Derby Day's Mackinnon lost between Cox and the Cup

By Andrew Hawkins / Expert

While Derby Day is named for the spring staying test of three-year-olds, the Victoria Derby, it is the Mackinnon Stakes which has long been the true highlight of the day for racing purists.

With every horse in the Victoria Derby stepping out to the 2500m trip for the first time, the Derby form is always hard to gauge and cannot be adequately assessed until we see what emerges as the season progresses.

For example, I thought last year’s Derby was weak after 40-1 shot Fiveandahalfstar came off a restricted Rosehill race to run them off their legs.

Twelve months on, I can see that was harsh.

The Derby quinella beat the older horses in running one-two in the Australian Cup, albeit with Super Cool getting the better of Fiveandahalfstar. Two starts later, Fiveandahalfstar won The BMW.

Among the beaten brigade were Australian Derby winner It’s A Dundeel, South Australian Derby winner Escado and Queensland Derby placegetters Electric Fusion and Honorius.

It was one of the stronger Derbies in recent years, and the subsequent form suggests third placegetter Rawnaq – unraced since the Derby with injury niggles – may be a very smart galloper. He’s in light work at the Euroa property of David Hayes, and I can’t wait to see him back.

But I digress. It is an impossible race to judge at the time, while the Mackinnon Stakes features fit horses – some best at 2000m, others preparing for the Melbourne Cup on Tuesday.

The Mackinnon Stakes, first run in 1869, features an honour roll which perhaps can only be matched by the Cox Plate.

There are Melbourne Cup winners galore, with the double completed 16 times – Malua (1884), Carbine (1890), Phar Lap (1930), Peter Pan (1932 and 1934), The Trump (1937), Comic Court (1950), Delta (1951), Dalray (1952), Rising Fast (1954), Rain Lover (1968), Gold and Black (1977), At Talaq (1986), Empire Rose (1988), Let’s Elope (1991) and Rogan Josh (1999).

There are some of the great horses of the Australian turf – Wakeful (1901, 1902, 1903), Eurythmic (1920, 1921), Gloaming (1924), Manfred (1926), Gothic (1928), Rogilla (1933), Ajax (1938), Beau Vite (1940, 1941), Tranquil Star (1942, 1944, 1945), Flight (1946), Tulloch (1960), Sky High (1961), Tobin Bronze (1966), Leilani (1974), Dulcify (1979), Better Loosen Up (1990), Lonhro (2002) and So You Think (2010).

There’s no doubting it’s been a great race, which makes Saturday’s renewal a great disappointment.

The best judgement I saw on Twitter was from Steve Meakes (@ourmaizcay), who tweeted, “Good Werribee Cup field lining up in the Mackinnon.”

That may be an exaggeration, given Group 1 winners Mourayan, Mr Moet, Solzhenitsyn and Dear Demi are joined by last start winners Pakal and Hvasstan, two of the eye-catching runners from the Caulfield Cup in Moriarty and Jet Away, and international visitor Side Glance.

However, it has raised serious questions about the purpose of the Mackinnon Stakes.

The best weight-for-age horses have fallen by the wayside, either before or in the immediate aftermath of the Cox Plate, leaving a disappointing field to tackle the Mackinnon.

It may be too early to raise the white flag, but if this trend continues, something needs to be done urgently to restore the Mackinnon to its rightful place.

One suggestion was to move the race to Melbourne Cup day, to bulk up an undercard which is decidedly thin.

However, I think there is a real opportunity for the Victoria Racing Club to reinvent the Mackinnon Stakes by placing it at the end of the Melbourne Cup Carnival, on the Saturday after the Melbourne Cup.

Of course, in that position it would clash with the Emirates Stakes, so why not move the Emirates to the first day of the carnival instead? And while we’re at it, why not change the Emirates to weight-for-age instead of the current handicap conditions?

Melbourne is lacking an appropriate weight-for-age mile during the spring. Yes, the Crystal Mile is now being run at weight-for-age on Cox Plate day, but in my opinion, it cannibalises the Cox Plate and seems to lack purpose. For example, Sacred Falls should have been running in the Cox Plate last weekend, not the Crystal Mile.

A top weight-for-age mile as a lead in to the Mackinnon Stakes seven days later makes plenty of sense. And while the Myer Classic is on the same day, it is no different to running the George Ryder Stakes and the Queen of the Turf on Golden Slipper day.

The argument that there would be no 2000m lead-up for Melbourne Cup horses is moot. Last Saturday’s Cox Plate was more of a lead-up than the Mackinnon, and these days, the link between the Mackinnon and the Melbourne Cup is tenuous at best. A horse like Jet Away could come out and make a mockery of that analysis, sure, but in recent years the Mackinnon has had little influence on the Melbourne Cup itself.

Times are changing, and the Victoria Racing Club has to adapt. By placing the Mackinnon Stakes on the final day of the calendar, the race could in time inherit the weight-for-age championship tag that goes with the Cox Plate, especially once the cauldron that is Moonee Valley is reconfigured by the end of the decade.

Opposition to a change would come from the Moonee Valley Racing Club, determined to keep the Cox Plate as Australia’s weight-for-age championship.

But there is a real opportunity awaiting the Victoria Racing Club if they decide to act.

