Memsie chance for Lion Tamer

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Memsie chance for Lion Tamer

Lion Tamer could be a surprise early spring arrival in Melbourne, according to his trainer Murray Baker.

Baker (pictured) said that the 2010 Victoria Derby winner was a chance to be in Melbourne to run in the Group 2 Memsie Stakes (1400m, Caulfield) on August 27.

The Memsie Stakes clashes with the Group 1 Mudgway Stakes (1400m, Hasting) in New Zealand, but Baker is keen to come to Melbourne early.

“I have entered him for the Mudgway, but my preference at this stage is to come to Melbourne for the Memsie Stakes – I think it is an ideal race for him,” Baker said.

The Cambridge trainer added that Lion Tamer would then have two weeks to the Dato Tan Chin Nam Stakes (1600m) at Moonee Valley, which would give the 4YO another start around Moonee Valley as part of his preparation for a run in the Group 1 Cox Plate (2040m) on October 22.

Lion Tamer finished a terrific second behind Rekindled Interest in the Group 2 AAMI Vase (2040m) on Cox Plate day last year, a week before his easy win in the Derby seven days later.

Baker also said that his Melbourne Cup hopeful Harris Tweed, who has recovered from a throat operation, would accompany Lion Tamer to Melbourne and kick off his campaign in the Listed Heatherlie Handicap (1700m) on the same day as the Memsie.

“He’s not making any noise in his work, so I am hopeful he will have a good campaign,” Baker said.


Freedman is “Mr Big” with Group double

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Freedman is “Mr Big” with Group double

Australian Michael Freedman has had his best meeting since settling as a trainer in Singapore when he won the two main races on the Kranji card yesterday.

Freedman, who moved to Singapore in April 2008 after working with brother Lee in Victoria, won the Group 3 Magic Millions Juvenile Championship (1200m) with Mr Big and the Group 2 Chairman’s Trophy (1800m) with Always Certain.

After seven seconds in 22 starts, Not A Single Doubt gelding Always Certain had been tagged a ‘bridesmaid’ at the top level, but a sixth win and a first at Group 2 made start No. 23 memorable for connections.

Always Certain, who is usually ridden by Freedman’s stable jockey Danny Beasley – this time Breasley was on the unplaced Intercept for top trainer Laurie Laxon – gave another Australian, John Powell, his second Group success within two weeks after winning the Group 1 Singapore Derby (2000m) on Clint on July 17.

Gun three-year-old Gingerbread Man, ridden by Victorian Vlad Duric, looked to have the Chairman’s Trophy sewn up when he hit the lead at the 200m, but Always Certain ($35, for a $5 unit) emerged from the pack to win by a half-length. The fast-finishing Risky Business (Craig Williams), who flew from last, was third.

Always Certain, bought by Lee Freedman for $60,000 at the 2008 Magic Millions Gold Coast Yearling Sale, has earned almost $S800,000 at Kranji.

Beasley didn’t go empty-handed, winning on Mr Big ($15, for a $5 unit), who showed he was Singapore’s best two-year-old with his authoritative performance – just over two months ago he won the only other two-year-old feature run at Kranji, the Aushorse Golden Horseshoe.

The Singapore Turf Club’s website, www.turfclub.com.sg, reported that the horse Mr Big beat by a neck in the Golden Horseshoe, Dark Matter, was backed into short-priced favouritism ($9) in the Juvenile Championship.

But Mr Big underlined that he was top dog when he beat stablemate Rush and Destiny Action.

Dark Matter was a fraction slow out of the gates and was settled at the rear by leading Melbourne jockey Craig Williams, who was testing the Stratum colt for a possible tilt at the spring carnival riches in Melbourne. He was a disappointing sixth.

“He came around runners, but in the home straight he just did not accelerate,” Williams told the website. “I think he was totally out of his comfort zone today.”

Williams didn’t ride a winner from six tries – he had three placings.

Singapore’s premier jockey, Brazilian Joao Moreira, had a big weekend, riding four winners on Friday and on Sunday. His great eight lifted him to 77 wins for the season, 22 ahead of Duric (55).

Other Australians: 5th, Ronnie Stewart 28 wins; 6th, Powell 26; 8th, Beasley, 23.

Freedman sits with another Australian, Brian Dean, just outside the top 10 trainers on 26 wins.

Top of the list is New Zealander Laurie Laxon (47) from South African Patrick Shaw (42). Australians Steven Burridge 39 and Don Baertschiger 35 are next, from Kiwi Mark Walker 34 and Aussie Cliff Brown 32.

Meanwhile, Shaw has announced that Singapore’s champion sprinter Rocket Man will not take on Black Caviar in the Group 1 Patinack Farm Classic (1200m) at Flemington this spring.

Shaw, who had intended to inspect quarantine facilities at Werribee this month, cited the time Rocket Man would have to spend in quarantine as the reason for choosing to race in Japan and Hong Kong instead.

With Black Caviar not travelling abroad until next year, Rocket Man looks to have the two Asian races at his mercy.

Black Caviar, provided she comes up this campaign, appears to have the Patinack in the bag and if she wins she will then be eligible for a $600,000 bonus if she goes on to win at Royal Ascot in England in June – the bonus, of course, was offered by the Victoria Racing Club to lure Rocket Man to challenge Australia’s unbeaten sprint star.

Connections of Black Caviar threatened to race her elsewhere because she wasn’t eligible for the bonus, and the VRC changed the terms to include post-Patinack Global sprint races as well as pre-Patinack.

