Richard Mauntah
LATEST STORIES BY RICHARD MAUNTAH
Nijinsky wins $1 million North America Cup
CAMPBELLVILLE – As a two-year-old, Nijinsky was struggling to learn how to win. Safe to say he knows now. The Ontario-sired three-year-old son of Bettors Delight captured the $1 million North America Cup on Saturday, continuing a magical run that has seen him win five times in as many starts this season and establishing himself as the top three-year-old pacer in North America. Driven by Louis-Philippe Roy, the Woodbine Mohawk Park regular who captured his first win in the track’s signature race, Nijinsky sat mid-pack early in the mile. He followed the outside flow into the turn and chased leader Captains Quarters. In the stretch, he put on a strong surge to get by the pacesetter and win as the 5-2 co-favorite in 1:48 1/5. “I have to give credit to the horse,” Roy said. “He’ll respond to you at any time in the mile. He’s so easy to drive.” “Coming down the lane, I didn’t know how much he had but I liked my chances.” Nijinsky’s 2023 season was not horrendous. But with just one victory in 10 starts, he certainly wasn’t considered among the early favourites for the Cup. Anthony Beaton knew he had the talent but just needed to grow up a bit. “He was a very nice colt last year,” he said. “He was just a little immature but he was always showing those high speeds at the end of his miles.” “This year, he’s just so much more mature and you can do anything you want with him. And he still has that high speed.” The win skyrocketed Nijinsky’s earnings to $723,000. Also on Saturday’s card, locally-bred Highland Kismet established himself as a serious contender for the Hambletonian later this year, dominating the $225,000 Goodtimes in 1:51 3/5. Bob McClure drove the Mark Etsell-trained three-year-old trotter to his fourth win in five starts. It’s A Love Thing took advantage of a great trip to capture the $425,000 Fan Hanover in a Canadian-record tying 1:48 2/5 at odds of 4-1. James Macdonald drove the David Menary-trained three-year-old pacing filly to her third win of the season. As for the older mare pacers, Twin B Joe Fresh was much the best in the $305,000 Roses Are Red final. Driver Dexter Dunn took the four-year-old to the front just before the half and was clearly best from there. It was the third straight win for the Chris Ryder trainee. 1-5 favourite M Ms Dream was upset by 3-1 second choice Call Me Goo in the $233,000 Armbro Flight for older mare trotters. Tim Tetrick drove Call Me Goo to her fourth win this year for trainer Jason Skinner. And 10-1 long shot Linedrive Hanover got up late to win the $100,000 Mohawk Gold Cup with Macdonald at the lines in 1:47 2/5. Oilers stay alive, shove Game 4 down Florida's throat Blue Jays hit the right notes in win over Guardians Canadians in the hunt at U.S. Open

Rock's season over after blowing big lead in lacrosse semifinal at Buffalo
BUFFALO – The Toronto Rock is a team in crisis. The Rock was eliminated by the Buffalo Bandits in their NLL semifinal series on Sunday, losing 10-8 at KeyBank Center after having lost 12-4 at FirstOntario Centre on Friday. The Rock had an 8-4 lead in this game with just over 14 minutes to play. But three goals in the fourth quarter from Chase Fraser, two from Josh Byrne and one from Tehoka Nanticoke brought the Bandits back and off to another league final. Nanticoke ended with two, Dhane Smith also scored twice and Kyle Buchanan also scored. Corey Small and Mark Matthews scored two each for the Rock. Tom Schreiber, Chris Boushy, Dan Craig and Chris Weier also scored. What this game, and pretty much the past six previous meetings with the Bandits have shown, is that the Rock is in serious trouble. And the juxtaposition of being a top regular season team and its playoff woes make it really hard to make significant changes. Toronto is 41-13 in the regular season since the league returned from the pandemic and 3-0 in quarterfinal matches. Even in some ways the 2019 and 2022 playoff losses to the Bandits were competitive enough to not be an indicator of what was to come. But in the past two semifinal rounds against the Bandits, it was thoroughly exposed. While its effort on Sunday was considerably better than Friday’s debacle, it was thoroughly unable to stop Buffalo when it mattered most. It was simply unable to match either Buffalo’s speed or ball movement. “It’s tough,” Rock owner and general manager Jamie Dawick said. “There’s no other way to describe it right now.” “We’re in a bad rut. We’ve got to find a way to get it done when it matters most.” So all Dawick can do, given the nature of the NLL is, save for some usual turnover, roll out the same nucleus and hope for better. Nick Rose, the primary reason Toronto had the second-best regular season in league history did not cost his team this series and should be back in net next season. And the remainder of the roster is good enough to keep Toronto near the top of the league and in contention for a while to come. “As a group, as a team, those guys in that room, they did change,” Rock head coach Matt Sawyer said. “They changed how they prepared for the season and what they did throughout the season.” “We felt we were set up for success but we found out at the end that it wasn’t good enough.” Meanwhile, Buffalo will face the Albany FireWolves in an attempt to win its second consecutive championship for the best fanbase in the NLL. The FireWolves, last in the league one season ago, beat the San Diego Seals 13-10 Sunday after beating them 14-12 on Friday. The first two games between the upstate New York rivals will take place next weekend. “They might think we have the upper hand but they’re a tough team over there,” Smith said of the FireWolves, “They’ve beat us twice this season.”
