Day 1 of The Championships can catapult the Sydney autumn past the spring

By Justin Cinque / Expert

It’s one of the great debates among racing fans: which is the best race meeting in Australia each year?

Many favour Derby Day at Flemington on the Saturday before the Melbourne Cup. Plenty of others will say Golden Slipper Day, with a nation-high five Group 1s is the greatest.

But I don’t think either of those two meetings can place a hand on the Day 1 of the Championships.

A 10-race program that boasts four Group 1s of the absolute highest quality, Day 1 of the Championships lives up to its billing as ‘the grand finals of thoroughbred racing’ in Australia. The four 1s are some of the most important in Australia and that is exactly what elevates Day 1 of the Championships to the top of the pile.

The Doncaster Mile (handicap) is the premier 1600m contest in the country, run over the most testing and fair mile in Australia. It boasts an honour roll that just about any race in Australia would be proud of, and for a handicap that is some feat.

The TJ Smith (weight-for-age), run over 1200m, is now clearly the best sprint in Australian racing because, by dangling a $2.5 million carrot in prizemoney, it is has become the richest sprint in the world (for open-age gallopers – the Golden Slipper for the two-year-olds still holds $3.5 million in prizemoney) and, at weight-for-age, a much more reliable form reference than the Newmarket Handicap.

Australia is recognised as the breeding ground for great sprinters, and, as such, the TJ Smith is one of the best races in the country.

The ATC Australian Derby (2400m) is the premier staying contest for three-year-olds in this country. Run in the second half of the Australian season, it has always fielded a much more mature set of gallopers than its VRC counterpart, and its honour roll speaks for itself. In the last 20 years, Octagonal, Sky Heights, Starcraft, Eremein, Nom De Jeu, Shoot Out, It’s A Dundeel and Criterion have gone on to great success after winning the Sydney Derby. Each of those horses won Group 1s as older horses, or ran second in Group 1s at four.

The winners of the VRC Derby over the same period haven’t had the same success. Its best winners since 1995 are Nothin’ Leica Dane, Helenus, the great horses Elvstroem and Efficient, Lion Tamer, who perished too soon, Fiveandahalfstar and perhaps even the similarly unlucky Polanski. Only three of those horses won Group 1s at four or older.

Then there’s the Sires Produce, the classic contest over 1400m for two-year-olds and the second leg of Australia’s juvenile Triple Crown. So many of its winners have ended up at stud. Pierro destroyed All Too Hard in the 2012 version and then they fought out a legendary Caulfield Guineas before filling the placings in Ocean Park’s Cox Plate that year. Dance Hero, who sits with Pierro and Vancouver in the top 3 two-year-olds I’ve seen, won the great race in 2004.

Turning back the clock, the Sires Produce is a race that has been won by many champions including Ajax, Shannon, Tulloch who defeated the champion juvenile Todman, Wenona Girl, Eskimo Prince, Beau Babylon, who inflicted a rare defeat on the legendary sprinter Vain (whom his great jockey Roy Higgins had always insisted was cost victory by illness), Baguette and the ‘Colt from the Coalfields’ Luskin Star.

The Sires Produce doesn’t get the build-up of the Golden Slipper but it’s probably just as good a race.

Victoria Derby Day doesn’t boast a single Group 1 that I hold in higher regard that any of the four Group 1s on Day 1 of the Championships. The Mackinnon is a great race but doesn’t hold a candle to the Cox Plate run a week earlier over similar conditions. Besides, the modern-day Mackinnon Stakes is a far cry from the race that was for so many years regarded as the best Melbourne Cup lead-up.

The Myer Classic for the mares over the mile is always an exciting race but it is not in the Doncaster’s class when it comes to top mile-races. The Coolmore Stud for the three-year-old sprinters is probably the best VRC Derby Day contest and as its influence as a stallion-making race grows, so too will its quality and importance.

As mentioned earlier, the VRC Derby is a fantastic race but not as good as the Australian Derby at Randwick.

Fans of Golden Slipper Day will quickly try to argue that the Golden Slipper is a better race than the Sires Produce. The Sires has a top honour roll, perhaps better than the honour roll of the Slipper, but there is no race on earth like the Golden Slipper. It is the most important two-year-old race on the planet because of its prizemoney and stallion-producing qualities.

Slipper Day boasts the best weight-for-age mile contest in Australia. The George Ryder stands as one of the better races in the country. The trouble is that it is used as the main Doncaster lead-up.

Slipper Day has lost the BMW and Vinery Stud to their own stand-alone meeting, and in their place the Ranvet Stakes and Rosehill Guineas have been placed. The Ranvet is probably on a similar level to the Caulfield Stakes in the spring. The former is a top lead-up to the BMW and Queen Elizabeth Stakes, the latter to the Caulfield Cup and Cox Plate. The Rosehill Guineas, on the other hand, is a fantastic race, and along with the Caulfield Guineas, is the only Guineas contest in Australia worthy of Group 1 status. That said, the Australian Derby is the premier staying contest for the colts each season.

