2017 Caulfield Cup: Tips and preview

By Cameron Rose / Expert

The Caulfield Cup is upon us once again, the first of the Melbourne spring ‘Big Three’ that captures the attention of casual racing fans and purists alike.

There looks a nice spread of quality throughout the field, and while some of the favourites are going to be hard to beat, most horses have claims of a podium finish at least, if things go their way.

Johannes Vermeer is the market-elect thanks to heavy backing during the week after his slashing Cup trial in the Caulfield Stakes last Saturday. The first three in the run ran first, third and fourth around him, while he made a huge impression from back in the field to finish a close second to Gailo Chop.

The travelling foreman for Johannes Vermeer appears brimming with confidence given he continues to refer to that Caulfield Stakes run as merely a track gallop, and from barrier two Ben Melham is going to be able to position the horse where he likes.

A number of factors make him the clear horse to beat but there isn’t much of a price left, it must be said.

Five other runners from the Caulfield Stakes present in the Cup, including former warm favourite Bonneval.

Bonneval ran sixth there, coming in off six wins in a row including three Group 1s. She drew awkwardly, got right back in a race controlled by the leader, and may or may not have pulled up lame depending on who you believe. From a wide draw she’ll have to go back again, but if it’s a swooper’s race she should be in the finish if right, and could easily run away with it based on her Underwood Stakes win.

Jon Snow was third in the Caulfield Stakes, but had every chance and has to find three lengths to beat Johannes Vermeer, at least. He’s a good horse in good form, and is proven at 2400m, but would likely need the cut out of the ground to be a genuine winning chance. He’ll get his chance up on the speed from a good gate.

Single Gaze was fourth in the Caulfield Stakes, finishing alongside Jon Snow, and like that horse had every chance. She is a hardy mare that always runs well, but has never appealed as a Caulfield Cup winner.

Inference always seems to get mentioned as a sneaky chance and always runs on, but rarely wins. His Randwick Guineas win and Rosehill Guineas second back in the autumn were both on bottomless tracks. He’ll be the horse closing into a top six or eight finish without ever looking a threat.

Abbey Marie is the other horse from the Caulfield Stakes, and has put in four solid runs this campaign as grounding for this race. Her class at this level is questionable, and frankly she looks like she wants three miles instead of 2400m.

The Turnbull Stakes is another key form reference, and rightly so given that five of the last six locally trained Caulfield Cup winners used that as their lead-in race.

Humidor battled into third behind Winx in the Turnbull but was looking his best over the last furlong, which can give his admirers confidence that he’s ready for 2400m now, especially under the tutelage of Darren Weir. The last time he saw this trip was when second in the BMW, but was beaten a long way behind Jameka that day, on a heavy track.

Humidor is carrying the number one saddlecloth, but isn’t badly in at the weights for a dual Group 1 WFA winner, and a couple of gear changes might see him produce his best again. He won’t be the last to be taken out of his comfort zone by Winx.

Ventura Storm ran second in the Turnbull, in what was a classic Caulfield Cup trial. He has been building beautifully all preparation for David Hayes, and was a Group 1 winner in Italy the last time he saw this trip.

Ventura Storm should get the perfect run in transit from barrier four under Damien Oliver, no doubt looking to be somewhere around the third pair in running, and he presents as the most appealing each-way play of those at double figures.

Sir Isaac Newton was fifth in the Turnbull, 4-5 lengths behind Ventura Storm and Humidor, after racing on a strong tempo, but his run prior in the Naturalism was quite good. He ran seventh in this race last year, and while a win would certainly shock, he can easily defy his odds as the second most despised runner.

Harlem won the Naturalism in dominant fashion to secure his Caulfield Cup berth, but failed to flatter when stepping out in the Bart Cummings last start. Depending on which run you want to trust, he is either a huge chance or couldn’t possibly win.

David Hayes has long been a master at applying blinkers first time for the grand final assignments of his horses, and Harlem benefits from that gear change here. Also crucial is that he has drawn gate one, the same as his Naturalism win, so a cosy run is all but guaranteed.

Amelie’s Star was the eye-catcher from the tail in the Naturalism behind Harlem, and then was the winner of the Bart Cummings when putting in a strong staying performance. She’s four from four when running at distances between 2100m-2500m, so the Caulfield Cup is right in her wheelhouse.

She drops 3kgs into this race from her Bart Cummings win, although it must be noted Harlem meets her 1.5kgs better from that race. The two of them have met three times this prep with not much between them. Amelie’s Star has drawn a tricky 13 gate though, which means Craig Williams will have some decisions to make early.

Lord Fandango looks a generous price coming off wins in the Benalla Cup and Herbert Power, the latter of which is run over this track and trip. In-form stayers on the quick back-up usually run well at this time of year, even when stepping up significantly in grade.

