A broodmare maker: the Dark Jewel Classic

9 min read
The G3 Dark Jewel Classic has an extraordinary record for producing broodmares, with six of the race’s first 10 runners producing stakes winners. It’s a fitting tribute to a mare who still pops up in conversation, 52 years after her death.

Cover image courtesy of Ashlea Brennan

In the summer of 1971, when in foal to the stallion Rego (Ire), the bonny mare Dark Jewel (Star Kingdom {Ire}) died at the age of 17. She was the dam of five stakes winners, among them Baguette, Heirloom (Rego {Ire}) and Cabochon (Edmundo {GB}).

Between them, Dark Jewel’s progeny won 28 stakes races, including Golden Slippers, Thousand Guineas and Maribyrnong Plates, and they were sharp, precocious individuals. They won at two, then at three and four years of age, setting up their dam for immortality.

Dark Jewel | Image courtesy of Scone Vet Dynasty

As such, it was fitting in 1999 when Scone Race Club announced the Dark Jewel Classic, a 1400-metre race in honour of the famous mare. Even then, over 25 years after her death, Dark Jewel was still in conversation.

The race, now a Group 3, is open to all ages of fillies and mares, and it’s an important feature of the annual Scone racing carnival each May. Among many of the old-stage racegoers, the race invites memories of that delightful 1960s/70s era when Dark Jewel progeny was the rage.

For Olly Tait, who wasn’t alive in that era, Dark Jewel is of a different importance. She is the filly his grandfather bought and put to stud, and to which the Tait family owes so much of its fame.

Olly Tait | Image courtesy of Twin Hills Stud

“Even to this day, I will meet people in a breeding context who’ll tell me they’re looking for another Dark Jewel,” Tait said, speaking to TDN AusNZ. “She was a very famous mare of her time, and I was certainly aware of that as a little boy.”

Dark Jewel was owned throughout her breeding life by Griff Tait after an ordinary career for trainer Fil Allotta in Sydney. She won three races in 25 starts, outperforming herself at stud. Her tombstone reads ‘a broodmare without equal’, and even by today’s standards, there’s little arguing with it.

“Even to this day, I will meet people in a breeding context who’ll tell me they’re looking for another Dark Jewel. She was a very famous mare of her time, and I was certainly aware of that as a little boy.” - Olly Tait

“I probably speak for my mum and dad and brother when I say that Dark Jewel has always been prominent in our lives,” Tait said. “My grandparents, Griff and Daisy Tait, have been breeding horses for a long time and very successfully, but this mare was at a different level.

“In quick succession she got the Epsom winner Cabochan and the Thousand Guineas winner Heirloom, then Heirloom’s full brother Baguette, who was the first Triple Crown winner and went on to win a Newmarket and Doomben 10,000. So she was an incredible mare and, while none of her descendants have scaled her heights, she is still an incredible mare.”

The Tait family has the Dark Jewel line still, dotted here and there among the herd. Spinning Hill (Dolphin Street {Fr}) was raced by Sandy Tait and his sister, Jill Nivison, to great sprinting victories in such races as the G1 Lightning S. and G1 Manikato S. twice, and she claimed Dark Jewel as her fifth dam.

However, as successful as the Tait family has been over the decades, it’s arguable that any horse has ever bettered Dark Jewel’s record.

Spinning Hill | Image courtesy of Sportpix

“Whisked probably came close,” Tait said. “She was the dam of Tie The Knot, and she had two other stakes winners. Whisked was a Thousand Guineas winner herself who produced an absolute champion, so there are comparisons there. But you probably couldn’t say that she reached the same heights as Dark Jewel.”

A broodmare maker

When the Dark Jewel Classic kicked off in 1999, it took only two years for it to become a stakes-producing race. In 2001, the winner was the Alquoz (USA) mare Nanny Maroon, who later produced at stud the Group 2-winning De Lightning Ridge (Tale Of The Cat {USA}).

Nanny Maroon was the first of a number of important mares to matriculate out of this race and into the breeding barn and, to date, there have been six winners of the Dark Jewel Classic foaling stakes winners.

After Nanny Maroon in 2001, Chuckle (Danehill {USA}) came along in 2003 and won the race with jockey Lenny Beasley. When she retired, she proved a very smart broodmare, foaling the triple Group winner Crack Me Up (NZ) (Mossman) and the stakes winner Hoofit (NZ) (Mossman) in New Zealand.

Nanny Maroon | Image courtesy of Sportpix

Then, in 2004, Romare (Marscay) won the Dark Jewel before later foaling the Listed Inglis Debutant S. winner Eramor (Stratum).

These three mares meant that in the first six runnings of the Dark Jewel Classic, the race had produced three broodmares of merit, and this record continued from 2006 through 2008 when a further three winners did the same.

Really Flying (Real Quiet {USA}) won in 2006 and she became the dam of the Group 3 and Listed winner Camporella (Exceed And Excel), while Rosa’s Spur (Flying Spur) won in 2007. The latter subsequently produced the stakes winner Members Joy (Hussonet {USA}), in turn, the dam of the dual Group 2 winner Pure Elation (I Am Invincible).

Rosa’s Spur was a handy mare, but even her record pales alongside the mare that won the Dark Jewel in 2008. Sung, a daughter of Anabaa (USA) bred by Woodlands Stud, and in 2016 produced the smart colt Microphone, who won the G1 ATC Sires’ Produce S. and two further Group races before retiring as a Godolphin sire.

Sung | Image courtesy of Sportpix

Sung was the sixth mare in 10 years of the Dark Jewel Classic to be a broodmare of merit. It was a remarkable record for the young race, but one not all that surprising, according to Olly Tait.

“It’s a nice statistic and it’s appropriate, given who the raced is named after, but at the end of the day, it’s been a point of ability for the next generation in racing,” he said. “It’s a Group 3 race at a meeting where people want to have runners and winners, so it’s natural the field will be of good ability and therefore able to go on to be good broodmares.”

“It’s (the Dark Jewel Classic) a Group 3 race at a meeting where people want to have runners and winners, so it’s natural the field will be of good ability and therefore able to go on to be good broodmares.” - Olly Tait

Dark Jewel winners haven’t produced any stakes winners since Sung in 2008. However, the race hasn’t lacked talent, with such pedigrees among its winners as Arctic Flight (Flying Spur) in 2013, a daughter of that great producer Scandinavia (Snippets).

And, it’s still early days for such later winners as the G1 Coolmore Classic hero Daysee Doom (Domesday), as well as Con Te Partiro (USA) (Scat Daddy {USA}), the latter exported by SF Bloodstock for a breeding career in America.

