$525k Harry Angel pinhook result concludes yearling sale season on a high note

14 min read
The 2025 Magic Millions National Yearling Sale concluded on Tuesday with solid results despite a challenging market. Harry Angel emerged as the standout sire on Day 2, highlighted by a colt that sold for $525,000, while Extreme Choice continued his strong commercial run, siring three of the top five lots overall. In total, 21 yearlings sold for $100,000 or more, up from 17 in 2024, underscoring strong buyer demand at the top end of the market.

Cover image courtesy of Magic Millions

At A Glance

The final yearling sale of 2025 concluded on the Gold Coast with 21 yearlings selling for over $100,000, up from 17 in 2024. Overall, 249 of the 381 catalogued were sold, up in volume from 2024 where 195 of 328 were sold.

The clearance rate after the last lot walked through the ring was 76 per cent, higher than last year’s figure at the same point of 71 per cent.

Despite two lots making more than last year’s sale topping figure of $400,000, at $850,000 and $520,000 respectively, the sale average was down at $41,434 compared to $42,869 in 2024 and $45,510 in 2023.

The median price also fell to $25,000 from 2024’s median of $28,000, but with a larger volume and improved clearance rate, the gross rose to $10.3 million, up from $8.3 million in 2024.

Baramul Stud were the leading vendors by gross, selling 23 yearlings for $2 million, while Longwood Thoroughbreds were the leading vendor by average (2 or more sold) selling three yearlings for $315,000, and average of $105,000.

Yulong’s sole purchase of the sale topper made them the leading buyer by gross, spending $850,000. Next in was Magic Millions China representative Amy Feng who spent $624,000 on 11 yearlings. The leading buyer by average (2 or more bought) was Springwood who spent an average of $190,000 each on two yearlings, and the leading buyer by volume was the Selangor Turf Club who purchased 13 yearlings.

Extreme Choice lead the stallion results by gross and average with all five of his yearlings catalogued selling for $1.57 million at an average of $314,000. Pinatubo was the leading first season sire, by average, with two yearlings averaging $67,500.

Bowditch: ‘Today was another good, solid day’s trade’

Overall, the Magic Millions National Yearling Sale could be classed as a success. Across the two days of selling at the National Yearling Sale (Book 1), some 249 lots sold at an average price of $41,434 to provide a gross of over $10.3 million - $2 million more than last year’s corresponding sale. The clearance rate currently sits at over 76 per cent, which is up from last year’s 71 per cent.

“I thought today was another good, solid day’s trade,” Magic Millions Managing Director Barry Bowditch said. “Obviously the $525,000 for Alma Vale’s lovely Harry Angel colt to Manfred Man was an outstanding result.

“All in all, to have a clearance rate of 76 per cent and a gross of over $10 million, which is well up on last year, and to have at least 112 horses sell internationally is a huge effort.”

Barry Bowditch | Image courtesy of The image Is Everything

The National Yearling Sale is always well linked with overseas buyers and Bowditch was keen to touch on that

“It was great to see $1.7 million worth of horses to Hong Kong – a million up on last year. We have to thank our international agents and obviously David Chester for his efforts.

“We’ve been so pleased,” Bowditch said. “From the weanlings, which was an outstanding sale, through to the mares, which was quite extraordinary with 24 million-dollar-plus lots, and to the yearlings today and yesterday.

“Nearly $120 million worth of horses with almost 900 horses sold – it’s an outstanding effort.

“We have to thank all our vendors for supporting the sale. The buyers who have turned up globally and domestically – and all of the staff who have helped the breeders out to get their horses here.

“We have to thank all our vendors for supporting the sale. The buyers who have turned up globally and domestically.” - Barry Bowditch

“We are pleased we have been able to pull it all together again in 2025,” Bowditch added.

Life-changing result as Harry Angel pinhook goes from $1500 to $525,000

It was an extraordinary result on Day 2 of the Magic Millions National Yearling Sale, as Lot 1472 , a lovely colt by Harry Angel (Ire) out of Enclosure (NZ) (Postponed {USA}), sold for $525,000 to leading Hong Kong trainer Manfred Man.

Alma Vale Thoroughbreds offered the colt on behalf of Temerity Park, who had purchased him for just $1500 as a weanling from Sledmere Stud’s draft at the 2024 Inglis Australian Weanling Sale. The return marked an incredible profit of 350 times the original purchase price.

Alma Vale Thoroughbreds’ Stud Manager, Oscar Engelbrecht, was understandably slightly shocked, but thrilled after the sale.

Lot 1472 - Harry Angel (Ire) x Enclosure (NZ) (colt) | Image courtesy of Magic Millions

“The result is incredible, that is what dreams are made of, it really is life-changing for the owners, Temerity Park,” Engelbrecht said.

“It’s good to finish the year on such a high note. We’ve (Alma Vale) had a very good year, and huge credit has to go to everyone involved. It takes a lot of work to get these results, not just from the team at the sales, but everyone back home as well.

“We’re absolutely rapt, and very happy to get the result for such good people.”

“We’re absolutely rapt, and very happy to get the result for such good people.” - Oscar Engelbrecht

Engelbrecht praised the professionalism of the colt, the form of his sire, and noted the strong interest in inspection during the week.

“Harry Angel is doing a really good job, and this colt was so professional throughout the week, the underbidder looked at him seven times,” he said.

Oscar Engelbrecht | Image courtesy of Alma Vale Thoroughbred

“The beauty of live auction action was on full display, when two people want the horse, they’re willing to pay for it.”

Reflecting on the incredible financial turnaround, Engelbrecht added:

“A $1500 weanling into a $525,000 yearling – it could quite possibly be one of the best pinhooks ever.

“When the stars align, it can go really well. It’s a huge team effort, and we have a great team that works extremely hard.”

The colt also boasts a deep pedigree. His grandam, Wrap Around (Bletchingly), was a nine-time winner, including victory in the G1 William Reid Stakes. She produced six individual winners and is part of a family that includes the Group 1 winner Fashions Afield (Redoute’s Choice) and high-class stakes winners such as, Runway Star (Northern Meteor), What You Need (Supido), Fashion Legend (Deep Field), Kiss And Make Up and Imelda Mary (NZ) (Ferlax {NZ}).

Lot 1352 - Harry Angel (Ire) x Turnstiles (NZ) (colt) | Image courtesy of Magic Millions

It wasn’t the only strong result for Harry Angel on the day. Lot 1352, offered by Aristia Park, sold for $100,000 to Shane McGrath Bloodstock and Clinton McDonald Racing. This athletic colt is the eighth foal out of Turnstiles (NZ) (Anabaa {USA}), a five-time winner who was also Listed placed.

She has already produced four winners, including the Melbourne Group performers Revolving Door (Sebring) and Golden Spin (Medaglia D’Oro {USA}). The broader family includes the Group 2 winner and Group 1 placed sprinter Vangelic (Vancouver).

Harry Angel has been in outstanding form this season and sits seventh on the Australian General Sires’ Premiership. He boasts six individual stakes winners this term, headlined by the Group 1-winning gelding Tom Kitten, the G1 Galaxy Handicap winner Private Harry who Yulong Stud have now bought into, and Angel Capital who has now been purchased outright by Yulong Stud.

Harry Angel stands at Darley Stud this season at a fee of $66,000 (inc GST), and with the strength of his current racetrack and sales results, demand is expected to be strong.

