Rosehill, politics, the haters and his future: Racing NSW CEO Peter V'landys reveals all
No topic was off limits this week when senior racing writer Ben Dorries sat down with Peter V'landys in the Racing NSW boardroom.
The most powerful man in Australian sport, the CEO of Racing NSW and the chairman of the Australian Rugby League Commission bared his soul and spoke out on a range of major issues.
â– â– â– â– â–
THE 'HATERS'
Peter V'landys almost wears it as a badge of honour when detractors label him a dictator.
'I think it's a compliment, I wish I was a dictator,' V'landys says.
'The results speak for themselves, both thoroughbred racing and rugby league are in the best position they have ever been in.
'So, if I'm a dictator and I get those results and outcomes then I'm sure the participants aren't really concerned, that is the bottom line.
'The biggest thing that I often get is people saying to me 'you are not as bad as people say you are'.
'I'd say 90 per cent of the people that are haters, as you call them, have never met me.
'If they had met me and made that judgment, I would be concerned.
'But they have never met me, so they don't know what I am, they don't know my personality, they don't know any attribute of me at all.'
â– â– â– â– â–
PVL THE POLITICIAN?
V'landys says he has been approached 'many times' to run for politics but 'that's not my forte, I will leave that to others'.
However, he has opened up on his warm friendship with Prime Minister Anthony Albanese.
'If you saw the real side of Anthony, you'd like him,' V'landys said.
'He is one of those guys you want to go to the pub with and have a beer with.
'Anthony is a very nice guy, he's good to deal with and he's a good person.
'I always look at people to see if they are a good person, first and foremost.
'He's got an exceptionally good personality and he's a very witty man.
'He has honoured his word in every situation I have dealt with him.'
â– â– â– â– â–
ROSEHILL INQUIRY HOSTILITY
V'landys wore plenty of barbs during the parliamentary inquiry into the potential sale of Rosehill racecourse, which Australian Turf Club members later voted down.
'It was hostile, but I tried to stay out of it, I did not make public statements,' V'landys said.
'The future will tell you if it was a good decision or a bad decision (not to sell).
'It will tell you whether we were builders … or were we destroyers?
'I could see commercially the financial benefits to it, but the Australian Turf Club Members voted against it and history will judge whether that was a good or bad decision.'
â– â– â– â– â–
MARK LATHAM and GAI WATERHOUSE CRITICISM
Latham went into attack dog mode against V'landys during the Rosehill inquiry, while racing's first lady Gai Waterhouse was also outspoken and critical of some of the process.
Latham, who at one stage could have been Prime Minister, has encountered his own troubles in recent weeks over allegations from his former partner which Latham denies.
'I don't take much notice of all those things,' V'landys said, of Latham's recent troubles.
'I don't think personal attacks are necessary.
'I think Mark in this instance deserves due process and natural justice as to the accusations that have been made against him.
'I don't really worry too much what people say, because if you did you would be in the corner in the foetal position.
'Gai is entitled to her view and I haven't spoken to Gai about it.
'The only thing I would say is when you make an opinion, make sure you are correct in facts when you make that opinion.
'Gai had her opinion, I don't think she needed to get personal.
'If you get personal in an argument, I always think you are losing the argument.
'I never attack anyone personally, I will attack the issue.'
â– â– â– â– â–
The $20m slot race The Everest is V'landys' baby and he predicts the 2025 edition featuring Hong Kong superstar Ka Ying Rising will 'break all records'.
He also hinted at a major surprise to shake up the spring carnival.
' Ka Ying Rising is a personality horse with a lot of charisma and the attention we will get from Hong Kong will be exceptional,' he said.
'I've spoken to Marc van Gestel, the chairman of stewards in Hong Kong who used to work in New South Wales, and I asked him if this horse was as good as they say.
'He said 'every bit'.
Black Caviar � Ka Ying Rising?
David Hayes on what makes Ka Ying Rising so freakish ðŸ'‰ https://t.co/BMHzL8lvmm pic.twitter.com/5FtlX2Zx1k
— Racenet (@RacenetTweets) July 18, 2025
'There will be something (a surprise in spring carnival) but we will be making that announcement in the next couple of weeks.