The fifth Group 1 on Golden Slipper Day is The Galaxy, a handicap over the 1100m short-course. In an autumn over-saturated with Group 1 sprints, this is one of weaker top-level races, although the winner has been known to produce a top performance every few seasons. Anyone who saw Bel Sprinter’s victory in this race in 2013 would attest. Sweet Idea was very impressive in the 2015 renewal as well.

Slipper Day is always fantastic racing and the fact it sits so close to The Championships leads me to believe that it will not be too long before the Sydney autumn is declared superior to the Melbourne spring.

And, to be perfectly honest, that is how it ought to be. In the autumn the three-year-olds are mature enough to tackle longer distances as well as several weight-for-age contests with confidence. The two-year-olds battle for four Group 1s in the autumn, including the Triple Crown in Sydney. In the spring, only the absolute most athletic and forward juveniles are seen at the races and the form can be very inconsistent.

Sydney has proven it can attract top horses, from Asia particularly, to compete during its autumn carnival. Aside from the Melbourne Cup, and with the obvious exception of the Macau champion Luen Yat Forever (I couldn’t help myself!) this is something the Melbourne spring has struggled to do well in recent times.

Of course, top Hong Kong galloper Dan Excel was going to run in last year’s Cox Plate but the campaign hit too many hurdles. The fact remains Sydney’s March-April carnival suits Asian racing better than Melbourne’s October-November program, when Japan and Hong Kong racing is at a high level.

Both eastern-state carnivals should always be aiming to improve the quality of their international participants, and a cleaner middle-distance program mapped out by the Australian Turf Club and Racing NSW should assist the Sydney autumn in this regard. The carnival could certainly do with more European participation.

The reason the Melbourne Spring Carnival is so successful is because it has been brilliantly programmed and administered for many years. The Melbourne Cup is the showpiece and the carnival builds to a fantastic crescendo from the Caulfield Guineas to the Caulfield Cup, Cox Plate, VRC Derby and finally the Cup.

Sydney doesn’t have a Melbourne Cup in its autumn. Its strength is a wealth of great races contested over a period of a month from Slipper Day through to the end of The Championships. Its potential as a carnival is unlimited.

We will see a glimpse of that great promise on Saturday when an exceptional meeting is conducted at Randwick.

The Crowd Says:

2015-04-07T03:00:09+00:00

Andrew S

Guest


Oh, and of course the other problem - the people just don't come. 40,000 at Oakbank on Saturday and 11,000 at Randwick yesterday that's just deplorable. More people came to the William Reid on a cold Friday night at Moonee Valley a few weeks ago for a very sub standard edition of that race...

2015-04-07T02:50:24+00:00

Andrew S

Guest


The problem with The Championships is that the feature race is being propped up by the NSW Government - how long will they continue to do that? Doubtful very long surely. When the QE2 prizemoney subsides to its previous levels then what's the difference between now and 5 years ago other than the branding? And then there's the Sydney weather at Easter....

2015-04-04T23:42:37+00:00

Jrod

Guest


Happens every year Doncaster. Perhaps why many of the best horses will be sceptical to target these races.... Arguably won by as many dominant wet trackers as dominant milers. Melbourne with the history by a margin for mine. Racing is still about prestige as much or more than $ and Sydney can't just buy that.

2015-04-04T22:16:49+00:00

michael steel

Guest


You nailed that.

AUTHOR

2015-04-04T21:54:57+00:00

Justin Cinque

Expert


Fair enough Andrew. It is something I am aware of. I thought I did read a while ago that the Caulfield Cup crowd has fallen to the low 30000s in recent years, sometimes 15000 people less than they got in the early 2000s. I just checked and the 2013 crowd was 33000. I couldnt find last year's attendance. So that is below what would be considered a sellout today. Still, its a very strong crowd and one Sydney racing would love to have. Hopefully it happens at the championships. Maybe not on Monday but i can report blue skies at my abode, not to far from Rosehill.

AUTHOR

2015-04-04T21:46:10+00:00

Justin Cinque

Expert


I think that was the perception Scuba. I think the ATC are attempting to correct that bias. How much damage has it done? At the track, the Slipper carnival is not what it used to be. Bad crowds and hardly a true punter or racing fan to be found in the public enclousre. The party crowd has scared them all off.

AUTHOR

2015-04-04T21:42:22+00:00

Justin Cinque

Expert


That is absolutely right Andrew. The fact it is a 37-race carnival does dilute the four meetings. Yet, it is without a doubt the best week of racing in Australia and one of the best Carnivals in the world. I dont want to sound like im a Derby Day hater. I love the meeting and its atmosphere and I love Cup week just as much. And I intend to be there this year for Derby Day, probably starting my Derby Day at a ridiculous hour just to get on a plane to see it!

2015-04-04T11:43:44+00:00

andrew

Guest


justin. one thing to consider. the 'day' might be better but is the 'week'. syd tried in the past to strech things out mid-week and diluate the quality and the result was awful. they rightly re-condensed it. imagine how good derby day would be if they ran the melb cup on the same day (as you point out the mc kinnon is not really a lead up any more and maybe 1 or 2 from the saab would be forced to geel cup or mv cup) and how good emirates day would be if the oaks was run. so, your criticisim of the 'day' is vailid, but do factor in that the 'week' at flem is spead across 4 days of racing - not 2.

