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Black Caviar and Winx to be elevated to Legend status in Australian Racing Hall of Fame

Black Caviar and Winx to be elevated to Legend status in Australian Racing Hall of Fame

News.com.au4 hours ago

Winx or Black Caviar? Who was the greatest?
The mighty mares were both freakish champions and trying to determine who is the best is the subject of robust debate.
There is a school of thought that comparing champions of different eras is a futile exercise but racing – and other sports – is built on comparisons.
We all like to consider how Phar Lap would have gone against today's champions. Or, who is the best racehorse, Secretariat or Frankel?
It's the same in other sports. In cricket, we are forever comparing the records of modern day batters like Steve Smith to the legendary Sir Donald Bradman.
In rugby league, is Wally Lewis better than Andrew Johns? Is Reg Gasnier or John Raper the best of them all?
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It's the same with AFL. There's plenty in Leigh Matthews' corner, Gary Ablett Senior is in the conversation, as are Ted Whitten, John Coleman and Tony Lockett.
There are always comparisons between Michael Jordan or LeBron James as the best basketballer, and does any boxer challenge Muhammad Ali as the greatest of all-time?
In tennis, there is ongoing debate about the best player of the modern era – Roger Federer, Rafael Nadal or Novak Djokovic? And how do they rate against the only man to win the Grand Slam twice, Rod Laver?
The point is comparing champion racehorses is like debating the greats of other sports – it's a fun exercise and we all do it.
But when analysing the race careers of Winx and Black Caviar, how do you split them?
This was the dilemma facing the Australian Racing Hall of Fame selection committee when determining which of these two mares would be elevated to 'Legend' status at the Hall of Fame-Racehorse of the Year awards in Brisbane on August 31.
There are only three racehorses elevated to the Legend category so far – Phar Lap, Carbine and Makybe Diva – and it is the most elite honour in Australian racing.
Winx and Black Caviar are both deserving of 'Legend'' status, it was just a matter of when.
And trying to decide who would go in first was like asking which mare would win if they clashed over 1400m at weight-for-age?
In the end, the selection panel simply couldn't split them and made the unprecedented but sensible call to elevate both Winx and Black Caviar to 'Legend' status the same year.
'It is fitting Black Caviar and Winx are going in as a 'Legend' together,'' said Peter Moody, trainer of Black Caviar.
'They are both great mares and it was only a matter of time, with all due respect, they were both going to get that honour and very deservedly so.''
Perfection! ðŸ'¯
Do yourself a favour & watch Black Caviar's 25 wins from 25 starts �
Which victory was your favourite? pic.twitter.com/ejIuDyuXEj
— Racing.com (@Racing) August 17, 2024

Hall of Fame chairman Jason Scott echoed the sentiments of the entire selection panel when he said: 'Debate has raged for years over which of the two champion mares is the greatest we've seen, however what is certain is that their legacies transcend far beyond the boundaries of racing.
'It's deserving that they both be bestowed 'Legend' status in the Australian Racing Hall of Fame together, befitting of their stature as two of the best we have and will ever have the (good) fortune to see'.
Winx won 37 of her 43 races, including her last 33 races in succession, featuring a world record 25 at Group 1 level. She was so good they made a movie about her.
'I always admired Winx's determination and the uncomplicated way she went about her work and racing,'' Waller said. 'She didn't require any extra fuss.
'She was a high performance athlete with an amazing amount of talent, and she captured the imagination.
'When I talk to people about Winx, there's nothing but ultimate respect for her. It is fitting she has been elevated to 'Legend' status.''
"IT'S EQUINE UTOPIA!"
It wouldn't be Cox Plate week without the four-time champion Winx - the most successful Cox Plate horse in history 🙌
If you're looking for more Cox Plate replays, you can head to https://t.co/Ga3GHuaAKJ 's Vault to watch them ðŸ'‰ https://t.co/rnwadynQhP pic.twitter.com/MnNVRdF6zU
— Racing.com (@Racing) October 24, 2024
Black Caviar was simply unbeatable. 25 starts, 25 wins, 15 at Group 1 level. Surely there has never been a better sprinter than this magnificent mare.
She won most of her races effortlessly, running fast times and breaking the hearts of her chasing rivals. Even when she wasn't at her absolute best, like the 2012 Diamond Jubilee Stakes at Royal Ascot, they still couldn't beat her.
'Black Caviar changed my life,'' Moody said. 'Every day, I still think about her and then when Royal Ascot comes each year around you relive those great memories again. She was a once-in-a-lifetime horse.''

