Bubbles burst, champs return as racing warms into spring

By Justin Cinque / Expert

In what is sure to be a spring full of highlights, the first Group One of the new season was decided on Saturday, with the spoils going to Darley stables on a day where the limelight was occupied by a popular mare.

More Joyous continued her unbeaten run in 2012 with a brilliant show of speed first-up in the Sheraco Stakes (1200m, Listed fillies and mares).

The six-year old mare paraded in outstanding fashion before the race. In her 27-start career More Joyous has developed a reputation for being lightly-framed and nothing special to look at. But on Saturday she was the standout horse in the mounting yard across the entire meeting.

I’ve never seen More Joyous look healthier, and just as it was clear from a distance of a few metres, it was evident as I watched her walk around behind the starting position on Rosehill’s huge screen.

After five seasons of racing, More Joyous may have finally filled out. And that must be a scary thought for any Cox Plate aspirant because, as an eight-time Group One winner, she is already one of the best mares in the world.

The race itself developed into a sprint home, and the darling of Sydney racing was able to control proceedings from the front – More Joyous coming home to a rousing reception, in a sharp 33.1 seconds for the last 600 metres, to win for the 20th time, from Miss Marx who turned in a career-best showing.

Importantly, multiple classics winner Streama returned in great order to hold third from the fast-finishing Emotional Circus.

Emotional Circus is regarded as one of the best closers in Sydney sprint racing so it was good to see Streama – coming off an autumn campaign that culminated in an Oaks victory – hang on for a minor placing. Trainer Guy Walter will target Streama at Flemington’s Group One November miles.

The feature race was the Group One Golden Rose (1400 metres, three-year olds). The race was fought out by the Darley pairing of Albrecht and Epaulette, with Epaulette enjoying a clearer path in the straight to win by a slender margin from his Warwick Farm stablemate.

The Sheik Mohammed-owned Darley has had an underwhelming 2012 with no standout performer in the autumn, a year further soured by the poor showing of stable stars Sepoy and Helmet in highly-publicised European campaigns.

So Saturday came as a relief to head trainer Peter Snowden who led in two stakes winners; high-class performer Ambidexter joining Epaulette in the winner’s circle after breaking through for his maiden Group victory in the Sebring Stakes (1400 metres, Group Two) earlier in the day.

There were many talking points to come out of the Golden Rose, and a lot of them focus on favourite Nechita, who disappointed in sixth. Only three weeks ago I declared the Patinack Farm filly a star on the rise, but she put in a lacklustre performance on Saturday.

The Golden Rose was run at a frenetic pace, with the first 800 metres completed in a time over ten lengths faster than standard. It left the entire on-speed brigade completely exposed in the straight, and it was no surprise to see the first two horses at the finish come from the last two positions.

With that in mind, the run of Ashokan in third position was enormous. The son of More Than Ready sat behind the leader, and after being declined clear running for a large portion of the straight, remained strong enough to take a late gap to steal third at the death.

There mightn’t be a Group One victory in store for this John O’Shea three-year colt, but he could well be winning a lower-level Group race in coming weeks.

After striking the front at the top of the straight, Nechita knocked up in the final furlong to finish a tiring sixth.

The filly pulled up with a cut on her leg that required four stitches and she also has minor damage to splint bone. It’s unclear when she will run next but her poor showing can be forgiven.

Nechita’s jockey Christian Reith received a nine-meeting suspension for causing interference at the 1000 metre mark.

Reith rode aggressively to settle the filly in a forward position, but in hindsight he would’ve been best served to let Nechita find a more comfortable spot back in the field, as he did in her two other starts.

In any case, the bubble on this boom filly may’ve burst. After pondering her run for some time, I still believe Nechita will be a top-level performer over distances up to at least a mile, but maybe not this spring.

All things considered, I’m not really sure what to make of the Golden Rose as a future form reference. If the gun three-year old Pierro had lined up yesterday, he would’ve settled midfield and used the hot tempo to demolish his inferior rivals in the straight.