Yes, there are question marks over Lord Fandango’s class as the lowest rater in the field, but the beauty of a handicap is that he carries the lowest weight accordingly, and he’s probably the most progressive stayer in the race. He can’t be left out of multiples, at the least.

Marmelo and Wicklow Brave are two internationals in the field, but unlike Johannes Vermeer have not had a local lead-up run. Wicklow Brave ran well down the track in last year’s Melbourne Cup, and has been just going in Europe in recent times.

However, Marmelo is coming off a win in the Prix Kergolay, which has often been an instrumental lead-up race for overseas horses attacking the Melbourne spring. He’s only missed a place once in his last nine starts, and even that was only beaten less than two lengths at Group 2 level. He looks to be a live chance and is sure to run well.

Rounding out the field are Hardham, Boom Time and He’s Our Rokkii, all at bolter’s odds.

Boom Time is the pick of those, given his good run behind Lord Fandango in the Herbert Power, and meeting that horse better at the weights. He’ll go forward from barrier three, and can certainly give cheek in the straight if he has an easy time.

Hardham couldn’t win with Batman pulling and Superman pushing, while He’s Our Rokkii is 125-1 and should be triple that.

There doesn’t look to be hectic speed on paper and the two horses most likely to lead, Jon Snow and Boom Time, have drawn well. However, one or all of Moreira on Wicklow Brave from 16, Bowman on Marmelo from 10, and O’Hara on Single Gaze from 12 will want to push forward and take a position, and may inject some early tempo. The short run to the first turn always makes life difficult for jockeys drawn out.

Johannes Vermeer really does look the most bomb-proof selection given his combination of pedigree, trainer, class, weight, form and barrier draw, but how short should he really be? Looking towards the horses with the best recent form that have drawn kindly, might be the best betting play here.

Selections: 1.Johannes Vermeer 2.Ventura Storm 3.Harlem 4.Lord Fandango 5.Marmelo

The Crowd Says:

2017-10-20T12:09:07+00:00

Scuba

Guest


Johannes Vermeer couldn't run down his pacemaker at his last run over 2400. Leave me out. Murray Baker will win this. 18 hours to work out which horse it will be.

2017-10-20T08:18:58+00:00

sheek

Roar Guru


Thanks Cam, Good stuff! I'll tip Johannes Vermeer simply because I like the name!!

2017-10-20T07:11:20+00:00

andrew

Guest


got rolled by the messin nymph god bless her. some well backed mares to win the last at caul similar to neita are silent sedition and azkedellia (mannersim stks on blue diamond day). profiled similar benefitting from weight scale as the class horses and duly won and just kept firming after all sorts of multis parlayed up. if faves are having a good day, she will open 1.70, and barely drift. there will be a lot of holds going into her. give her strenght................ i like : naantali main stage turnitaround burning front super too humidor ravi nieta several fo these ew. and mcevoy/kah will win 3 in a row early in ADL - about $4.50 for the treble.

2017-10-20T07:08:50+00:00

Razzar

Guest


That was the best news, with instructions Isaac Newton crossing and working to lead. All the opposing trainers can instruct their mounts, Isaac will race his race, and we’ll just race ours. I’d expect Isaac to be three to four lengths ahead of 2nd, and the rest of the field. Tacking onto Isaac would possibly be suicide. But now at least tactically the trainers have been forewarned, and are now forearmed.

2017-10-20T06:10:40+00:00

no one in particular

Roar Guru


JV quick back ups were 1) as a 2yo on a soft track dropping back from a mile to 1400m, and 2) an 11 day back up. This is his only run over 2400m http://www.attheraces.com/atrplayer-replay-popup/VOD/1003077 Given every possible chance to run down the stablemate

2017-10-20T05:52:49+00:00

kv joef

Roar Guru


Yes, the thought had crossed my mind. Now Williams Racing are making it known that Issac Newton will cross from the outside to lead ensuring a truly run race ... i'd be inclined to keep IzzyNewton out there as long as possible ... that would sharpen the race up a little.

2017-10-20T04:39:23+00:00

mattK

Guest


Are you expecting He's Our Rokkii to bring those outside horses across towards the front? Can't see any other reason he is there other then to make sure HHD stayers get a solid pace.

2017-10-20T04:26:00+00:00

tails

Guest


forgive the mare bonneval last weeks run. may have been galloped on in race. she never has carried less than 55.5 in her career and she will love the 52.5kg. all her wins she has had clear running from the top of the straight. last week a gap closed at the top of straight and lane went back inside still with traffic. not her go. she does bounce out of the barriers so i think macca will want a trailing position with cover and hopefully around midfield. unbeaten at the distance and we all know the caufield cup is the quick hectic 2400 metre race. Bonneval win in the austalian oaks was really winks like. made her run from the 700metres 15lengths of the lead and won be 4 lengths charging through the line.. go bonny go..