'It is certainly going to be a major change, but we have to go through all the processes and we have to consult our partner the Australian Turf Club.'
• Jimmysstar confirmed in TAB slot for 2025 The Everest
â– â– â– â– â–
THE BEEFED UP $10m MELBOURNE CUP
$10m Melbourne Cup: Why every runner is a winner @gilbertgardiner analyses key Victorian prizemoney changes - plus the 10 golden tickets that are now on offer for Australia's most famous race. ðŸ'‡ https://t.co/ixnokkCBwY
— Racenet (@RacenetTweets) July 9, 2025
V'landys has previously taken shots at the Melbourne Cup, although he admits it commands its place in the Australian racing landscape.
But he doesn't think the recent prizemoney boost will make much difference to the race.
'The Melbourne Cup is the Melbourne Cup – you could get two donkeys in it and people would still pay attention to it,' he said.
'The Cup has got tradition over many years, I don't think it (the prizemoney uplift) will make any difference.
'It's great for Australian racing to have an aspirational race like the Melbourne Cup.
'The thing for me though is that New South Wales last year paid over $400m in returns to participants.
'The closest any other state got was $110m less than us.
'The good thing for me is that $60m of our prizemoney goes to maiden races.
'We look after the bottom end of the industry, but we also look after the top end.'
â– â– â– â– â–
RACING VICTORIA SKIRMISH
V'landys has hardly been bosom buddies with Racing Victoria, but there appeared to be a thawing of the interstate cold war, at least initially, when Aaron Morrison took the helm at RV.
This is what V'landys now has to say about his Victorian rivals in racing administration.
'We get along pretty well with Racing Victoria and I think the chairman Tim Eddy is a good guy,' V'landys said.
'He takes your point of view on, and he certainly prosecutes his case if he doesn't agree with you.
'We are not going to agree on everything.
'The one that is the sticking point at the moment is this racing pattern … but I am sure we will resolve that in the near future.
'I take my hat off to Racing Victoria for trying very hard in doing the best for their state, they have to appreciate that I have to do the best for New South Wales.'
â– â– â– â– â–
WILL HE WALK AWAY FROM RACING?
Should Peter V’landys remain the NRL boss? These numbers say a lot..
Me and @webbywrites
have a new podcast: Off The Record that gives you the best info and inside word from the world of sport.
Off The Record with Buzz & Webby is out now on all podcast platforms pic.twitter.com/tYaqmh9J2m
— BUZZ ROTHFIELD (@BuzzRothfield) March 30, 2025
A podcast earlier this year got tongues wagging when The Daily Telegraph's Sports Editor at Large, Phil Rothfield, revealed V'landys was considering stepping down from one of his high-powered roles in rugby league or racing.
Most expected it could be his racing role rather than league role that he could relinquish.
But V'landys insists he has not yet made any decision – that will come in a roundtable conversation with his family later this year.
'What I have said in the last six years since I have been chairman of the ARL Commission and CEO of Racing New South Wales is that at the end of the year I sit down with my family and I look at how the year went, what my capacity is to continue doing both roles,' V'landys said.
'I will do the same process this year and I will determine at the end of the year if I will stay on at Racing NSW and if I stay on the League Commission.
'Whatever decisions I make, I will make at the end of the year.
'For the last six years I have done both roles, how long that will continue I will tell you at the end of the year.
'Racing in New South Wales is in the healthiest position it has ever been in.
'We pay the most to participants, people say how can you sustain the prizemoney?
'Well, we have $375m in provisions to ensure we can sustain both the prizemoney and capital upgrades.
'We have $375m in our balance sheet to ensure the future of the New South Wales racing industry.
'I don't think there's too many racing jurisdictions who can say they have that sort of money set aside.
'There has been a decline in (wagering) turnover, but we will still probably make a $10m profit this year.'
â– â– â– â– â–
GROUP 1 RACES AND THE GOLDEN EAGLE
V'landys concedes there 'are probably too many' Group 1 races in Australia but says 'the hardest part is telling a race club that you are going to have to go down to a Group 2 from a Group 1.'