The Golden Rose field didn’t contain many runners that hadn’t been dismantled by Pierro at some point. One must concede, however, the only time Pierro has looked vulnerable was when Epaulette gave him a scare in a Golden Slipper lead-up in March.

Despite being well beaten by Pierro on two occasions since, victor Epaulette is probably the horse to follow from the Golden Rose, especially because Albrecht won’t be going to Melbourne.

At Moonee Valley, the feature race was the Dato Tan Chim Nam (formerly Feehan) renamed in honour of Bart Cummings’ most loyal client. The Malaysian entrepreneur has owned four Melbourne Cup winners.

On Saturday a field of 12 lined up in the Dato, hoping to find the sort of form that would allow them to emulate the feats of So You Think (another of Chim Nam’s horses) in October’s Cox Plate.

And the quinella from Saturday’s 1600m weight-for-age feature is sure to have a say in some big races this spring. South Australian Happy Trails was able to hold off Green Moon in a driving finish.

Happy Trails has promised to win a big race all year, and a change in tactics has seen a winless autumn quickly repressed by two wins this campaign. Happy Trails was a horse that would settle near last before charging when it was all over, but more positive tactics have got the desired results.

It will be interesting to see where Happy Trails goes from here. Jockey Glen Boss was adamant that the 1600 metres Emirates Stakes on the final day of the Carnival should be the favoured target, but trainer Paul Beshara has had the Cox Plate earmarked for several months. He’d be more than competitive in both.

Green Moon has been in brilliant form this preparation. He will continue a path towards the Cox Plate and I hope they press on to the Melbourne Cup because there’s every chance he’ll shake the life out of it.

Behind those two, Rekindled Interest, Linton and the imported Sneak A Peek put in encouraging runs for longer races.

But the standout performance was Love To Ransom who won the second (1200m, open fillies) on the program, which incidentally is the same race Atlantic Jewel used on the way to Thousand Guineas success last season.

Love To Ransom produced an unbelievable finish; coming from last with 400 to go before switching to the outside and sweeping past her 11 opponents at the tight Valley circuit. The feeling must have been pretty special for triple Melbourne-Cup-winning jockey Boss, because he gave an elated punch to the air as the filly passed the line.

Like AJ, Love To Ransom will go towards the Thousand Guineas (Group One, 1600m) where she will be hoping to profit from a rise in distance against better opposition.

The Crowd Says:

2012-09-17T23:51:56+00:00

Sh00ter

Guest


I got sucked right in to the Nechita hype after one run this prep. Before that I rated her with or behind Snitzerland who probably would have performed similarly in the GR. They are different horses we can see that now as 3yos but Snitzerland's stable may be entitled to think she's better. Love for Ransom's run was clearly the best all day. She can only beat what is in front of her but I think the point JC was making was AJ did that to Mosheen as 3yos in the Guineas and it's hard to see that happening again. One of my new favourites Bradbury Chocolate won like that in Sat Bris 3yo class and then didn't back up next run. As a bookie I would lay Ransom this far out from the race.

2012-09-17T11:34:03+00:00

Bondy.

Guest


+1.

2012-09-17T11:32:06+00:00

Alfred Chan

Expert


Bang on the money there Cam. Loving the knowledgeable racing discussions here on the Roar!

2012-09-17T11:11:19+00:00

Cameron Rose

Expert


Yep, all fair points. Don't you just love having Spring racing back? I love the discussion that goes along with it as much as the racing!

AUTHOR

2012-09-17T10:43:46+00:00

Justin Cinque

Expert


I just re-read my comment again - it's a bit harsh. Definitely not the worst field, no way. But heading to the best time of year I'm not sure where this race falls (save for LFR). When the progressive three-year olds begin to emerge in the next few weeks I think those behind LFR will end up being either Listed grade or not up to metro class. But we'll see. As an example when AJ won that race last year she beat Sharnee Rose, Florets and Emerald Downs. Not the best form behind her esp the third and fourth horses but it didn't stop AJ from taking the spring by storm. At the end of the day, you can only beat what's in front of you and LFR couldn't have been more impressive.