All the Talk for Lees

This weekend, the race has a capacity field of 16, with three emergencies. Among the favourites is the Brad Widdup mare Short Shorts (NZ) (Iffraaj {GB}) and the Joseph Pride-trained Expat (NZ) (Makfi {GB}).

It’s a typically open and robust field, with no contenders under the age of four. They’re also widely raced, including the Kris Lees 5-year-old Never Talk, a daughter of No Nay Never (USA) on lease by Lees from Yarraman Park.

Gallery: Current favourites for the G3 Dark Jewel Classic this weekend

Never Talk comes with a substantial pedigree. She is from Palace Talk (NZ) (Street Cry {Ire}), making her a half-sister to Shuffle Dancer (I Am Invincible), a recent winner of the G2 Angus Armansco S. The female family here is very good because Palace Talk throws straight to Eljazzi (Ire) (Artaius {USA}).

Earlier this year, we spoke to Anthony Rogers, studmaster of the Kildare-based Airlie Stud, about this family. The Rogers family had bred Eljazzi and sold her, regretting the sale as the family blossomed.

They had spent 15 to 20 years looking to buy back into it, which only occurred when Harry Mitchell offered Anthony and his mother Sonia a half-share in Shuffle Dancer.

The first emergence of this line in Australia was via Fayfa (Ire) (Slip Anchor {GB}), Never Talk’s third dam, who was imported by Coolmore in 1997. Via Shuffle Dancer, it has come to life, as Anthony Rogers said it would.

The Mitchell brothers bought Palace Talk via Boomer Bloodstock (FBAA) in 2017 at the Magic Millions National Broodmare Sale, buying her from Newhaven Park for $140,000.

Palace Talk (NZ) as a yearling | Image courtesy of Magic Millions

Never Talk was her first foal, retained by the Mitchells and leased to Lees Racing. The mare has so far won six races in close to 30 starts, with $580,000 banked in prizemoney.

She was unplaced in the G3 Hawkesbury Crown at her last start, but previous to that she was second to Zapateo (Brazen Beau) in the G2 Sapphire S. at Randwick. She has been a useful sort, the kind of mare that could fit well with the way the Dark Jewel has historically played out.

“We’ve always thought she would race well here,” said Kris Lees, speaking to TDN AusNZ. “She’s run well at Scone previously. In a perfect world, we’d have softer ground than what we’ll get on Saturday, but she’s finally drawn a soft barrier and, if she can run midfield, she’ll get a chance.”

“We’ve always thought she (Never Talk) would race well here... she’s run well at Scone previously. In a perfect world, we’d have softer ground than what we’ll get on Saturday, but she’s finally drawn a soft barrier and, if she can run midfield, she’ll get a chance.” - Kris Lees

It’s likely that Never Talk will be retired to Yarraman Park this spring, while three of the mares in the Dark Jewel field will be heading to the Magic Millions National Broodmare Sale later this month. The race is a common path to the Gold Coast sale, with Meg (Sebring), Riduna (Fastnet Rock) and Air To Air (Smart Missile) in the current catalogue later this month.

“It will be a typical Dark Jewel,” Lees said. “It’s a big, open race with a number of chances, and luck in running will play its part. It’s been a traditional broodmare-making race, and hopefully that will transpire again.”

Dark Jewel Classic
Dark Jewel
Olly Tait
Never Talk
Kris Lees
Palace Talk
Shuffle Dancer

Dundeel’s stellar 2-year-old season

8 min read
The Arrowfield Stud resident is having a tremendous run with his juveniles in 2022/23, sitting inside the top 10 in that category in the Australian premiership - and there appears to be more success on the horizon.

Cover image courtesy of Arrowfield Stud

If you look at this season’s Leading 2YO Sires’ table, most of the usual suspects are there. The great Snitzel leads the way, Darley’s superstar Exceed And Excel sits second, while the country’s premier stallion I Am Invincible rounds out the top three. There’s also Better Than Ready, Russian Revolution, Capitalist and Zoustar.

Some, however, may be surprised to see Dundeel’s (NZ) name sitting in eighth position. That may be due to the fact he himself only had one start at two (he won a maiden at Ellerslie over 1200 metres), or the fact his pedigree boasts so much stoutness - he is by High Chaparral (Ire) from the Zabeel (NZ) mare Stareel (NZ). Dundeel’s grandam, Staring (NZ) (Fiesta Star), won seven stakes races between 1600-2400 metres.

A winner of seven stakes races himself - six at the elite level - Dundeel raced 19 times, with only four of those at 1400 metres or less.

Dundeel (NZ) | Standing at Arrowfield Stud

Dundeel has only ever finished a season in the top 10 in the 2-year-old category once, that being in 2018/19, when, from 16 runners, he logged six winners, nine wins, one stakes winner and two stakes wins, for earnings of $1,829,125. His star performer, of course, was Castelvecchio, who now resides alongside him at Arrowfield Stud. He had a five-start juvenile campaign, which included a G1 Champagne S. triumph, as well as placings in the G1 Sires’ Produce S. and G2 Skyline S.

Dundeel is having a sensational season with his 2-year-olds, boasting career-best numbers by winners and wins.

His juvenile progeny has amassed $1,561,575 in 2022/23. From 23 runners, he has nine winners that have combined for 12 wins and Militarize (NZ) is likely to be in contention to be named Australia’s Champion 2-Year-Old, having won three of his five starts, including two Group 1s.

Militarize (NZ) | Image courtesy of Ashlea Brennan

Unlike this author, Arrowfield Stud’s Bloodstock Manager Jon Freyer isn’t surprised to see Dundeel enjoying such a great run with his juveniles.

“He’s having a terrific run,” Freyer told TDN AusNZ.

“It’s not a surprise for us because he was such a fast horse himself. I know he could run over a bit of ground, but as Murray Baker used to say, ‘The horse would win a Newmarket if we’d trained him for it’. He was just a really fast horse that could keep it up for 2000 metres.

“It’s not a surprise for us because he (Dundeel) was such a fast horse himself.” - Jon Freyer

“When you’ve got the class he had, and horses like So You Think had, they can get sprinters because they’ve got the speed to go with it.

“He’s done it before, obviously Castelvecchio possibly could have been a Golden Slipper horse; he didn’t qualify for the race as all the prizemoney he won was from the (R. Listed) Inglis Millennium. He was a really fast 2-year-old.

“He’s also had Super Seth and others, so he’s done it before.”

Militarize has obviously been Dundeel’s headline act this season, but aside from him, other notable achievers include Townsend, who has won one of his three starts and was third behind in the Champagne. Oceans Of Energy has scored in two of her three starts, including one at Doomben. Fistsoffury won on debut, before running fourth in the G2 VRC Sires’ produce S. at his third start, and late last month, Yosemite Falls triumphed on debut at Echuca by 6.5l.

