After struggling in stakes company, Island Dec chasing return to winner's stall
The three-year-old scored a first-up win at Canterbury in February and was then thrown in the deep end in the group 1 Surround Stakes before a freshen-up and her last start eighth in the Group 3 PJ Bell.
Price said the Asahi Super Dry Handicap (1100m) is an opportunity for Island Dec to return to the successful formula of settling back, and coming with one run, which has seen her win three of her seven starts.
'She's been jumping on the bridle and just charging,' Price said. 'She did it so well first-up over 1250m, she switched off and attacked the line and won with a bit in hand in lesser grade.
'I'm going to keep things as simple as possible for her. I think we'll get genuine speed coming back to 1100m and I think it will work.'
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In the PJ Bell, Tommy Berry was able to settle Island Dec a little closer in the run, but she didn't react as well as expected and was beaten 3-1/2 lengths by She's Got Pizzaz.
'You've got to get everything right, those one per cent things you can't do wrong in those races,' he said. 'I've had all the gear on her and the slower speed in those races and getting cluttered up doesn't suit her, and it takes that back end away.'
James McDonald was initially booked to ride Island Dec, but when he was suspended in Hong Kong on the weekend, Tyler Schiller was snapped up for the ride.

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Herald Sun
15 hours ago
- Herald Sun
Comeback mare The Map launches spring campaign in Leon Macdonald Stakes
Don't miss out on the headlines from Horse Racing. Followed categories will be added to My News. Murray Bridge trainers Dan Clarken and Oopy MacGillivray are plotting a return to Melbourne's spring carnival with staying mare The Map, who launches a comeback in Saturday's Listed Leon Macdonald Stakes at Morphettville. The Map, South Australia's recent Melbourne Cup representative, finished 21st in the famous race last year, before two unplaced runs in February saw the Group 3 winner retired, aborting a planned Adelaide Cup run the following month. • PUNT LIKE A PRO: Become a Racenet iQ member and get expert tips – with fully transparent return on investment statistics – from Racenet's team of professional punters at our Pro Tips section. SUBSCRIBE NOW! Clarken and MacGillivray concluded that the breeding barn beckoned for The Map, but she was passed in at the Inglis Chairman's Sale in May, missing a reserve of $200,000. The pair used it as an opportunity to reset, and reassess their plans with the nine-time race winner. 'If someone had really wanted to take her on as a broodmare, it was the time to sell her, but having crossed that bridge … I suppose it was just a reset moment,' MacGillivray said. 'We always had a reserve on her of $200,000 and said 'if she doesn't make that, she comes home and we reassess'. 'She had a good three months off, she's worked back up, had plenty of leg work, a bit of green grass and a change in the drought conditions have made her and us feel a little bit better about everything – she's just terrific.' The daughter of Alpine Eagle, now a seven-year-old, has had a Murray Bridge trial and jumpout in the lead-up to Saturday's 1400m assignment. 'She was very bright and bubbly, she's doing everything we'd expect her to do, we just gave her the extra jumpout (Monday), occasionally she just jumps a bit slow, especially if she's a bit fresh. She's right where we need her,' she said. 'We've got our own sand track up a hill out the back of our place, she's been enjoying using that, she seems in a good space – I suppose we are about to find out. 'If she jumps well, puts herself there and finishes off, I'd like to see her finish in the first half. That really lets us think positively about where we are heading to next, as long as she comes through it well, and every indication is that she will.' • Campton retires stable star as 'incredible' mare nears return The Map is a $41 chance with Sportsbet, and will be ridden by Emily Finnegan. The comeback mare will likely head to Victoria as she steps out in trip. Clarken and MacGillivray have the Group 1 Makybe Diva Stakes and Melbourne Cup qualifier, Group 3 The Bart Cummings, earmarked as possible target races. '(Makybe Diva) is obviously going to be pretty hot company, there's also a 1700m handicap at Flemington that day (September 13), that's probably the next step in her campaign to see where she's at,' MacGillivray said. 'We'll definitely still nominate for the (Melbourne) Cup, it's not off the radar, but in the back of our minds we might be heading into a Bart Cummings or something like that, we'll keep her at Flemington where she's happy and see what comes up.' The Map came out of retirement after she was passed in at the Inglis Chairman's Sale in May. Picture: Makoto Kaneko • New home for 2026 Cox Plate confirmed While a stable stalwart returns, Group 3-winning juvenile, Steel Trap, has left the Clarken and MacGillivray yard, the King's Legacy filly was sold privately to Yulong earlier this month. 