logo
Ciaron Maher plotting another Group 1 Queensland Oaks upset

Ciaron Maher plotting another Group 1 Queensland Oaks upset

Daily Telegraph3 days ago

Don't miss out on the headlines from Horse Racing. Followed categories will be added to My News.
Socks Nation 2.0 is about to rock the Group 1 Queensland Oaks.
The mystique of Ciaron Maher went to a new level last year when he conjured a training miracle and masterclass to score the Oaks with $101 bolter Socks Nation.
Few saw it coming, not even Maher's great mate Tony Gollan who questioned what Socks Nation was even doing in Brisbane when he first saw the travelling filly in his stables.
• PUNT LIKE A PRO: Become a Racenet iQ member and get expert tips – with fully transparent return on investment statistics – from Racenet's team of professional punters at our Pro Tips section. SUBSCRIBE NOW!
Fast forward 12 months and Maher might have another Socks Nation, ready to land a knockout blow and shock punters.
The team of Maher and jockey Ryan Maloney, who stunned everyone with Socks Nation, will combine with Amplify in the Oaks (2200m) at Eagle Farm on Saturday.
Amplify, a $60,000 buy as a weanling and who was sent to country Bathurst to win a race two starts ago, won't go out $101 but after Tuesday's barrier draw was a $34 chance.
Maher said there are similarities between Amplify and Socks Nation.
He said a remarkable slice of racing history could be repeated.
'Socks Nation seemed to run fourth in everything she raced in before the Oaks, it didn't matter what race we ran her in she still ran well,' Maher told Racenet.
• 'It jeopardises the Stradbroke': Benedetta back-up gamble
'Socks Nation to be fair probably shouldn't have been $101, but I wasn't complaining.
'It was a bit of a roll of dice at the trip but she was a consistent, hearty, sort of filly.
'Amplify is not too dissimilar and you can draw some similarities through their toughness and their demeanour.
'I quite like Amplify.
'The Bathurst run was to give her some confidence and she has done well since then.'
The Ciaron Maher-trained Queensland Oaks hope Amplify (outside) winning her maiden at Wyong in March. Picture: Bradley Photos
Maher said in terms of the shape of the Oaks this year, it wasn't too different to the previous year when Socks Nation surged to unexpected glory.
David Vandyke's winning machine Philia and Glen Thompson's Australasian Oaks winner Benagil are the fancied ones in betting but Maher thinks it's an open race.
• 'You'll see the best of her Saturday': Vandyke's warning to Oaks rivals
'The Oaks shapes up similar to last year, there were a couple of shorter ones in the betting market and then the rest of the field,' Maher said.
'I think it is a relatively open Oaks, again.
'It's all about timing and I think my filly should present well.
'She ran solidly for second in her last start in The Bracelet and that was an indifferent day, the way the track was on the Gold Coast.'
Socks Nation causing a huge boilover in the Queensland Oaks last year. Picture: Trackside Photography
Chris Waller's filly Belle Detelle, scratched on race morning of last Saturday's Queensland Derby with a minor foot issue, is set to contest the rescheduled Derby on Saturday rather than the Oaks.
Champion trainer Maher feels jockeys may have been premature to withdraw their services from riding on Group 1 Queensland Derby day last Saturday.
The races were called off after jockeys complained about visibility, leading to both the Derby and the Group 1 Kingsford Smith Cup being rescheduled to this Saturday.
'They (jockeys) are certainly very quick to call them off,' Maher said.
'The track was rained on, but it was fine.
'They ran the Kentucky Derby in mud and the jockeys didn't seem to have much of a problem seeing what was going on that day.'
Originally published as Ciaron Maher plotting another Group 1 Queensland Oaks upset with Amplify

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Comeback Crows' late surge sinks Brisbane in thriller
Comeback Crows' late surge sinks Brisbane in thriller

