logo
Mitch Cohen's Blackbook: Five to follow from Winter Stakes day

Mitch Cohen's Blackbook: Five to follow from Winter Stakes day

News.com.au06-07-2025
Daily Telegraph racing writer Mitch Cohen has analysed all the action from Saturday's Listed $200,000 Winter Stakes (1400m) at Rosehill Gardens and found a few worth following.
FIVE TO FOLLOW
RAGING FORCE (1st, race 1)
Punters saw the most exciting young galloper in the opener and he didn't disappoint, bringing up a hat-trick of wins this preparation in emphatic fashion. He's got stakes quality written all over him.
A dominant win from Raging Force in the Rosehill opener - that's three from three, and he's living up to his name! ðŸ'¥ @TommyBerry21 @SnowdenRacing1 @Darby_Racing pic.twitter.com/rpl7b3ekOF
— SKY Racing (@SkyRacingAU) July 5, 2025
POWDER MAN (2nd, race 3)
It's now been back-to-back Highway runs where he's got back in the field and rocketed home, this time closing off strongly for second. If he can get the breaks, there's a Highway win in him soon.
USEAPIN (6th, race 6)
There is no doubt this filly should have finished a lot closer in her first run back from a freshen up after running into dead ends in the straight when she had plenty to offer. Stay with her.
Bounced back in a big way from his tough Stradbroke Handicap run with an unlucky second in the Winter Stakes. He can go close next start, perhaps in a race like the Winter Challenge on Saturday week.
SACRED ROCKS (2nd, race 10)
The winner Brave One was excellent after racing three-wide throughout but don't drop off this mare either. She is a mare on an upward trajectory and tipping stakes races beckon for her in the future.
It's @djgibbons22 's world, we're just living in it ðŸ''
A treble for the young star as Brave One makes it two on the trot, he's progressing nicely for Team Hawkes! @HawkesRacing pic.twitter.com/Dq2i6dnCta
— 7HorseRacing ðŸ�Ž (@7horseracing) July 5, 2025
STEWARDS SAY
Just Awesome (race 1): Jockey Regan Bayliss reported the colt raced flat and may have come to the end of his prep. He was found to be 3/5 lame in the near foreleg and will now be spelled.
Lull (race 1): Found to be slow to recover post-race. Will undergo a veterinary and endoscopic examination before racing again.
Sequista (race 1): Jockey Jason Collett could offer little explanation for the filly's disappointing finishing effort. She will now be spelled.
Let's Go Brandon (race 3): After weakening in the straight, the gelding was found to have bled in both nostrils for the first time and is now banned from racing for three months.
Tarpaulin (race 5): Slow to begin. Raced too keenly through the early and middle stages and jockey Rachel King felt it impacted his finishing effort.
Fleet Commander (race 7): Jockey Josh Parr said near the 450m mark the gelding's action deteriorated and he became badly unbalanced so retired him from the race. The gelding was found to be stiff and short in its action.
Whinchat (race 9): Fractious in the barriers before beginning awkwardly. Jockey Jay Ford reported he never travelled well, raced flat and was disappointing in the manner in which he finished off. He will now be spelled.
CRUNCH TIME
Raging Force (race 1): Settled in the box seat and unleashed a powerful last 600m of 34.08 seconds for the 1100m test. His closing splits of 11.16 and 11.45 were the clear best of the race.
Powder Man (race 3): Didn't have a runner behind him at the 600m before closing off in a clear race-best 35.09 seconds from that point. His last 200m of 11.90 got him within a length of the winner Lordster.
Lordster rules the TAB Highway first up for @AnnaRoper_ and Brett Bellamy! ðŸ'' @aus_turf_club @larneuk pic.twitter.com/LqZa2FzR0R
— SKY Racing (@SkyRacingAU) July 5, 2025
Lonhro's Queen (race 6): The only horse at the meeting to break the 34 second barrier for the last 600m, coming home from last in 33.98 seconds while still only beating a runner home.
Brave One (race 10): Went back from a wide draw before making a long sustained run to win, clocking 35.70 seconds for his last 600m. Only fellow back marker Sacred Rocks (35.64) came home better but position in running was key.
TRACK TALK
'I have been telling the jockeys, 'watch him going to the gates because he'll pull and be a bit ferocious' but at his first two runs back he has gone around to the start like a kid's pony. Today, he took off a bit on the rider and I thought, 'this is better'.'' Joe Pride after Estadio Mestalla's Winter Stakes win.
'Punters' obsession with weight is ridiculous and sometimes they ignore the obvious.' Pride after Storm The Ramparts carried 62.5kg to victory.
'He still has to make more improvement which I think he will. He's improving with every start and you don't see how good they are until they race against the better quality of horses because that brings the best out of them.' Tommy Berry on emerging star Raging Force.
'When a jockey is in form and confident, things just happen and they happen without you even thinking about it.' Josh Parr after his Rosehill Gardens double.
'We would love to get black type with her. There are a couple of those early mares races in August-September that might be alright for her.' Gerald Ryan on Diddle Dumpling.
Diddle Dumpling does it at both ends in The Agency Real Estate Handicap � @clarkyhk pulls off a great frontrunning ride for @RARacing_ pic.twitter.com/UifHGPPrsS
— Australian Turf Club (@aus_turf_club) July 5, 2025
THIS WEEK IN NSW RACING
Monday: Wagga
Tuesday: Goulburn, Muswellbrook
Wednesday: Canterbury Park
Thursday: Gosford, Dubbo
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Levi Ashcroft coming home strong in race with Dan Curtin and Murphy Reid for Rising Star
Levi Ashcroft coming home strong in race with Dan Curtin and Murphy Reid for Rising Star