2012-09-17T10:38:04+00:00

Bondy.

Guest


I think Corstens had starspangledbanner didnt he.

2012-09-17T10:31:00+00:00

Cameron Rose

Expert


Good call there Justin. A lot of people reckon Caulfield plays too leaderish, but it's almost always tempo-related. Oftentimes, the first two races are 1200m-1400m races with fields of 7 or 8 and no speed up front. The winner comes from the first two or three in running, and everyone's already saying 'leaders bias'. Mostly it's rubbish. And obviously a lot of the WFA races down here suffer from lack of tempo, so it becomes a sit-and-sprint, which always favours the first four in running.

2012-09-17T10:24:59+00:00

Cameron Rose

Expert


It's funny Bondy, I was going to say I thought Love for Ransom reminded me of God's Own! The way she wobbled around the turn was similar to God's Own rearing off horses. And of course, both had Bossy on board. I was at Caulfield that day, arguably the best race win i've been there for, maybe followed by Lonhro in the 2004 Australia Cup. Justin - Only time will tell, but the fillies that LFR beat may not be the worst field. 2nd and 3rd have both been stakes placed, and the fourth horse beat Jimando in the Autumn and ran 3rd to Commanding Jewel last month. Malasun did well to hold on for fifth, and she's beaten Members Joy in the past, so there is some 2yo and early 3yo form stacking up there. I Youtube'd Great Heavens' win, and she certainly jumped out of the ground. Looked to be struggling a fair way out, but then went zing!

2012-09-17T09:47:00+00:00

Bondy.

Guest


Good posts cameron, i'll just mention I think the filly Boss rode it was the only horse to really swoop out wide and from the back,most horses on the day one close too or on the rail happy trails green moon etc. Look out for shamexpress back at flemington as well.

AUTHOR

2012-09-17T09:31:57+00:00

Justin Cinque

Expert


Great point Bondy!! I can see it now. Pierro scares away everyone and something gets the softest lead in a small field around Caulfield and holds on to cause a massive upset. It's happened heaps of times - SSB in the Guineas, Descarado in the Yalumba are just two. Front-runners excel on soft leads at Caulfield more than most tracks. But it won't be Kabayan - Gai won't run anyone against Pierro - it's worth too much to his stud value for him to lose. I reckon she did a deal with owners - no Pierro in Golden Rose and no Kabayan in Caulfield Guineas.

2012-09-17T09:24:03+00:00

Bondy.

Guest


I'll just say there was a tone of speed in the rose if they crawl in the gueinas ?. Something like Kabayan with not much speed on could be dangerous ala C Mc Donalds Starspangled Banner, incidently the golden rose reminded me a bit of gods own nabbing parratroopers in the guineas "damn". Our Maiscay also crawled and bolted in in the guineas.

AUTHOR

2012-09-17T06:57:00+00:00

Justin Cinque

Expert


Unlucky cameron. I bet it would've been party time had albrecht got up! K mc reckons he dogged it in the last 20 yards too. I agree about the golden rose - winners will come from it but probably not g1s. I didn't mention it but kabayan wouldn't be out of place on a derby prep, he was good late but looks a little slow at that level and distance. My only reservation with love to ransom is the quality of field she beat. I learnt with nechita that it can hurt when you back a horse in two make the giant step - eg fillies g3 to colts and fillies g1 or open fillies to fillies g1 - off an impressive lower grade win. It takes a special horse to do it. Now the field she beat on saturday was pretty avg as a spring carnival reference but love to ransom scores full marks for style! Her win was the most awesome performance i've seen since great heavens won the irish oaks about two months ago - and that is worth youtubing!