The Advertiser

time2 hours ago

  • The Advertiser

Comeback Crows' late surge sinks Brisbane in thriller

Adelaide have produced a stunning last-quarter comeback to sink reigning premiers Brisbane by five points in an AFL thriller. Down 17 points at three-quarter time, the Crows then booted five goals to none for a 10.8 (68) to 8.15 (63) triumph at a rain-soaked Adelaide Oval on Friday night. Adelaide retain a hold on third spot - they're just two premiership points behind the second-placed Lions. Adelaide boast nine wins and four losses and appear certain to return to the finals for the first time since 2017. "I know we're we're a good side; we have got a little bit still to do to become a great side," Crows coach Matthew Nicks said. "But tonight is a step in the right direction. It backs up my belief in the group, there's no doubt about that." Adelaide livewire Josh Rachele slotted three goals, as did Ben Keays (20 disposals, seven inside 50s) who was outstanding against his former club. And their captain, Jordan Dawson, took a mark-of-the-year contender - and then goaled - during a final-term flourish which enhances the Crows' status as a genuine contender. Brisbane duo Cam Rayner and Charlie Cameron kicked two goals each and Norm Smith medallist Will Ashcroft was superb with a game-high 31 disposals. Ashcroft's midfield colleagues Hugh McCluggage (27 touches, one goal), Jarrod Berry (28 possessions) and Lachie Neal (22) also revelled in the wet. In slippery conditions, it took until the 21st minute of the game for Brisbane's Rayner to score the opening goal. Just 60 seconds later, the Lions struck again when Callum Ah Chee bounced through a major. The visitors led 2.3 to 0.6 at the end of a first quarter which could land Crows recruit James Peatling in strife for a sling tackle on Neale. The Lions champ wasn't hurt when his head hit the turf but Peatling was penalised for a dangerous tackle certain to attract match review scrutiny. Brisbane scored three goals in nine minutes to create a 21-point advantage midway through the second term. But Adelaide responded to the danger with Rachele threading a remarkable 45m set shot from outside a boundary line to help cut their deficit to eight points at halftime, 5.3 to 3.7. That advantage was reduced to two points early in the third quarter when Rachele snapped his second goal - and 26 minutes into the term, the home side were still within four points. But late strikes from Cameron and Kai Lohmann gave Brisbane a 17-point buffer at three-quarter time. Adelaide then stormed to victory with five goals to none in less than 18 minutes. Tall attacker Riley Thilthorpe triggered the spree with a classy goal on the run from an acute angle - Keays, Dawson - after his soaring mark - Rachele and Keays again followed with majors for an 11-point lead. The Lions pressed late but could add only eight behinds in the final quarter - plus two attempts which sailed out-on-the-full. "In the last quarter - 10 shots to five - and we lose. That was a game we should have won," Lions coach Chris Fagan said. "We did so many things right and didn't win the game." Adelaide have produced a stunning last-quarter comeback to sink reigning premiers Brisbane by five points in an AFL thriller. Down 17 points at three-quarter time, the Crows then booted five goals to none for a 10.8 (68) to 8.15 (63) triumph at a rain-soaked Adelaide Oval on Friday night. Adelaide retain a hold on third spot - they're just two premiership points behind the second-placed Lions. Adelaide boast nine wins and four losses and appear certain to return to the finals for the first time since 2017. "I know we're we're a good side; we have got a little bit still to do to become a great side," Crows coach Matthew Nicks said. "But tonight is a step in the right direction. It backs up my belief in the group, there's no doubt about that." Adelaide livewire Josh Rachele slotted three goals, as did Ben Keays (20 disposals, seven inside 50s) who was outstanding against his former club. And their captain, Jordan Dawson, took a mark-of-the-year contender - and then goaled - during a final-term flourish which enhances the Crows' status as a genuine contender. Brisbane duo Cam Rayner and Charlie Cameron kicked two goals each and Norm Smith medallist Will Ashcroft was superb with a game-high 31 disposals. Ashcroft's midfield colleagues Hugh McCluggage (27 touches, one goal), Jarrod Berry (28 possessions) and Lachie Neal (22) also revelled in the wet. In slippery conditions, it took until the 21st minute of the game for Brisbane's Rayner to score the opening goal. Just 60 seconds later, the Lions struck again when Callum Ah Chee bounced through a major. The visitors led 2.3 to 0.6 at the end of a first quarter which could land Crows recruit James Peatling in strife for a sling tackle on Neale. The Lions champ wasn't hurt when his head hit the turf but Peatling was penalised for a dangerous tackle certain to attract match review scrutiny. Brisbane scored three goals in nine minutes to create a 21-point advantage midway through the second term. But Adelaide responded to the danger with Rachele threading a remarkable 45m set shot from outside a boundary line to help cut their deficit to eight points at halftime, 5.3 to 3.7. That advantage was reduced to two points early in the third quarter when Rachele snapped his second goal - and 26 minutes into the term, the home side were still within four points. But late strikes from Cameron and Kai Lohmann gave Brisbane a 17-point buffer at three-quarter time. Adelaide then stormed to victory with five goals to none in less than 18 minutes. Tall attacker Riley Thilthorpe triggered the spree with a classy goal on the run from an acute angle - Keays, Dawson - after his soaring mark - Rachele and Keays again followed with majors for an 11-point lead. The Lions pressed late but could add only eight behinds in the final quarter - plus two attempts which sailed out-on-the-full. "In the last quarter - 10 shots to five - and we lose. That was a game we should have won," Lions coach Chris Fagan said. "We did so many things right and didn't win the game." Adelaide have produced a stunning last-quarter comeback to sink reigning premiers Brisbane by five points in an AFL thriller. Down 17 points at three-quarter time, the Crows then booted five goals to none for a 10.8 (68) to 8.15 (63) triumph at a rain-soaked Adelaide Oval on Friday night. Adelaide retain a hold on third spot - they're just two premiership points behind the second-placed Lions. Adelaide boast nine wins and four losses and appear certain to return to the finals for the first time since 2017. "I know we're we're a good side; we have got a little bit still to do to become a great side," Crows coach Matthew Nicks said. "But tonight is a step in the right direction. It backs up my belief in the group, there's no doubt about that." Adelaide livewire Josh Rachele slotted three goals, as did Ben Keays (20 disposals, seven inside 50s) who was outstanding against his former club. And their captain, Jordan Dawson, took a mark-of-the-year contender - and then goaled - during a final-term flourish which enhances the Crows' status as a genuine contender. Brisbane duo Cam Rayner and Charlie Cameron kicked two goals each and Norm Smith medallist Will Ashcroft was superb with a game-high 31 disposals. Ashcroft's midfield colleagues Hugh McCluggage (27 touches, one goal), Jarrod Berry (28 possessions) and Lachie Neal (22) also revelled in the wet. In slippery conditions, it took until the 21st minute of the game for Brisbane's Rayner to score the opening goal. Just 60 seconds later, the Lions struck again when Callum Ah Chee bounced through a major. The visitors led 2.3 to 0.6 at the end of a first quarter which could land Crows recruit James Peatling in strife for a sling tackle on Neale. The Lions champ wasn't hurt when his head hit the turf but Peatling was penalised for a dangerous tackle certain to attract match review scrutiny. Brisbane scored three goals in nine minutes to create a 21-point advantage midway through the second term. But Adelaide responded to the danger with Rachele threading a remarkable 45m set shot from outside a boundary line to help cut their deficit to eight points at halftime, 5.3 to 3.7. That advantage was reduced to two points early in the third quarter when Rachele snapped his second goal - and 26 minutes into the term, the home side were still within four points. But late strikes from Cameron and Kai Lohmann gave Brisbane a 17-point buffer at three-quarter time. Adelaide then stormed to victory with five goals to none in less than 18 minutes. Tall attacker Riley Thilthorpe triggered the spree with a classy goal on the run from an acute angle - Keays, Dawson - after his soaring mark - Rachele and Keays again followed with majors for an 11-point lead. The Lions pressed late but could add only eight behinds in the final quarter - plus two attempts which sailed out-on-the-full. "In the last quarter - 10 shots to five - and we lose. That was a game we should have won," Lions coach Chris Fagan said. "We did so many things right and didn't win the game."

