Race-by-race tips and preview for Newcastle on Tuesday
Race 1
2. Malbork Castle has hit his straps winning his past two starts in good style. He had a string of placings before scoring those two wins. He's up in distance for this but shows all the signs that he will handle it. 1. Coto De Caza was down the track against tougher opposition at Rosehill before a solid second at Kembla Grange when last produced. 5. Whisker To Whisker ran well when finishing third at Wyong three starts ago and then wasn't beaten too far despite running last at Warwick Farm. She was safely held in the Winter Cup at Rosehill last time out but will find this much easier. 3. Whetu is a tough stayer at best and could get into the placings from the good draw.
How to play it: Malbork Castle to win.
Race 2
6. Cellarmaster is a Bivouac gelding on debut on the back of three barrier trials. He's had two recent hit-outs leading into this, and won the last of them at Canterbury. He's drawn wide but looks to have the talent to run a bold race. 9. Hillier is resuming from a spell on the back of two trials, and he finished second in the last of them at Randwick. He ran second on debut in the Canonbury Stakes and looms as a leading chance. 3. Firework has been placed in two of four starts and has drawn the inside here. 10. Sunburnt Country resumes after two trials and is far from the worst.
How to play it: Cellarmaster each way.
Race 3
8. Samarelle is a Savabeel filly having her first start here. She's had two trials and comes in this after a second in a Canterbury hit-out. She's from a form stable and should take plenty of beating. 6. The Stars has been placed in two of four starts in city grade and can sprint well first up from a spell. 4. Say Yes is a stablemate of The Stars on debut after a number of trials. 7. Organics can improve on a resuming seventh at Sale.
How to play it: Samarelle each way.
Race 4
5. Starry Desert is an Irish import having his first Australian run. He's been placed in two of four starts and has had two trials in preparation, running second in the latest of them. 14. Skirmish ran well in two trials before making her debut with a fourth on the Kensington track. She can run well with a repeat. 7. Invisible Magic has been placed in all four starts to date and warrants plenty of thought again. 10. Shanoni is yet to be placed from four starts, but has shown enough to be rated a minor money hope here.
How to play it: Starry Desert each way.
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The Advertiser
an hour ago
- The Advertiser
Fast-finishing Adelaide pip Hawthorn in AFL thriller
Coach Matthew Nicks is hailing Adelaide's character in a comeback 14-point win over Hawthorn which returns the Crows to top of the AFL ladder. The Crows kicked six goals to two in the last quarter for a gutsy 15.11 (101) to 13.9 (87) triumph in a Friday night thriller. Adelaide slipped 32 points down late in the first term before a sell-out 50,654-strong crowd at Adelaide Oval. They recovered to take the lead, only to lose it and trail by eight points at three-quarter time. The Crows, with stars Izak Rankine and Taylor Walker kicking two goals each in a final term, then finished with a flourish. Walker converted two long-range set shots to seal victory - he kicked three goals for the game, as did Rankine, while spearhead Riley Thilthorpe booted four. "There was a lot of pressure coming in - massive, massive stage," Nicks said. "And then to start the way we did, the pressure went through the roof. "To reset the way we did, the maturity our boys showed ... it was another way to win in what was a finals atmosphere." Adelaide sit top with a 15-5 win-loss record but Collingwood will reclaim pole position with a victory over Brisbane on Saturday night. Hawthorn (13-7) remain fifth - only a win ahead of ninth spot - with fresh concern over injury-troubled midfielder Will Day, who limped from the field late on. "I don't have an answer yet," Hawks coach Sam Mitchell said of Day's condition. "He was cramping, he had ice on most parts of his lower body, as plenty of the players do, so unsure just yet." The Crows were superbly served by Irish-born defender Mark Keane (21 disposals, six marks), halfback Wayne Milera (19 touches) and winger Dan Curtin (20, six inside 50s). Attacking trio Thilthorpe, Rankine and Walker were ever-present threats while captain Jordan Dawson (21 disposals, 11 tackles) kicked two team-lifting goals in five minutes. Hawthorn stalwart Jack Gunston booted four goals and Jack Ginnivan (19 disposals) scored two. Hawk duo Massimo D'Ambrosio (25 possessions) and Karl Amon (23) were standouts and skipper James Sicily ruled the air with 11 marks. In a wildly fluctuating fixture, Hawthorn raced to a 32-point lead - 5.3 to 0.1 - late in the first quarter. The Crows hit back with 6.6 to nothing in the second term for a 16-point halftime advantage. Adelaide went 18 points clear before a steely response from the Hawks: six of the next seven goals for an eight-point edge at the final change. The Crows logged three consecutive goals to jump 12 points up before two strikes from Gunston, both from holding free kicks, put the Hawks one point ahead. Adelaide rallied with the final three goals of the game, with Walker's last two long bombs sending the sell-out crowd into raptures. Coach Matthew Nicks is hailing Adelaide's character in a comeback 14-point win over Hawthorn which returns the Crows to top of the AFL ladder. The Crows kicked six goals to two in the last quarter for a gutsy 15.11 (101) to 13.9 (87) triumph in a Friday night