Townsend (black and red silks) | Image courtesy of Ashlea Brennan

“Militarize is in line to be the Champion 2-Year-Old, he’s won two Group 1s. He’s had Townsend be Group 1-placed and a number of others that are showing so much promise. It looks good for this year, but even better for next season,” said Freyer.

“Horses like him (Dundeel) and Zabeel before him, when they have classy 2-year-olds you’re thinking Guineas and Cox Plates, those kinds of races, and I think that’s what they’ve got in mind with Militarize in the spring.

“It looks good for this year, but even better for next season.” - Jon Freyer

“They’re not limited like some stallions, where you say, ‘Once you get beyond 1200 metres we’ll be crossing our fingers’. You’re looking at all the big races with these horses and there’s no ceiling for them.”

A special crop?

Asked if there was anything noteworthy about this particular crop, whether that be better mares and/or more precious types, Freyer provided great insight.

“Not particularly, no. I think that as stallions get to this stage of their career, breeders and even studs learn what works with a stallion, how to mate them, that kind of thing,” he explained.

Jon Freyer | Image courtesy of Inglis

“You see stallions go in cycles a little bit and often at this point of their career when we figure stallions out, we see them shoot up and improve their performance. You work out the mares and the bloodlines that suit them and to some extent as well, the trainers are better at knowing how to train them; they’ve often had a few through the stable.”

A bright future

Freyer is adamant Dundeel’s rich vein of form is far from being done.

One of his 2-year-olds that is sure to attract plenty of interest is Miracle Of Love - a filly out of Arrowfield Stud’s great mare Miss Finland (Redoute’s Choice), who won five Group 1s and was Australia’s Champion 2YO Filly in 2007 and Champion 3YO Filly in 2007.

Miss Finland | Image courtesy of Sportpix

The Paul Messara-trained Miracle Of Love will debut in Saturday’s Listed Woodlands S. at Scone.

“She’s a lovely filly, she was an outstanding yearling out of our great mare that we kept,” said Freyer.

“She’s very inexperienced and it’s probably throwing her into the deep end, but it’s at home.

“She’s (Miracle Of Love) a lovely filly, she was an outstanding yearling out of our great mare that we kept.” - John Freyer

“She’s got a lot of talent and she won’t be disgraced by any stretch.

“She’ll certainly be better as she matures, but she’s reasonably precocious; she’s got enough speed to warrant running her in this race and if she runs as well as we hope, she may head north (for the Queensland Winter Racing Carnival).”

Miracle Of Love, who will be ridden by apprentice Dylan Gibbons, is a half-sister to the Group 1 heroine Stay With Me (Street Cry {Ire}), as well the stakes performers Earth Angel (Animal Kingdom {USA}), Bucharest (Deep Impact {Jpn}) and Woodbine (Hussonet {USA}).

This is also the family of the dual Listed scorer and Group 2 placegetter Waltz On By (I Am Invincible).

Miss Finland’s Castelvecchio colt made $280,000 at this year’s Inglis Australian Easter Yearling Sale.

Lot 239 - Castelvecchio x Miss Finland (colt) sold for $280,000 at the 2023 Inglis Australian Easter Yearling Sale | Image courtesy of Inglis

Freyer also believes the Team Snowden-trained Vomo Island is worth following. The colt was bred and is raced by Greg and Barb Ingham and is from the winless Lonhro mare The Darling One, making him a brother to the three-time victress Thousand Years and a half-brother to the Listed winner Wayupinthesky (Snitzel).

Vomo Island ran second on debut at Canterbury in February, before being tipped out. He resumed at the same track last week, running third behind the promising Kandinsky Abstract (Zoustar).

“He is a really promising horse; we had him at the farm and he was a magnificent yearling, one of the standouts on the farm,” Freyer commented.

“He was bred by Greg and Barb Ingham and they decided to keep him and race him.

Vomo at the Canterbury trials | Image courtesy of Ashlea Brennan

“I think he is a horse with a massive future; he did get beaten the other day, but the race didn't quite pan out for him. He’s a horse that’s really going places.”

In that same race last week, another Dundeel 2-year-old - Celestial Legend - rattled home to grab second.

Arrowfield Stud bred the colt and consigned him at last year’s Inglis Classic Yearling Sale. He was knocked down to Legend Racing / Avenue Bloodstock for $220,000.

The colt is out of Sarraqa (Snitzel) and she is an unraced three-quarter sister to the Group 1 winners Mustaaqeem and Rafeef. The former was the Champion 2YO Colt in South Africa in 2016/17, while the latter is now a sire of three Group 1 winners and 12 stakes winners in South Africa.

Celestial Legend as a yearling | Image courtesy of Inglis

“He is one that we bred and is raced by Bon Ho,” Freyer said.

“He flashed home and has got stakes class written all over him.

“It’s exciting, because when you’ve got a classy bunch of 2-year-olds, you normally get a great crop of 3-year-olds.”

Dundeel
Arrowfield Stud
Jon Freyer

Top end leads growth in Inglis Weanlings

4 min read
Taking a look back at the 2023 Inglis Australian Weanling Sale, TDN AusNZ puts the market into perspective against the past five Select Weanling sessions, and we take a look at some of the pinhooking trends from the sale in recent years.

Cover image courtesy of Inglis

Termed a ‘pleasing’ sale by Inglis Bloodstock CEO Sebastian Hutch, this year's Weanling Sale at Riverside saw an improved average and a near identical aggregate against last year’s results. However, Hutch also admitted frustration at so many buyers being unable to fill orders.

Breaking down the sale results into quartiles can help to reveal what’s going on. In the last five years, the average of the cheapest 25 per cent of select weanlings has gone from $2890 in 2019 to $3508 this year. It rose to above $5000 in the intervening years, but in general, the movement has not been significant either way, and it’s fair to conclude that the growth seen in the median is not being driven by the cheaper weanlings.

Median

Chart: The median price over the past five editions of the Inglis Australian Weanling Sale

Instead, it appears that the growth is coming from the middle and top end. The average of the most expensive 25 per cent of weanlings has shown determined growth over the past five years, bar stalling in the first COVID-striken year of 2020.

Top-end average

Chart: The average price amongst the most expensive 25 per cent of horses at the Inglis Australian Weanling Sale

This may have been helped by the increased interest from end users at the sale. He might have been at it for many years, but it was notable to see Western Australian trainer Simon Miller finish fourth on the buyer’s sheet by aggregate at this year’s sale, spending $370,000 on three youngsters.

