Owner Peter Wood has faith teen rider Bella Youngberry can pull off miracle result in Grafton Cup in $101 outsider Pure Deal
This is the creed that Pure Deal owner Peter Wood lives by and why he has placed his trust in teenager Bella Youngberry to ride the seven-year-old gelding in the $200,000 Listed Grafton Cup (2350m) on Thursday.
The 19-year-old Youngberry rode Pure Deal to a narrow victory in a diving finish at $61 odds in the Grafton Cup Prelude (2230m) on July 6 to book a spot in the main event, where the daughter of Queensland Channel 9 weather presenter Garry Youngberry is ready to step up again.
The son of Dundeel is a $101 chance in the Grafton Cup but that won't stop Wood, Gold Coast hoop Youngberry and trainer Brett Bellamy from believing that fairytales can happen to them.
Wood already has a Grafton Cup on his CV after Rednav saluted in the 2016 edition at $31 after winning the cup prelude the week before.
'Bella has got good ability and I like to back the apprentices,' said Wood, who lives in the tiny village Coramba, just a 15-minute drive from Coffs Harbour racetrack.
'If you watch the way she rode that horse in the prelude, you couldn't knock the ride in any shape or form.
'I never even thought about whether or not to put her in the (Grafton) Cup. I simply said to her 'if you want the ride, it's yours'.
'She's got the horse happy and the horse goes for her. It responds to everything that she wants it to do.'
The last five Grafton Cups have been won by Group 1-winning jockeys but Wood sees the glass as half-full, saying it's overdue for a lesser light to grab the spoils.
Blake Shinn, with 31 Group 1s to his name, is undoubtedly the star hoop in Thursday's field and will ride $4.40 chance Belvedere Boys for trainer Matt Dunn.
'Just the ride itself for Bella and the experience is going to help her tenfold,' Wood said about Youngberry, who is in only her second season of riding.
'We need to let these apprentices experience what it's all about. They can't do it if they don't get the chance.
'There's absolutely no way I would have considered another jockey given the work that Bella has already put into the horse.
'You've got to weigh 54kg so that limits who you can get as well. In the end it wasn't a hard decision. She won't let us down, whether we win, lose or draw.'
Wood paid just $1500 last month from an online Inglis Sale for Pure Deal, who raced across southeast Queensland from 2020 to 2022 for Brisbane trainer Bevan Laming before being sent to Victoria to compete, mainly in jumps and hurdles races.
His previous race before the Grafton Cup Prelude was a 3400m hurdle event at Sandown Lakeside on June 1.
Wood said he was cashed up after winning his first Highway race as an owner when Lordster saluted over 1200m at Rosehill on July 5, and he took the $61 odds on offer for Pure Deal the following day in the cup prelude.
'He's been rejuvenated working on the beaches at Coffs Harbour,' Wood said.
'There's no reason not to run him on Thursday at Grafton. He's an outsider and you'd have to say it'll be a huge ask.
'But we've got a horse who's feeling good and he'll definitely run the distance.'
Hashtags