Harry Angel (Ire) | Image courtesy of Darley

Triple Crown rounds out a multi-million-dollar selling week with buying success

It’s been a week to remember for Triple Crown Syndications, who opened their account with strong results at the Magic Millions National Broodmare Sale, selling three mares for a combined $2.58 million. Among the trio was the high-class Revolutionary Miss (Russian Revolution), who fetched $1.6 million, while Miss Hellfire (Hellbent) sold for $640,000 and Aemelius (Hellbent) cost her new owners $340,000, capping off a lucrative few days for the popular syndication team.

Gallery: High-class mares sold by Triple Crown Syndications at the Magic Millions Gold Coast National Broodmare Sale

The team’s momentum continued into the National Yearling Sale, where they were active on the buying bench, securing three yearlings they had specifically targeted before the sale.

Sam Manion of Triple Crown was delighted with the outcome, particularly with Lot 1406, the Hellbent filly purchased from the Attunga Stud draft for $145,000. She is out of the three-time winner Beside You (Ready’s Image {USA}) and is a full sister to Marokopa Falls (Hellbent), who was a debut winner and Group-placed as a juvenile in the G2 Wakefield Challenge Stakes and ran fourth in the G2 Matamata Breeders’ Stakes.

“The Hellbent filly is a lovely type,” Manion said. “We sold two Hellbent mares very well last week (Miss Hellfire and Aemelius) and one of them we had also bought off Attunga like this one.

Sam Manion | Image courtesy of Triple Crown

"We love Hellbent fillies and we were pretty keen to get this one. Te Akau have the full sister who is smart, and I think Te Akau were the underbidders for this one. We are very pleased, we liked her, and we have owners that are very keen on Hellbent, which helps make selling them easier.”

The team also secured Lot 1132 by Castelvecchio from Arrowfield Stud for $100,000 on Monday, a horse that had impressed them during on-farm inspections.

“He is a nice type, lovely mover and a really relaxed colt,” Manion said. “We saw him at the farm (Arrowfield Stud) and we thought he was the pick of their draft, and we were keen to have him. We were actually blown away that we could get him for $100,000.”

Lot 1132 - Castelvecchio x Holiday Romance (colt) | Image courtesy of Magic Millions

Rounding out the week’s buying activity was a D’Argento filly from Bowness Stud, picked up for $42,000.

“The last couple of years we have liked targeting this sale, picking your mark and trying to get some nice stock,” Manion said. “We picked three beforehand and managed to get them all, including a D’Argento filly for a relatively cheap price, and we are over the moon with all three of them.”

“The last couple of years we have liked targeting this sale, picking your mark and trying to get some nice stock,” - Sam Manion

Triple Crown’s week could finish on an even higher note, with Firm Agreement (Yes Yes Yes) heading into Saturday’s rescheduled G1 Queensland Derby as a genuine winning chance. Already a runner-up in the G1 Australian Derby, the Annabel and Rob Archibald-trained gelding shapes as one of the leading hopes in a competitive edition of the race.

“We have had a fabulous week and hopefully it carries on to Saturday and we can win the Derby,” Manion said. “We think he is a red-hot chance, he will handle a soft track and delaying the race a week has definitely given him a better chance.”

Farnan makes his presence felt on Day 2

After promising first-season sires Cool Aza Beel (NZ) and Ole Kirk made headlines on Day 1 of the Magic Millions National Yearling Sale with strong six-figure results, it was Farnan’s turn to shine on Day 2 as buyers' thirst for runners by young sires that have made a promising start with their juveniles continued.

Lot 1413, a well-related colt by Farnan, was offered by Evergreen Stud Farm and secured by Gai Waterhouse & Adrian Bott Racing in partnership with Kestrel Thoroughbreds for $150,000.

The colt is the ninth foal out of Bound To Blush (Strategic), a four-time winner who strung three of those wins together and placed in several black-type events including the G3 Glenlogan Park Stakes, Listed Razor Sharp Handicap, Listed James HB Carr Stakes, Listed Tatt's RC Travel Associates Classic, and the Listed Hawkesbury Guineas.

Lot 1413 - Farnan x Bound to Blush (colt) | Image courtesy of Magic Millions

She has already produced four winners, notably Final AwardGon Sai Baau (Mac.) (Smart Missile), a Listed Canberra Guineas winner and nine-time winner across Australia and Macau, and Happy Fat Cat (Shalaa {Ire}), a prolific nine-time winning sprinter in Hong Kong.

Bruce Slade of Kestrel Thoroughbreds was enthusiastic about the colt and the stallion’s early success.

“Really nice Farnan colt, we are a fan of the stallion and he has been good to us with his first crop of 2-year-olds. We have North Of England who won the Golden Gift and The Kindergarten, Farnicle ran a huge race in the Sires’ Produce last Saturday and we think he will be even better in the JJ Atkins in a couple of weeks, and Farcited of course, who was second in the Black Opal and ran in the Slipper for us this year.

“So, amongst a few others in the 2-year-old ranks that we like, and a new group of yearlings by him coming through, we really rate them.

Bruce Slade | Image courtesy of The Image Is Everything

"Adrian and Gai think they are really good to deal with, really straightforward, easy to train, and importantly, have speed and an engine, so we are happy to keep buying them.”

On the colt’s maternal line, Slade added:

“The mare’s done a really good job. It's an old Gooree Stud mare that we have had a bit to do with over the years, going way back for the team.

“He was born in November, but he is very forward. We can break him in now, and it won’t take him too long to catch up based on his physicality.”

Slade also felt the colt represented excellent value.

“We think he was good buying. We think that had this horse been in one of the earlier sales, he may have made considerably more, so we got good value.

“We think he (Lot 1413) was good buying. We think that had this horse been in one of the earlier sales, he may have made considerably more, so we got good value.” - Bruce Slade

“Understandably, at this time of year, everyone has their stocking full and there isn’t as much appetite or demand to buy these young horses, so naturally they don’t make quite as much.”

That wasn’t the only purchase for the Waterhouse and Bott–Kestrel Thoroughbreds combination. On Day 1, they teamed up with First Light Racing to secure Lot 1296, a Northern Hemisphere-bred filly by Extreme Choice out of Sheza Shamardal (Shamardal {USA}) from the draft of Infinity Thoroughbreds, for $160,000.

Lot 1296 - Extreme Choice x Sheza Shamardal (filly) | Image courtesy of Magic Millions

With bold ambitions, the team has Royal Ascot in their sights.

“It’s a big dream, but quite pragmatic on how we approached the plan, logically there are some significant advantages that we could tap into targeting some European 2-year-old races out of Australia,” Slade explained.

“With that being our natural precocity over here, through our genetics, we are commercially invested in precocity and speed in Australia. We have a much warmer climate, which is conducive to quicker growth and more muscle mass.

“That, along with being able to educate her well ahead of her counterparts in the Northern Hemisphere and the fact that she is by Extreme Choice, gives us a lot of strong pointers to possibly have a two-year-old raid on the Northern Hemisphere from Tulloch Lodge.”

While Royal Ascot is the dream, Slade is realistic about alternative pathways for the filly.

“At the same time, if that dream doesn’t come true, there are still plenty of other options for her. Extreme Choice has averaged around $500,000 this year at the yearling sales, and we purchased her for $160,000. She was top-class, and if she isn’t really a two-year-old, there are so many options as a three, four and five-year-old. She has scope and a great action, and she looks like she could be effective up to a mile.