He explained to TDN AusNZ at the time that he can afford to ‘go a few extra bids’ precisely because he’s not looking at the same profit margin pinhookers must closely observe.

Fillies vs. colts

When we reviewed the Inglis Australian Easter Yearling Sale recently, we saw an interesting phenomenon between the sexes. It appeared that the residual value prized by well-credentialled fillies was driving the colts’ premium to be negative in the last two years.

The top end of results wasn’t immune to that trend either, with the premium for top-end colts dropping to its lowest level in five years.

There might be an absence of stallion syndicates at weanling sales, but the opposite was true of this year’s results, which saw the highest average for top-end colts in the five years examined.

Average of top-end colts

Chart: The average price amongst the most expensive 25 per cent of colts at the Inglis Australian Weanling Sale

Pinhookers

It was Silverdale Farm’s The Autumn Sun filly that produced the biggest pinhook in Australian history when selling to Arrowfield Stud for $1.8 million to top this year’s Easter Sale. However, in general, colts are considered a safer bet by pinhookers, with their yearling sales averages traditionally outperforming the fillies.

Taking a look at the 20 best pinhooks purchased at the Inglis Australian Weanling Sale in each of the last few years, we see this played out. The average cost of those top-performing investments was $64,600 in 2021.

Lot 440 - The Autumn Sun x Via Africa (SAf) filly who topped the 2023 Inglis Australian Easter Yearling Sale, selling for $1.8 million | Image courtesy of Inglis

Whilst there was less than $2000 separating the colts and fillies when broken down by sex, come yearling sale time in 2022 the raw profit (excluding all costs) on those colts averaged $138,875, with the fillies lagging behind at $94,750.

In the following year, i.e., 2022 weanling purchases that were sold in 2023 as yearlings, there was a similarly small discrepancy by sex from the $94,650 average, and still, the fillies lagged some $20,000 behind the colt’s average of $154,167.

Risk/reward

Of those best-performing pinhooks in the last few years, it’s interesting to note the prevalence of the Inglis Classic Yearling Sale as their final destination. Although the most common yearling sale for them to end up in is the Magic Millions Gold Coast Yearling Sale, exactly a quarter of the 60 analysed were sold at the Inglis Classic Yearling Sale.

And they did well, with the raw profit on those pinhooks exceeding those that were sent to Brisbane in the last two years.

A famously risky venture with many possible pitfalls, a look at the bare data suggests that pinhooking success is attainable even at a reasonable level. If you take the Australian Weanling and Classic Sales as a reasonable level, the difference in the corresponding medians hasn’t dipped below $50,000 in recent years.

If you allow for costs between the two sales of $25,000 that is still, (very) loosely, a $25,000 profit. This is by no means an endorsement to rush out and get involved, but it is some evidence that, over enough instances, a basic reward for pinhooking does exist.

Inglis
Weanling
Australian Inglis Easter Yearling Sale
Inglis Australian Weanling Sale
The Autumn Sun

Who was I?

3 min read
In our weekly series, we take a walk down memory lane to learn about some of the characters, both human, equine and otherwise, in whose honour our important races are named. This week we look at the G1 Doomben 10,000, which will be run at Doomben on Saturday.

Cover image courtesy of the State Library of Queensland

As was the fate of many of Australia’s racecourses during World War II, Doomben, through the years 1941 to 1944, was occupied by the Allied military. When finally the track was handed back to the Brisbane Amateur Turf Club, and the tents moved out and horses back in, plans were afoot for a celebratory meeting.

It was scheduled for June 1, 1946, which would be the first post-war racing at Doomben Racecourse. On the schedule was a new sprint feature worth £10,000.

That figure was the equivalent value of the 1945 Melbourne Cup, which gives some context to the value of the first Doomben 10,000, and it was to be a ‘sprint feature over seven furlongs less 93 yards on a circular course, allowing for a field of 24 horses’.

Doomben Racecourse as 'Camp Doomben' military quarters in 1943 during World War II | Image courtesy of the State Library of Queensland

As such, the race was immediately coined ‘the 10,000’, except that it wasn’t officially called that in 1946. It was called the T. M. Ahern Memorial H. in memory of the Club’s former chairman, Terry Ahern, who was the licensee of the downtown Gresham Hotel before his death in 1944.

In the Australasian Turf Register of the era, which recorded every race the length of Australia, the Doomben 10,000 is recorded as just that in 1946, not the T. M. Ahern Memorial H. It was also recorded as such in the Australian Stud Book.

However, the newspapers of the time referred to the inaugural race as the ‘Ahern Memorial H.’ By 1947, the race was the '10,000 Handicap', so it’s likely that it was for only one year to honour Terry Ahern.

Racegoers at the 1953 Doomben 10,000 | Image courtesy of the State Library of Queensland

However, that first year was one of the most special in the history of the race because its rich purse attracted the Sydney stars Bernborough and Flight (Royal Step).

It’s unorthodox to call Bernborough a ‘Sydney horse’ when he was Queensland-bred and begun, but by the time he trekked back over the border for the first Doomben 10,000, he was owned by Azzalin Romano and ensconced at Randwick.

The glamour horse won the race lumping 10st 5lbs, a personal record. He led home Cragsman and Puffham for his ninth straight win, earning £6500 for his 2l winning effort. Over 30,000 patrons spilled into the course to watch the race, and Bernborough didn’t disappoint. He set a new course record.

Bernborough and jockey Athol Murray

It was no mean feat in 1946 to offer a £10,000 prize purse. In those earliest of post-war years, the Club had to stew annually over its ability to meet the figure.

However, the race name stuck and it is a punchy addition to the long scroll of races in Australia each year. It has also been won by thoroughbreds of immense merit, including Baguette in 1971 and Manikato (Manihi) in 1979, and then Chief De Beers (Hula Chief {NZ}), Apache Cat (Lion Cavern {USA}) and Spirit Of Boom in later decades.

Who Was I?
Doomben 10,000
Bernborough

Boulton chuffed by HTBA Horsemanship Award

4 min read

Written by Trent Masenhelder

Cover image courtesy of Hunter Media

Longtime Godolphin Australia employee Roger Boulton admits he was stunned when he realised it was he who was receiving the Hunter Thoroughbreds Breeders’ Association (HTBA) Employee of the Year (Horsemanship) Award on Wednesday night.

The HTBA paid tribute to three exceptional employees, in the fields of administration, horsemanship and leadership at the ceremony, which was held at Scone Racecourse in the lead-up to the two-day Cup Carnival, which kicks off on Friday. The Horsemanship Award recognises someone for their passion, commitment, care and love of horses and racing.