However, he is adamant the $10m Golden Eagle for four-year-old horses deserves to join The Everest in the newly-minted Group 1 club.
'There is a pyramid and the Group 1s should be the grand finals and there should be less of them,' V'landys said.
'But at the same time you can't stop innovation and the Golden Eagle deserves to be a Group 1.
'Horses have won Group 1 races all around the world after coming out of the Golden Eagle.
'If all goes to plan, it should be a Group 1 (before it is raced in the coming spring).
'Last year was exceptional and I don't think there's a race anywhere in the world that has produced as many Group 1 winners as the Golden Eagle.'
â– â– â– â– â–
RACING'S FUTURE
V'landys feels racing in Australia is in a better position to safeguard its future than most other countries.
He insists the younger audience which has been attracted to The Everest helps racing as a whole Down Under.
'I think we have done racing in Australia a big favour by promoting The Everest,' V'landys said.
'I think even the Melbourne Cup has had a resurgence from the young audience that we have been able to generate.
'We are promoting The Everest to the young person in Victoria just as much as we are promoting it to the young person in New South Wales.
'And that has become evident when you look at Victorian race meetings, they are getting a younger crowd.
'Racing has made a blunder worldwide where it hasn't looked at that next generation.
'You look at other jurisdictions around the world like America, they have been complacent, and racing is on a massive decline in America.
'Racing will be lucky to survive in the next 10 or 20 years in America.
'In Australia, racing is now appealing to a younger audience not just for The Everest, but for the whole year.'
â– â– â– â– â–
JOCKEY HEROES
V'landys loved Racenet's exclusive story in May about how 12 of the world's best jockeys, including James McDonald, had banded together to form a Grand Prix style franchise-based global circuit which could revolutionise horse racing.
He hopes it gets off the ground next year – for a very good reason.
'I think you have to look outside the square and you've got to go with innovation,' V'landys said.
'It may succeed, it may not, but I like the fact that someone is having a go.
'We need to hero the jockeys.
'I've noticed in racing that we don't have the heroes, in rugby league all the players are heroes.
James McDonald reacts to our exclusive story of world's best jockeys competing in new global franchise league: "This will be the ultimate challenge for jockeys, I can't wait to get started."
Reaction from JMac + other big name jockeys involved - https://t.co/EMdIH18aem pic.twitter.com/QcyxQ5DL9B
— Ben Dorries (@bendorries76) May 5, 2025
'The league players walk down the street and everyone wants a selfie with them.
'In racing you don't have that same effect, unless you are really in the racing industry you don't know our major players and our jockeys.
'If you have something that promotes that and makes them a personality or a household name you grab it, it's a good thing.
'I saw a lot of criticism of the (jockey) concept, but those same critics think that just because you've got a racecourse people are going to turn up.
'They live in yesterday's land, they don't live in the future.'
â– â– â– â– â–
THE GIL FACTOR
Former AFL supremo Gillon McLachlan took over as Tabcorp chief executive last year and has embarked on a quest for a leaner but far more competitive business.
'I think he's a brilliant operator,' V'landys said.
'The thing I like the most about him is that he's out of the AFL because he was certainly a formidable opponent.
'I think he's going to be a major asset to TAB.'