7NEWS

timean hour ago

  • 7NEWS

Levi Ashcroft coming home strong in race with Dan Curtin and Murphy Reid for Rising Star

Levi Ashcroft is 'all over' his competitors in the race for the AFL's Rising Star award this year. That's according to The Agenda Setters ' Caroline Wilson, who says the Brisbane youngster should be the clear favourite with two weeks left in the season. Know the news with the 7NEWS app: Download today In one of the most tightly contested Rising Star fields in years, Ashcroft sits third favourite with the bookmakers behind Adelaide utility Dan Curtin and Fremantle forward Murphy Reid. He had been the outright favourite for most of the year until a recent burst of form from Curtin and later Reid. Essendon rebounder Archie Roberts, Melbourne midfield bull Harvey Langford and Geelong defender Connor O'Sullivan are the other contenders for the gong. Ashcroft has slipped seamlessly into the 23 of the reigning premiers and has not missed a game since debuting in Opening Round, but has been made to play out of his natural position. The 18-year-old was arguably the best inside midfielder in the draft last year, but has had to learn his craft as a winger for the Lions, with the likes of Lachie Neale, Josh Dunkley, Hugh McCluggage and his brother Will Ashcroft all ahead of him in the midfield queue. Stream The Agenda Setters for free, live or on-demand, anytime at 7plus With Neale out last Saturday against Sydney, Ashcroft — albeit still mostly playing on the wing — was able to step up and shine with 27 disposals and a goal. 'He got a go against Sydney on the weekend — I thought he was fabulous,' Wilson said of Ashcroft on Tuesday night. 'I think his evenness as a first-year player — it's better than Curtin, it's better than Reid. 'And remember, his brother was pretty hardly done-by (with injury) two years ago, not winning it. 'I think Levi is the standout. 'Curtin and Reid have probably had better, more spectacular games. But in terms of consistency, Levi's all over them. 'I think he's hurt by the fact his name's Ashcroft.' Until Round 14, Curtin was averaging just 10.9 disposals and 0.3 goals per game. Since then, he's averaged 18.7 touches and 0.7 goals. It's an undeniable spike in form from the 197cm second-year player — but Ashcroft has averaged 20.0 touches for the entire year, kicked one more goal than Curtin, and has had 12 games of 20 disposals or more. Curtin has had five. Curtin has had fewer than 10 touches in a game seven times. Ashcroft hasn't gone under 11 once. 'We were hardly talking about Curtin at Round 10; we've been talking about Levi the whole time,' Luke Hodge said. As a small forward, Reid is a different prospect for the award, and should be compared differently. He's only had one game of 20 disposals or more, but has kicked 22 goals and had 19 direct assists, including two games with four-goal hauls.