Hunter Thoroughbreds Breeders' Association 2023 winners and winning connections | Image courtesy of Hunter Media

“It came as a complete surprise. I was sitting there enjoying the evening, then they started saying a few things about the winner, like, ‘He came out to Australia in the 1980s, he worked for Peter Orton and Senga Bissett’, so I thought, ‘Hang on a minute, that sounds a bit like me’ Boulton revealed to TDN AusNZ on Thursday.

“Once the penny dropped, it was a huge thrill. To be recognised in that company… there's far better horsemen and women than me.

“It’s really nice to get that recognition.”

“Once the penny dropped, it was a huge thrill. To be recognised in that company… there’s far better horsemen and women than me.” - Roger Boulton

Boulton grew up in Gloucestershire, England and always had a pony at home. His father was a stockman on the farm and his two grandfathers were stud grooms, so there were always horses about.

“I can’t remember not being involved with a pony or doing something on the farm with a pony. Horses have always been there,” Boulton explained.

He moved to New Zealand in 1986 and helped a lady by the name of Helen O’Connor at the yearling sales.

“I thought it was quite good, I had never had much to do with thoroughbreds,” said Boulton.

“I was in the pub one night and I said to a few of the guys, ‘If you hear of a job going, please put my name forward’. I then had a message to ring Peter Orton at Middlebrook Park, so I did. He asked if I could go and help with their yearlings and that’s how I got to Australia.

“Later on, I got married and worked with Senga Bissett. She sold the place (Willow Park Stud) to Glenn Burrows, so I stayed and worked for him for four years.

“Later on, I got married and worked with Senga Bissett. She sold the place (Willow Park Stud) to Glenn Burrows, so I stayed and worked for him for four years.” - Roger Boulton

“From there, I got in contact with John Sunderland at Darley. It was 2004 and they were the new kids on the block. I went for an interview and I’ve been with them ever since.

“We never intended to stay this long, it’s just rolled on. I’ve been fortunate enough to work for Darley, as well as (employees) John Sunderland and Barley Ward-Thomas; it’s a privilege to work for them.”

Boulton is known as a man for all occasions and his skills and experience in horsemanship have enabled him to work in all facets of the company’s breeding system.

Roger Boulton pictured with Exceed And Excel

He has overseen Godolphin’s mare preparation for breeding for some 15 years.

“I make sure all of the mares that should be there are there. I ID them and send them through to get covered,” he said.

“There’s also a lot of vet work done, to get the mares as near as we can to ovulation.”

Boulton also works with Darley’s stallions.

Asked if he has a favourite, the Englishman didn’t hesitate.

“The first horse I ever looked after was Street Cry. He was a bit of a rough, old character, but I liked him. You always knew he wanted to bite you, he didn’t hide the fact, but it didn’t bother me,” said Boulton.

Street Cry (Ire) | Image courtesy of Darley

“I had some enjoyable times with Street Cry.

“And Exceed And Excel is a nice character, he’s a bit of a gentleman, really.

“He’s 22 and still at the top of his game.”

Godolphin Australia
Darley
Roger Boulton
HTBA
Hunter Thoroughbreds Breeders’ Association

Black type fields: Scone

1 min read

Listed Scone Cup, $200,000, 1600m

Black type fields
Scone

Daily News Wrap

16 min read

Dissident, Sizzling at $5500 on Riverdene roster

Wagga-based Riverdene Stud has announced its stallion roster for 2023, with both Dissident and Sizzling confirmed at $5500 (inc GST). Both have been slightly reduced from their 2022 figures of $6600 (inc GST), despite healthy support and encouraging results.

Gallery: Stallions standing at Riverdene Stud in 2023

“I think we have two stallions priced right for the breed-to-race people,” said the stud’s manager, Amanda Elliott. “These horses give them an opportunity to get to stallions representing Australia’s leading sirelines and with Group 1 race-winning ability, including an Australian Horse of the Year.”

Former Horse of the Year Dissident ranks regularly among the top 20 Australian stallions for individual winners. He has posted 74 winners this season so far, with that figure consistent with his previous two seasons of 89 and 79 winners respectively.

Sizzling, meanwhile, is approaching 50 individual winners for the current season, which is tracking with previous efforts of 65 last year and 59 the season before. His current posterboy is Sizzle Minizzle, who won the $500,000 Country Championships Final at Randwick in the autumn. His Group-performed daughter, Blazing Miss, was a recent transaction at the Inglis Chairman’s Sale, reaching $590,000 when selling to Belmont Bloodstock (FBAA) from the Newgate Consignment draft.

Grenville Stud announces 2023 service fees

Tasmania’s Grenville Stud will stand two stallions in 2023, namely Stratosphere and Zululand.

Gallery: Stallions standing at Grenville Stud in 2023

Stratosphere, who has made a big early impression on the 'apple isle', has received a small fee increase, going from $4400 (inc GST) to $7700 (inc GST). His progeny averaged over $53,000 (in excess of 13 times his service fee) at the 2023 Magic Millions Tasmanian Yearling Sale, with a 100 per cent clearance rate demonstrating the huge demand for his progeny. He has dominated the 2-year-old ranks in Tasmania this season with four individual winners and two stakes performers from his first six runners.

Zululand, meanwhile, will stand at a reduced fee of $4400 (inc GST), having commanded $5500 (inc GST) last year. Fees are payable within 30 days of live foal.

Veteran sprinter scratched from Brisbane Group 1

Trainer Joseph Pride announced via Twitter on Thursday that his dual Group 1 winner Eduardo (Host {Chi}) won’t take his place in Saturday’s G1 Doomben 10,000. The 9-year-old was slated to break from the outside gate (11).

“Eduardo won’t run in the Doomben 10,000. Wide draw, poor make-up of race for him,” Pride tweeted. “Will instead trial and Kingsford-Smith the likely option.”

Hundreds of new jobs for the Victorian racing industry

The Victorian State Government has pledged over $3 million to help put up to 200 people to work in racing stables. The announcement was made at Matt Cumani’s Ballarat stables on Thursday by Racing Minister Anthony Carbines.

“We’re backing a strong racing industry and this program is a fantastic boost, investing in local jobs to ensure the industry can continue to thrive,” Carbines said.

The Minister for Employment, Ben Carroll, added: “Jobs Victoria plays a critical role in helping job-seekers get back into work by pairing them with employers and supporting them throughout the program to get the most out of their new career.”

Ballarat trainers will be the big winner with 100 workers to be placed with stables in the area. Workers will undergo paid training, including through Racing Victoria’s Stable Start program so they are fully licensed and educated.