“She (Lot 1296) was top-class, and if she isn’t really a two-year-old, there are so many options as a three, four and five-year-old.” - Bruce Slade

“But who is to say we can’t dream and have a crack, and you can never count Gai out of pulling something spectacular - an Australian-raised Royal Ascot runner would be pretty cool.”

Top lots

1282Extreme Choice (AUS)Samarmeteors (AUS)Baramul Stud, Widden Valley, NSWCh.CYu Long Investments (Australia) Pty LtdVIC $ 850,000
1472Harry Angel (IRE)Enclosure (NZ)Alma Vale Thoroughbreds, Scone, NSW (As Agent)B.CManfred ManHONG KONG $ 525,000
1263Extreme Choice (AUS)Queen Magdalene (AUS)Baramul Stud, Widden Valley, NSWB.FSpringwoodNSW $ 240,000
1144Nicconi (AUS)I'm Gunna Cashew (AUS)Lyndhurst Stud Farm, Warwick, QldCh.CRobl Racing Pty LtdQLD $ 190,000
1334Extreme Choice (AUS)Telepathic (NZ)Baramul Stud, Widden Valley, NSWB.FDavid NewlingNSW $ 180,000
1410Churchill (IRE)Blizzardly (AUS)Taghadoe Stud, Scone, NSW (As Agent for D Walker)B.CMichael ChangHONG KONG $ 170,000
1296Extreme Choice (AUS)Sheza Shamardal (AUS)Infinity Thoroughbreds, Purga, Qld (As Agent)Ch.FFirst Light Racing/Waterhouse & Bott/Kestrel ThoroughbredsNSW $ 160,000
1413Farnan (AUS)Bound to Blush (AUS)Evergreen Stud Farm, Heatherbrae, NSW (As Agent)B.CGai Waterhouse & Adrian Bott Racing/Kestrel ThoroughredsNSW $ 150,000
1406Hellbent (AUS)Beside You (AUS)Attunga Stud, Scone, NSW (As Agent)B.FTriple Crown SyndicationsNSW $ 145,000
1181Ole Kirk (AUS)Lady Lynette (AUS)Baramul Stud, Widden Valley, NSWB.CAmy FengCHINA $ 140,000

Top Vendors by gross (Day 2)

Baramul Stud, Widden Valley, NSW2339$87,239$2,006,500
Alma Vale Thoroughbreds, Scone, NSW1422$64,643$905,000
Attunga Stud, Scone, NSW1212$44,167$530,000
Newhaven Park, Boorowa, NSW1582$33,500$502,500
Arrowfield Stud, Scone, NSW1200$39,500$474,000
Westbury Stud Ltd, Karaka, NZ803$45,313$362,500
Infinity Thoroughbreds, Purga, Qld410$89,000$356,000
Taghadoe Stud, Scone, NSW512$68,800$344,000
Longwood Thoroughbred Farm, Longwood East, Vic301$105,000$315,000
Robyn Wise, Toowoomba, Qld801$38,938$311,500

Top Vendors by average (2 or more sold) (Day 2)

Longwood Thoroughbred Farm, Longwood East, Vic301$105,000$315,000
Infinity Thoroughbreds, Purga, Qld410$89,000$356,000
Baramul Stud, Widden Valley, NSW2339$87,239$2,006,500
Taghadoe Stud, Scone, NSW512$68,800$344,000
Alma Vale Thoroughbreds, Scone, NSW1422$64,643$905,000
Widden Stud, Widden Valley, NSW511$59,900$299,500
Aristia Park, Koo Wee Rup, Vic211$52,500$105,000
Traxion Management Services, Biddaddaba, Qld401$50,500$202,000
Goodwood Farm, Murrurundi, NSW601$50,333$302,000
Westbury Stud Ltd, Karaka, NZ803$45,313$362,500

Top Buyers by gross (Day2)

Yu Long Investments (Australia) Pty Ltd1$850,000$850,000
Amy Feng11$56,773$624,500
Manfred Man1$525,000$525,000
Springwood2$190,000$380,000
Triple Crown Syndications3$95,667$287,000
Robl Racing Pty Ltd3$90,833$272,500
Koidco Ltd11$23,727$261,000
Moorillah Pastoral6$43,333$260,000
David Newling1$180,000$180,000
John Foote Bloodstock (FBAA)3$58,333$175,000

Top Buyers by average (2 or more bought) (Day 2)

Springwood2$190,000$380,000
Triple Crown Syndications3$95,667$287,000
Robl Racing Pty Ltd3$90,833$272,500
Kendrick Racing2$86,000$172,000
Shane McGrath Bloodstock/Clinton McDonald Racing2$65,000$130,000
Red Bloodstock2$60,000$120,000
Paul Murray2$59,500$119,000
John Foote Bloodstock (FBAA)3$58,333$175,000
Amy Feng11$56,773$624,500
David Ellis (BAFNZ)2$51,250$102,500

Top Buyers by volume (Day 2)

Selangor Turf Club13$11,038$5,000$18,000$143,500
Amy Feng11$56,773$12,000$140,000$624,500
Koidco Ltd11$23,727$5,000$60,000$261,000
Panachai Chewarathanaporn7$10,857$5,000$20,000$76,000
Moorillah Pastoral6$43,333$20,000$100,000$260,000
Cesar Avila Jr6$12,000$7,000$25,000$72,000
Narisara Sripal5$11,200$4,000$22,000$56,000
Regal Farm4$38,500$24,000$60,000$154,000
Triple Crown Syndications3$95,667$42,000$145,000$287,000
Robl Racing Pty Ltd3$90,833$37,500$190,000$272,500

Top Sires by gross (Day 2)

Extreme Choice (AUS)5$0$0$314,000$1,570,000
Harry Angel (IRE)8$0$0$111,000$888,000
Ole Kirk (AUS)6$1$0$77,000$462,000
Cool Aza Beel (NZ)11$3$3$38,455$423,000
Zoustar (AUS)5$0$0$79,500$397,500
Farnan (AUS)5$1$4$60,400$302,000
Tarzino (NZ)7$0$1$40,286$282,000
Hellbent (AUS)5$0$2$52,900$264,500
Churchill (IRE)4$0$0$61,500$246,000
I Am Invincible (AUS)2$0$1$120,000$240,000

Top Sires by average (2 or more sold) (Day 2)

Extreme Choice (AUS)5$0$0$314,000$1,570,000
I Am Invincible (AUS)2$0$1$120,000$240,000
Harry Angel (IRE)8$0$0$111,000$888,000
Zoustar (AUS)5$0$0$79,500$397,500
Ole Kirk (AUS)6$1$0$77,000$462,000
Pinatubo (IRE)2$0$0$67,500$135,000
Nicconi (AUS)3$0$1$66,667$200,000
St Mark's Basilica (FR)3$0$1$65,333$196,000
Churchill (IRE)4$0$0$61,500$246,000
Farnan (AUS)5$1$4$60,400$302,000
Alma Vale
Manfred Man
Oscar Engelbrecht
Magic Millions
Temerity Park
Triple Crown
Hellbent
Sam Manion
Farnan
Kestrel Thoroughbreds
Bruce Slade
Gai Waterhouse & Adrian Bott
Extreme Choice
Barry Bowditch

Value Buy: Robl prepared to be patient with well-related Hellbent colt

3 min read
On the second day of the Magic Millions Gold Coast National Yearling Sale, TTR AusNZ uncovered a 'value buy' - an opportunity that a shrewd purchaser had snapped up. Gold Coast trainer Peter Robl is happy to wait for 'immature' Hellbent colt, who is closely related to Cosmic Force, to blossom.