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

The Age
an hour ago
- The Age
Vilifying art-lovers at the NGV is a step too far
To submit a letter to The Age, email letters@ Please include your home address and telephone number below your letter. No attachments. See here for our rules and tips on getting your letter published. PROTESTS Exiting the NGV on Sunday, I was confronted by women protesting. My first instinct was to think they are women like me. As a teacher and Christian leader I've worked for peace, justice and reconciliation in education, churches and communities creating meaningful ways of offering hopeful transformation. I am a protester. But my instinct was wrong about these women as I don't target individuals and vilify them as they did to hundreds of us. A woman with the megaphone claimed 'anyone entering the NGV was ensuring the NGV thinks it's OK to hang out with fascists. You have blood on your hands and you support Zionism.' She then got personal to one woman saying 'you in the hat, you are supporting genocide entering the NGV'. I was collecting my bike nearby and foolishly engaged suggesting we can protest but it's wrong to target individuals as perpetrators of genocide. She then directed the megaphone at me chanting 'you support genocide'. She's right; we are all complicit in systemic and collective sins of commission and omission. But broad scale public vilification is not protest. It polarises, shuts down empathy and divides us further. Sally Apokis, South Melbourne Albanese should offer more than a gesture Anthony Albanese is correct in that the government should not recognise Palestine as a gesture only. He should do it as a commitment to the people of Palestine (''We won't make a decision as a gesture': Albanese says no imminent move to recognise Palestine ', 28/7). At the moment Albanese is gesturing, not acting. He is unprepared to take a bold stand, whether it be to recognise Palestine or sanction Israel for its blatant crimes. While acknowledging the heartbreak of seeing children starve, he makes no mention of genocide or ethnic cleansing. It's time he be a true leader. Lorel Thomas, Blackburn South Australia must act Sadly it appears the world's leaders are deaf and blind to what has been happening in Gaza. And as Sean Kelly noted (' Mere words won't pass our moral test ', 28/7) only two months after the horrific Hamas attacks on Israelis on October 7, 2023, already 93 per cent of people were in phases 3, 4 or 5 of food insecurity. In May UN experts noted that 'while States debate terminology — is it or is it not genocide? — Israel continues its relentless destruction of life in Gaza, through attacks by land, air and sea, displacing and massacring the surviving population with impunity'. When will the Australian government take action? It's time we say to the US and the UK that we will not proceed with AUKUS unless arms supplies to Israel stop. Where is the power of leaders if they take no action to stop this carnage in Gaza? Peta Colebatch, Hawthorn Blame not so simple Regarding Sean Kelly, the Geneva Conventions allow the blocking of aid if the enemy is stealing or using it. Kelly cites a New York Times story denying Hamas is doing so, but a Washington Post report set out in detail, citing many witnesses including Gazans, how Hamas is in financial crisis because Israel has stopped it taxing aid, or stealing and selling it. Kelly writes about famine starting within months of the war beginning, but those warnings were retracted by the Famine Early Warning System, a US-funded monitoring group. The UN is also culpable. After ending its nine-week blockade in May, after having allowed enough aid into Gaza to last for some months, Israel not only facilitated the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation, which has distributed around 95 million meals, but also resumed UN access. However, there were recently 900 truckloads of aid inside Gaza checkpoints the UN hadn't collected. As for the suggestion of recognising a Palestinian state, only Palestinian Authority intransigence has prevented such a state. Hamas would say recognition only happened because of the October 7 atrocities. Recognition would simply encourage further Palestinian rejectionism and terrorism. Jamie Hyams, Australia/Israel & Jewish Affairs Council Statehood for Palestine The people of the world claiming statehood for Palestine are living in a world of delusion. There are so many questions that still need to be asked. Some of these are: What are the geographical boundaries that define this state called Palestine? Who are the citizens of Palestine and who makes the decisions as to who becomes a citizen? What are the institutions that govern this state called Palestine? Are Jews allowed to be citizens of this new state called Palestine? These are only a few of the questions that need to be considered. No leader nor a member of the lobby groups that are advocating for statehood have made proposals that define this state. It's disingenuous on all people wishing for a state called Palestine because it's a falsehood. The people who are most vulnerable and exploited are once again being led up a path of others making. Graham Haupt, Glen Waverley Revert to 1947 borders Yes, as several correspondents to this page have stated, there are other serious human massacres also occurring, right now, in Yemen, and in Sudan. The difference is that those wars are not openly supported by a vocal and prominent segment of Australians, or accepted by Australian governments. Injustice for the people of Gaza stings our collective conscience. Here, and around the world. The only fair and long-term solution is to formally recognise those 1947 UN borders and allow the two states to exist as equals — with equal rights to exist, and also equal rights to have the military capability to defend themselves. Geoffrey McNaughton, Glen Huntly

AU Financial Review
an hour ago
- AU Financial Review
Why Australia can't sue if AUKUS delivers dud subs
Australia will be blocked from seeking compensation from the United Kingdom if British-designed nuclear-powered submarines have defects or are delayed, under the terms of the 50-year AUKUS treaty between the two nations. The treaty also gives Britain an effective veto over any Australian proposal for the design of the new submarines, while the pact could be torn up with just a year's notice, amid growing questions over the Trump administration's commitment to AUKUS and willingness to share the crown jewels of weapons technology.

