Queensland Oaks contender Jenni's Meadow marks full-circle moment for owner Tony Ottobre
Now, in a full-circle moment, Hayes' grandsons Ben, Will and JD are training Ottobre's filly Jenni's Meadow in what looks to be a wide-open race in the Group 1 Queensland Oaks (2200m) at Eagle Farm on Saturday.
The David Vandyke -trained Philia, chasing a fifth straight victory, has drifted slightly to $4.20 in the betting market after drawing barrier 16 while Jenni's Meadow is $8.
Group 1 Australasian Oaks winner Benagil is $5.50 and the Chris Waller -trained Movin Out, with James McDonald on board, is $8 in the $700,000 race for three-year-old fillies.
Both Movin Out and Jenni's Meadow came from well back in the field to heap the pressure on frontrunning winner Philia in the Group 2 The Roses (2000m) at Doomben two weeks ago.
'She did make a long sustained run and the way she finished off, you'd think the extra 200m (in the Oaks) will be no problem,' Ben Hayes said.
'We're really happy with her and she's done everything right.
'She's really thrived and her final piece of work earlier in the week was excellent.
'We feel like we're right on track, we're just going to need a little bit of luck from barrier one, which is the opposite of The Roses (barrier 14).'
Ottobre started out as an apprentice jockey in the early 1970s for legendary trainer Colin Hayes, who established the famous Lindsay Park Stud in South Australia's Barossa Valley.
Hayes built a training and breeding empire that produced an incredible 5333 winners by the time he retired in 1990, including two Melbourne Cup victories with Beldale Ball (1980) and At Talaq in 1986.
• 'How do they work that out?': Trainer queries Joliestar 'best horse' tag
Ottobre eventually realised his future lay in owning horses rather than riding them and he became a successful businessman.
He now keeps his stable of horses at his Cape Schanck farm on the Mornington Peninsula, enjoying enormous success over the past two years with three-time Group 1 champion and reigning horse of the year Pride Of Jenni.
'He's got a little bit of history with Lindsay Park, which is good, so it'll be exciting to get a good winner for Tony,' Ben Hayes said about Ottobre, who names his Jenni horses after his daughter, who tragically died from brain cancer at age 26 in 2015.
'He's passionate and he loves his horses. She (Jenni's Meadow) has been a very good horse for him the whole way through.
'She's a Listed winner, black-type Group 2, Group 3 placed and she'll be around the mark.
'She's definitely more than capable (of winning the Oaks).'
All horses in the three Group 1s – the Oaks, Queensland Derby (2400m) and Kingsford Smith Cup (1300m) – at Eagle Farm on Saturday have been passed by vets, with the exception of Let's Fly.
Vets say the $21 Oaks chance has some muscle soreness and the filly will need to be trotted up again on race morning.
Hashtags

