."
Copeland said the track would be in communication with those who bought tickets for the Plate with information related to Saturday's cancellation. He said it was too early to know if the King's Plate could be broadcast nationally on Friday, as had been scheduled on Saturday. He said the track would work to distribute it through as many outlets as possible.
None of the five stakes races on the day had been contested, which was to be topped by the $1 million (Canadian dollars) King's Plate, the first leg of the Canadian Triple Crown and the oldest continuously run stakes race in North America.
Copeland said he was hopeful the six-day delay of the King's Plate would not negatively impact the second race of the series, the Sept. 10 Prince of Wales Stakes at 1 3/16 miles on dirt, due to less recovery time for horses between races. The Sept. 29 Breeders' Stakes at 1 1/2 miles on turf at Woodbine concludes the Canadian Triple Crown.