'She's a terrific filly … we had high hopes, a Thousand Guineas (run) in the not too distant future, but we are also realists,' she said. 'We love where we live, but Adelaide is not the place to have progressive young horses at the moment, you've got to be realistic, how easy is it to get her back and forth across the border to do what she needed to do? 'We don't look back, no regrets, I'll be proud and excited to see her perform on the big stage and I hope she goes well for the connections.' Talented gelding, A Samurai Mind, has also moved on, transferring to the care of Cranbourne trainer Grahamme Begg. 'We just felt it was very hard to get any consistency in his racing here. He was at a rating level where you were trying to run him with three to five weeks between runs all the time, which doesn't make it very easy to train them when you've got them fit and ready to race,' she said. 'In conjunction with James Jordan (owner-breeder), we just felt it was in his best interests to go to Victoria where he can be placed accordingly and get the runs where he needs the runs.' The Map's full sister, On The Map, will also make her debut for the stable in a Maiden Plate (1250m) at Morphettville on Saturday. Originally published as Comeback mare The Map launches spring campaign in Leon Macdonald Stakes at Morphettville

Mercury
5 days ago
- Mercury
11-length debut winner Ninja passes city test with narrow win at Rosehill
Don't miss out on the headlines from Horse Racing. Followed categories will be added to My News. From a runaway provincial maiden win by a massive margin of more than 11 lengths to scrambling home by a short half-head in Sydney Saturday grade. This was the often difficult transition to metropolitan class Ninja was able to negotiate successfully when he held on for a narrow win in the Asahi Super Dry Handicap (1300m) at Rosehill Gardens. Trainer Michael Freedman had deliberately downplayed Ninja's huge maiden win but he was more effusive in his praise for the emerging three-year-old sprinter after his city success. • PUNT LIKE A PRO: Become a Racenet iQ member and get expert tips – with fully transparent return on investment statistics – from Racenet's team of professional punters at our Pro Tips section. SUBSCRIBE NOW! 'While the margin wasn't great and we certainly wouldn't want it over again, I thought there was a lot of merit in it and he's a horse with a future,'' Freedman said. 'I don't care what anybody says, even though the margin was big the other day, it's not easy going from a maiden to a Benchmark 72 in town.'' Ninja's reputation preceded him and he was sent out the $2.40 favourite. He jumped straight to the front, dashed clear in the straight and although tiring late, held off the late surge of promising Without Peer ($9) to win by a short half-head. Crown The King ($11) chased the leader gamely throughout and was a short-head away third with Fermoy closing off strongly to finish fourth, beaten less than a length, in a race that is likely to be a strong three-year-old form reference during the spring carnival. Form jockey Andrew Adkins said Ninja's slender winning margin should not detract from the lightly-raced sprinter's win. 'Ninja is still a work in progress,'' Adkins said. 'It's not like he is doing things wrong but he is doing things a little upside down in places. 'But from the barriers, he stepped better today so he is slowly picking things up. 'It's hard to come out of that grade (provincial maiden) and come to Saturday against a pretty handy field and still win quite dominantly.'' Adkins said Ninja 'didn't have it easy today but he was quite tough late'. 'I don't think he needs to lead but I rode him like the best horse in the race,'' Adkins said. 'He was there and working through the bridle so I didn't want to break his confidence and rip him back just to sit off the lead. 'The more racing he does we will be able to ride him differently, too. He's exciting and still progressing. He's a horse with a lot of upside.'' Ninja, a $380,000 Magic Millions Yearling Sale purchase, is from the first crop of Golden Slipper winner Farnan and is raced in partnership by the My Racehorse Syndications which specialises in micro-shares, as well as some high profile owners including John Camilleri of Sunshine In Paris fame, Widden Stud, Sledmere Stud and Torryburn Stud. The gelding was having just his third start in his debut preparation, having finished third at Kensington before his back-to-back wins. Andrew Adkins speaks with the owners after Ninja's win. Picture: Getty Images Freedman admitted he has been surprised by Ninja's rapid progression this winter. 'Looking back on it I think he might have found that Kensington track a bit tight and the 1100m a bit sharp first-up,'' the trainer said. 'He has certainly loved getting out over a bit further and just getting into a nice rhythm. He may not look like it today but I do think he will appreciate getting out over a bit further.'' Freedman agreed with Adkins that Ninja is 'still learning his craft' and is not sure he will press on with the emerging young sprinter into the spring. 