Unraced at
two, the son of K adabra has won six
of seven starts and $182,152 for Gillis and Ontario-based owners Al Libfeld,
Marvin K atz, Mac Nichol and Gerald
Stay. Libfeld and K atz were
co-owners of 2010 Hambletonian winner Muscle Massive.
In 2009,
Gillis arrived at the Meadowlands with hot Hambletonian prospect Federal
Flex. Everything went well until health issues doused his flames in the
the big race.
“It’s hard to
look back on it as a fond experience,” recalled Gillis. “Federal Flex
came down there after winning the Goodtimes and then won the Dancer.
Unfortunately, sickness and inexperience caught up with him, and he was never
the same again.”
Gillis has
bounced back. The 34-year-old from Cape Breton ,
Nova Scotia was voted the 2011 O’Brien Award
as Canada ’s
top trainer after a career best season of 112 wins and $3,926,251. He was
also the leading trainer on the Woodbine Entertainment Group circuit and won
his first Breeders Crown with Frenchfrysnvinegar.
Gillis
spotted K nows Nothing at the
Harrisburg Sale in the fall of 2010.
“There’s a
bit of story behind how we got him,” offered Gillis, who is based at Ideal Training
Center in Acton , Ontario .
“He was scheduled to sell at the beginning of Day Four at Harrisburg . We had found him and fell
in love with him on Day Two. Once we saw his video that was it. It
was breathtaking. So, we passed on a few other colts, and on the morning
he was to sell he was pulled out for some reason. We were initially
distraught, but Al Libfeld and Marvin K atz
knew the breeder [Herb Liverman] and arranged to buy him.”
Gillis and
his connections were forced to wait on K nows
Nothing, and their patience has started to pay off.
“Last year,
he had a bone chip removed,” explained Gillis. “It compromised his
season, so we decided to just shut him down and bring him back. We
entered him in the Goodtimes after he won his first four starts because we knew
he measured up. I was more surprised that he got beat [finished fourth]
in that final than winning his elimination. We expected a lot of
him. He had really just raced against lesser company, getting his feet
wet, but we knew there was a lot more there. We’re just hoping he can
keep it going.”
“I think that
big kick from off the pace is his forte,” noted Gillis. “I also hope that
start will help him. He was good enough to win, but he could be
better. He’s a big, majestic animal, and the mile track should suit
him. We’ve passed on taking him to smaller tracks because of his
size.
“I’m not
worried about racing him on the mile track there. I’ve shipped trotters
down there before and haven’t had any difficulty coming from Woodbine or
Mohawk. The Lasix is a bit of a concern. We didn’t really need to
put him on Lasix. We thought it would help him and it did. It
remains to be seen. I don’t know what to expect.
“His sire K adabra has been great. The outcross that he
brings is something the trotting breed has really been looking for.
“Obviously,
Jimmy Takter’s colts have been impressive. I saw the stretch drive of
Little Brown Fox in the Dancer, and Uncle Peter rates highly. It’s just a
pretty solid group of colts overall.”
Last Saturday
at Mohawk, Gillis and Jamieson teamed up to win the $742,500 Maple Leaf Trot
with Mister Herbie in a Canadian record of 1:50.4. The four-year-old son
of Here Comes Herbie upset 2011 Horse of the Year San Pail in the Glorys Comet
Final at Woodbine, and he also won the Arthur J. Cutler Memorial at the Big
M. Both miles were in 1:51.3.
“We’re very
tickled about Mister Herbie. He’s enroute to New Jersey for the Nat Ray.”