Chittick in no rush with I Wish I Win

Waikato Stud principal Mark Chittick has confirmed he has received a number of approaches from The Everest slotholders regarding his G1 TJ Smith S. champion I Wish I Win (NZ) (Savabeel), but he insists a deal is not imminent.

I Wish I Win (NZ) (white, blue and green silks) | Image courtesy of Ashlea Brennan

“We actually had a couple more approaches this week,” Chittick told News Corp. “I know some people want us to make a decision about The Everest for I Wish I Win, but we don’t have to rush into it. The horse is in the spelling paddock and the race is not until October. I Wish I Win is not going anywhere and the race is not going anywhere. I can tell you a deal is not imminent.

“We’ve had a few slotholders contact us now so there is no problem getting the horse into The Everest. We just want to make sure we look closely at every offer and consider all the information.”

Kersley to be sidelined after trackwork fall

Victorian-based jockey Fred Kersley will miss at least the next month after a trackwork fall at Flemington on Wednesday morning. Scans on Thursday confirmed Kersley has a small fracture to his left ankle.

“Fred is in good spirits and will be undergoing a small surgical procedure in the coming days,” a statement said.

Opal Ridge ready for the Luskin Star challenge

Scone trainer Luke Pepper has his 3-year-old filly Opal Ridge (Rubick) against the older horses in Saturday’s Listed Luskin Star S. at home, but he’s confident his five-time winner will be up to the task. Opal Ridge has won half of her 10 starts to date, including the Listed Darby Munro S. on March 18. She has since been fourth and fifth at Group 3 level at Randwick.

“She’s been so versatile her whole career,” Pepper told journalist Ray Hickson. “I thought she was suited more with a nice, light weight on her back in the Luskin Star. There’s not much that she can’t do, so if there’s a horse I’d be confident about taking on older horses with, it’s her.”

Opal Ridge is looking at a possible Queensland start next time out after Saturday. Dylan Gibbons will ride the filly this weekend in a field that also includes the Godolphin gelding Tamerlane (Golden Horn {GB}) and the Waikato Stud gelding Waihaha Falls (NZ) (Sacred Falls {NZ}).

Neasham’s Queensland runners on a high

After last weekend’s record-breaking efforts by Zaaki (GB) (Leroidesanimaux {Brz}) in the G2 Hollindale S., Annabel Neasham’s Queensland yard is on a high. This Saturday, the Sydney trainer has the Harry Angel (Ire) gelding Addriel in the G2 Spirit Of Boom Classic at Doomben for the juveniles, and assistant trainer Todd Pollard has said the last-start Ipswich winner could be competitive in his first attempt at stakes company.

“It’s probably a throw at the stumps but he was impressive on Saturday (at Ipswich),” Pollard said. “We didn’t expect him to win as well as he did, but he justified the short quote. He will need to be at his best, but if he could run top three in a race like this, that would be great for the owners.”

Addriel is raced by Peachester Lodge, who bought him for $100,000 from a Coolmore draft at the 2022 Magic Millions Gold Coast Yearling Sale.

BOBS nominations open

BOBS, the New South Wales-based Breeder Owner Bonus Scheme, is now open for nominations for horses foaled in 2021 that will be 2-year-olds from August 1, 2023. The nomination period will close on Friday, September 1, and includes BOBS Extra.

To date, BOBS has paid a total of $174 million in bonuses across the state, with the top BOBS earner in the last racing season being the Snowden-trained Mazu (Maurice {Jpn}) with $90,000 in bonuses won.

Sheeza Belter to trial ahead of Tiara

Retired trainer Justin Warwick has said his smart filly Sheeza Belter (Gold Standard) will trial this Monday ahead of her Brisbane campaign, which will see her attempt the G1 Tattersall's Tiara. In advance of that race, Sheeza Belter will go around in Listed company before the G2 Dane Ripper S.

Sheeza Belter (black and red silks) | Image courtesy of Ashlea Brennan

“She might go on afterwards, but the Tatt's Tiara is the race we want to win,” Warwick said. “It would be nice if she could win a Group 1 as a two-and 3-year-old.”

Think About It ready for Group 1 class

Joseph Pride’s smart gelding Think About It, a son of So You Think (NZ), will next tackle the Group 1 pair of the Kingsford-Smith Cup and Stradbroke H. during the Queensland carnival. The 4-year-old was a winner last weekend of the Listed Takeover Target S. at Gosford, his first appearance since his G3 Liverpool Cup win in February. His respectable record now reads seven wins from eight-lifetime starts.

“He’s experienced quite a few things in a short racing career where he’s been asked to go to a lot of different tracks,” Pride told Sky Racing. “He’s still got a little mountain to climb there (stepping up in grade), and you never take it for granted that a horse is going to take that leap from whatever grade they’re in into the higher grade. But he does shape as a horse who’s got plenty of the requirements and ingredients in place to be able to make that transition.”

Juvenile winner for Your Song

The 2-year-old gelding Super News led home a juvenile field at Wyong on Thursday for his sire, the Gooree Park Stud-based Your Song. Trained locally by Kim Waugh, the horse was on debut and won by 1.06l with jockey Jay Ford, leading home the well-bred Absolute Power (I Am Invincible) for Tulloch Lodge and the Freedman-trained Ramius (Russian Revolution).

Super News is from the Clang mare Wonderful News, a half-sister to the stakes winner Oxford Poet (Dylan Thomas {Ire}). He wasn’t offered as a yearling.

Juvenile winner for Cable Bay

Pakenham’s juvenile feature on Thursday evening posted a tidy result for the former shuttler Cable Bay (Ire), who last shuttled to Australia in 2020. Tiz Time, a 2-year-old filly for trainer Andrea Leek, rolled Grahame Begg's hot favourite Miraval Rose (Grunt {NZ}) by 1.25l, with the Dundeel (NZ) colt Et Tu Brute racing on for third.

Tiz Time was on her second start after a debut last month that saw her finish second. The filly was a $6500 weanling purchase for her owner, Adam Stevens, on Inglis Digital in May 2021. She is from the Snitzel mare Tiz My View, herself a daughter of the American stakes winner Miss Tizzy (USA) (Cee’s Tizzy {USA}).

Derby favourite She’s Fit works well

Trainer Daniel Morton watched his South Australian Derby favourite She’s Fit, a daughter of Pride Of Dubai, work well earlier this week during trackwork, promising a good effort in the Group 1 contest this Saturday.

She's Fit after winning the G3 Western Australian Oaks | Image courtesy of Western Racepix

“She had a short, sharp gallop over 600 metres,” Morton told The Races WA. “I haven’t seen her in a while and I’m rapt with how she looks and is going. She has come on since the Australasian Oaks.”

