Thinking
Out Loud Primed to Pull Off North America
Cup-Meadowlands Pace Double
Thinking Out
Loud will try to become the ninth pacer in history to parlay a win in the North
America Cup into a Meadowlands Pace victory.
Trained by
Hall of Famer Bob McIntosh, the three-year-old son of Ponder drew post three in
the second of two $50,000 eliminations for the Pace, carded as races five and
six on the 13-race program. The top five finishers in each elim advance
to the $600,000 final on July 14. Elimination winners pick their post
positions for the final. Randy Waples, the 2011 O’Brien Award winner as Canada ’s
top driver, looks to qualify for his first Meadowlands Pace drive with Thinking
Out Loud.
Thinking Out
Loud has won seven of 10 career starts, and never been off the board, earning
$847,638 for Robert McIntosh Stables of Lasalle, Ontario ; C S X Stables of Liberty Center,
Ohio; and Al McIntosh Holdings of Leamington, Ontario.
In the $1.47
million North America Cup, the lightly raced Ontario-bred son of Ponder stormed
home to an 8-1 upset in 1:47.4, equaling the Canadian record set by Sweet Lou
in his elimination the week before. The win gave Waples and McIntosh
their first North America Cup win.
The victory
was extra sweet for McIntosh having bred the colt and raced the sire, the dam [Los Angeles ] and the dam’s
sire [Camluck].
“The North
America Cup was certainly an emotional win for us,” said McIntosh. “My
cousin, Al, is a partner on the horse. He was the first guy to put faith
in me and gave me my first horse to train back in 1977.
“The horse
was very sharp that night, but you always need some luck. The race shaped
up well for us with the hot early pace. I don’t think anybody could’ve
seen those kinds of fractions [:25.2, :52.4 and 1:20.3]. It took its toll
on Warrawee Needy and Sweet Lou also got caught up in it. Turning for
home, I actually thought my other horse Dapper Dude [third] was going to
win. He raced tremendous as well. Randy said he was sitting with a
lot of horse off the last turn and had a good feeling.
“Dapper Dude
qualified last Friday [fourth behind Thinking Out Loud] and John Campbell said
he was sub-par. We scoped him and he was full of mucus. We thought it was
in the best interest of the horse to shut him down for now. We’ll aim for
Adios [July 28] with him.”
Thinking Out
Loud has been a standout for McIntosh since Day One and reinforced his faith in
his sire Ponder.
“He was
training down as our best colt last year,” noted McIntosh. “He showed
tremendous ability as a two-year-old and Randy Waples really liked him.
He got injured [a bone bruise], we shut him down and that was an easy
call. The colt had a good winter and came back in fine shape. I
know there’s another colt by Ponder in our elimination [Bolt The Duer].
He only has a small crop. Maybe people will wake up and see he’s an
underrated sire.”
Thinking Out
Loud has made a smooth transition across the border.
“We freshened
him up, he qualified last Friday [in 1:52.2] at Mohawk. He’s pretty easy
on him himself. We were going to ship him down to Showplace Farms [in Englishtown , NJ ].
We trained him a little bit [Wednesday] morning, and he’ll travel down
overnight. I have no concerns about him shipping.”
With the
recent decision by the Ontario
government to end the slots-at-racetrack program in March of 2013, McIntosh
carries a heavy heart as he looks for his first Meadowlands Pace win after four
finals and two third-place finishes.
“Winning a
race like the Meadowlands Pace takes on a special meaning because of what’s
happening up here in Ontario
right now. It’s terrible, it defies logic and it’s an unbelievable
nightmare. We’ve had a lot of sleepless nights.”
McIntosh is a
member of the Hall of Fame in both the US and Canada, a seven-time O’Brien
Award winner as Canada’s top trainer, and twice been named Canada’s Horseman of
the Year and the Glen Garnsey Award winner for top trainer in the US.