
Horse racing: Cambridge Stud savours Champagne success
The $1.30 favourite controlled the race from there and was travelling easily coming up to the home turn.
Te Akau Racing filly Queen's Evidence briefly loomed as a threat on her outside coming into the straight, but Lucy In The Sky quickened again and left her behind. She dashed to victory by a length and three-quarters, with Queen's Evidence finishing another four lengths clear of the third-placed Alottago. Lucy In The Sky clocked 1m 09.77s for the 1200m.
'Tony Pike asked me if I'd come down here to ride her today and it was an absolute no-brainer,' Fawcett said.
'She's still a bit green – she changed legs early in the race and actually jumped a shadow. But she's a class horse and she still managed to get the job done. I was confident turning for home that she was going to put them away easily.'
Lucy In The Sky has now had three starts for two wins, earning $77,250 in stakes.
Pike was pleased to add valuable black type to the filly's CV, while the trip down to Christchurch – albeit to race on a different surface – will also hold her in good stead ahead of a potential Group 1 New Zealand 1000 Guineas (1600m) campaign in the spring.
'We came down here to try to get a stakes win on the board, so it's mission accomplished in that sense,' Pike said. 'She'll also go down in history as the first horse to win a black-type race on the synthetic [track] in New Zealand.
'She's a really nice filly who ran in a Group 1 race up north. She still has a bit to learn, so it's all positive heading into her 3-year-old season. I think the best two fillies ran the quinella today and have the makings of good 3-year-olds.
'Our filly had to work a bit to get across and lead, but she's done it well. I told Jasmine to just allow her to get into rhythm, which she did.
'There's a lot of water to go under the bridge yet, but it would be great to see her back here in November for the 1000 Guineas.'
Lucy In The Sky and Queen's Evidence continued a dominant run for fillies in the Champagne Stakes. They have now won 10 of the last 11 runnings, with the only exception coming from Te Akau gelding Discretion Rules last year.
Before that, the winners were Illicit Dreams (2023), Diss Is Dramatic (2022), Unusual Countess (2021), All About Magic (2019 – race not run in 2020), Secret Allure (2018), Prom Queen (2017), Zigwig (2016), Peach Cove (2015) and Elusive Catch (2014).
Hashtags

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


NZ Herald
24-05-2025
- NZ Herald
Velocious wins Te Rapa sprint feature and now has Brisbane race in sight
Group 1 winner Velocious bounced back to her brilliant best in the Jarvis Trading (1100m) at Te Rapa on Saturday, raising the possibility of a transtasman mission. The Stephen Marsh-trained filly was New Zealand's champion 2-year-old last season, when she won four of her six starts including the Karaka Million 2YO (1200m) and the Group 1 Sistema Stakes (1200m). Her 3-year-old season has been an up-and-down journey for her connections. There was a wind operation in the spring, then a smart first-up win at Te Aroha in March, then a luckless run in the Group 3 Cambridge Breeders' Stakes (1200m) and a disappointing fifth after a costly slow start at Ellerslie last Saturday. Marsh and owners Go Racing decided to roll the dice and run Velocious in Saturday's $40,000 sprint feature on a seven-day turnaround, and the gamble paid off. Velocious jumped much better and her jockey Michael McNab took up a handy position in third along the fence as Shoes and Illicit Dreams showed the way through the early stages.


NZ Herald
21-05-2025
- NZ Herald
Chase A Dream won't be chasing the Inter Dominions
Chase A Dream's best form has been elusive this year. Photo / Race Images Chase A Dream's Queensland campaign and any hope of a stud career are both over before they began. The exceptional but erratic 4-year-old was pulled out of the Rising Sun at Albion Park in July 5 on Wednesday morning by co-owner and trainer Mark Purdon, following a so-so second to stablemate Rubira at a Pukekohe trial on Tuesday. That means he won't board a plane to Sydney on Sunday with Rubira and Oscar Bonavena, instead staying home and heading to the spelling paddock. But before then, he will be gelded as Purdon seeks more consistency from the Group 1 winner in the second half of the season. 'We think that is the best thing for him,' says Purdon. 'He will be gelded, have a break and hopefully come back better and more consistent in the second half of the season. 'We are disappointed to not be going and really appreciated the invite to the Rising Sun but it just hasn't worked out for him.' Purdon confirmed both Rubura (Derbys) and Oscar Bonavena (Inter Dominion Trotting Champs) will still make the trip. With Chase A Dream out of the series and Republican Party almost certain to follow there will be few, if any, realistic New Zealand chances of making the pacing final on July 19 but Oscar Bonavena and Bet N Win give New Zealand two top chances in the Trotting series. Michael Guerin wrote his first nationally published racing articles while still in school and started writing about horse racing and the gambling industry for the Herald as a 20-year-old in 1990. He became the Herald's Racing Editor in 1995 and covers the world's biggest horse racing carnivals.


NZ Herald
18-05-2025
- NZ Herald
Mick On Monday: No Triple Crown for Journalism but plenty of glory
The modern thoroughbred gets plenty of flak for not being as hardy as the equine heroes of yesteryear but Journalism proved proved himself equal parts brilliant and brave to fight through the interference, shouldering his way out of trouble when many simply would have shouldered arms. That Journalism wanted to do that, regather himself and then run down the leader just two weeks after his narrow loss in the Kentucky mud suggests he is a special horse and now all eyes turn to a possible rematch with Sovereignty in the Belmont Stakes, the last leg of this dead crown, on June 7. The public would usually fixate on the Derby winner heading to the Belmont, but after the heart Journalism showed yesterday, he may have even more supporters than Sovereignty if they clash again to decide who is North America's best 3-year-old. What does it all mean to Kiwis, who rarely bet on US horse racing, a jurisdiction far less important to us than Australia, Hong Kong or even Europe? Probably not a lot. But you could spend the next few years watching the best horse racing from around the world and not see a horse get up off the canvas like Journalism did yesterday. PUTTING THE WIND UP Hāwera provided a new way to nearly lose a race meeting yesterday and, this time, nobody was to blame. While slippery tracks and abandoned meetings have become one of the biggest threats to the financial stability of the thoroughbred industry, it was high winds that caused delays to yesterday's meeting. The wind was gale-like by the middle of the afternoon and raised concerns about safety and fair starts as it was blowing some of the starting gates closed again after they opened. That saw the fifth race delayed so some of the springs that open the starting gates could be replaced but helpfully, the wind dropped and racing continued. NARROW LEAD It is advantage Walker/Bergerson in the battle to be the black-type kings of New Zealand racing. The country's leading trainers had to settle for second with Towering Vision in the Champagne Stakes at Ellerslie on Saturday but won the only other black type race in the country when Francee triumphed in the listed Rangitīkei Cup at Trentham. That takes them to 18 black-type wins in New Zealand for the season, one more than Stephen Marsh, on 17, in his best year. While the premiership matters and total stakes even more, trainers take enormous pride in black-type wins and the Te Akau trainers, whether that be Walker, Bergerson or formerly Jamie Richards, haven't lost the black-type title since 2019 when Murray Baker and Andrew Forsman trained 25 elite-level winners. With only three black-type races remaining for the season, all in Central Districts, Marsh is running out of opportunities to claw the lead back but both stables are going to finish with new personal bests for the season on stakes won. Michael Guerin wrote his first nationally published racing articles while still in school and started writing about horse racing and the gambling industry for the Herald as a 20-year-old in 1990. He became the Herald