Lot: 1426 - bay or brown colt (Hellbent x Charleah {Myboycharlie {Ire}}) - $37,500

Buyer: Robl Racing

Vendor: Clarke and Croft Bloodstock

Industry veteran and accomplished Gold Coast horseman Peter Robl was immediately drawn to the pedigree of Lot 1426, a Hellbent colt out of winning Myboycharlie (Ire) mare Charleah, a half-sister to emerging sire Cosmic Force and the stakeswinners Onemorezeta (Onemorenomore) and Razeta (Deep Field). Striking late in the day on Tuesday, he secured the colt for $37,500 from the draft of Clarke and Croft Bloodstock.

“Looking at him, I thought he was a lovely colt,” Robl said. “His pedigree is very good. He was a bit immature on his x-rays, which I thought would take away the Asian market, and so I thought we’d get him at a good price.

“If he was perfect, I thought he probably would have made $140,000, not $40,000. He just needs a bit of time - and with what we paid for him, we are happy to give him the time he needs.”

Lot 1426 - Hellbent x Charleah (colt) | Image courtesy of Magic Millions

The sixth living foal of Charleah, the colt is a half-brother to two multiple winners from three foals to race; Atomic Energy (Sooboog) was a $50,000 yearling purchase for Paul Moroney Bloodstock and Haoh Co, and has since amassed over HK$2.69 million ($531,000) in prizemoney, and three-time winner Allusionist (Super One) who placed several times at the metropolitan level.

Second dam Little Zeta (Commands) produced seven winners from nine to the track. In addition to her aforementioned three stakeswinners, she is the dam of 15-time winner My Greek Boy (Myboycharlie {Ire}), who collected $489,260 in earnings for trainer Steve Wolfe in West Australia.

Sire Hellbent, who will again stand at Yarraman Park for $38,500 (inc GST) this season, has seven stakeswinners to his name, three of which also feature a Danehill (USA) line stallion as damsire. His newest recruit Tremonti, winner of the Listed Maribyrnong Trial, is out of a mare by All Too Hard.

As a damsire, Myboycharlie crosses well with sons of I Am Invincible, having to date produced winners by four sons of the Champion Sire. The exact cross has already produced metropolitan winner Champagne Bender (Hellbent).

Peter Robl | Image courtesy of Inglis

Robl had closely followed several relations to this lot on the track over the last few years, so was pleased to secure a slice of the family.

“He (Lot 1426) walked really well,” Robl said. “He’s a strong horse and has a great temperament about him. And you just can’t go past that pedigree. It speaks for itself. There's winner after winner on the page, you can’t beat that. A family that produces winners is going to keep on producing winners.”

“You just can’t go past that pedigree. There's winner after winner on the page, you can’t beat that.” - Peter Robl

Horses that require more patience have been bargains throughout the sales season, Robl noted. Close relation Onemorezeta is an excellent example; while she debuted in the autumn of her 2-year-old year, she was unbeaten across three starts including the G3 Red Roses the following spring, and continued to perform at Group and metropolitan level until her last preparation as a 5-year-old.

“Not every horse has to be a Christmas 2-year-old,” he said. “This guy is more in the mould of a 3-year-old, or a late 2-year-old at best. We got him at a really good price.”

Value Buy
Peter Robl
Hellbent
Cosmic Force

Sectionally Speaking: Rising stars emerge from Caulfield and Rosehill

5 min read
Grahame Begg’s mares Niance and Splash Back turned heads with sharp wins at Caulfield, marking them as horses to follow this winter. Niance cruised to victory in the Listed Bel Esprit Stakes, while Splash Back flew home in a BM78. Promising 2-year-olds Zebra Finch and Salty Pearl also caught the eye, with several blackbookers emerging ahead of the Queensland carnival.

Cover image courtesy of Racing Photos

Begg’s mares impress with strong weekend wins

Two mares from Grahame Begg’s yard stamped themselves as horses to follow with fast wins over the weekend.

Niance (NZ) (Swiss Ace) resumed in the Listed Bel Esprit Stakes at Caulfield. She was one of the talking points of the spring carnival winning both starts at Caulfield at Listed and then Group 3 level before a spell. Her trainer Grahame Begg is striking at 30 per cent and is the most profitable stable at Victorian metro level recently. So, when Niance resumed in the Caulfield feature, the punters lined up to back her. She was $2.70 into $2.25, before easing back to $2.40 in the last few minutes. But for a horse resuming at this level, that’s a good push.

Midwest (Zoustar) an even gallop going bang on average for the grade through the first 500 metres. No leader won at Caulfield on Saturday and 5 of the 9 winners were more than 3l off the pace at the 600 metres, suggesting it was a good day for run-on horses. Niance chimed in before they hit the 200-metre mark cruising to victory over the in-form Cleo Cat (American Pharoah {USA}) and talented mare Aviatress (Smart Missile). The winning time was 1.6l above standard and Niance looks set to win more races this winter. Keep an eye out for a horse called Watchme Win (Harry Angel {Ire}), who charged home for fourth. He was slowly away. but clocked the fastest last 400 metres and 200 metres of the day.

Earlier in the day, Begg had French-bred mare Splash Back (Fr) (Le Havre {Ire}) resume in a BM78 1200-metre contest. This import has been stretched to 2000 metres in a previous campaign, yet here she is clocking the second fastest last 400 metres of the day, which was 10l above standard. We blackbooked her in the spring after a huge first-up run when Begg dropped her straight from a BM70 at Seymour to a Group 3 at Flemington during Cup week. She was beaten 5l, but had massive excuses – was back on a day when leaders dominated, plus she was held up. I’m looking forward to seeing her wherever she runs next.

Salty Pearl shows promise with grinding win

Still at Caulfield, and Salty Pearl (Tagaloa) won the 2-year-old event run over 1200 metres. It was the slowest of 4 races on the day at that distance, but this filly’s sectionals were quite flat suggesting she might get a tad further than 1200 metres, which means this win might have some hidden merit – time will tell.

Zebra Finch continues rise toward JJ Atkins

In Sydney, the 2-year-old race was taken out by Godolphin’s Zebra Finch (Exceed And Excel), who was quite impressive clocking the 10th fastest last 200 metres of the day, pleasing as he was a horse to follow in a previous column on May 5 following his Hawkesbury placing.

To quote that article; "Out of that race, Zebra Finch (Exceed And Excel) is one I’d like to follow especially on wet tracks over further. I backed him and thought the cash was gone at the top of the straight but he kept lifting and, for the second time in as many starts, clocked the best last 200 metres of the race."

It wouldn’t surprise me to see him prove competitive in the G1 JJ Atkins on Saturday week. The Brisbane 2-year-olds were forced to plough through heavy ground in the G2 Sires' Produce Stakes last Saturday – the ground deteriorated so badly we’ve elected not to review the numbers. What that means is quite a few will go flat, and this could be the year when a 2-year-old comes from left-field to win the final Group 1 for the juveniles this season.

Codetta flashes late on tough Rosehill track

Race 5 at Rosehill saw Private Eye’s (Al Maher) little brother King's Secret (Shalaa {Ire}) get the cash. They beat standard time by 5l, but you’d expect something like that in a BM72 on a Saturday as this class of race is quite often run at the midweeks. No knock on King's Secret, but the one to follow from the race is Codetta (Nicconi) for Michael Freedman. This filly was resuming on a heavy track and came from well back to clock the best last 800, 600, 400 and 200 metres of the day while still beating standard time by 4.5l.

