GLOUCESTER, ON — Ontario’s harness racing stars flock to Rideau Carleton Raceway this weekend as the Ottawa oval plays host to eight two-year-old Grassroots Semifinals on Friday and eight three-year-old Grassroots Semifinals on Sunday.

Trainer Mark Steacy will be a fixture at Rideau Carleton on both nights as his powerful Lansdowne stable attempts to qualify starters in seven of eight Grassroots Finals. On Friday the horseman will harness four young contenders — two in the freshman trotting filly division, one in the trotting colt division, and one in the pacing filly contest.

Trotting filly Canada Cool kicks off Steacy’s attempt at Grassroots glory from Post 3 in Friday’s first race and the trainer is hoping the feisty youngster can in fact, keep her cool, and advance to the $100,000 Final.

“She’s an excitable mare, kind of over aggressive,” Steacy explains. “She’s perfect in the barn, but on the track she’s all business. She wants to get things done right now. Sometimes that can be her worst enemy, she wears herself out.”

Canada Cool heads into the Semifinal off an eighth-place finish in the last regular season Grassroots event. Starting from the trailing Post 9 at Kawartha Downs, the Angus Hall miss was frustrated by her inability to charge off the starting gate, and made a miscue heading by the halfway marker. Prior to that error Canada Cool had not finished worse than third in seven starts.

“She likes things her own way,” notes Steacy, who conditions the filly for Katherine Steacy of Lansdowne, David Reid of Glenburnie, Dr. Malcolm Man Son Hing of Campbell River, BC and Joe Loring of Canmore, AB. “But she’s nice gaited, and she does have quick speed too.”

In the second trotting filly Semifinal J M Annie will carry the stable’s torch from Post 6. The Angus Hall miss delivered an impressive Grassroots victory at Hanover Raceway on Sept. 5 to secure her berth in the post season, but Steacy says the filly has not been at her best since that performance.

“She raced super at Hanover, but since then she’s been kind of flat,” laments the horseman. “She got a little sick and she just hasn’t bounced back from that. She just hasn’t got the same pop that she did early in the year.”

Landmark II Racing Stable of Elginburg, David Reid of Glenburnie, George Judson of Athens and David McDonald of Cornwall share ownership on J M Annie, who has recorded two fourths and one fifth in her three starts since Sept. 5.

While J M Annie has struggled through her recent Grassroots outings, two-year-old trotting colt Hava Kadabra heads into his Semifinal battle off a personal best effort at Windsor Raceway on Oct. 6. The Kadabra son circled Windsor’s five-eighths mile oval in 2:00.3, reaching the wire 11 lengths ahead of his peers.

“He’s been a good horse all year, and pretty consistent,” says Steacy. “I expect pretty good things from him.”

Steacy says the only thing that may hinder Hava Kadabra’s shot at a Grassroots Final berth are a pair of quarter cracks he popped in his front feet following the Windsor start.

“He had one in one foot and three or four days later we noticed another one,” recalls Steacy. “Hopefully the blacksmith has taken care of that for us and they’re not going to be an issue going into the Semifinal.”

Landmark II Racing Stable of Elginburg, David Reid of Glenburnie, breeder Stan Klemencic of Trenton and Diane Bertrand of Edmonton, AB own Have Kadabra, who has posted four wins, one second and two thirds through his nine freshman starts, and will start from Post 4 in the sixth race.

The last entry from the Steacy stable in Friday’s Semifinal round is freshman pacing filly Modern Music, who squeaked into the post season with impressive efforts in the last two Grassroots events.

“She had to be first or second at Flamboro, first mostly, and she got second,” explains the trainer. “She lacked five points, she was seventeenth on the list, but all of the top 16 did not enter, so she got in.

“She got a late start, and I think that helped her. She’s kind of fresh,” he adds.

Modern Music will make her bid for a Championship berth from Post 5 in Race 11. The Modern Art daughter is owned by Katherine Steacy of Lansdowne, Clarke Steacy of Gananoque and Landmark II Racing Stable of Elginburg. The filly faces a tough Semifinal field, including division point leader Lyons Anitacol from Post 2, but Steacy thinks she is poised for success in her eighth lifetime start.

“There are a couple of good fillies in against her, but she’s not a bad mare herself,” says the horseman. “She’s got a pretty good attitude; she tries.”

Rideau Carleton Raceway plays host to eight two-year-old Grassroots Semifinals on Friday, sending them postward as Races 1, 2, 4, 6, 7, 8, 10 and 11. Canada Cool and her peers in the first race roll in behind the starting gate at 6:30 pm.

For complete entries please go to: http://www.standardbredcanada.ca/racing/entries/data/e1023ridcfn.dat.