Meg Lanning in the leading run-scorer in The Hundred two years after international retirement
Meg Lanning in the leading run-scorer in The Hundred two years after international retirement

News.com.au

timean hour ago

  • News.com.au

Meg Lanning in the leading run-scorer in The Hundred two years after international retirement

Australian star Annabel Sutherland has soared to be the No.1 T20 bowler in the world, but an Aussie who doesn't play international cricket is dominating the short format in England. Former captain Meg Lanning is the highest run-scorer in The Hundred after another blistering effort. At 33, and having played her last match for her country in 2023 before a premature retirement that shocked the cricket and sporting world, Lanning continues to show herself to be a batting force. Playing for the Oval Invincibles, Lanning's latest effort was part of a powerhouse opening partnership that racked up 54 runs off 25 balls, the best powerplay score in the five-year history of the competition. Lanning smashed six fours in her 19-ball innings of 36 that took her haul in the tournament to 177 runs in just three innings, 20 ahead of big-hitting Aussie Grace Harris, who still plays for Australia. Since her retirement from the international game, Lanning has continued to plunder runs for Victoria as well as dominate the Indian Premier League, where she's the third highest run-scorer in the tournament's history. All those runs have come against international-calibre bowlers, making it clear she would still be a batting force for Australia. Lanning's retirement sparked a regeneration of the Australian team, and superstar all-rounder Sutherland has been a major beneficiary. The 23-year-old has netted centuries at Test and ODI level and continues to star with the ball. Sutherland has also been a beneficiary of a quirk of the International Cricket Council's rankings system, being elevated to the No.1 T20 bowling ranking despite not playing an international T20 since she took a four-wicket haul against New Zealand in March. But her rating of 736 remains unchanged, as a group of bowlers near the top of the rankings lost points across the last week.

Reason why AFL WAG Paris Tier lost her sales job
Reason why AFL WAG Paris Tier lost her sales job

News.com.au

timean hour ago

  • News.com.au

Reason why AFL WAG Paris Tier lost her sales job

The girlfriend of a professional athlete has revealed how she lost her job due to her rising profile on social media. Paris Tier, who is dating Greater Western Sydney Giants player Conor Stone, divulged on her WAG — Women and Goals podcast that her social media profile led to her being fired from her job. Ms Tier was working in sales merchandising, and part of her role led to her being contracted out at another businesses. At the time, she didn't have a lot of followers but her posts about what her life was like dating a professional athlete started to boost her profile. 'I started posting on TikTok a month into working this job, and I only had 2000 followers but my videos were averaging 30,000 views,' she told Ms Tier said she wasn't posting about her job, but about her relationship with Stone. She said it started off with mean comments, but things escalated when she posted a clip about an NRL player. After backlash, she deleted the video. 'I got a call from a colleague and she said, '[Our boss] has called me saying you can't work tomorrow because somebody has complained about your TikTok',' Ms Tier said. The AFL WAG was told the complaint was made not to her direct company, but the one that she was contracted to as part of her role. She asked the company's media and human resources if there were any issues with her social media, but neither department had any issues with the content. At the time, Ms Tier had annual leave planned due to a medical procedure so she went on two weeks worth of leave. 'I took the two weeks off because I needed this to calm down before I go back to work, because obviously not everyone loves social media, and if your boss read something that you did online they have to believe it in a way,' she said. 'I was a little bit disappointed because when I messaged [my boss] about it, she said it was nothing. She essentially lied to me.' During her time off, Ms Tier consulted an employment lawyer, received a probation update about why she 'wasn't the right fit for the role' and ultimately decided to leave the job. To this day, she has no idea where the complaint originated from or if it was even real. 'When this happened at work, I was in the state of mind of, 'Have I lost every opportunity to get a good job? Have I lost every opportunity to do a thing I love',' she recalled. 'And no, I haven't.' Ms Tier revealed she works in a completely new industry now, and really loves it, finding the workplace incredibly supportive. She said that contracts needed to highlight what issues they may have in regards to employee's social media presence, particularly as she never talked about the company online — barring the fact that it was on her LinkedIn profile. She said she hasn't added her latest workplace to her profile as she is scared it could happen again. Ms Tier added that there is a belief that many people in her position are unemployed. 'I don't think people realise, they see someone and think, 'Oh my god she's a stay-at-home mum, bet she doesn't have half a brain cell',' she said. 'That woman is 90 per cent of the time on maternity leave, or young enough to still be figuring out their life.' She said baseless assumptions about WAGs are 'not fair' and simply incorrect. 'People have assumptions because we don't post our work, but how can people post their work when individuals do something like this,' she said. 'It's not fair.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store