Matahga aiming to replicate success of Derby winners in Oaklands Plate at Morphettville Parks
The last two winners of the Oaklands Plate have since achieved Group 1 glory, and Saturday's race favourite, Matahga, is out to prove he's on that trajectory.
The impressive colt won the Racing Rewards 2YO Plate (1200m) at Murray Bridge last start, and is out to nail consecutive Oaklands Plate's for trainer Phillip Stokes, who saddled up last year's winner, Femminile.
Femminile pulled off a brilliant win in May's $1m SA Derby (2500m), while staying filly Coco Sun, also pulled off a Oaklands Plate-Derby double in 2023-24.
Matahga, a son of Tivaci, is only two starts into his career, but is giving the indication that he fits a similar mould.
'To be honest, I think he's shown more than Femminile, obviously Femminile improved a heap, so he's going to have to do the same,' assistant trainer Tommy Stokes said.
'He'll look at a similar path, he's got stayer written all over him, he settles so well in his trackwork and his races, he's going to eat up a bigger trip for sure.'
Matahga comes from a long way back & finishes the strongest in a promising maiden win ðŸ'¥ @pstokesracing pic.twitter.com/KEkgXqRNiP
— Racing.com (@Racing) June 14, 2025
•
Matahga produced an eye-catching last 200m to run down his rivals in the Racing Rewards feature on June 14, after his debut outing saw him charge home for second.
'That was the race we wanted to win, leading into the first start we thought they were going to be way too sharp for him, but he really stuck on well and nearly won the race,' he said.
'He improved again second-up, we reckon 1400m is going to be perfect, the Parks track is probably not going to be to his liking, but the distance definitely will be.
'He's come through it (last start) really well, I think he's improved again, he'll run a real good race if he's not too far off them as they straighten up.
'He's one of our nicer 2YOs, and he's not just a 2YO, he's got scope, that's what is most exciting about him.'
Jacob Opperman has piloted the colt in his previous two starts, and will steer again on Saturday from barrier nine at Morphettville Parks.
'I think Jacob suits him well, he rode him on debut when Lachie (Neindorf) was in Victoria,' he said.
'He's started to help us out at trackwork on various mornings, and if he continues to do that he can keep the rides.'
Matahga impresses running away with the Magic Millions Racing Rewards SA 2YO Plate at Murray Bridge 🚀
Congratulations to the Brook family @GaryBrook18 | @RacingSA pic.twitter.com/KpzIDewJ8L
— Phillip Stokes Racing (@pstokesracing) June 14, 2025
Matahga ($2.80 Sportsbet) will be accompanied by stablemate Kazaru in Saturday's Oaklands Plate (1400m).
The filly, a half-sister to 2022 Adelaide Cup winner Daqiansweet Junior, is at the other end of the market, with an eighth-placed finish at Geelong her only start.
'She's improved a heap off her debut run,' Stokes said.
'She's obviously 100-1, so the form doesn't stack up, she was beaten a fair way.
'She'll appreciate distance and we are obviously trying to sneak black type for the pedigree.'
Hashtags