AUTHOR

2012-09-17T06:45:27+00:00

Justin Cinque

Expert


I'll tell you right now happy trails won't win the cox plate but ridden cold he can run a place ala whobegotyou in 2010

2012-09-17T03:57:54+00:00

Cameron Rose

Expert


Love your review's Justin, hopefully racing can really start to get some traction on this site, especially as we get into the thick of the carnival. The precedents nearly pulled off a feature double for me with Happy Trails and Albrecht, history is a wonderful pointer to these feature races. And with $20 on the double at 58-1, I let out a roar of disapproval at Epaulette's refusal to give in. Swap the runs and swap the result, but the winner is a proven horse. Feehan - The Memsie form holds up again, with the first three home all running in it, and in the same order they finished relative to each other. Green Moon is going enormous and is going to have a huge say in whatever he contests, he'll be well in at the weights in the Turnbull (SWP) and must command heavy favouritism if he runs in it. Happy Trails is entitled to have a crack at the Cox Plate despite Bossy's misgivings, and he certainly won't be in my top selections, but connections must take the opportunities when they can. He ran 2nd over 2000m on a heavy track as a three year old, and as a clearly much stronger and improved horse now, he deserves to measure himself against the best, but I suspect he'll need to be ridden quietly at that trip. Plenty of other good runs in the race, and I see quite a few future wins coming out it. Golden Rose - Nechita was a rock bottom price as a filly against the boys in her first go at 1400m and trying to win a group one at her third start, priced for everything to go her way, which it rarely does in big races. Obviously she's still the one to watch, and it will be interesting to see where they go with her. While Justin may be right to have reservations about the form, Pierro can't race in every three year old race, so there's still plenty of black type left for the others. Ashokan will be starting short at his next start for all the reasons pointed out. I watched Love for Ransom over and over last night, wow. Based purely off that run, and assuming soundness and ability to run the mile (which she's bred to handle no worries), nothing can beat her in the Thousand Guineas. No wonder Bossy was shaking his head afterwards. Keep throwing Green Birdie into quaddies when on a dry track, he'll find his right race at some stage, but needs a strongly run 1200m, either in a weaker WFA race or a handicap where he's not too far above the minimum. I'll be at Caulfield this week, and based on the nominations in both states, there's quite a few of my 'follow' horses running. Can't wait.

2012-09-17T01:13:30+00:00

Rogue

Guest


I'm not convinced with Happy Trails run in the Feehan to believe he can win a Cox Plate. He struggled over the line and an extra 10m would have given the race to Green Moon. Of the first six horses over the line, Happy Trails crossed the slowest and 1600m looks to be his limit. If he went to 2000m, I don't think he'd match it with genuine group 1 horses like Green Moon, Rekindled Interest and Linton.

AUTHOR

2012-09-16T22:02:37+00:00

Justin Cinque

Expert


Hindsight's a beautiful thing, isn't it? Because after a quizzical thought, i was happy to see reith land in the box seat. But now it looks like a mistake and for a few reasons - 1. Nechita isn't as good as we thought she was 2. Reith got suspended for his aggressive move 3. Nechita sustained injuries when reith tried to get her in the 1/1 4. Nechita appears to be quite one-dimensional. 5. There appeared to be sufficient speed on paper to warrant a quiet ride. It's easy to blame Reith after the event but he has to learn from this and i've no doubt he will. He's a really really good jock and his time in the sun will come. The late Stathi Katsidis had some questionable rides in big races but he learnt from them and within weeks was producing outrageously good rides to win big races - look at his ride on shoot out in the derby as an example. Reith will win his fair share too.

2012-09-16T21:47:35+00:00

Bondy.

Guest


I thought Reith rode Nechita well got the run of the race unfortunately they went like scolded cats and they all folded up front and Epaulette got he's deserved Gr 1. More Joyous's size why does it bother some people they've been saying she's small since she was three,she just won the all aged in a trot canter last prep?. I wish Green Moon stuck he's noggin on the line. Velrosso in the last should've got some out of trouble, heavilly backed. Good read mate.

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