Another champion mare, France’s great miler Goldikova, won the Group 1 Prix Rothschild at Deauville yesterday, her fourth success in the 1600m race and her 14th Group 1 win.

Goldikova (by Anabaa (USA)) is the only horse to win the same Group 1 race in France since the European Pattern was introduced in 1971. Yeats, of course, won the Ascot Gold Cup (3200m) four times at Royal Ascot from 2006-09. Yeats (by Sadler’s Wells (USA)) was seventh in the 2007 Melbourne Cup won by Delta Blues.  He is at stud at Coolmore in Ireland.

Jockey Olivier Peslier had a milestone day at Deauville, too – the Goldikova win was his 100th Group 1 success. He has ridden the mare in all her 24 starts, for 17 wins.


Jumping to a new breed

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Jumping to a new breed

The recent importation of the stallion Daliapour to stand in Victoria sparked me to think that this is a horse ideal to breed not only capable stayers and, possibly, champion jumpers.

Daliapour (pictured), a son of the great Sadler’s Wells (USA), ticks all the right boxes to produce hardy, sound horses who could make jumpers. Daliapour is from the right sire-line and he was a tough, durable and outstanding racehorse at the Classic 2400m distance – he won the 2000 G1 Coronation Cup (Epsom, 2400m) and the 2000 G1 International Vase (Sha Tin, 2400m) as well as runner-up in the 1999 G1 Epsom and Irish Derbys.

Daliapour also will stand at a fee of $3000 at Woodside Park, Tylden, so he’s in the right price range for breeders with patience.

Dalipour’s arrival also had me thinking that the jumping industry should be trying to breed horses to jump. The state government’s decision to boost jumps racing with a $2 million handout is very welcome, but does it go far enough to help resurrect this maligned section of the racing industry?

I believe that for long-term survival of jumps racing we need to breed horses for that specific purpose. I don’t believe that the current model of using failed flat horses is a sustainable long-term model for the industry to prosper, although horses such as Capecover, Our Aristocrat and Cats Fun competed well at the highest level on the flat before switching to the “up and overs”.

There is little hope of Victoria having a commercial jumps breeding arm –as Ireland has with its National Hunt Stud – but it is possible that with assistance from Government and Racing Victoria a breeding program could be fostered. I see no reason why the equine education colleges that have a breeding emphasis, such as Northern TAFE and South West (Glenorminston) College, couldn’t be encouraged to stand stallions for the specific purpose of breeding strong, athletic stayers for the jumping.

I see such a breeding scheme also taking the resultant jumps-bred foals right through the education process, including teaching them to jump, before they are made available to the wider community as three-year-olds – humans and horses learning together. Only the sound and capable horses would make it through the system to become the backbone of the next generation of jumpers.

This scheme would take six to 10 years before the fruits of such an ideal would ripen, but if the general racing industry and the minister, Denis Napthine, who is an enthusiastic jumps supporter, are serious about preserving jumps racing, a breeding/education scheme is worth considering.

The key to the success of such an idea is to breed very sound horses with enough turn-of-foot to be competitive over hurdles before switching to the bigger jumps. We have the suitable stallions, but they need to be matched with the right, sound and strong-boned mares to produce the ideal foals. The cost of this scheme is to invest in the right mares.

In Ireland, it is the depth of the breeding that gives the National Hunt its pool of horses. Interestingly, most of the champion jumps sires of the past 20 years have been quality flat racehorses at 2400 metres – these stallions include Denman’s sire Presenting (by Mtoto (GB), a son of Epsom Derby (2400m) winner Busted), who was third in the 1995 Epsom Derby, and Old Vic (by Sadler’s Wells (USA)), winner of the 1989 Irish Derby and French Derby (2100m), and more recently another Sadler’s Wells son King Theatre, winner of the 1994 King George and Queen Elizabeth Stakes (2400m).

The famed Coolmore Stud cut its teeth in the stallion game with its National Hunt stallions, headed by Supreme Leader (by Bustino (GB)), who was placed third in the 1985 Irish 2000 Guineas before his fourth in the 1985 Epsom Derby.

An exception to the flat horses becoming the best hunt sires is the champion French-bred Roselier (by Misti IV (FR)), who stood with great success in Ireland until his death in 1998. The grey stallion only raced once on the flat before switching to jumping and winning the French Champion Hurdle.

There are three important things these sires passed onto their progeny – courage, soundness and the ability to jump.

The only sire-line in Australia that could be developed for producing jumping stallions is the Sir Tristram/Zabeel line. Zabeel has sired some outstanding jumpers including the champions Marlborough and Zabenz. One of his Victorian-based sons Tully Zeal (fee is only $1650) is leaving a few handy runners from limited opportunities for his owner Peter White, so he fits the profile.

Some of Australia’s most influence jumps sires of the past included Solar Bear (by Solario (GB)), Ottoman (by Blue Peter (GB)) and Zamazaan (by Exbury (FR)).

Mornington trainer David Brideoake, a former top equestrian rider, is not sure Australia is ready to breed its own stayers, but he conceded that it is worthy of consideration. “For the way that we race, National Hunt is probably breeding horses that are too slow,” he said.

Brideoake stands Oh Oklahoma (by the Sadler’s Wells grandson, Singspiel (GB)), runner-up in the 2006 G1 Rosehill Guineas, who he said was one a number of horses in Australia ideally suited to producing stayers for jumping.

Brideoake is right; we need to produce a faster, more athletic jumper than they do in Europe, but that should be part of a well-planned, well-executed process. Jump to it.


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