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

News.com.au
4 minutes ago
- News.com.au
Axed Bulldogs halfback Toby Sexton tells all about Lachlan Galvin saga amid surprising call on Phil Gould
Axed Bulldogs star Toby Sexton has given his side to the Lachlan Galvin and Phil Gould saga, which continues to simmer as Canterbury's slide down the NRL ladder continues. On Friday night, the Roosters totally outclassed the Bulldogs 32-12, as the decision to drop Sexton for Galvin continues to age poorly. After years of rebuilding, the Bulldogs appeared to have finally positioned themselves as genuine premiership contenders in 2025, but in the last three weeks, they have been smashed by both the lowly Tigers and the Roosters. FOX LEAGUE, available on Kayo Sports, is the only place to watch every game of every round in the 2025 NRL Telstra Premiership, LIVE with no ad-breaks during play. New to Kayo? Join now and get your first month for just $1. Sandwiched in between those losses was a win over the struggling Warriors, who have lost three of their last four games. Yet despite their form slump, the Bulldogs still sit in third on the NRL ladder, thanks to a strong start to the season. But there is a sense that the damage done by unsettling a spine that was thriving by bringing Galvin in mid-season could ultimately cost them the title. A large part of that blame has been placed on the shoulders of Bulldogs supremo Phil Gould and coach Cameron Ciraldo. While there have even been suggestions of a rift in the team. However, Sexton played down all that talk, stating he has no hard feelings towards Galvin, who is simply doing what is best for him. 'There's no issue with Lachy, not at all,' Sexton told Code Sports. 'At the end of the day, he chose the Bulldogs because he thinks that's a side that will win a comp and where he can add value. He's a kid who has come in, works hard and does his job at halfback. I can't be critical of him.' Billed as the next big thing at the Titans in 2021, Sexton's NRL career went into free fall before Gould and Ciraldo gave him a lifeline. Under the tutelage of Ciraldo, the playmaker quickly developed into one of the most consistent halves and played a pivotal role in the Bulldogs' strong start to the season. Sexton will head to the Super League next season after he was somewhat tapped on the shoulder by Gould and Ciraldo, following Galvin's arrival. But the halfback holds no ill will towards the pair, crediting them for turning his career and the Bulldogs around. 'Phil Gould is very good. He was the one with Cameron who took a chance on me in 2023, and at a stage of my career where I didn't know where I was going,' Sexton continued. 'I was playing reserve grade for Tweed at the time (in the Queensland Cup) and wasn't sure what I was going to do. 'Gus has been in a lot of great systems. You can't fault his knowledge. He helped set up Penrith and the Roosters, and I realise why there have been so many good halves coming through at those clubs, it's on the back of what he's done. 'He's a very honest character. He will let you know where you are at, whether you are doing well or you have stuff to work on, that's what players appreciate the most from him.' Next year, Sexton will join French Super League club Catalans, where he will replace Roosters veteran Luke Keary. But at just 24 years of age, there is a good chance he will return to the NRL down the track. In the meantime, Sexton says his sole focus is on trying to win a premiership with the Dogs. While he is clearly on the outer, after being dropped for Galvin, if injuries strike, he may be able to once again turn the stuttering Dogs ship around and lead them to grand final glory.

News.com.au
27 minutes ago
- News.com.au
11-length debut winner Ninja passes city test with narrow win at Rosehill
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. '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. Ninja holds on! 🥷 The @MFreedmanRacing trained galloper wins at Rosehill with @AndrewAdkins103 in the saddle! â€' SKY Racing (@SkyRacingAU) August 16, 2025 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. 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.'' â– â– â– â– â– 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. It's @AnnaRoper_ and Denim Wynen combining to take out the first at Rosehill with Monkhana saluting! ðŸ'� â€' SKY Racing (@SkyRacingAU) August 16, 2025 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.

News.com.au
an hour ago
- News.com.au
Treasurer Jim Chalmers says too many Aussies are ‘burning cash' waiting for approvals
Treasurer Jim Chalmers says Australians are 'burning cash' waiting for approvals as he takes aim at Australia's sluggish productivity rate ahead of a three-day talkfest in Canberra. Chalmers will next week host an economic reform roundtable in Canberra where boosting productivity and building resilience in Australia's economy and budget will take centre-stage. Speaking with The Guardian, Mr Chalmers said slow approval times by governments and councils had stymied productivity. 'It will be one of the main ways that people think through our regulatory challenges and our challenges around the time it takes to get projects approved,' Chalmers told the Guardian. 'In all the consultation I've been doing – in housing, renewable energy projects – there are too many instances where people are burning cash waiting for approvals to build things that we desperately want people to build.' The treasurer's remarks signal reform to the Environment Protection and Biodiversity Conservation Act is a high priority for the re-elected government. The Albanese government failed to deliver on its promise of reform the country's complex environmental laws its first term. Separately, Mr Chalmers told NewsWire on Friday that Australia's sluggish birthrate meant the country would have to lift productivity to maintain living standards. 'It's not surprising that the birthrate has slowed given the pressures on people, including financial pressures,' he said. 'We want to make it easier for them to make that choice. If they want to have more kids, we want to make it easier for them to do that, and that's what motivates a lot of our changes.' As Australia struggles to boost the economy, and in turn raise wages and living standards, it's contending with a sluggish birthrate of 1.5 births per woman, which is under the 2.1 figure needed to sustain population growth. Boosting productivity will be essential to ensuring that Australia's ageing population can weather economic headwinds, the Treasurer said. 'Now, the reason why the productivity challenge is important to this is because our society is ageing, and over time, there will be fewer workers for every person who's retired,' he said. 'We need to make sure that our economy is as productive as it can be, as strong as it can be to withstand that demographic change, which is going to be big and consequential.'