The Guardian (Charlottetown)

All-stars double junior C alumni

- Nicholas Oakes

The All-Stars scored three goals in the final two minutes of the second period and held on for a 6-3 win over the Aumni in the Razzy’s Junior C Hockey League all-star game Wednesday in Crapaud. The All-Stars spread out their offence with Matt Bowness, Tristan Gallant, Brady Vanderveld­en, Dalton Kemp (1-1), Jake Arsenault and Ryan Beckingham (1-1) netted the markers. Logan Toole, James Briand, Ethan MacFadyen, Dawson McCarthy and Derian Johnson each chipped in assists.

Jake Larsen (1-1), Michael Lawless (1-1) and Andy Murphy scored for the Alumni with Jared Doucette and Ryan MacLeod adding assists. James Duffy, Ryan Clory and Sean MacPhee got the win in goal for the All-Stars, while Jordan Zember and Nick MacDonald shared the loss for the alumni.

The All-Stars held period leads of 2-0 and 5-1.

The game raised just over $4,100 for Steve Watts, manager of the Southside MacDonald’s Excavation EF MacPhee Lynx.

Little Black Book and Charlottet­own native Paul MacKenzie winning their 1993 Gold Cup and Saucer trial was an historic moment in Atlantic and Canadian harness racing.

Little Black Book set a Canadian record on a half-mile track in her 1993 Gold Cup and Saucer trial as well as rewrote the Charlottet­own Driving Park (CDP) track record with a 1:54 effort. The Canadian mark was rewritten in the years that followed but the Charlottet­own pacing mares track record, as well as the Atlantic Canadian pacing mares record, stood for 21 more years.

Every top pacing mare that graced Atlantic Canadian racing took a shot at the mark but always fell short. That all changed on a Tuesday night in August of 2014 during the National Driving Championsh­ip in the most unlikely of places as Ontario representa­tive Billy Davis Jr. sent Whitesand Artist to the front in a $3,000 claiming event. The Neil Bambrick-owned and -trained pacing mare laid down reasonable fractions of a 28 second quarter and a half-mile of 57.3. It was after the five-eighths that launched her into her own world as three-quarters were reached in 1:25.2 before unleashing a 28.2 closer.

The collective jaws of everyone in attendance dropped when track announcer Vance Cameron called out the mile in 1:53.4 obliterati­ng more than two decades of history in a single $1,200 race.

The daughter of Artiscape never went near that Atlantic Canadian record mile but her achievemen­t can never be taken away. The winner of 33 races and $92,000 will make the final start of her career as ownertrain­er Bambrick has decided to call it quits in the first start of her 13-year-old season and

breed the champion mare in the spring.

Her final start will be in Race 6 on the CDP card with Gary Chappell in the bike. Also retiring in the race is the iron-tough Onehotvett, a former open mare in her own right, with $235,000 in the bank and multiple open mares victories to her credit. Onehotvett will start from Post 2 in Saturday’s contest with Wade Sorrie in the bike for trainer Austin Sorrie and owner Tammy Collings of Hazel Brook, while Whitesand Artist has Post 4.

North America Driving Championsh­ip

The second annual North America Driving Championsh­ip

had some Island flavour at the event held at Miami Valley Raceway in Ohio, but no racing luck for P.E.I.’s top driver on Sunday and Monday.

Maritime dash champion Marc Campbell was at the event but suffered with poor draws in horses and post positions. Campbell finished the competitio­n with three fourth-place finishes, three ninth-place finishes and two 10th-place finishes putting him back of contention for a spot in the championsh­ip final. Indiana driver Trace Tetrick captured the driving crown.

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