If you think the King's Secret race is worth following then consider putting Lady Extreme (Extreme Choice) into your blackbook. Her overall time winning the same class race over the same trip was just 0.28s slower than King's Secret but he was race-fit, whereas Lady Extreme was resuming and her data late is suggesting improvement to come.

This Saturday we have the rescheduled G1 Queensland Derby and G1 Kingsford Smith Cup, plus the G1 Queensland Oaks. I can’t work out why Benagil (Manhattan Rain) has drifted to $5 for the Oaks? She was $3 for it before her unplaced run in the G2 Doomben Roses. Even Ray Charles could see she never got a crack at them. Stick with her.

Grahame Begg
Niance
Splash Back
Caulfield
Salty Pearl
Zebra Finch
Codetta
King's Secret
Lady Extreme

Wednesday Trivia

2 min read

Play the TTR AusNZ trivia game then challenge your mates!

Play TTR Aus NZ Trivia!

Wednesday Trivia

Op-Ed: Where to start?

4 min read

Cover image courtesy of Georgia Young Photography

Written by William Johnson

Last week’s result drew a line in the sand. We’ve debated long enough – the time for action is now.

This isn’t about the winners and losers from Rosehill. Most of us agree on the real issue: the future of Australian racing – how it is built, and who builds it.

What started as a vote against the sale of Rosehill has exposed cracks that run much deeper. It’s shown we need a reset – not just in NSW, but across the country. The status quo is broken. If we want a future, we have to build it differently.

William Johnson | Image courtesy of William Johnson Bloodstock

A national sport, not a patchwork of states

Let’s step back for a moment. Why is a global sport being run like a patchwork of disconnected state-run businesses, divided among 28 million people? Racing has been part of international sport for over 200 years. It wasn’t built to be carved up into small, isolated parts – it’s a shared product that spans continents.

Look at how the AFL runs its national competition. There’s a central body that protects the interests of each state, ensures fairness, and drives the sport forward. It’s time racing had the same – an organisation that manages the national product as a whole, ensuring no region is left behind, and no state operates in isolation.

The conveyor belt illusion

To borrow from Howard Marks, the industry has been moving along on borrowed momentum – like standing on a moving walkway at the airport. It feels like you’re making progress, but the moment you step off, the reality hits: you’re carrying your own luggage, and the grind is real.

Since the GFC, we’ve been gliding forward without addressing the real issues. Now we’ve hit the end of the belt – it’s time to walk. We need to put in the work and build a system that can carry the industry forward on its own strength.

Governance reform: the foundation for change

This isn’t just about wagering. The governance of the sport is outdated. The NSW Thoroughbred Racing Act 1996 is nearly 30 years old and no longer fit for purpose. We need stronger frameworks across each state, real accountability, and transparency. No more band-aids – structural reform is the only way forward.

Three priorities for immediate action

1. Independent oversight

Every state’s PRA must face scrutiny. Racing Acts must be reviewed and rewritten, ensuring that Racing Integrity Commissioners, Auditors-General and when necessary, ICAC have proper oversight.

2. Board Renewal

The leadership of Australian racing must balance deep experience with fresh thinking. We need those who bring decades of knowledge, alongside those who can ask the hard questions about where the industry is heading in 5, 10, 20 years.

3. Infrastructure Reform

Can we really keep training horses in the middle of suburbia as our cities grow and property values soar? Shouldn’t we be asking whether it makes sense to maintain training centres in places like Randwick? Could these sites be redeveloped to unlock the funding needed for modern, purpose-built facilities in locations that actually support our workforce and the industry’s future?

Training Facilities | Image courtesy of The Image Is Everything

A national industry needs a national vision

We must rethink Racing Australia – its structure, its purpose, and whether it’s ready to manage the future of this industry.

The racing calendar must match the foal crops of today and tomorrow. The Pattern needs streamlining so black type retains its value and relevance globally. Let’s look at the data and build a better model.

And the ownership system? It’s clunky and outdated. We need a centralised national account to manage payments, streamline administration, and hold non-payers accountable. If you’re not paying your bills, you shouldn’t be able to bounce from one stable or stud farm to the next unchecked.

Black type race at Doomben | Image courtesy of Trackside Photography

Building a future for the next generation

This is about the bigger picture: creating a product fit for the modern world, and building an industry that works for everyone: breeders, owners, trainers, staff, and punters alike.

It’s about recognising the value of experience while making space for new voices. It’s about building a future where racing thrives – not just for today, but for the generations to come.

Because here’s the hard truth: if my generation and the next can’t afford to buy a house, how are they supposed to afford $80,000 a year in training fees for a single horse?

Job Board

5 min read

On today's Job board:

Ardex Technology - Demand Generation Manager

Magic Millions - Head of Digital

Ardex Technology - Demand Generation Manager

EquineTech 3/5 FTE

We seek a growth-driven experienced marketer with a passion for scaling emerging SaaS platforms. As a pioneering software company in the EquineTech space we seek a Demand Generation Manager to drive customer acquisition, revenue growth, and market leadership as it expands across Australia, New Zealand, and international markets.

With a newly launched cloud-based platform aimed at revolutionizing how equine businesses operate—from trainers and breeders to veterinarians and service providers—this role offers a unique opportunity to lead high-impact marketing initiatives in a niche but rapidly evolving vertical.

About the Role

You will lead the company’s growth marketing efforts across digital channels, partner ecosystems, and event strategies. Reporting directly to the CEO, you’ll be responsible for delivering measurable growth outcomes, building demand generation engines, establishing thought leadership frameworks and turning marketing investment into pipeline and revenue.

You will work closely with the sales, product, and customer success teams to ensure the marketing funnel is optimized end-to-end, from awareness to retention.

Key Responsibilities

Growth & Demand Generation

Design and implement full-funnel digital marketing campaigns to generate qualified leads.

Manage and optimize SEO, SEM, paid social, and content strategies.

Apply growth hacking techniques to boost platform adoption.

Track and reduce customer acquisition costs while improving ROI across paid media.

Customer Acquisition & Product-Led Growth

Drive GTM strategies and onboarding funnels, tailored to specific customer segments.

Use data and analytics to refine messaging and increase user engagement.

Lead referral programs and incentives to accelerate adoption.

Performance Marketing & Marketing Ops

Oversee CRO for website and campaign assets through continuous A/B testing.

Manage email marketing, CRM workflows, and marketing automation (HubSpot).

Execute targeted ABM campaigns for high-value prospects.

Partner & Event Marketing

Build and nurture relationships with key industry stakeholders and service providers.

Represent the business at leading industry events and conferences.

Develop and lead co-marketing initiatives with partners.

Generate publicity through thought leadership initiatives

About you

Hands on

Multi task

Lateral thinker

Energetic

Sydney based - 3 days in office (Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday but can be flexible)

Well versed in Hubspot and Microsoft applications

Analytical

Minimum 5 years’ experience at similar role

Exposure to the equine industry highly valued

If this is you, please send your CV to Adam Bate adam.bate@ardex.com.au. The company offers career opportunities and significant future growth opportunities.

To be eligible to apply, you must have unrestricted rights to work in Australia

Magic Millions - Head of Digital

Division: Magic Millions Digital

Location: Gold Coast (preferred) | Flexible

Reports to: Managing Director

Role Purpose

The Head of Digital will lead the next phase of growth and innovation across Magic Millions’ digital business. This senior leadership role will define and execute a forward-thinking digital strategy spanning bloodstock, sales, marketing, and technology. With a mandate to enhance the performance and profile of Magic Millions Digital, the successful candidate will drive market share growth, deepen client engagement, and position strongly for online sales in the thoroughbred industry.