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

News.com.au
an hour ago
- News.com.au
New series to revive Aussie racing's golden age
The golden age of Australian motorsport will return in 2026 as Ford turns back the clock to the kind of racing that made Peter Brock and Allan Moffat superstars. Back then, racing heroes would take a car from the showroom, make a few minor modifications and hit the track. These days, modern Supercars racing sees multimillion-dollar, purpose-built racing machines fretted over by teams of mechanics and engineers. But a new series from Ford will turn back the clock and make racing a V8-powered Mustang cheaper and easier than before. The Mustang Challenge is a new series in the US that will reach Australia next year.. Andrew, Birkic, President and chief executive of Ford Australia, says the Mustang 'holds a special place in the hearts of Australians, and a dedicated one-make series featuring the Dark Horse R is a natural and incredibly exciting fit for our market'. 'This new championship provides a clear pathway for aspiring drivers and adds another thrilling dimension to the Mustang's legendary racing heritage down under,' he said. 'We can't wait for 2026 to see these incredible cars battling it out on tracks all over Australia.' The series will be run by Driving Solutions, a firm with decades of experience in motorsport and automotive events. We are incredibly proud and excited to partner with Ford Performance to bring Mustang Cup Australia to life,' Driving Solutions director James Stewart said. 'The Mustang Dark Horse R is a spectacular race car, and we believe a one-make series featuring this machine will be a huge drawcard for Australian drivers and fans. 'Our aim is to build a professional, competitive, and accessible series that provides a fantastic opportunity for young drivers to hone their skills, and for experience drivers to enjoy racing a high-performance and market-relevant race car. 'We look forward to working hard to make this series a roaring success.' The series puts drivers in identical Mustang Dark Horse R racing cars, which are purpose-built by Ford Performance in the US but are nearly-identical to the road-legal Mustang except for the added safety features - just like what Brock, Moffat and co. raced in the 1970s. One example of the Mustang Dark Horse R is already in the country to help drum up interest for the category, and six Australian drivers have signed up for June's special race at Le Mans, France. Chris Ward, Ford's global one-make category manager, is overseeing Mustang Challenge and is confident that the series will hit Aussie tracks next year. While there are still a few fine details to get resolved, Ward is confidently planning for an Australian series and said he would be 'thrilled' with a 20 car grid for the first season. Australia already has plenty of racing categories, including the Porsche Carrera Cup and Toyota GR 86 Series, but Ward believes the unique appeal of the Mustang will make it a worthy addition to the local racing scene. 'We are not coming to the market to disrupt what's already there,' he said. 'We want to supplement that, if that's the right word. We want to be supportive. We readily realise that there's a finite number of people in the Australian market that have the wherewithal to go sports car racing. So we're not looking to disrupt that.' Ford's goal, Ward explained, is to help introduce both young and older amateur drivers into the world of racing and hopefully have them progress up through its established pathway of other track-ready Mustangs that includes the GT4 and GT3 class cars. 'We're looking to further the sports car market in Australia where people that are track day enthusiasts, not have such a giant leap to go from the track day warrior, let's call them, to let's say GT4 racing or GT3 racing. We want to fill that little niche in between people that have taken their street cars onto the racetrack to go GT4 racing,' he said. One example of this is reigning Mustang Challenge champion Robert Noaker. The 21-year-old is a throwback to the likes of a young Peter Brock, racing for his own family-run team with only his dad and a few friends to help work on his car. His success in the inaugural season has seen him signed up to be part of Ford's 'junior team' of young drivers that it will groom for future sports car drives across its various activities. This allows him to dream of becoming a professional racing driver, something that was otherwise out of reach for him before Mustang Challenge. 'I'm still keeping the mindset of 'it's not going to happen', so I'm gonna just keep focusing on the business side, with the team. But I'm still doing whatever I can to try to make something out of the program and to try to step up the ladder [into GT4 or GT3].' Not surprisingly, like any racing driver, he has dreams of racing at Australia's greatest track - Mt Panorama, Bathurst - having previously run a race there in a different category. 'Personally, my favourite track is Bathurst. After I ran it, my first lap I'm like 'this has ruined everything else'. So I'd love to do the 12 hour or the 1000. And you know, being Ford is involved in the cars that race in that, I have the experience at the track already and maybe something could happen at some point. And that's the beauty of the program. You know, if you're the right fit for something, you're already in the program and you're able to go up their ladder.'

News.com.au
2 hours ago
- News.com.au
'We'll get beat': Alice Springs trainer Dick Leech charged after prejudicial comments in leaked video
Alice Springs trainer Dick Leech has been charged with conduct prejudicial for comments in a leaked video about stopping Darwin Cup-bound Hasseltoff from winning a lead-up race on Saturday. In a video sent to owners of the former Victorian-based galloper Hasseltoff, Leech said the Alice Springs Cup winner would go around Saturday 'for a look' in the 1300m ROANT Gold Cup (Div 2). 'He's getting a fair bit of spark in him now,' Leech said after initial commentary about the gelding's condition. 'He'll go around next Saturday in the 1300m … but we'll only be going for a look. 'We'll get beat … we gotta get beat then we'll go for the Chief Minister's (Cup) a fortnight later, mile. 'We got to win that and then on towards the (Darwin) Cup but going quite good.' A person behind the camera then asked Leech, 'all right, so hopefully the jockey can hold him?' 'Yeah, yeah, he will be getting held,' Leech laughed. 'The worst jockey in Australia put on him.' NT Stewards obtained the leaked footage on Thursday and ordered Leech to front an inquiry on Friday. NT chairman of stewards David Hensler said Leech pleaded guilty to a conduct prejudicial charge. Stewards expect to hand down a monetary penalty in coming days. 'It's of great concern to us, the stewards, that (vision) would be in the public arena,' Hensler said. 'We've treated the matter very seriously. 'I only saw it (video) yesterday (Thursday) and we acted on it today … that's how seriously we've treated (this matter).' Leech scratched Hasseltoff on Thursday after the horse pulled up lame from a track gallop. 'It saved a further issue for us to deal with, really,' Hensler said. 'Hopefully, for the connections, the horse can get over the lameness and progress to the (Darwin Cup), because that's obviously its target.' Australian Thoroughbred Bloodstock Director Darren Dance, managing owner of Hasseltoff, lamented the 'unfortunate situation' as a prank gone wrong. 'Turns out to be an unfortunate situation as Hasseltoff was always going to be first up in the Chief Minister's Cup, en route to win the Darwin Cup as his main mission for the preparation,' Dance said. 'After a super preparation in Alice Springs, where he was unbeaten … the team up there appeared to be joking around about him running this Saturday. 'To stir me up, as they know I am keen for him to go through the carnival undefeated. 'It was never the intention to run (Saturday) as he was always going to be weighted out with his rating … now, it's a big story.'

Daily Telegraph
2 hours ago
- Daily Telegraph
NRL round 17: Knights v Raiders live scores, updates, SuperCoach analysis
Hello and welcome to our coverage of a very important edition of Friday Night Footy. Two games with big implications for the top-eight greet us tonight. It all starts with Manly hosting the Wests Tigers, before the Knights go head-to-head with the Raiders. Follow all the Friday coverage in our live blog below Originally published as NRL round 17: Knights v Raiders live scores, updates, SuperCoach analysis