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2025 TAB Eureka favourites Bay Of Biscay, Fighter Command step-up preparation for showdown

2025 TAB Eureka favourites Bay Of Biscay, Fighter Command step-up preparation for showdown

News.com.au29-07-2025
The two biggest guns of the world's richest harness race, Bay Of Biscay and Fighter Command, will head interstate to step-up their preparations on Saturday night.
The Victorian-trained pair head the betting – at $3.50 and $5 respectively – for the $2.1 million TAB Eureka, which is just five weeks away at Menangle on September 6.
Bay Of Biscay was nominated to race at Melton and Menangle, but co-trainer Emma Stewart confirmed the Chariots Of Fire winner would head interstate for the Sydney race.
The prospect of a 2300m race at Menangle – the same track and distance as the TAB Eureka – was more attractive than a 1720m sprint with less prize money at Melton.
Bay Of Biscay, who flashed home for a luckless second to subsequent Miracle Mile and Inter Dominion winner Don Hugo in last year's TAB Eureka, will become the first pacer to tackle the race twice.
The TAB Eureka is restricted to three and four-year-old Australian-bred pacers.
Connections have focused everything on this year's TAB Eureka and snared an early slot through WA breeding giant Rob Watson's Soho Standardbreds.
The Bay Of Biscay team even declined an invitation to run in the $1 million Miracle Mile in March, which came after winning the Chariots Of Fire a week earlier.
'If all goes well, we'll have a go at the Miracle Mile next year, but we want to win the TAB Eureka first,' managing owner Tim Bunning said at the time.
Bay Of Biscay is the 2025 Group 1 Cordina Chicken Farms Chariots of Fire champion for Emma Stewart and Cam Hart.ðŸ�†ðŸ'¥
The son of Somebeachsomewhere USA out of Nike Franco NZ recorded a mile of 1.49.1 with Charge Ahead and Major Hot NZ filling the minor placings. #ClubMenangle pic.twitter.com/7bOQSAIEge
— Club Menangle (@ClubMenangle) March 1, 2025
Bay Of Biscay, who boasts 11 wins and seven seconds from just 22 starts, has only raced once since his Chariots Of Fire win on March 1. That was for a narrow win, albeit in slick time, at Melton on June 28.
He was set for the $350,000 Group 1 Rising Sun at Albion Park earlier this month, but plans were aborted when a suitable flight could not be arranged.
Top young driver Cam Hart, who has been aboard for Bay Of Biscay's past three runs and is locked in for the TAB Eureka, will take the reins again this week.
Fighter Command will head in a different direction for the $80,000 Beautide in Hobart on Saturday night.
The Jess Tubbs-trained four-year-old won the Beautide last year, which carries with it a golden ticket into the TAB Eureka through the Tasracing slot.
FIGHTER COMMAND is Eureka bound!! Taking out The Beautide at Hobart tonight the Jess Tubbs trained and Greg Sugars driven gelding is into the worlds richest race on September 7!🤩 pic.twitter.com/sKrewNfWhn
— NSWSOA (@NSWStandardbred) August 3, 2024
Tubbs described the race as the 'first step towards redemption' after Fighter Command almost died after he was struck down with a twisted bowel and scratched just days out from last year's TAB Eureka.
'We've slowly and steadily built him back-up again and with everything focused on this race (the Beautide),' Tubbs said.
'After what happened last year, we haven't looked beyond this week, but hopefully he wins and we can.
'Herbie (Australia's premier driver James Herbertson) is locked in for Hobart, so we're set to go.'
Fighter Command had almost six months away from the track after the twisted bowel, but he returned with eight starts for two wins, a second, a third and two fourths.
So far only Bay Of Biscay (Soho Standardbreds) and Hesitate (John Singleton), are confirmed runners in the TAB Eureka.
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West Tigers stars in hot water as NRL hit Brent Naden with breach notice

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I was an NRL player who locked himself in the toilet to read fantasy books in secret

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‘Pokie in your pocket': How Aussie teens are getting hooked on gambling
‘Pokie in your pocket': How Aussie teens are getting hooked on gambling

