New dawn for Lightning Stakes

By Sam Kelly / Roar Guru

It’s hard to believe 11 years have passed since Choisir’s bold Lightning Stakes win, when Glen Boss steered a solo path on the flat side of the famous Flemington straight.

As Australia’s only 1000m Group 1, the now-named Black Caviar Lightning Stakes have always delivered a quality field and provided a pathway to overseas riches.

Along with Choisir, Takeover Target, Miss Andretti, Scenic Blast and Black Caviar tasted victory in the race before taking out feature sprints at Royal Ascot.

However, the birth of The Championships and the rise of the TJ Smith Stakes threw the VRC a curve ball.

No longer will the best sprinters purely target Melbourne and you can hardly blame the owners and trainers, given the enormous $2.5 million purse of the Sydney sprint.

The year’s field is unarguably down on quality, however it is high on intrigue and interest, thanks considerably to the inclusion of the two-year-old’s Boomwaa and Bugatty.

It’s hard to believe decades have passed since a two-year-old contested the Lightning and this year we have two.

While Boomwa trainer Robbie Laing is prone to throwing a horse in the deep end, Bugatty’s trainers, the Hawkes, are more measured and cautious, raising the eyebrows of many form students and sectional experts.

While they don’t have the boom (pardon the pun) of Rubick or Earthquake, they showed enough to warrant a start in the field, particularly with the postage stamp weight of 46kgs and weakened field.

With the likes of Zoustar and Buffering at home, it leaves Samaready and Shamexpress as the only Group 1-winning sprinters in the field and provides the trainers with the perfect opportunity to test their youngsters against more seasoned rivals.

Choisir was a pioneer for Australian sprinters by winning two races at Royal Ascot and Boomwaa and Bugatty may become pioneers for future two-year-old’s should they run well on Saturday.

If successful, it could be only a matter of months before we see a Golden Slipper winner in the TJ Smith Stakes.

And while I only give both horses a place chance at best, I know one thing is certain: steer clear of hoops Dean Yendall and Dean Holland at the buffet on Saturday night!

The Crowd Says:

2014-02-14T19:16:51+00:00

peeeko

Guest


good summation, i agree its a good field but weak compared to great fields of the last decade

2014-02-14T10:36:40+00:00

Mike from tari

Guest


2 year olds have already won so how do these 2 year olds become pioneers, maybe you can call them new pioneers.

2014-02-14T00:15:20+00:00

Luke Andrews

Guest


I wouldn't call it a weakened field. There aren't that many Gr1 winning sprinters around atm and a lot of that is due to the dominance of BC. Zoustar will probably have a very managed campaign as he is worth so much; until the TJ he will probably only race in races that they are very confident in winning. He seems more a 1200-1400 type sprinter than the pure speed horse that wins this race. Buffering is on a back-ended campaign. Being a Qlder you would imagine that they would want to get him to the BTC Cup and the Doomben 10,000 after the TJ. They went to Perth with him so this race comes along a bit too quick for the Buff. Also believe he is better over anther furlong.

2014-02-13T20:36:10+00:00

Drew H

Guest


We could call this race 'The Resuming Stakes'

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