Saturday an important guide to the spring

By Andrew Hawkins / Expert

The early spring – late August and early September – is an exciting time for the racing industry, with the upcoming features the equivalent of a blank canvas.

In the space of a few weeks, races that would be the highlight of a mid-winter Saturday meeting in July are suddenly support races at midweek metropolitan or provincial meetings.

And come Saturday, every race on a metropolitan card represents quality, a potential stepping stone to bigger and better things.

This Saturday’s meetings at Caulfield and Rosehill, as well as the Makfi Challenge Stakes meeting from Hastings in New Zealand, indicate much of the promise of the early spring.

Last year’s results are proof of the importance of this weekend.

Spring Champion Stakes runner up Proisir and Flight Stakes winner Norzita quinella’d a Benchmark 69 at Rosehill – the best BM69 you’ll ever see – while Tea Rose Stakes winner Longport was well beaten in the same race.

Group 1 winners Pierro (first), Your Song (second), Epaulette (third) and All Too Hard (fifth) dominated the Run to the Rose while The Metropolitan winner Glencadam Gold won the Premier’s Cup easily.

It is at Caulfield, though, where the spring really steps up to a new level.

Subsequent Group 1 winners to have run at last year’s Memsie Stakes meeting included Gondokoro (Queensland Oaks), Shamexpress (Newmarket Handicap), Happy Trails (Emirates Stakes), Green Moon (Melbourne Cup) and Luckygray (Kingston Town Classic).

This Saturday will see more stars emerge, and I’d thoroughly recommend reading Cam Rose’s preview tomorrow for the best guide for this weekend’s big races.

However, the race that is likely to be overlooked by many Australian punters is the Makfi Challenge Stakes at Hastings in New Zealand.

Formerly known as the Mudgway Stakes, this race has been a terrific guide to the Australian spring in recent years, having been won by the likes of Sunline, Miss Potential, Starcraft, Xcellent, Seachange and Mufhasa.

Last year, it was the starting point for eventual Cox Plate winner Ocean Park. He came from a long way back, poking through along the inside to hit the lead in the final stages.

This year looks to have produced a top line-up, featuring the likes of former winners Fritzy Boy and Mufhasa (scratched from the Memsie Stakes), Group 1 winners Sangster, Nashville, Final Touch, Xanadu, Fleur de Lune and Rollout The Carpet, and promising horses like Thunderbird One.

From a Melbourne point of view, Sangster looks to provide the most interest as he pushes towards the Melbourne Cup, but I’m fascinated to see Thunderbird One in this company.

Make sure you are playing close attention this weekend – you are likely to be seeing this spring’s stars.

The Crowd Says:

2013-11-02T20:17:30+00:00

Peto

Guest


Fawkner will win the Melbourne Cup, ticks all the boxes. Main danger is Hawkspur but will have to overcome barrier 18(no horse has won from this barrier). I tend to bet against the run, so think its due!! -- Comment from The Roar's iPhone app.

2013-10-22T12:43:53+00:00

Billy

Guest


It's a dundeel has history against him winning the cox plate. There is no star 3yo, the Williams team have a bunch of handicappers, puissance is exciting but yet to do it, fiorente looks good in his lead up races but yet to crack it, the internationals were a waste of an invitation. Super cool was disappointing but Ill forgive one average run, happy trails will crack 250 out. It's a dundeel by 3 1/2 lengths and join the elite ajc derby/cox plate legends. -- Comment from The Roar's iPhone app.

2013-08-30T06:27:57+00:00

Cameron

Guest


The Roarers all share her around. neRds

2013-08-29T22:55:13+00:00

Will Sinclair

Roar Guru


I reckon the young lady in that picture features on the Roar more than any other individual person.

2013-08-29T13:57:19+00:00

Trent Masenhelder

Roar Guru


Always a fan of this race and you're spot on, it's a good guide to who the quality NZ raiders are. However, I can't see any of this lot getting away with any of the spring features other than Thunderbird One. The WFA horses in Australia look to be top-drawer and in the staying ranks we look set to see another influx of top-class imports. Thunderbird One, however, is untapped and his first-up win last time out after 271 days off the track was very impressive. Can he handle the rise in class? I think he can and sure hope so.

2013-08-29T06:15:42+00:00

Cameron

Guest


Good on them, it was just a colts only race. The 3yo colts crop has been horrible. Take the chocolates in resticted races while you can.

2013-08-29T00:10:40+00:00

Justin Cinque

Expert


Was far from it on Saturday

2013-08-28T23:42:14+00:00

Cameron

Guest


NZ form will be rubbish this year.

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