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News.com.au
12 minutes ago
- News.com.au
Mornington trainers Lyn Tolson and Leonie Proctor eye Listed win with Pop Award in Regal Roller Stakes at Caulfield
There are family businesses then there's the Lyn Tolson and Leonie Proctor operation at Mornington. Every family member has a role. Tolson is the matriarch with her daughter Proctor training alongside her while jockey grandsons Luke and Matthew Cartwright do the riding, the latter when not plying his trade in New Zealand. • 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! Even son-in-law, former top jumps jockey Adrian Garraway is involved, educating and pre-training the stable's youngest residents. Tolson and Proctor have combined for more than 100 winners since beginning their training partnership but preparing their 19-strong team is only part of the pair's busy schedule. Taking on new clients is almost impossible with their workload but loyal supporters have always supplied the pair with talented gallopers alongside their own purchases. 'We're trying to work on a bit better class horses so we bought a few young horses,' Tolson said. 'We're trying to upgrade what we've got but we don't take a lot of new outside owners because we do a lot of pre-training for Nick Ryan, Grahame Begg and Lloyd Kennewell. 'That side of things is very important for our business.' • Brad Waters' Caulfield Saturday tips, race-by-race analysis Grand sprinter Curran is the star of Tolson and Proctor's team, earning the camp more than $800,000 in his 40-start career. Tolson joked Proctor lets Curran do whatever he likes as the definite stable favourite. Saturday's Listed Regal Roller Stakes runner Pop Award could equal Curran's win tally of five if she secures a vital black-type success at Caulfield. But unlike Curran, Tolson said Pop Award initially had a vicious streak that caused her earliest breakers to throw up their hands in despair. 'When we got her, she'd been through different breakers and pre-trainers because she'd been such a rat,' Tolson said. 'She could strike at you and go at you better than any stallion. 'She was just an angry horse and always said, 'I'm just not doing it'. The more pressure you put on her, the worse she got.' Time spent with her final breaker immensely improved Pop Award's attitude. Tolson said Pop Award wasn't perfect, but her trainers could work with the daughter of Shamus Award. 'She gave him (the last breaker) a hard, hard time and when he handed her back to us, he said, 'what you've got here is what you've got and I've got no more tricks up my sleeve',' Tolson said. 'He was the third breaker that had her. But he told us, 'once you get her in the box, she'll stand. She won't want to come out. Just let her do it herself'. 'That's what we did, we worked with her and she's a lovely horse. She's such a nice horse to ride but you've got to let her do it on her terms. 'She's got plenty of attitude but she's a nice horse to work with now.' Pop Award belied her difficult start to her career to string together four wins in a row to earn a chance at Listed level in the Regal Roller Stakes. Tolson said she didn't know how high Pop Award could go in her career but said connections would do the five-year-old a disservice not to give her a shot at stakes racing. 'The media keeps putting a wrap on her and she's still stepping but I'm not sure how far she's going to go,' Tolson said. 'She's still got to do it but we'd be kicking ourselves if she was good and we missed out on some nice races.' Pop Award is a $7.50 chance to notch her fifth straight win in the Regal Roller Stakes. 'As long as she's competitive in it and works to the line, we'll be happy,' Tolson said. 'We'll see how she goes and we can plan from there.'

ABC News
28 minutes ago
- ABC News
Paul Kelly spills the gravy on Rita Wrote A Letter
The long-awaited song sequel to his Christmas anthem 'How to Make Gravy' finds the master songwriter returning to the flawed but beloved characters with some delicious results, the quietly devastating yet darkly comic Rita Wrote A Letter. The new single arrives nearly three decades after the public met Paul Kelly's characters Dan, Joe, and Rita in his accidental Christmas classic, How To Make Gravy. Paull Kelly joins Karen Leng on Double J to spill the gravy on how this sequel came together, 29 years after the original recipe.

Sydney Morning Herald
42 minutes ago
- Sydney Morning Herald
Eagles bullish AFL's $2 million man will stay as co-captain is all but Brisbane-bound
West Coast coach Andrew McQualter is optimistic Harley Reid will stay at the club for the long term despite more Godfather-type offers rolling in for the star midfielder. Reid is contracted to West Coast until the end of 2026 but there is already a huge tug-of-war for the No.1 draft pick. St Kilda were the latest club to throw their hat into the ring, with the Saints reportedly contemplating an offer in the vicinity of $25 million over 12 years. The Eagles offer is rumoured to be about $24 million over 11 years - comprising an initial two-year deal with a trigger for the remaining nine. Hawthorn, Essendon and Geelong are others to have shown interest in Reid, with Melbourne-based clubs hoping the pull-home factor will convince the Victorian to leave West Coast. Reid's management say the 20-year-old is happy in Perth, and the Eagles are hopeful of being able to re-sign the midfield bull. 'I'm really confident Harley will be here,' McQualter said on Thursday. 'Every day Harley turns up to work, he's incredibly invested in this team, this club. So yeah, I'm really optimistic that Harley will be here.' When asked to clarify whether his optimism around Reid was merely for next year or for the long term, McQualter replied: 'I'm talking for a long time.'