Imagine the winners of the Victoria Derby, Emirates Stakes, Myer Classic and Cox Plate all lining up in an end-of-carnival Mackinnon. It would be a great way to bring a close to the spring carnival.

In the coming years, I expect the time will come when the entire program is rewritten and changed. For now, though, switching the Mackinnon Stakes to the final day of the carnival is the only way to reinvigorate what was once a top race.

The Crowd Says:

2013-11-03T09:04:20+00:00

Ken

Guest


The Mackinnon Stakes is part of a traditional lead in race to fine tune fitness & qualify for the Melbourne Cup. It must not be moved.

2013-11-03T06:38:30+00:00

Daniel

Guest


I always feel that Derby days 9 race program has a fair few races that could and should be a feature race. Mackinion and Myer Classic come to mind. I feel that at least one of those races is more deserving of headline status than the Oaks certainly and maybe even the VRC stakes belongs as an undercard. The Mackinnion stakes has lost alot of its role as a leadup for the cup, with that role being almost soley serviced by the Lexus stakes (This race would of been considered but its role as a lead up is far too importent for it to be moved from Derby day) I think The VRC will give the carnival a bit of a shuffle and i think the oaks role may be the first question

2013-11-02T21:29:20+00:00

Lovell

Guest


Agreed. McKinnon has always been one of my favorites of the non classics. Glass Harmonium last year. What a warrior. This year wasn't great.

2013-10-31T19:28:39+00:00

Drew H

Guest


How about using a greyhound approach to the gallops? Heats into finals. Or a drag racing approach. Call your best time (class) before the race, and don't exceed it. Or a weight lifting approach. 3 strikes and you're out.

2013-10-31T08:35:45+00:00

kv joef

Guest


Excellent suggestion Andrew and agree with your appraisal sheek. After-all the validation of the idea is Sydney's autumn finale in Queen Liz (2000m). I was genuinely taken aback by this years Big Mac field - it's a $mill race? there is not a quality G1 WFA animal among them. I was horrified a few weeks ago when they were going loopy about the Cox - talking about shifting it to make it a lead-up race to the Cups. Are this Vicracing mob !*#@ nuts!. The Cox gained it's stature by bringing milers and middle distance horses together. Now since a couple of champs did the double it's a good leadup? ... This year half the field was made up of long distance animals. I've always believed in the miler's spring pathway of the Epsom / Toorak / Cox / Mac (if you were unlucky) / Emirates --- middle distrance horses ... mile / Turnbull / Caulfield Stks / Cox/ Big Mac - Emirates. As you said stayers currently have a multitude of leadup races to choose. Maybe remove or restrict the penalty clause on them, bump the money ... running 8th in the Cox = $100, 000 - winning the MV Cup $150,000 ... 2nd 45,000) and give them a preference status. IMHO, a lot of trainers have planned their good horses preps v.badly.

2013-10-31T07:55:45+00:00

sheek

Roar Guru


Hi Andrew, I've been thinking about this, & my thought processes are from complete. I mean, I haven't been thinking about the Mackinnon itself so much, but the reality that the staying wfa and hcp streams are becoming quite separate. I don't think this is a bad thing. Indeed the Melbourne spring carnival is well placed to offer connections several different streams, each vibrant in their own way - staying hcps; staying wfas; miler hcps & wfas; sprinter hcps & wfas; the three year old colts, geldings & fillies; debutante two year olds & mares & fillies. That's basically about eight different streams with plenty of opportunity for cross-overs. I think the Victorian clubs should be selling the staying wfas as a separate stream, attracting quite possibly a better spread of quality than the Melbourne Cup, without I think, detracting from the 'pull' of that great race. Starting in early October & ending in mid-November, you would have the Turnbull Stakes (2000m), Caulfield Stakes (2000m), WS Cox Plate (2040m), LKS Mackinnon Stakes (2000m) & culminating in the gut-busting Sandown Classic (2400m). That's five high quality wfa races over seven weekends. It could have its own point system for an overall wfa champion & there would also be nothing stopping connections diverting to either or both the Caulfield & Melbourne Cups. I'm thinking, why attract overseas horses just for the Caulfield/Geelong/Melbourne Cups? There's a great wfa program already in place. Not to mention mile races, sprint races & mares & fillies. Contrary-ers will say, "oh we can't possibly compete with the Breeders Cup" (which is held late Oct/early Nov, usually same weekend as Derby/Mackinnon day). I say, "why not"? Australian racing is potentially much better than US racing. I'm talking structure rather than breeding (unfortunately, we've managed to screw that up). Australian racing has much more variety, much more soul, assuming we don't destroy it anymore than we already have.

2013-10-31T07:50:05+00:00

Haradasun

Roar Rookie


Love a good digression. I like that the race has the carrot of a Melb Cup ticket for the winner, and didn't they also recently upgrade the prizemoney for the race to a $1m? It always has that feel of a race for WFA horses not quite good enough to win the cox plate, but even this year is still intriguing. It also give some much needed formlines for the Internationals heading our way at this time of year. Side Glance did run well in the cox plate, I am sure Happy Trails would have backed up if he was OK too. There are some talented WFA horses running this year even considering the injuries we have seen, so I am all in favour of keeping it where it is. If anything they need MORE group 1s on Derby day!! Such an exciting day. btw I am not sure Sacred Falls runs past a mile? In any event he was a certainty beaten Saturday. a tragedy for everyone.

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