2015-04-04T01:04:20+00:00

michael steel

Guest


I made a great error and oversight in leaving the Australian Cup out of the best 10 races in Australia. It's high up the list.

2015-04-03T10:31:01+00:00

andrew

Guest


justin - the caul cup crowd has intentionally fallen. the club had big crowd figures in the early 2000's, but it was a booze up for the south-east suburbs and a real people cram. the club has now lifted the price a bit, increased its corporate offerings. it gets 10,000 less people, but they have make more money, evenyone has a better time as the crowd is managable. this 'drop' is a conscious decision of the club. just have a read of the annual reports from the MRC which i am sure are available on-line.

2015-04-03T10:23:12+00:00

michael steel

Guest


You've made a very good case for The Doncaster Day Group 1 races being of a slightly higher quality Group 1 card than Derby Day. And although they talk about the big 4 races the Melbourne and Caulfield Cups, the Cox Plate and Slipper, I feel that The Doncaster is clearly No 5 and T.J Smith and AJC Derby are also top 10 with respectively and they are the same program. But I love Derby Day because as a punter it's been very good to me and there's one thing that makes Derby Day all that more exciting is that I feel racing anti clockwise or the Melbourne way of going is so much better to watch and I don't know why it's just a thing with me. Strangely my favourite Derby Day race was the Salinger (or whatever they call it) and it was downgraded to Group 2. Of course I've now started another conversation or argument so I'll round off my top 10 with the The Newmarket, The Stradbroke and Sydney's Queen Elizabeth Stakes.

2015-04-02T23:33:00+00:00

Jason Cornell

Expert


It will be interesting to see the crowd figures this week. ATC have been discounting and giving out free guest passes. I think Day 2 will attract a larger crowd. The best improvement this year has been the country and provincial races for The Championships - but I cannot understand why RNSW have not promoted this to race club to get them to attend The Championships. Also is is almost impossible to book even if you are an owner. I like the branding of the Grand Finals - but gee they lost an opportunity re the naming of the QE - considering the highest prizemoney. The Sydney Cup should be much more prominent - especially re the challenge of handicapping - have you seen any promotion re Red Cadeux?? Having the Japanese and HK horses are great but huge missed opportunity if not broadcast and simulcast. We need a person that can make this happen - and at present this is tasked with Sky.

2015-04-02T16:04:54+00:00

fiddlesticks

Guest


but Melbourne has the hype and pomp.

2015-04-02T13:32:28+00:00

Scuba

Guest


Justin, I'm in QLD so I don't fully know the dynamic, but it seems the former AJC calls the shots and the former STC is left with the scraps. Sad if true

2015-04-02T10:12:00+00:00

bill

Guest


Currently planning a spring trip. The sydney autumn hasnt crossed my mind as a travrl option. You need focal points to get exvited about. Slipper day i like, but is saturday doncaster day or tj smith day. And since when do i care about either?

2015-04-02T08:16:21+00:00

Judge

Guest


Sydney can never compete if they have the laughable track that is Randwick and the weather! Both wreck the spectacle!

AUTHOR

2015-04-02T06:22:19+00:00

Justin Cinque

Expert


I am with you Cameron. A more clear cut transition from Melbourne to Sydney in the autumn would help both carnivals. It works well in the spring. The racing in Sydney has more depth until the first weekend in October and then on Turnbull/Epsom Day the baton changes to Melbourne and Sydney's run ends. Although now with the spring champion meeting standing alone that too is more blurred than it ought to be.

AUTHOR

2015-04-02T06:16:42+00:00

Justin Cinque

Expert


Certainly am from Sydney. Stand by the point and believe in it. I guess you are from Melbourne? The spring is fantastic. But I expect to see better racing in the autumn now. And in 2015 i have not been disappointed. The next two weeks will be massive. In the sydney autumn you have the nation's best mile, best sprint and in the QE a race equal to if not superior to the Cox Plate as the best middle-distance race. The best 2yo race. The best middle-distance and staying 3yo races. Probably the best 2400m in the BMW too. Sydney has so much potential.

AUTHOR

2015-04-02T06:10:15+00:00

Justin Cinque

Expert


Slipper crowds had been falling well before the championships came along. There was 22000 in attendance when Sebring won it. Crowds were in decline from about 2005. That said the crowds should be much better. I think the Slipper marketing was poorly aimed at the party crowd this year. The BMW crowd was deplorable. But then again Rosehill Guineas Day never used to draw a crowd anyway. What was good at least was an increase of 1000 people on last year's Slipper crowd from 18000 to 19500. The day deserves a crowd of at least 30000 however.

2015-04-02T05:28:24+00:00

Scuba

Guest


The Championships is simply cannibalising the crowds that used to attend the other big meetings, as evidenced by the fact that less than 20000 attended Golden Slipper day and around 7500 attended the BMW last week.

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