She’s Fit, a winner of the G3 Western Australian Oaks in late March, was second to Affaire A Suivre (NZ) (Astern) in the G1 Australasian Oaks on April 29. She is currently second-favourite behind Loco (So You Think {NZ}) in Saturday’s race at Morphettville.

Fifth SA Derby for John Allen?

Jockey John Allen has drawn perfectly this Saturday aboard High Approach (Highland Reel {Ire}) in the G1 South Australian Derby as he chases a fifth victory in the blue riband, and a third straight South Australian Group 1. Allen was successful in 2021 aboard Explosive Jack (NZ) (Jakkalberry {Ire}) and in 2020 aboard Russian Camelot (Ire) (Camelot {GB}). Previous to that, he won the race on Volatile Mix (NZ) (Pentire {GB}) in 2017 and on Howard Be Thy Name (Redoute’s Choice) in 2016.

On Saturday, High Approach has drawn barrier five for his new trainer, Dan O’Sullivan, and he’s currently $15 in the market. The horse was a winner of the Listed TAB Trophy last year and is lightly raced with just nine starts to his name.

Brad Parnham out for WA jockeys’ title

Jockey Brad Parnham is vying for the Perth jockeys’ premiership this winter after riding one of the best seasons of his career to date. Parnham has ridden 52 city winners, coasting past his career-best figure of 45, which he set last season. He will have to overcome William Pike in the next two months, Pike is a multiple winner of the Western Australian title and currently leading with 57 winners, while Parnham’s younger brother Chris is the defending title holder and currently sitting on 51 winners.

Brad Parnham | Image courtesy of Racing & Wagering Western Australia (RWWA)

“He’s a hard man to beat, you know what he’s like,” Parnham told The Races WA, speaking about Pike. “It’s always been a goal of mine, but Pikey has been so dominant throughout my career. It would be the highlight of my career and one of the things I would love to achieve if I could do it.”

Stradbroke aim for Waihaha Falls

The John O’Shea-trained Waihaha Falls (NZ) (Sacred Falls {NZ}) is aiming to land a spot in the G1 Stradbroke H. when he contests the Listed Luskin Star S. at Scone on Saturday. Raced by Waikato Stud in conjunction with Hawke’s Bay trainer Guy Lowry, the gelding has won four of his 14 starts for four placings.

Waihaha Falls (NZ) | Image courtesy of Ashlea Brennan

“He is probably better getting his toe in, but he’s in such great form,” O’Shea told SEN Track. “I think it’s (the G1 Stradbroke H.) a perfect race for him and he is probably second-tier handicap level where he gets down in the weights with a fast-run race and a long run-in.”

Waihaha Falls was a last-start second in the G3 Hall Mark S. He has Chad Schofield and barrier five on Saturday.

The Intimidator sold to Hong Kong

Andrew Forsman has lost his promising 3-year-old The Intimidator (NZ) (Toronado {Ire}) to Hong Kong, the gelding running a last-start fifth in the G1 Levin Classic before his sale to Asia. The deal was brokered by Waikato bloodstock agent Stuart Hale.

“It does get harder when you get out of racing against your own age group, but he’s the sort of horse that is going to strengthen up and develop, and hopefully he can go up there and have a good career,” Forsman told NZ Racing Desk.

The Intimidator (NZ) (black cap) | Image courtesy of Trish Dunell

The Intimidator won the Listed Mufhasa S. and was placed in both the G3 Bonecrusher S. and Listed Uncle Remus S.

Positive swab news to be public sooner

On Tuesday, the New York Times revealed that the hot 3-year-old Forte (USA) (Violence {USA}), a sensational scratching from last Saturday’s G1 Kentucky Derby, had returned a positive swab after his victory in the G1 Hopeful S. in September last year. In a press release dated Wednesday, however, America’s Horseracing Integrity & Welfare Unit (HIWU) said that such results will no longer be kept from public knowledge as of May 22, following the implementation of the Horseracing Integrity and Safety Authority's (HISA) Anti-Doping and Medication Control Program.

Specific rules will be in place from May 22 whereby violations will be published on the HIWU website when the party in question waives its right to a B sample, when a B sample is requested by the party in question and returned, or following the admission of a violation, whichever occurs earliest. Public reporting will occur at the earliest of a number of specific situations, which were outlined by HIWU.

Forte (USA) ahead of his running in the G1 Hopeful S. last September | Image courtesy of Sarah Andrew

Additionally, in the case of all medical violations, the public disclosure will include details of the substance responsible for the violation. So far, the details of the positive swab by Forte are unknown. The B sample is typically sent for testing when the A sample returns positive, which in this case occurred back in September.

Marwan Koukash removed as registered owner

The one-time prolific owner Marwan Koukash has been removed as a registered owner by the British Horseracing Authority (BHA) due to bankruptcy declaration, according to published reports on Wednesday. The 69-year-old Palestinian won the Chester Cup four times between 2008 and 2018.

Koukash holds a PhD in electrical engineering and at one time owned a Salford rugby team, as well as a string of hotels in the United Kingdom. His bankruptcy petition was filed in June last year and granted in September. Koukash had his final British runner in November, with the BHA stripping his registration as soon as news of his bankruptcy emerged.

Savethelastdance routs Cheshire Oaks rivals

Ballydoyle filly Savethelastdance (Ire), a daughter of Galileo (Ire), has firmed her position as an Epsom Oaks fancy after routing her rivals on Wednesday in the Listed Cheshire Oaks at Chester. The 3-year-old was bustled along early by Ryan Moore before edging into the lead and clearing away to post a 22l victory over the Starspangledbanner filly There’s The Door (Ire) and the Golden Horn (GB) filly Ermesinde (Ire).

“I was very impressed, and you can only be impressed by what she’s done there,” Moore said. “They kind of all gave up with a half-mile to go and she was just getting going, but she gave me a very good feel. She’s probably given me as good a feel in this race as the ones I’ve ridden in it before.”

Savethelastdance is the first of three foals to date for the G1 American Oaks winner Daddys Lil Darling (USA) (Scat Daddy {USA}), herself a half-sister to the G1 Breeders’ Cup Turf Sprint winner Mongolian Saturday (USA) (Any Given Saturday {USA}).

Chester Vase winner a potential Derby colt

The Frankel (GB) colt Arrest (Ire) was impressive on Wednesday for jockey Frankie Dettori when winning the G3 Chester Vase ahead of his next-start effort in the G1 Epsom Derby. Arrest posted a 6.5l victory over Ballydoyle’s Adelaide River (Ire) (Australia {GB}), with Hadrianus (Ire) (Galileo {Ire}) a further 10l in arrears.