News.com.au

time2 hours ago

  • News.com.au

‘Pokie in your pocket': How Aussie teens are getting hooked on gambling

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'Australia's teenagers are now more likely to gamble than they are to play any of Australia's most popular sports,' the Australia Institute's Matt Saunders and Morgan Harrington wrote in a March discussion paper. 'The 902,717 12- to 19-year-olds who gamble is more than the 484,490 who play soccer, or the 439,773 who play basketball, which are the two most popular sports among this age group.' Their report warned teens were 'losing big'. 'Annual expenditure on gambling among teenagers is an estimated $231 million, or an average of $86.72 per teenager per year,' they wrote. 'Of this, 12- to 17-year-olds spend around $18.4 million a year on gambling activities — this is about $30 a year for each underage teenager that admits to gambling. This is relatively small compared to the $213 million a year spent by 18- and 19-year-olds. This is $321 per 18- and 19- year-old, or a staggering $698 a year if limited just to those who do gamble.' Luca Kante, 23, one of the country's most popular gambling influencers with nearly 230,000 followers on Instagram, has 'gambled since the day I turned 18' and firmly believes 'if you're an adult you can make your own decisions'. The former Griffith University student stresses, however, that 'with age, I'm very big on that'. 'If you're underage that is just absolutely a no-no,' he said. But Kante conceded at least some of his fans were underage, saying he had been approached in public for a photo by followers as young as 16. 'Obviously I'm not going to say no to a photo, but I'm just going, 'How do you even know who I am?'' he said. 'Times have changed. Vaping and stuff, I didn't do that [when I was their age]. It's the same with gambling.' Dr Ahmed said there was a 'huge overlap' between excessive social media use, excessive video game use and gambling. 'There's a gamification component, there's a chase reward, you lose time in a type of flow state where you're totally absorbed,' he said. 'It's such a sophisticated way of exploiting the adolescent brain, which is extra-impulsive and desperate for social approval, and their reward circuits are still immature so they're just super exposed. It is essentially a dopamine hack.' Addiction to video games and gambling are both now clinically recognised behavioural disorders, and there are growing calls for excessive social media use to be added to major diagnostic systems like the American Psychiatric Association's Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM) and the World Health Organization's International Statistical Classification of Diseases and Related Health Problems (ICD). All three rely on ever more sophisticated methods of hacking the human brain's reward systems — which have been well understood since American psychologist B.F. Skinner's famous 'Skinner box' experiments on rats and pigeons nearly in the first half of last century. 'This isn't just content, it's behavioural modelling,' Ms Coalter said. 'These influencers are walking reinforcement schedules. From a behaviourist perspective, those accounts are textbook examples of what's called operant conditioning.' The key element of operant conditioning — a concept in behavioural psychology pioneered by Skinner — is the randomness of rewards. Just like a pokie player never knows when they'll hit a feature, the 'doomscrolling' social media user is waiting for that next interesting post to pop up on their feed. 'That unpredictability drives engagement,' Ms Coalter said. 'It's the same old reinforcement loop under a new skin. That same schedule drives both pokies and compulsive social media use. Scrolling becomes the cue, gambling becomes the behaviour — cue, behaviour, reward loop. When we're young we might not be able to gamble yet, that's OK, it's all being cued up for us.' She added, 'We're watching a whole generation get conditioned into gambling the way they were conditioned into scrolling.' From finely tuned 'return rate' algorithms and 'losses disguised as wins' to physiological stimuli like colourful characters, upbeat jingles and even the smell of the gaming room itself, the pokies industry has turned the art of separating punters from their cash into an exact science. '[Electronic gambling machine] design very successfully employ psychological principals to maximise users' bet sizes and machine usage,' Monash University gambling researcher Dr Charles Livingstone wrote in a 2017 policy paper. 'These characteristics have the effect of increasing the addictive potential of EGMs.' But Ms Coalter said sports betting apps and other types of gambling popular with teens could be equally harmful. 'Pokies [are designed] to extract as much as possible within a short amount of time,' she said. 'When it comes to other types of gambling, those reinforcements are still at play, just timed differently. Modern sports betting and apps, that's just like a pokie in your pocket.' She added that for impressionable young teens, watching their favourite influencer gambling online was a powerful 'social learning' tool. 'The ones watching those getting rewards with money, attention, with clout, that's like vicarious reinforcement,' she said. 'It's pretty powerful. The reward might not be money, it's often the emotional stimulation.' Indeed, she noted at least part of the appeal was watching influencers lose eye-watering amounts. 'You've got these influencers saying things like, 'I lost $10,000 last night but it's part of the game,' and young people nodding along in the comments,' Ms Coalter said. 'They're not just influencers, they're behaviour shapers. We're watching what often is referred to as disordered gambling behaviour get rebranded as content. That's not informed choice, that's learnt behaviour. We didn't let tobacco influencers target kids but that's essentially what's being done at the moment.' Dr Ahmed agreed that the glamorisation of gambling losses was insidious. 'Underneath that is 'I can afford to lose that',' he said. 'It's a bit like going off a big jump with your mountain bike. There's an element of flexing, I think males in particular can be attracted to that.' More broadly, Dr Ahmed said teens increasingly viewed the online environment as a place to rebel, making gambling 'quite attractive on that front because it does feel a bit naughty'. He said it was 'not dissimilar' to the appeal of controversial influencer Andrew Tate. 'Tate will have some misogynistic idea but wrapped up in a lifestyle that's attractive for a lot of young men — great body, hot women, going on nice holidays,' he said. 'You can be popular, you can buy nice stuff, and linked to that here's this fun thing you can do with your friends. That's more attractive to adolescents. They're going to be very socially driven, it's all about peer belonging. They're all about self-comparison, they're more impulsive and they're less able to quantify risk.'

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