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

Daily Telegraph
3 hours ago
- Daily Telegraph
Stuard Broad hits back at David Warner as Ashes war of words erupts, cricket 2025 news
Don't miss out on the headlines from Cricket. Followed categories will be added to My News. There's nearly four months until the first Ashes Test in Perth, but the war of words is already well underway. Ex-England bowler Stuart Broad has hit back at comments from former Australian rival David Warner, who took a gentle dig at superstar batter Joe Root ahead of the marquee series. Speaking to BBC Sport, Warner suggested that Root, the second-leading run-scorer in Test history, was susceptible to LBW dismissals, warning that Australian quick Josh Hazlewood will be targeting his front pad during this summer's Ashes campaign. Root averages 51.09 in Tests, but that figure slips to 31.40 when facing Hazlewood. Watch England vs India Test Series LIVE & EXCLUSIVE on Fox Cricket, available on Kayo Sports | New to Kayo? Join now and get your first month for just $1 > 'The big anchor there is Rooty, who is yet to score a hundred in Australia,' Warner said. 'Hazlewood tends to have his number quite a lot. He will have to take the surfboard off his front leg.' Most times dismissing Joe Root in Tests 11 – Pat Cummins (AUS) 11 – Jasprit Bumrah (IND) 10 – Josh Hazlewood (AUS) 9 – Ravindra Jadeja (IND) England's Joe Root. Photo by HENRY NICHOLLS / AFP Root has cracked 15 Test hundreds since the start of 2022, averaging 64.64 in the game's longest format during that period. However, the right-hander has struggled on previous Ashes tours to Australia, scoring 892 runs at 35.68 with no centuries across 15 matches. The Yorkshireman has been toppled by Hazlewood ten times in the Test arena – but as pointed out by Broad, only three of those dismissals were LBW, the most recent of which occurred way back in 2019. 'I've never heard England's best ever batters front pad called a surfboard,' Broad tweeted. 'Just for clarity. Hazlewood has got Rooty LBW in Test cricket three times. Three.' Since the start of 2013, no cricketer has been dismissed LBW in the Test arena more often than Root with 51, accounting for 19.39 per cent of his wickets, which is noticeably higher than teammates Ben Stokes (12.69), Ollie Pope (15.84) and Zak Crawley (14.29). Warner, who will represent the London Spirit in the upcoming Hundred tournament, and Broad enjoyed an entertaining Ashes rival, with the Englishman removing the Australian opener on 17 occasions. Most LBW dismissals in Tests since 2013 51 – Joe Root (ENG) 36 – Virat Kohli (IND) 33 – Steve Smith (AUS) 31 – Kraigg Brathwaite (WI) 30 – Jonny Bairstow (ENG) Originally published as Ashes war of words erupts as Broad hits back at Warner's swipe

Sydney Morning Herald
6 hours ago
- Sydney Morning Herald
Maroons, Raiders legend Sam Backo dies
Australian, Queensland and Canberra rugby league legend Sam Backo has died, aged 64. A proud Warrgamay Indigenous man, he played seven State of Origin matches for the Maroons, six Tests for Australia, 116 matches for the Canberra Raiders and 20 for the Brisbane Broncos between 1983 and 1990 in a storied career. NRL identities have paid tribute, including former Maroons captain Wally Lewis and Australian Rugby League Commission chairman Peter V'landys. 'It is with great sadness that I learned this afternoon of the passing of a great mate – Sam Backo,' Lewis wrote on Facebook. 'It was a privilege to play beside Sam, and to have him as a mate. I am very grateful [former Maroon and Bronco] Gene Miles and I got to visit Sam 10 days ago in hospital and have a few laughs with him. 'RIP Sam, you will greatly missed. My deepest sympathies to your loving wife Chrissie and family.' V'Landys said Backo 'was as tough as they come, a larger-than-life character who was as recognisable as he was resilient'. 'Through a successful career with Canberra Raiders, Brisbane Broncos, not to mention Queensland and Australia, he was a one-of-a-kind footballer.

The Age
6 hours ago
- The Age
Maroons, Raiders legend Sam Backo dies
Australian, Queensland and Canberra rugby league legend Sam Backo has died, aged 64. A proud Warrgamay Indigenous man, he played seven State of Origin matches for the Maroons, six Tests for Australia, 116 matches for the Canberra Raiders and 20 for the Brisbane Broncos between 1983 and 1990 in a storied career. NRL identities have paid tribute, including former Maroons captain Wally Lewis and Australian Rugby League Commission chairman Peter V'landys. 'It is with great sadness that I learned this afternoon of the passing of a great mate – Sam Backo,' Lewis wrote on Facebook. 'It was a privilege to play beside Sam, and to have him as a mate. I am very grateful [former Maroon and Bronco] Gene Miles and I got to visit Sam 10 days ago in hospital and have a few laughs with him. 'RIP Sam, you will greatly missed. My deepest sympathies to your loving wife Chrissie and family.' V'Landys said Backo 'was as tough as they come, a larger-than-life character who was as recognisable as he was resilient'. 'Through a successful career with Canberra Raiders, Brisbane Broncos, not to mention Queensland and Australia, he was a one-of-a-kind footballer.