'She improved like magic': Racehorse no one wanted goes on to win big
A young racehorse no one believed had the genes or drive needed to win races proved everyone wrong this season. Purchased for just $1,000, Stevie Wonder Girl has since climbed her way to the top, winning fifty times that.
Alivia Kettleson and her husband have been involved in horse racing their entire lives. Her husband was at a yearling sale when he came home with the unproven horse.
"I did not want him to buy horses, but he came back with two," Kettleson told CTV News Edmonton.
"When they go through the sales ring, they have to have a minimum bid of $1,000. If no one puts their hands up for that minimum bid," she added, "they just go back to the barn."
"So he was the only one who put his hand up."
As a two-year-old, Kettleson said Stevie Wonder Girl wasn't raising any eyebrows.
"She was looking like she was just a horse," Kettleson said. "Maybe not a dud but like one better than a dud."
Despite training, Stevie Wonder Girl wasn't showing an interest in being a competitive racing horse, her jockey Dane Nelson recalled.
"She wasn't going nowhere," Nelson said. "She was at the back, lie every race in a cheap maiden, she was at the back. Like, come on."
"She started the year off very slow," Kettleson added.
"We (then) put her in a race that was as low as you can go," she explained. "So this is the bottom of the barrel, and she won that day. Then the next time she raced, she won again."
Kettleson said she never expected for Stevie Wonder Girl to get to the level she's at now.
"She didn't really have a proven winning father," she said. "He just hasn't really bred that many horses either."
"It was uncharted waters… You weren't really sure what you were going to get."
Nelson has been riding for 20 years and has won two championships in Jamaica. He's never seen a horse with a trajectory like Stevie Wonder Girl.
"She improved like magic," he said. "Not many horses do that… She just keeps going and climbing."
"She was at the bottom," he added. "To be at this level now, she's truly a wonder horse."
He expects she will only get better next season.
"She's just gaining strength and ability," Nelson said. "She lives up to her name, just like Wonder Woman."
CTVNews.ca Top Stories
BREAKING | Liberals table bill delaying assisted dying expansion to March 2024
The federal government is seeking to delay the extension of assisted dying eligibility to people whose sole condition is a mental disorder until March 17, 2024. Justice Minister David Lametti introduced a bill seeking the extension in the House of Commons on Thursday.

EXCLUSIVE | Gay man taking Canadian government to court, says sperm donation restrictions make him feel like a 'second-class citizen'
A gay man is taking the federal government to court, challenging the constitutionality of a policy restricting gay and bisexual men from donating to sperm banks in Canada, CTV News has learned.
Six more weeks of winter? Here are the predictions of groundhogs across North America
Will we see six more weeks of winter, or an early spring? Here’s what some of the groundhogs (and one human) have predicted so far, from coast-to-coast.
Why Delissio pizzas and other Nestle products will disappear from Canadian stores
Nestle Canada says it is winding down its frozen meals and pizza business in Canada over the next six months. The four brands that will no longer be sold in the freezer aisle at Canadian grocery stores are Delissio, Stouffer's, Lean Cuisine and Life Cuisine.
Ukraine's new weapon will force a Russian shift
The United States has answered President Volodymyr Zelenskyy's plea for rockets that can strike deep behind the front lines of the nearly year-long conflict with Russia. Now Russian forces will need to adapt or face potentially catastrophic losses.
China accuses Canada of 'politically manipulating' with Uyghur refugee vote
The Chinese government says a motion MPs passed Wednesday to provide asylum to persecuted Uyghurs amounts to political manipulation by Canada.
Australia is removing monarchy from its bank notes
Australia is removing the monarchy from its bank notes. The nation's new $5 bill will feature an Indigenous design rather than an image of King Charles III. But the king is still expected to appear on coins that currently bear the image of the late Queen Elizabeth II.
Organization regulating medical care in Manitoba apologizes for Indigenous-specific racism in health care
The organization regulating medical care and services in Manitoba is apologizing for racism directed towards Indigenous people when accessing health care in the province.
Quebec woman shocked to find stolen Audi driven through Ontario mall in 'insane' theft
A Quebec woman said she was very surprised to find her stolen Audi had been used in what’s being described as an “absolutely insane” Ontario mall theft.