Key Responsibilities

1. Strategic Leadership & Vision

- Set and execute a long-term strategic plan for Magic Millions Digital, aligned with company-wide commercial priorities.

- Champion innovation and digital transformation across the business.

- Identify and capitalise on growth opportunities including new digital sale formats, international expansion, and strategic partnerships.

2. Market Engagement & Profile

- Act as a key industry spokesperson for Magic Millions Digital, engaging vendors, buyers, syndicators, and other stakeholders to grow market influence.

- Build and sustain market confidence through strategic relationships, thought leadership, and high-impact delivery.

- Elevate Magic Millions Digital as a best-in-class platform globally.

3. Commercial Performance & Growth

- Own revenue growth, market share, and user adoption KPIs.

- Optimise platform performance through data-led sales, marketing, and customer engagement strategies.

- Lead the continual refinement of the commercial model, calendar, and customer offering.

4. Product & Technology Oversight

- Lead product vision and delivery in collaboration with internal tech teams and third-party providers.

- Prioritise platform enhancements that improve user experience, performance, and integration.

- Drive innovation in remote sales technologies, vendor tools, and buyer services.

5. Internal Leadership & Execution

- Build and manage a high-performing team aligned with Magic Millions’ broader strategic goals.

- Foster cross-functional collaboration across Bloodstock, Marketing, IT, Finance, and Client Services.

- Provide regular updates and strategic guidance to Executive and Board-level stakeholders.

Ideal Candidate Profile

- Proven experience in leading digital business strategy and growth in a relevant industry (bloodstock, racing, e-commerce, or digital marketplace).

- Deep understanding of the thoroughbred sales landscape and credibility with key market stakeholders.

- Commercial acumen with a track record of revenue growth, platform adoption, and market positioning.

- Strong grasp of digital marketing, customer acquisition, and buyer/vendor behaviour in online environments.

- Experience with technology oversight and managing product development lifecycles.

- A compelling communicator and external ambassador with the confidence to lead strategic discussions with clients and stakeholders.

- Entrepreneurial mindset with the operational rigour to execute at scale.

Strategic Imperative

This appointment reflects Magic Millions’ continued investment in digital innovation. The Head of Digital will ensure clear ownership and unified execution across the online division, supporting growth ambitions and the company’s commercial position in a rapidly evolving global market.

For further information or to submit your CV, please email Magic Millions HR at Kim.Arnel@peopleandkapability.com.au.

Job Board
Kick Collective
Marketing Manager

Black Type Fields: Doomben

1 min read

Doomben: G3 Fred Best Classic, $300,000, 1350m

International
Wootton Bassett
Hello Youmzain
Kitasan Black

Daily News Wrap

12 min read

Pride Of Jenni to visit I Am Invincible

Yarraman Park Stud announced on Tuesday that Horse Of The Year Pride Of Jenni (Pride Of Dubai) will be served by their Champion Sire I Am Invincible during the 2025 season. The announcement, perhaps, ends speculation about her retirement, although mares can race in foal up to 120 days in foal (AR 84).

New Zealand Excellence finalists announced

With 28 finalists named across the nine award categories open to anyone under the age of 40, New Zealand’s Industry Excellence Awards will be announced at an awards night at Tote On Ascot at Ellerslie Racecourse on Sunday, June 29.

“The future of the industry is in outstanding hands, based on the nominations we received,” Entain’s General Manager – New Zealand and member of the judging panel, Jessica Meech said.

“They all struck a chord with the judging panel, and it was challenging enough to find the category finalists, let alone the winners and the overall Entain Excellence Award winner, which is our next incredibly important task.”

Philia will be at her best on Saturday

The G1 Queensland Oaks has been the plan for David Vandyke-trained Philia (All Too Hard) for a long time. “From the time I got her as a yearling, the plan was always to end up at the Queensland Oaks,” Vandyke told racenet.com.au.

Philia | Image courtesy of Trackside Photography

“For this girl to go from a maiden at the start of this prep and us not really knowing to what level she could climb … it would be wonderful to win an Oaks with her. When she goes out for a break next week, irrespective of what happens on Saturday, it'll be a good time for reflection. I can sit back and look at the pedigree page, I can watch the replays and I can really appreciate what's happened during this period.”

Derby delay no drama for Dun

Trainer Danny O’Brien isn’t fussed about the week delay for G1 Queensland Derby runner Politely Dun (Dundeel {NZ}). “I think he was six weeks between runs the other day, so that won't be a problem,” O’Brien told racing.com.

“He's been up there for 10 days and he's enjoying it up in Queensland. He worked on the course proper this morning and we were happy with him. We were always hoping to run him in either the South Australian Derby or the Queensland Derby, or both. We just had a little hiccup where we couldn't go to South Australia, but it certainly hasn't done him any harm. His win at Flemington was good and he's going to get there with a really good chance on Saturday.”

Benagil ready for another challenge

Ahead of the Oaks on Saturday, trainer Glen Thompson told punters to ignore Benagil (Manhattan Rain)’s last start where she came home with minor cuts after being caught in traffic. “Taking out that last run, she has got the best form in the race,” Thompson told racenet.com.au.

“She has been racing against the best fillies and she ran second to probably the best 3-year-old filly in the country (Treasurethe Moment) three starts ago in Sydney. If she brings her A game, I think she's going to be the horse to beat in the Oaks.

Benagil | Image courtesy of Racing Photos

“Last start was a very messy race, she got back in behind the wrong horses and ran up their arses. She just got dragged out of the race at the wrong time when she needed to be building into the race. It was a hard watch and not good to see heading into a Group 1 race. She pulled up with a few cuts on her front and back legs, just superficial stuff. But she seems really good now and I'm really happy with her heading to Saturday.”

Shinn’s injury challenge in jockey’s titles

Jockey Blake Shinn currently leads three premierships - Australia, Victoria and Melbourne metropolitan title standings – but is out for between three and six weeks with a foot injury. William Pike is closest in the Australian premiership on 135.5 to Shinn’s 150; while Jamie Mott’s treble on Monday took him to 118 in the Victorian premiership (to Shinn’s 139).

Craig Williams is only 12 behind in the Melbourne premiership. There are two months left in the season.

Charity aims on Saturday for Thunder Zeus

Peter Gelagotis-trained Thunder Zeus (Night Of Thunder {Ire}) will carry the official FightMND silks on Saturday at Flemington as part of the Neale Daniher-inspired drive to raise funds for research into motor neurone disease. “We're doing this in conjunction with the Moe Lions where Neale Daniher's son Ben has played for the last four or five years,” Gelagotis told racenet.com.au.

“That's how the connection was made and I've got to know the family well. It's my passion to drive it through my two interests in racing and the footy club. We've got many people like Peter Daicos, Nathan Buckley, Sam Kekovich and Denis Pagan that have all done videos for us to help raise awareness.

Peter Gelagotis | Image courtesy of Racing Photos

“The big event happens at Ted Summerton (Oval) on Saturday and it's turned into a really big thing because a lot of other leagues don't play on the long weekend so we get heaps of people coming from everywhere. Health-permitting, we hope Neale is going to be there but it's a day-to-day thing and it's been so powerful when he has made it in the past.” Southside Racing and Racing Victoria will donate $1000 to the charity for every winner carrying the silks during June.