“He’s a delightful colt,” said co-trainer John Gosden. “He’s done nothing but mature and improve. It was the full mile-and-a-half today and we’ll leave all options open for Epsom. I think he enjoyed the ground and if Epsom was fast, I don’t think he’d enjoy that sort of surface. We put him in the Arc on Tuesday and he’s got scope to train on at three, four and five.”

Arrest is from an unraced half-sister to the dual Group 1 placegetter Narniyn (Ire) (Dubawi {Ire}). He is raced by the Juddmonte operation after he was purchased for €440,000 (AU$715,000) as a Goffs November foal.

Daily News Wrap

Looking Ahead - May 12

4 min read

Looking Ahead puts the spotlight on runners of interest across Australia and New Zealand. Whether they are a particularly well-bred or high-priced runner having their first or second start, a promising galloper returning to the track or a horse which has trialled particularly well, we’ll aim to give you something to follow.

Friday at Albury, we look at a filly for Mitchell Beer who has an Oaks-littered family, plus a filly at Geelong who is a daughter of the remarkable, six-time stakes-producer Imposingly (Zabeel {NZ}). At Scone, in the $200,000 juvenile feature, we pay attention to a filly whose dam is a three-quarter sister to a Blue Diamond winner.

Albury, Race 1, 12.39pm AEST, Twin City Truck Centre Country Boosted Mdn, $30,000, 1400m

Ponder The Stars, 3-year-old filly (So You Think {NZ} x Betelgeuse {Darci Brahma {NZ}})

This filly is the first foal from the Darci Brahma (NZ) mare Betelguese, who is a full sister to the G1 Australian Oaks winner Gust Of Wind (NZ). The latter was a smart filly, running fourth to Mongolian Khan in the Caulfield Cup. This family also features the G1 Irish Oaks-placed filly Starbourne (Ire) (Sadler’s Wells {USA}), as well as Lady Carla (GB) (Caerleon {USA}), a winner of the G1 Epsom Oaks.

Ponder The Stars was bred by Willaroon Thoroughbreds and consigned to the 2021 Magic Millions Adelaide Yearling Sale. She was bought for $45,000 by Mitch Beer Racing and Heywood Bloodstock.

Ponder The Stars as a yearling | Image courtesy of Magic Millions

The filly is trained at Albury by Mitch Beer and she began trialling last October. She was a last-start fourth in a trial at Wagga on April 12, and in this debut, she has jockey Jordan Mallyon from barrier nine.

Geelong, Race 5, 2.55pm AEST, Asahi Lifestyle Beverages Mdn, $27,000, 1443m

Pinotage, 3-year-old filly (Pierro x Imposingly {Zabeel {NZ}})

Where to begin with this pedigree! Three-year-old Pinotage is from the Zabeel (NZ) producer Imposingly, who was New Zealand Broodmare of the Year in 2016/17. This filly is a half-sister to the Champion 3YO and Champion Stayer Bonneval (NZ) (Makfi {GB}), along with the Group 2 winner Lord Arthur, Group 3 winners Lady Cumquat (Duke Of Marmalade {Ire}), Full Of Spirit (Flying Spur) and Imposing Lass (NZ) (Makfi {GB}), and the Listed-winning, Group 1-placed Frontman (NZ) (Makfi {GB}).

Pinotage is a homebred for breeder Peter Newsom. Her dam, Imposingly, was purchased from Rob McAnulty when she finished racing. She has since produced six stakes winners for 12 stakes wins as a three-quarter sister to the Group 1 winners St Reims (NZ) and Champagne (NZ) (Zabeel {NZ}), the latter the dam of two stakes winners and the grandam of the Kiwi Group 1 winner Charmont (NZ) (High Chaparral {Ire}).

Pierro | Standing at Coolmore

Pinotage is trained by Mike Moroney at Flemington. She will debut in this race with jockey Robbie Downey from barrier six.

Scone, Race 4, 2.10pm AEST, Inglis 2YO Challenge, $200,000, 1100m

Lulumon, 2-year-old filly (Vancouver x For Lulu {Fastnet Rock})

This filly was bred by Colm Santry from the Fastnet Rock mare For Lulu, whose claim to fame is via her three-quarter sister, the G1 Blue Diamond winner Catchy (Fastnet Rock). For Robert Crabtree, Catchy won a further three Group races and was third at Group 1 level twice. Catchy’s dam, the second dam on this page, is Cats Whisker (Fusaichi Pegasus {USA}), who herself won three Group races and was second in the G1 Thousand Guineas at Caulfield.

Santry consigned this filly to Coolmore’s draft at the 2022 Inglis HTBA May Yearling Sale, where she was bought by Jason Coyle Racing for $50,000.

Lulumon as a yearling | Image courtesy of Inglis

Lulumon is unraced and trained by Coyle at Warwick Farm. She was a trial winner over 900 metres at Rosehill on April 28, and she comes into this debut with barrier four and jockey Kathy O’Hara.

Looking Back

Our Looking Ahead selections on Thursday went only fairly. At Kilmore, Nitrogen (Lonhro) was unplaced, while Absolute Power (I Am Invincible) was second at Wyong. At Pakenham, Delure (Dundeel {NZ}) was also unplaced.

Looking Ahead
Looking Back

Debutants

1 min read
First-time starters lining up on Friday, May 12

2YO & 3YO Winners by Sire

Winners by Sire

First Season Sire Runners & Results

1 min read

First Season Sires’ Results

Results: Thursday, May 11

First Season Sires’ Runners

Runners: Friday, May 12
First Season Sire Results
First Season Sire Runners

Second Season Sire Runners & Results

Second Season Sires’ Results

Results: Thursday, May 11

Second Season Sires’ Runners

Runners: Friday, May 12

Second Season Sire Results
Second Season Sire Runners

NSW Race Results

Wyong (Provincial)

Race result inclusion criteria: all city and provincial races, + country maiden, 3YO & feature races ($15,000) run before 6pm AEST

VIC Race Results

bet365 Park Kilmore (Country)

Sportsbet-Pakenham (night) (Country)

Race result inclusion criteria: all city and provincial races, + country maiden, 3YO & feature races ($15,000) run before 6pm AEST

QLD Race Results

Cairns (Provincial)

Race result inclusion criteria: all city and provincial races, + country maiden, 3YO & feature races ($15,000) run before 6pm AEST

WA Race Results

York (Provincial)

Race result inclusion criteria: all city and provincial races, + country maiden, 3YO & feature races ($15,000) run before 6pm AEST

Australian Sires' Premiership

Australian General Sires' Premiership

New Zealand Sires' Premiership

New Zealand General Sires' Premiership

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