The Age
2 hours ago
- The Age
Hanson tests Coalition resolve on net zero
'We are the Reform of [Australia] because everything that Nigel Farage stands for, I've been talking about for years, for nearly 30 years.' Hanson's anti-immigration party, which has courted controversy for decades for its stances on minority groups, added two senators at the May election, doubling its number of seats. Joyce's campaign has gained support from backbenchers Garth Hamilton, Tony Pasin, Alex Antic, a slew of Nationals, and the expanded right-wing Senate bloc of One Nation and United Australia Party's Ralph Babet. Frontbencher Andrew Hastie has also been fighting internally to overturn the net zero pledge, with the policy currently under review within the Coalition. Liberals have also spoken out about Indigenous welcome ceremonies after Ley indicated support for the practice. And in another sign of internal angst, former frontbencher Sarah Henderson argued in last week's private party room meeting that the Coalition should adopt as formal policy a push by Antic to enshrine in law the existence of only two genders. Henderson declined to comment. Taken together, the thrusts underline the depth of feeling among right-wing Coalition MPs as Ley aims to correct course from the perceived failings of the Dutton era. Institute of Public Affairs deputy head Daniel Wild said in Australia, as in the UK, there was a growing gap between the wishes of right-wing voters and the offerings of centre-right parties on cultural issues, immigration and green energy. 'What you're now seeing is a new bloc, whether it's people from One Nation or Barnaby Joyce, and others, giving voice to those concerns in a way that they haven't before,' Wild said. 'I don't think Liberals are going to die out, but I think the risk of irrelevancy is increasing.' Hume, one of only two Liberals to vote against Hanson's motion, pushed back against the One Nation leader, saying voters 'made it clear at the ballot box that they expect serious, credible action on climate change'. 'How can we keep the seats we have and win back the seats we've lost, without hearing that message?' she said. The UN's chief climate diplomat has urged Australia to continue its push towards net zero, warning that failure to stabilise the climate would cut living standards $7000 per person per year by 2050. 'Climate disasters are already costing Australian home owners $4 billion a year – and that figure is only going one way,' said Simon Stiell, executive secretary of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change. Outspoken conservative backbencher Hamilton warned of the risks of a Labor-lite agenda. 'We need to be wary of what's happened to our sister party in the UK,' he said, cautioning that Australia's preferential and compulsory system provided some protection from a third-party takeover. Loading Hamilton said public debate on the Coalition's direction should not be silenced, arguing Dutton did not lose because Australians rejected conservative values, but rather because of the Coalition's deficient policy agenda. Hanson said she was open to picking off Coalition MPs who felt uncomfortable with Ley's more centrist approach that has seen her spruik the case for quotas for preselecting women, dump the idea of building nuclear plants, and install Paul Scarr – who on Monday highlighted the positives of migration – into the immigration portfolio. The Nationals and Liberal Party briefly split after the election. During that period, Liberal MPs discussed privately the prospect of creating a new city-based party to espouse small-l liberal values unencumbered by conservative regional MPs. Scott Morrison canvassed the idea among his close colleagues after the 2022 election, according to several sources involved in those talks who did not want to be identified. Political historian Paul Strangio, an emeritus professor at Monash University, said Ley's message of modernising the party risked her being received 'as a kind of apostate'. 'Diagnosing what needs to be done doesn't mean Ley can magic away a quarter of a century of a conservative populist creep by the Liberals dating back to the Howard era that in essence has involved the party fighting a rearguard action against the evolving direction of Australian society,' he said. 'The resistance she will inevitably encounter is already evident in the incipient revolt within the Coalition against a net zero carbon emissions target. 'A major question looms over whether Ley has the requisite network of allies, intellectual and rhetorical force, strategic nous and fortitude to perform the diabolically difficult task of reversing 25 years of rightwards Liberal drift.'