Toronto Star

Veteran jockey returns to track

- DAN RALPH

Chantal Sutherland is home again.

After years south of the border, the veteran jockey will again ride full-time at Woodbine Racetrack, whose 2018 thoroughbr­ed schedule begins Saturday. Sutherland, 42, was born in Winnipeg but grew up on a horse farm in Caledon, Ont., located roughly 40 kilometres north of Toronto.

She’s raced throughout the U.S., and in Hong Kong and Dubai, but has always called Woodbine home and has even purchased a house in nearby Bolton, Ont.

“Woodbine is such a great place,” she said. “The surfaces are great, there’s a training track, main track, training turf course and main turf course.

“But what’s really cool is the people there are all my friends and have been for many years. They’ve all grown, people now have babies, it’s crazy. It’s so nice to come back and see them again. It’s home.”

The highlight of the 133-day meet will be the $1-million Queen’s Plate, North America’s oldest continuous­ly run stakes event and the first jewel in Canada’s Triple Crown. It will be held June 30. Woodbine will also host the final Triple Crown event, the $400,000 Breeders’ Stakes, on Aug. 18. Sutherland, Emma-Jayne Wilson and Francine Villeneuve are the only Canadianbo­rn female jockeys to achieve 1,000 wins. Woodbine is where Sutherland earned the first of her 1,025 career victories Oct. 9, 2000.

The following year, she captured the first of two straight Sovereign Awards as the country’s top apprentice jockey.

Sutherland remained in Canada through the 2004 campaign, riding that winter at Laurel Park Racecourse in Laurel, Md. After registerin­g a careerbest 159 wins in 2009, Sutherland claimed $8.7 million in purse earnings the following year. In 2011, she became the first woman to win the Santa Anita Handicap, a major California stakes race.

She also became the first female jockey to win the Hollywood Gold Cup Stakes and rode in the Dubai World Cup, a major event in the United Arab Emirates.

Sutherland has also received acclaim away from the track. In 2006, People Magazine named her one of its 100 Most Beautiful People and she was involved in a photo shoot for Vanity Fair.

She has spent the off-season recovering from shoulder and knee injuries suffered in a racing spill at Louisiana in January.

Although she’s returning to a familiar setting, Sutherland doesn’t expect to be handed anything this year.

“It’s getting more competitiv­e at Woodbine, there’s a lot of good jockeys,” she said. “I’ve learned a lot, I have a lot of experience now and I’m much stronger than I’ve ever been.

“I’m real excited to see how my riding year goes and I’m very excited to work because I haven’t been doing anything so they’re going to get a doublewham­my from me. It’s on.”

Sutherland’s goals for 2018 include riding in as many stakes races as possible, including the Plate.

“I’ve been asking everybody, ‘Who do you have for the Plate?’ ” she said. “I’d love to be in it, I’d love to win it.

 ??  ?? Chantal Sutherland is back full-time at Woodbine, where she began her career.
Chantal Sutherland is back full-time at Woodbine, where she began her career.

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