Ange Postecoglou sacked as Tottenham manager two weeks after Europa win
Ange Postecoglou sacked as Tottenham manager two weeks after Europa win

ABC News

time2 hours ago

  • ABC News

Ange Postecoglou sacked as Tottenham manager two weeks after Europa win

Ange Postecoglou has been sacked as manager of English Premier League team Tottenham Hotspur, just two weeks after he delivered the north London club its first silverware in 17 years. It's understood the 59-year-old Australian has been informed he won't be at Spurs next season. Tottenham won last month's Europa League final, sparking wild celebrations among the club's long-suffering supporters and speculation Postecoglou may be spared. However, the club's disappointing EPL season — its worst ever — was too much for powerbrokers. Despite having one of the more expensive squads in the top flight of English football, Spurs finished 17th, just above the relegation zone. Postecoglou was the first Australian to manage in the Premier League. He spent two seasons at Tottenham, after signing a four-year contract. At a parade last month celebrating the Europa League win, Postecoglou told fans "season three is better than season two". He was born in Greece and moved to Melbourne with his family aged five.

Media boss Greg Hywood looks back on cuts, mergers and stoushes
Media boss Greg Hywood looks back on cuts, mergers and stoushes

ABC News

time3 hours ago

  • ABC News

Media boss Greg Hywood looks back on cuts, mergers and stoushes

This week, Viv and Tim speak to Greg Hywood in the week he's announced his retirement from his role as Independent Chair at Free TV Australia. The former Fairfax CEO and newspaper editor has been in journalism and publishing since the 1970s when he started at the Australian Financial Review. He presided over period of intense cost cutting at Fairfax in the early 2010s and was CEO as the merger with NINE was put in place. He shares his views on whether that merger has worked and the state of publishing and commercial media in 2025. In another blow to music television, Foxtel has announced that MTV Hits, Nick Music, MTV Club, MTV 80s, and CMT music channels will stop playing at the end of June. TikTok has announced it is launching safety and wellness features including guided meditation sessions and George Clooney is bringing Broadway to America and the world's living rooms in a live streaming event of Good Night and Good Luck. Guest: Greg Hywood, Retiring Independent Chair of Free TV, former CEO of Fairfax and Editor and Publisher at the Australian Financial Review, Sydney Morning Herald and The Age.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store