On North American harness racing tracks it’s all about speed over a mile trip, in Australia it’s a mix of both standing start and mobile features across a range of track sizes, in New Zealand it could be about an extreme two-mile contest or a grass track race featuring non-race winners and in Europe the
Two headlines recently caught my eyes. The first one read: Michigan’s Last “Horse” Racing Track Closes After 80 Year Run… The second one: SPORTS STREAMING DEAL WITH ESPN, FOX, WARNER BROTHERS, DISCOVERY….WHAT IT MEANS FOR VIEWERS… To me, the first one should have read: MICHIGAN’S LAST “HORSE” RACING TRACK CLOSES AFTER 80 YEAR RUN… And
The Stable.ca enters it’s ninth year in operation in harness racing and it has grown from nothing to one of the biggest stables in North America. Harnesslink’s Garnet Barnsdale recently caught up with creator and proprietor Anthony Macdonald for a chat about all things The Stable. GB: You are now into your ninth year with
On North American harness racing tracks it’s all about speed over a mile trip, in Australia it’s a mix of both standing start and mobile features across a range of track sizes, in New Zealand it could be about an extreme two-mile contest or a grass track race featuring non-race winners and in Europe the
Harnesslink’s Nicholas Barnsdale is one of two finalists for Canadian harness racing's O'Brien Media Excellence Award in the Outstanding Written Work category. To say that was a proud dad moment for me is the understatement of 2024 so far. The younger Barnsdale was nominated for this Harnesslink story on young driver Jeff Hunt. The other