2022-10-21
Creatine ‘Likely’ To Retire After Crown
USA
“He’s got close to $2 million made, a record of (1:) 51 and a piece and he’s won big races all over the world… I think he’ll be well accepted (as a stallion).”

Creatine in Hambletonian Elimination


Creatine wins Hugo Åbergs Memorial 2015.





Creatine wins Hugo Åbergs Memorial 2015

There is no denying that the international flair of the Breeders Crown Trot has led to considerable intrigue over the past few editions, and this year’s contest on Saturday at Woodbine Racetrack figures to be no exception.

The small twist is that this year’s European ‘invader’ is actually Creatine, a thoroughly blue-blooded American trotter.

After three seasons of racing stateside in the sport’s most prestigious events for trainer Bob Stewart and owner/breeder Adam Bowden’s Diamond Creek Racing, the 2013 Kentucky Futurity winner was sent overseas for a European trotting campaign in 2015, returning to U.S. soil only a few weeks ago.

After disappointing results in his first four events in Sweden, racing out of the Robert Bergh stable, the horse was moved to trainer Jimmy Takter’s European division and placed in the capable hands of his brother Johnny Takter. The change was positive for Creatine, who delivered two Group 1 victories, in Finland and Sweden, after that point in time.

“He did win two races over there at a mile and raced well at longer distances as well, but there’s no question that a mile is his distance and we’re very anxious to see him race a mile in Canada (for the Breeders Crown),” said Stewart, who now shares ownership of the horse with his wife Lynda and Bowden under the name Big C Racing.

“My wife and I kind of equated it to the difference between NASCAR and Indy car — they are both car races, but it’s a whole different scenario the way they race (in Europe). I think there was a bit of a learning curve for him that way, but he did get the hang of it and raced well, winning two Group 1 races over there, but I’m glad that he’s back stateside now,” said Stewart.

Creatine made his return to racing on American soil two weeks ago in the million-dollar Yonkers International Trot at a distance of a mile-and-a-quarter, where he finished a strong third behind Papagayo E and Timoko.

On the strength of his performance, the decision was made to pay the $62,500 supplemental fee to enter the Breeders Crown. At first report, the Open Trot appeared to be a six-horse field, however, that field expanded to seven after the late addition of superstar mare Bee A Magician, who had been initially placed in the Mare Trot in error.

“Obviously, we didn’t mind it when it was a six-horse field, but we don’t mind the seven-horse field, either. We aren’t scared to race anybody, but it should be a very interesting race,” he said.

“The filly ending up in there made it a better race, so we are looking forward to it.”
Bee A Magician, now five, the 2013 Horse of the Year and two-time Breeders Crown champion, has already proven willing and able to handle a field of male counterparts on many occasions in the past, most notably winning the $680,000 Maple Leaf Trot in September at Mohawk for trainer Nifty Norman and owners Mel Hartman, Herb Liverman and David McDuffee.

Beyond Creatine and Bee A Magician, en masse it is an exceptionally interesting field, packed with wild cards such as Canadian contenders Intimidate and Flanagan Memory, who have proven to be more than capable of winning prestigious trotting stakes in the past.

Intimidate is returning to the scene of his greatest triumph, after winning the three-year-old Colt Trot as a supplemental entry the last time the Breeders Crown surfaced at Woodbine in 2012. Since then, he’s added the Maple Leaf Trot and TVG Final in 2014 to his credit. For his part, Flanagan Memory has been heard from in the older trotting ranks this year, beating a star-studded field, including Elitlopp winner Magic Tonight, Natural Herbie and Obrigado, in the $301,500 John Cashman Memorial.

Rounding out the field are Ake Svanstedt’s Resolve, Ron Burke’s Gural Hanover and another Takter trainee Master Of Law, who have all been in high-profile events this season. Resolve is the 9-5 morning line favourite, followed by Bee A Magician (2-1) and Creatine (4-1).

Creatine has been within striking distance before in the Crown, losing by just a neck in the 2013 edition as he stormed up the passing lane in the driving rain at Pocono to just miss Spider Blue Chip in the three-year-old Colt Trot. Last year, he was a locked-in third behind Commander Crowe at the Meadowlands.

According to Stewart, win or lose in the Crown final, Saturday is likely to be Creatine’s final career start as retirement to stud beckons.

“He’s got close to $2 million made, a record of (1:) 51 and a piece and he’s won big races all over the world… I think he’ll be well accepted (as a stallion).

“You know, all of them deserve to win, but his career deserves to have a Breeders Crown win so hopefully that will happen.”

A win for Creatine would be a wonderful swan song for the horse, while also carrying the flag for his sire, Andover Hall, in the Crown at Woodbine.

Andover Hall, who was trained by Stewart throughout his career, is firmly entrenched in Crown lore. In 2002, the three-year-old star finished third in his Crown elimination, but later spooked after being turned out in a paddock, hopped a fence and made a dangerous gallop down the shoulder of Highway 401, Canada’s busiest highway, before he was rescued by motorists. He never raced again, but fortunately lived to become one of this generation’s most influential trotting sires.

“I remember like it was yesterday,” said Stewart. “We actually won a Breeders Crown that night with Cameron Hall (the second of two Crowns won by the filly) so I think it’s better to dwell on the positive part.”

Stewart plans to be in attendance on Saturday to watch Creatine try to earn his Crown.

“We know he can compete at the highest level anywhere in the world,” he said. “He’s got a lot of big races under his belt, but a Breeders Crown would be nice on his resume when all is said and done.”
Hambletonian Society

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