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The Back Page: Australia's longest running sports show finishes after 29-year run on Fox Sports
The Back Page: Australia's longest running sports show finishes after 29-year run on Fox Sports

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The Back Page: Australia's longest running sports show finishes after 29-year run on Fox Sports

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Sione Tuipulotu's rise from playing club rugby with his father to representing the British and Irish Lions
Sione Tuipulotu's rise from playing club rugby with his father to representing the British and Irish Lions

ABC News

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Sione Tuipulotu's rise from playing club rugby with his father to representing the British and Irish Lions

Watching Australian Sione Tuipulotu playing for the British and Irish Lions should make the Wallabies wince. But lasting regrets would belie Tuipulotu's rise from rugby backblocks to international fame. His feats deserve comparison to trailblazers like Ange Postecoglou, Minjee Lee, and Jordan Mailata. ABC Sport will have live blog coverage of the British and Irish Lions' tour of Australia this July and August. Two generations ago, Tuipulotu's family was Scottish, Tongan, and Italian. His grandmother, Anne Thompson, moved with her parents and siblings from Greenock, outside Glasgow, to North Frankston (known as The Pines), an hour's drive from Melbourne, in 1963. Her daughter, Angelina, whose father was Italian, met Fohe Tuipulotu while he was studying at RMIT in Melbourne on an AusAID scholarship from Tonga. They married and moved to Tonga before returning to Australia to raise five children: two girls, Kiesse and Keanna, and three boys, Sione, Mosese and Ottavio. Sione played soccer while attending St Francis Xavier Primary School in Frankston. His childhood was spent in the Australian football heartland, where few people knew or cared about the differences between rugby and rugby league. The ranking of football codes in popularity was Australian Rules — daylight — soccer, rugby league and rugby. Sione was in his first year at the public high school Elisabeth Murdoch College when he decided to try rugby at Southern Districts, a family club in nearby Seaford — a world away from the private school programs in Sydney and Brisbane. But 'Souths' had everything children needed to improve their skills and showcase natural abilities. Fohe put up his hand to coach. Sione recently sent a video message to his old friends: "I just want to say how much I miss it (Souths)," he said. "I've played for quite a few teams now, but I've never had more fun than when I played for Souths. 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It's going to be hard, mentally." Fohe's advice to his son was to stay with the Rebels and keep trying. "At the time, for me personally, I like to fight. Stay there and fight," he said. "And that's what I told him to do. I didn't realise his mental health was affected at the time. "But he didn't tell me because he wanted to respect my decision, which is a learning curve for me now." A circuit breaker came for Sione in 2018 with the acceptance of an invitation to play in Japan during the off season. After a frustrating stretch with the Rebels he enjoyed the two-month experience, and Yamaha Jubilo (now Shizuoka Blue Revs) liked Sione so much that they wanted him to stay. "He rang me up to come and see him and I knew there was something up," Fohe said. "And he asked me to let him go. He had an offer to go back to Japan and play for them full-time. They offered him two years. He was struggling." With Fohe's blessing, Sione stayed with the Japanese club and his game, and confidence, grew. "Those two years that he went and played in Japan he played every single game for 80 minutes," Fohe said. "And I saw the improvement in his game and I saw it quick. I think that was when Scotland was looking at him." UK officials had witnessed Sione playing for Australia's under-20s at the World Cup in Manchester in 2016, with the knowledge that his grandmother was a Scot. "I met some of the coaching staff from Scotland at the time," Fohe said. "But our focus wasn't in Scotland, our focus was for them to grow up here and play for Australia." Five years later, Sione said yes to an offer from Glasgow Warriors. The big move into the Scottish national team came via a phone call from the coach Gregor Townsend. Sione made his debut for Scotland against his father's homeland, Tonga, in 2021. Three years later he was made captain for a series that would include the Scottish debut of his brother Mosese, who had been following Sione through the ranks. "The most emotional phone call I've ever had was Gregor phoning me to tell me I'll be Scotland captain," Sione told Scottish media. "But when he phoned to say my brother would be included, that was a pretty close second." The Tuipulotu brothers opposed Australia at Murrayfield Stadium, winning 27-13. Their grandmother made the trip from Frankston to be in the grandstands. "It was an amazing moment," Sione told the BBC. "When she handed over the cup she said, 'you got 'em!'. I'm super happy and it makes the day all worthwhile." The youngest Tuipulotu brother, Ottavio, represented the Junior Wallabies in 2024. "It's unbelievable," Fohe said. "Because all of them play professional now. I knew the quality of how he (Sione) is and that determination — I knew he was going to go all the way. "To see him grow not only with his rugby but his family life, for me as a father is very humbling." Grandmother Anne, 77, was not much of a sports watcher until her three grandsons took up rugby. 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Li Tu, Tristan Schoolkate, James McCabe and Alex Bolt begin Wimbledon qualifying with wins
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