Queensland gvernment overrides Act

The Queensland state government have renewed Lachlan Murray’s tenure as interim chief executive officer of Racing Queensland for 12 months with Racing Minister Tim Mander using legislation that allowed him to override the three month restriction in the Racing Act.

The Crisafulli government is currently conducting a review of racing in the state, and this is the reason behind the extension with a decision awaiting the results of the review.

Around the nation: Tuesday’s highlights

With four meetings on Tuesday, it was at Kembla Grange that Chris Waller broke his drought with the win of 3-year-old gelding Ant (Snitzel). At Moree, Outreach sired a double with Outta De Lady and Starry Jack.

Siblings Patrick and Michelle Payne-trained 2-year-old gelding Buccleuch became the second winner for first season sire Peltzer, and he has some form, having run second to Highvol (Microphone) at his previous start with Highvol having previously won the Listed Anzac Day Stakes. I Am Invincible sired a double at Dalby with Celestial Harbour and Irama.

Charm Stone half-sister resumes on Wednesday

Peter Snowden-trained 3-year-old filly Manaajem (Tassort), a half-sister to Group 1 winner Charm Stone (I Am Invincible), will resume at Warwick Farm on Wednesday. “She hasn’t got the best knees in the world, she pulled up a bit jarred up so we tipped her out again,” Snowden told racingnsw.com.au. Manaajem was a winner on debut, then ran fifth at her next start.

“It’s just immaturity. She’s older and a bit stronger, she’s a magnificent type. She’s got black type in her for sure the way she works. She has a good pedigree behind her, a very good family, she’s by Tassort and the fillies go very well by that horse.

Manaajem | Image courtesy of Georgia Young Photography

“The plan would be if she happened to win we’d look at a Saturday race and maybe give her 10 days off again and look at those good races in the early part of the spring. She’d need to get her rating up a bit to make sure we get into those races so she probably needs to win a couple now.”

Applications for Super Seth close tomorrow

Waikato Stud announced on Tuesday that applications to send a broodmare to second-season sire Super Seth in 2025 close at 5pm NZT on Wednesday, June 4. The sire of three G1 winners across both racing crops, Super Seth stands at NZ$75,000 plus GST.

Super Seth has sired G1 Australian Guineas winner Feroce (NZ), G1 Randwick Guineas winner Linebacker (NZ), and G1 Manawatu Sires’ Produce Stakes winner La Dorada (NZ) and three other stakes winners.

Century of homebred winners for Pencarrow

New Zealand’s Pencarrow Stud has had 100 winners this season. “It’s pretty good, considering the size we are, and we had some good quality winners in among the tally,” Stud Manager Leon Casey told Loveracing.nz.

“That includes horses we’ve sold as yearlings and those we have bred and retained to race. It doesn’t include the Coolmore Syndicate that we just have a small shareholding in.” The headline act has been G1 Australian Guineas winner Feroce (NZ) (Super Seth).

Leon Casey | Image courtesy of Pencarrow Stud

“There’s also six new stakes winners in total in the mix as well, and that’s what you live and die by and been really significant for us. We have been having better and better years since we got our farm at Matamata (Bellwood) established. We are now preparing and selling yearlings from that farm, the likes of Mehzebeen grew up there and was prepared from there and sold on to her current owners.”

Lawson-Carroll 100th career victory

Apprentice jockey Ace Lawson-Carroll earned his 100th career victory at Wingatui on Sunday aboard Mark Walker and Sam Bergerson-trained Cool Aza Rene (Cool Aza Beel {NZ}). “I knew I was on the best horse in the field and it was a relief to get there more than anything,” Lawson-Carroll told Loveracing.nz on Tuesday.

“This season I have jumped out of my skin a little bit during the summertime. Now that the wet tracks are coming, I am finding it a little bit harder with not having much of a claim, but I am seeing a lot more progress in my riding.”

Lawson-Carroll | Image courtesy of Race Images

Journalism vs. Sovereignty in the Belmont

The event that American horse racing has been waiting for is here. Sovereignty (USA) (Into Mischief {USA}) and Journalism (USA) (Curlin {USA}), the top two finishers in the GI Kentucky Derby, will get their rematch in Saturday's GI Belmont Stakes at Saratoga Race Course.

The two heavyweights of the 3-year-old division are the headliners of the 157th running of the Belmont, which will be run for the second straight year at Saratoga while Belmont Park continues its major renovation downstate.

A field of eight was entered at Monday's draw, which was held downtown at Universal Preservation Hall. The race will be run at 1 1/4 miles. Normally, the Belmont distance is 1 1/2 miles but the track configuration of the track at Saratoga.

Journalism will be the only horse that competes in all three legs of this year's Triple Crown. “This is a great race, one that is heavy on talent,” Journalism's trainer Michael McCarthy said. “Only eight horses but three or four that are going to be very, very good. Come years end, I would not be surprised if one of these horses won the Breeders' Cup Classic.”

First winner for St Mark’s Basilica

Coolmore's superstar St Mark's Basilica (Fr) was the latest first-season sire off the mark on Monday when his son Rogue Supremacy (GB) scored on debut at Wetherby. Well-touted before the opening 5 1/2-furlong maiden, the David O'Meara-trained £160,000 (AU$335,000) Goffs UK Breeze Up graduate established an early lead and never looked back, winning by 2.25l.

Almanzor sires Italian Derby winner

Marco Botti and Marco Ghiani enjoyed a glorious homecoming at Capannelle on Monday when teaming up to win the 142nd running of the G2 Derby Italiano with Molveno (GB) (Almanzor {Fr}). Both trainer and jockey were winning the most prestigious race that their home country has to offer for the first time.

For Molveno it was a fourth career win and his first beyond a mile, having raced exclusively at that distance in his eight previous starts in Britain. He arrived in Rome after filling the runner-up spot in a 3-year-old handicap at Newmarket, just a short distance from Marco Botti's adopted home at Prestige Place.

“I said to his owner Mr Dainotto after Newmarket that you have to have the right horse for this race, a horse who wants really fast ground, and I wasn't concerned with the trip – he's stayed a mile and three furlongs at home,” said the winning trainer.

“My main concern was that it is a long way to come here so we tried to plan it so that he had two days in Milan. Everything worked out quite well. You never know until you run but basically, a horse rated 90 can be competitive. So that was my view, I knew he was going to be competitive, it was just a case of whether he was good enough.”

Royal Ascot contender set for Tattersalls Online

Miss Yechance (Ire) (Cotai Glory {GB}), one of the fastest horses at the Goffs Breeze-Up Sale who translated that precocity when landing a Redcar maiden on debut for Jack Morland, is set to be offered for sale at the Tattersalls Online Pop-Up Sale on Thursday, June 12.

Despite posing one of the fastest breezes at Doncaster, Miss Yechance was led out unsold by EMW Equine. However, just over a month later, the Cotai Glory filly posted a straightforward success over the minimum trip at Redcar, winning comfortably by one-and-a-half lengths.

The cleverly-named Miss Yechance will be sold with entries in the G2 Queen Mary Stakes and the Listed Windsor Castle Stakes at Royal Ascot.

Meanwhile, Tattersalls Online is also launching a new feature to allow owners and trainers to sell percentage shares in their racehorses. This innovative function will provide a platform for connections to reach an international audience of racing enthusiasts and potential new investors, whilst retaining an interest in their horse.

In particular, it paves the way for owners to market shares in horses that are targeting this year's Royal Meeting or that have other high-profile engagements.