'Ninja is very raw still,'' Freedman said. 'He gets a big 'jig-joggey' in the parade ring. 'He is still not really jumping away as cleanly as we'd like and he's having to be used a bit just to hold a position. When one kicked up inside him he had to use him a bit more to cross so he's done a really good job to win. 'I will see how he pulls up but I'm always a little hesitant with horses that have raced a bit through the winter how far into the spring you press on with them but he's got a bit of upside for sure.'' ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ Denim doubles up in city Denim Wynen had never trained a city winner until the start of this season. But Monkhana gave the young trainer her second Saturday winner of the month when she scored a strong win in the Midway Handicap (1500m) at Rosehill Gardens. Monkhana's win came two weeks after mother-of-two Wynen's breakthrough metropolitan success with Sunshine Law at Rosehill on August 2. 'I'm lost for words, I can't believe it, I'm so excited,'' Wynen said. In a blanket finish where less than a length separated the top four finishers, Monkhana ($3.50 favourite), well ridden by apprentice Anna Roper, scored by a half-length from Vetwelve ($10) with Convergent ($5) a closing strongly for third, just in front of Justela. Monkhana ran second at the Rosehill meeting two weeks ago and Wynen, 29, returned to the track quietly confident about her mare's chances on Saturday. 'I was pretty confident with her today, without saying it,'' she said. 'She trained on well after her last start and has come back a different horse this time in, she is a lot stronger.'' Vetwelve maintained her consistent winter form with another game effort while Convergent showed promising staying potential with his strong finishing effort to claim third placing. Originally published as 11-length debut winner Ninja passes city test with narrow win at Rosehill


The Advertiser
11-08-2025
- The Advertiser
Kiwi ace re-signs as Giant makes a Super move for love
New Zealand shooting star Grace Nweke and Diamonds midcourt ace Jamie-Lee Price have decided their Super Netball futures, with the NSW Swifts and Melbourne Mavericks the big winners. Nweke has re-signed with the Swifts after being granted an exemption by New Zealand Netball that makes her available for Test selection despite playing in Australia rather than at home. The Melbourne Mavericks on Monday confirmed the arrival of Price from the Giants, with her signature following that of ex-Lightning shooter Reilley Batcheldor, who replaces Sasha Glasgow. The newest Super side locked in Price after she announced her plans to move from Sydney to Melbourne to be with her partner, Collingwood AFL player Harry Perryman. The departure is a blow for the Giants, with former co-captain Price winning their past three player-of-the-year gongs. The 29-year-old, known for her physicality, has been a regular in the Australian squad for the past eight years, part of the line-up that won the last World Cup in Cape Town in 2023. Mavs general manager Shae Bolton-Brown said the club, which finished second last in their second season, were determined not to miss out on signing Price once they heard she was moving south. "When we heard that Jamie-Lee was keen to move to Melbourne, we knew this was a signature we had to get," Bolton-Brown said. "Obviously she is a world-class talent, but with a relatively young squad we think her leadership on and off the court is a really valuable asset as well.'' Nweke, 23, won the Swifts' MVP award in her first Super season, but was initially reluctant to commit beyond a year, with the Commonwealth Games in Glasgow in 2026, followed by the World Cup in Sydney in 2027. Her form dipped towards the end of the season as the Swifts bowed out in the preliminary final, but head coach Briony Akle said Nweke would return an even better player in 2026. "Grace has made a phenomenal impact on the Swifts and the whole SSN competition in a very short period of time, and I know we've only just started to see what she can do," Akle said. "It takes a lot of bravery to leave everything you've ever known and back yourself to thrive in a new and challenging environment, but Grace did that, and I know she will be even better in 2026." Silver Ferns coach Noeline Taurua was happy to have Nweke at her disposal. "I was very pleased to see Grace apply for an exemption under the updated eligibility criteria and process, and we are thrilled that the Netball New Zealand Board approved it so she can play for the SiIver Ferns in 2025 and 2026," Taurua said in a statement. In other signing news, the Giants have secured dual premiership player Lucy Austin for 2026, the shooter shifting from the Adelaide Thunderbirds. New Zealand shooting star Grace Nweke and Diamonds midcourt ace Jamie-Lee Price have decided their Super Netball futures, with the NSW Swifts and Melbourne Mavericks the big winners. Nweke has re-signed with the Swifts after being granted an exemption by New Zealand Netball that makes her available for Test selection despite playing in Australia rather