2017-10-20T04:13:05+00:00

Larry1950

Guest


I'm at a loss with some of the reasoning here, Ventura Storm is building towards his best yet many pundits seem to be ignoring him. What price and rating for Winx if she was in the cup with around 56kg? VS meets Humidor 2kg better for beating him, made Winx stretch for about 100m and appears to have been set for this as a key target. Right pilot, great trainers in form and G1 winner at the distance? Why so many tipsters ignore the Winx form astounds me.

AUTHOR

2017-10-20T02:18:52+00:00

Cameron Rose

Expert


Great commentary as always KV. Feels like winners in recent years have either had a cosy box seat run (Southern Speed, Mongolian Khan (or Magnolian Khan, if you prefer), Jameka), or otherwise the pace has been hectic and we've had big closing winners (Admire Rakti, Dunaden). I'm going with the former, as you can see from the numbers above - JV, VS and Harlem have drawn 2, 4, 1 respectively, and I expect them all to position between handy and better than midfield, 4-8 in the run spending no petrol.

AUTHOR

2017-10-20T02:14:37+00:00

Cameron Rose

Expert


Looks a certainty. But we've all seen those lose before. I remember a Smerdon good thing in the last at Caulfield on one of the big days in the last year or two. Anatina maybe? No good.

AUTHOR

2017-10-20T02:13:51+00:00

Cameron Rose

Expert


Thanks Razzar. I like your pricing assessments, suggesting it is a very even race with that top handful or so of chances. I'm on Harlem at 100's, so I hope he can bounce back, and is drawn to. Single Gaze certainly goes into first fours in third and fourth. I'm with Foxplay, expecting the Winx / Happy Clapper form to simply be too good here. And the Epsom usually stands up very well, particularly for mares in recent times (Pinker Pinker, Winx, I feel like there have been other non-winners come down and win).

AUTHOR

2017-10-20T02:10:31+00:00

Cameron Rose

Expert


The money is suggesting something is amiss with Bonneval, but you're right, she can win easily if 100%. Yeah, I've got time for Jon Snow. Agree that it's hard to step into $4.20 on JV now. I'm on at $7, so feel okay about that, getting in just ahead of the crunch.

AUTHOR

2017-10-20T02:08:11+00:00

Cameron Rose

Expert


Thanks Chris. I think JV has answered the questions about the back-up and 2400m, but I can understand people being suspect, especially both occurring together. I'm not sure VRC Derby form ever holds much weight a year later. I just can't see him winning. Too many better horses that will be in better positions.

AUTHOR

2017-10-20T01:55:53+00:00

Cameron Rose

Expert


His 2400m run overseas tells me he can, but he looks to get the Southern Speed run to me. People love talking about Inference, and claims about this being his grand final mean nothing to me. As if the rest of the field are 45% fit or something.

2017-10-20T01:54:57+00:00

kv joef

Roar Guru


Counting on a G3. The pace is so crucial in this CC. There are a few horses v.effective at 2400m and beyond. JVermeer ... can't get his failure to run down Spanish Steps (stablemate and pacemaker) off a soft pace in the Ballyroan (2400m). He certainly zips at 2000m as he did at his previous IRE start beating the v.good horse Success Days. Humidor looks venerable at the weights and even distance in a truly run affair - remember his touch-up by Jameka in the BMW. He was beaten some distance in 2016 NZ Derby. If Marmelo / Wicklow Brave / Single Gaze / Boom Time / Jon Snow ... can wind-it-up from the 1200m applying race pressure for the last half. i think Marmelo could prove the best of the visitors. Whether he can hold Harlem and Amelie's Star is another matter. Chad has to be thinking were he wants to be when they up the ante.. He's been riding well in HK (15% SR). Amelie's Star, undefeated at 2400/2500m gives Craig a tricky ride from that gate but i think he might have Dunaden in his tactical thinking. Again the pace is the key, if they slow it on the far bend like you see them do time and again then the 2000m horses get their chance to sprint

2017-10-20T01:38:08+00:00

Razzar

Guest


Yes Noip, Boom Time is very likely to lead,, but if he can lead in a dictating way. He could set a scenario, where Ventura Storm racing close to Boom Time,, could hook out early,, say at the 500, and go for home, and making it a real staying test for the others. The same could be said for Harlem. Plus they’re all under the Hands of HHD.

2017-10-19T22:38:24+00:00

no one in particular

Roar Guru


Liked Humidor, but he's best runs have at Flemington and done zero at Caulfield. No idea where to look

2017-10-19T22:37:11+00:00

no one in particular

Roar Guru


the second Williams horse will be a pacemaker and lead them

2017-10-19T22:22:05+00:00

Haradasun

Guest


Haha is there anyone not on Nieta? Recalls to mind the day the Bagman won the last in Adelaide. I think half of Randwick was on him. Will not soon forget the roar and general bon hommie when he saluted as well as the general groaning despair of bookies Fyi Roger, best bets tells me JV has twice raced on a quick backup and won both times.

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