Daily News Wrap

Looking Ahead - June 04

4 min read

Looking Ahead highlights runners of interest across Australia and New Zealand. Whether they are an exceptionally well-bred or high-priced runner early in their career chasing maiden success, a promising galloper returning to the track or a horse that has trialled particularly well, we’ll aim to give you something to follow.

Three exciting runners are looking for success across Australia on Wednesday. Well-bred Snitzel and All Too Hard fillies are chasing maiden success at Warwick Farm, and a well-related Better Than Ready colt looks well-placed at Eagle Farm.

Warwick Farm, Race 1, 12.50pm AEDT, TAB 2YO Handicap, $60,000, 1100m

Mediterra, 2-year-old filly (Snitzel x Traceablity {Charge Forward})

The well-bred Snitzel filly Mediterra is set to make her debut for trainer Ciaron Maher at Warwick Farm on Wednesday. The promising filly was an impressive trial winner at Kembla Grange on May 12 when defeating Rouladen (Snitzel) by just under a length.

Mediterra as a yearling | Image courtesy of Inglis

Mediterra is the eighth-foal out of the Charge Forward mare Traceability, she was unraced but is well bred with plenty of Group 1 performers and stallions in her pedigree including Master Of Design, Danasinga, Suntagonal (Octagonal), Tracy’s Element (Last Tycoon {Ire}), Typhoon Tracey (Red Ransom {USA}), Cullen, Towkay, Kylikwong (Red Ransom) and Alligator Blood (All Too Hard).

Traceability has also had good success at stud leaving the South African Listed winner in Traces (Snitzel), the Group 3 placed colt in Spring Loaded (Redoute’s Choice).

Traceability since producing Mediterra, has left a weanling colt by Maurice (Jpn), and was served last spring by Snitzel.

Mediterra was purchased for $500,000 by Cambridge Stud from the draft of Arrowfield Stud at the 2024 Inglis Australian Easter Yearling Sale.

Warwick Farm, Race 3, 2pm AEDT, Hitotsu @ Arrowfield Maiden Plate, $100,000, 1100m

Regimental Colours, 3-year-old filly (All Too Hard x Regimental Gal {General Nediym})

The well-bred Regimental Colours (All Too Hard) is set to make her fourth start over 1100 metres for Warwick Farm trainer Bjorn Baker on her home track at Warwick Farm on Wednesday. She has run two nice placings at Canterbury in her career so far, and after a break, she has had a couple of trials at Warwick Farm to get her nice and ready to go resuming.

Regimental Colours as a yearling | Image courtesy of Magic Millions

Regimental Colours is a daughter of All Too Hard and is out of the classy sprinter Regimental Gal (General Nediym) who was a seven-time winner including in the G1 Lightning Stakes and the G1 Australia Stakes. She has had success at stud leaving seven individual winners with the best of them being Lilliburlero (Redoute’s Choice) who has been successful at Group 3 level in Sydney.

Other successful Group performers within this page are Regimental Band (I Am Invincible), Vimy (Redoute’s Choice), and Souchez (Lonhro).

Regimental Colours was passed in short of her $200,000 reserve at the 2023 Magic Millions Gold Coast Yearling Sale.

Doomben, Race 2, 11.57am AEDT, Mullins Lawyers QTIS 2YO Maiden Plate, $40,000, 1350m

Mortal Halo, 2-year-old colt (Better Than Ready x Freezethemillions {Freeze})

The sharply-bred colt Mortal Halo (Better Than Ready) will be making his fourth start at Doomben on Wednesday for trainer’s Annabel and Rob Archibald. He ran a very good second on debut at Eagle Farm last December, and then has disappointed in Group company at his next two starts, a drop back in grade looks suitable for him to bounce back to form.

Mortal Halo as a yearling | Image courtesy of Magic Millions

Mortal Halo is the seventh foal from the Freeze mare Freezethemillions, who was a winner as a juvenile and placed in the Listed Lancaster Stakes, Listed Hampden Stakes, and ran fourth in the G2 Sires’ Produce Stakes.

She has proven to be a very successful broodmare and has left five winners including Port Lockroy (Better Than Ready) who was successful in the G1 Railway Stakes, and Alpine Edge (Better Than Ready) who won the G3 BJ McLachlan Stakes and the Listed Phelan Ready Stakes.

Freezethemillions since producing Mortal Halo has left a weanling filly by Supido, and missed to Better Than Ready last spring.

Mortal Halo was passed in short of his $260,000 reserve at the 2024 Magic Millions Gold Coast Yearling Sale.

Looking Back

Bohemian Art (Deep Field) - Was unfortunately scratched from her race at Kembla Grange.

French Empire (Justify {USA}) - Ran fourth at Dalby, he was a touch disappointing as he appeared to have every chance.

Looking Ahead
Looking Back
Horses
New Zealand Bloodstock
Magic Millions
Race Horse
Racing
Horses

Debutants

1 min read
First-time starters lining up on Wednesday, June 04
Horses
Horse Racing
Debutants

2YO & 3YO Winners by Sire

Sire
Winner
Horses
Horse
Racing
Horse Racing

First Season Sire Runners & Results

1 min read

First Season Sires’ Results

Results: Tuesday, June 03

First Season Sires’ Runners

Runners: Wednesday, June 04
First Season Sire Results
First Season Sire Runners
Season Sires
Runners

Second Season Sire Runners & Results

Second Season Sires’ Results

Results: Tuesday, June 03

Second Season Sires’ Runners

Runners: Wednesday, June 04
Second Season Sire Results
Second Season Sire Runners
Season Runners
Sire Runners
Sire Results

NSW Race Results

Kembla Grange (Metropolitan)

Moree (Country)

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

Race Results
Young
Glen Innes
Kembla Grange
Gosford

VIC Race Results

bet365 Echuca (Country)

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

Race Results

QLD Race Results

Dalby (Country)

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

Race Results

Australian Sires' Premiership

Australian 2-Year-Old Sires' Premiership

Horses
Premiership
Horse
Australia Horses
Australia Horse

New Zealand Sires' Premiership

New Zealand 2-Year-Old Sires' Premiership

Horses
NZ Horses
New Zealand Horses
Premiership
New Zealand Broodmare

Thanks for reading!

1 min read

We hope you enjoyed reading today's edition of TTR AusNZ. If you have any feedback or ideas, please don't hesitate to reach out.

TTR AusNZ 2025 Media & Advertising Guide

TTR AusNZ Team & Contacts

President - Gary King | gary@ttrausnz.com.au

Managing Director - Vicky Leonard | vicky@ttrausnz.com.au

Editorial | editorial@ttrausnz.com.au
Advertising | advertising@ttrausnz.com.au
Accounts | accounts@ttrausnz.com.au

Charitable initiatives

At TTR AusNZ, we think it’s our obligation to positively help the industry by providing free advertising, and as such, all ads for industry charitable initiatives are free in TTR AusNZ and always will be.

If you need to raise awareness to a charitable initiative, email: advertising@ttrausnz.com.au

Regular Columnists

Renee Geelen | Kristen Manning | Kit Gow | Dane McLeod | Josh Spasaro | Nic Ashman | Tom Baddock

Photography is supplied by Ashlea Brennan, The Image Is Everything - Bronwen Healy and Darren Tindale, Georgia Young Photography, Sportpix, Trish Dunell (NZ), Racing Photos, Trackside Photography and Western Racepix.

The Final Say
Thoroughbred
Report
Daily News