than at home. The Melbourne Mavericks on Monday confirmed the arrival of Price from the Giants, with her signature following that of ex-Lightning shooter Reilley Batcheldor, who replaces Sasha Glasgow. The newest Super side locked in Price after she announced her plans to move from Sydney to Melbourne to be with her partner, Collingwood AFL player Harry Perryman. The departure is a blow for the Giants, with former co-captain Price winning their past three player-of-the-year gongs. The 29-year-old, known for her physicality, has been a regular in the Australian squad for the past eight years, part of the line-up that won the last World Cup in Cape Town in 2023. Mavs general manager Shae Bolton-Brown said the club, which finished second last in their second season, were determined not to miss out on signing Price once they heard she was moving south. "When we heard that Jamie-Lee was keen to move to Melbourne, we knew this was a signature we had to get," Bolton-Brown said. "Obviously she is a world-class talent, but with a relatively young squad we think her leadership on and off the court is a really valuable asset as well.'' Nweke, 23, won the Swifts' MVP award in her first Super season, but was initially reluctant to commit beyond a year, with the Commonwealth Games in Glasgow in 2026, followed by the World Cup in Sydney in 2027. Her form dipped towards the end of the season as the Swifts bowed out in the preliminary final, but head coach Briony Akle said Nweke would return an even better player in 2026. "Grace has made a phenomenal impact on the Swifts and the whole SSN competition in a very short period of time, and I know we've only just started to see what she can do," Akle said. "It takes a lot of bravery to leave everything you've ever known and back yourself to thrive in a new and challenging environment, but Grace did that, and I know she will be even better in 2026." Silver Ferns coach Noeline Taurua was happy to have Nweke at her disposal. "I was very pleased to see Grace apply for an exemption under the updated eligibility criteria and process, and we are thrilled that the Netball New Zealand Board approved it so she can play for the SiIver Ferns in 2025 and 2026," Taurua said in a statement. In other signing news, the Giants have secured dual premiership player Lucy Austin for 2026, the shooter shifting from the Adelaide Thunderbirds. New Zealand shooting star Grace Nweke and Diamonds midcourt ace Jamie-Lee Price have decided their Super Netball futures, with the NSW Swifts and Melbourne Mavericks the big winners. Nweke has re-signed with the Swifts after being granted an exemption by New Zealand Netball that makes her available for Test selection despite playing in Australia rather than at home. The Melbourne Mavericks on Monday confirmed the arrival of Price from the Giants, with her signature following that of ex-Lightning shooter Reilley Batcheldor, who replaces Sasha Glasgow. The newest Super side locked in Price after she announced her plans to move from Sydney to Melbourne to be with her partner, Collingwood AFL player Harry Perryman. The departure is a blow for the Giants, with former co-captain Price winning their past three player-of-the-year gongs. The 29-year-old, known for her physicality, has been a regular in the Australian squad for the past eight years, part of the line-up that won the last World Cup in Cape Town in 2023. Mavs general manager Shae Bolton-Brown said the club, which finished second last in their second season, were determined not to miss out on signing Price once they heard she was moving south. "When we heard that Jamie-Lee was keen to move to Melbourne, we knew this was a signature we had to get," Bolton-Brown said. "Obviously she is a world-class talent, but with a relatively young squad we think her leadership on and off the court is a really valuable asset as well.'' Nweke, 23, won the Swifts' MVP award in her first Super season, but was initially reluctant to commit beyond a year, with the Commonwealth Games in Glasgow in 2026, followed by the World Cup in Sydney in 2027. Her form dipped towards the end of the season as the Swifts bowed out in the preliminary final, but head coach Briony Akle said Nweke would return an even better player in 2026. "Grace has made a phenomenal impact on the Swifts and the whole SSN competition in a very short period of time, and I know we've only just started to see what she can do," Akle said. "It takes a lot of bravery to leave everything you've ever known and back yourself to thrive in a new and challenging environment, but Grace did that, and I know she will be even better in 2026." Silver Ferns coach Noeline Taurua was happy to have Nweke at her disposal. "I was very pleased to see Grace apply for an exemption under the updated eligibility criteria and process, and we are thrilled that the Netball New Zealand Board approved it so she can play for the SiIver Ferns in 2025 and 2026," Taurua said in a statement. In other signing news, the Giants have secured dual premiership player Lucy Austin for 2026, the shooter shifting from the Adelaide Thunderbirds.