thriller. Adelaide slipped 32 points down late in the first term before a sell-out 50,654-strong crowd at Adelaide Oval. They recovered to take the lead, only to lose it and trail by eight points at three-quarter time. The Crows, with stars Izak Rankine and Taylor Walker kicking two goals each in a final term, then finished with a flourish. Walker converted two long-range set shots to seal victory - he kicked three goals for the game, as did Rankine, while spearhead Riley Thilthorpe booted four. "There was a lot of pressure coming in - massive, massive stage," Nicks said. "And then to start the way we did, the pressure went through the roof. "To reset the way we did, the maturity our boys showed ... it was another way to win in what was a finals atmosphere." Adelaide sit top with a 15-5 win-loss record but Collingwood will reclaim pole position with a victory over Brisbane on Saturday night. Hawthorn (13-7) remain fifth - only a win ahead of ninth spot - with fresh concern over injury-troubled midfielder Will Day, who limped from the field late on. "I don't have an answer yet," Hawks coach Sam Mitchell said of Day's condition. "He was cramping, he had ice on most parts of his lower body, as plenty of the players do, so unsure just yet." The Crows were superbly served by Irish-born defender Mark Keane (21 disposals, six marks), halfback Wayne Milera (19 touches) and winger Dan Curtin (20, six inside 50s). Attacking trio Thilthorpe, Rankine and Walker were ever-present threats while captain Jordan Dawson (21 disposals, 11 tackles) kicked two team-lifting goals in five minutes. Hawthorn stalwart Jack Gunston booted four goals and Jack Ginnivan (19 disposals) scored two. Hawk duo Massimo D'Ambrosio (25 possessions) and Karl Amon (23) were standouts and skipper James Sicily ruled the air with 11 marks. In a wildly fluctuating fixture, Hawthorn raced to a 32-point lead - 5.3 to 0.1 - late in the first quarter. The Crows hit back with 6.6 to nothing in the second term for a 16-point halftime advantage. Adelaide went 18 points clear before a steely response from the Hawks: six of the next seven goals for an eight-point edge at the final change. The Crows logged three consecutive goals to jump 12 points up before two strikes from Gunston, both from holding free kicks, put the Hawks one point ahead. Adelaide rallied with the final three goals of the game, with Walker's last two long bombs sending the sell-out crowd into raptures. Coach Matthew Nicks is hailing Adelaide's character in a comeback 14-point win over Hawthorn which returns the Crows to top of the AFL ladder. The Crows kicked six goals to two in the last quarter for a gutsy 15.11 (101) to 13.9 (87) triumph in a Friday night thriller. Adelaide slipped 32 points down late in the first term before a sell-out 50,654-strong crowd at Adelaide Oval. They recovered to take the lead, only to lose it and trail by eight points at three-quarter time. The Crows, with stars Izak Rankine and Taylor Walker kicking two goals each in a final term, then finished with a flourish. Walker converted two long-range set shots to seal victory - he kicked three goals for the game, as did Rankine, while spearhead Riley Thilthorpe booted four. "There was a lot of pressure coming in - massive, massive stage," Nicks said. "And then to start the way we did, the pressure went through the roof. "To reset the way we did, the maturity our boys showed ... it was another way to win in what was a finals atmosphere." Adelaide sit top with a 15-5 win-loss record but Collingwood will reclaim pole position with a victory over Brisbane on Saturday night. Hawthorn (13-7) remain fifth - only a win ahead of ninth spot - with fresh concern over injury-troubled midfielder Will Day, who limped from the field late on. "I don't have an answer yet," Hawks coach Sam Mitchell said of Day's condition. "He was cramping, he had ice on most parts of his lower body, as plenty of the players do, so unsure just yet." The Crows were superbly served by Irish-born defender Mark Keane (21 disposals, six marks), halfback Wayne Milera (19 touches) and winger Dan Curtin (20, six inside 50s). Attacking trio Thilthorpe, Rankine and Walker were ever-present threats while captain Jordan Dawson (21 disposals, 11 tackles) kicked two team-lifting goals in five minutes. Hawthorn stalwart Jack Gunston booted four goals and Jack Ginnivan (19 disposals) scored two. Hawk duo Massimo D'Ambrosio (25 possessions) and Karl Amon (23) were standouts and skipper James Sicily ruled the air with 11 marks. In a wildly fluctuating fixture, Hawthorn raced to a 32-point lead - 5.3 to 0.1 - late in the first quarter. The Crows hit back with 6.6 to nothing in the second term for a 16-point halftime advantage. Adelaide went 18 points clear before a steely response from the Hawks: six of the next seven goals for an eight-point edge at the final change. The Crows logged three consecutive goals to jump 12 points up before two strikes from Gunston, both from holding free kicks, put the Hawks one point ahead. Adelaide rallied with the final three goals of the game, with Walker's last two long bombs sending the sell-out crowd into raptures.


7NEWS
an hour ago
- 7NEWS
Australia's Mollie O'Callaghan pipped by Dutch swimmer Marrit Steenbergen in women's 100m freestyle final
Backstroke star Kaylee McKeown and freestyle sprinter Cameron McEvoy will lead the charge as Australia attempt to claw their way back above the US at the swimming world championships in Singapore. A silver and bronze medal on Friday night dropped Australia (five gold, two silver, six bronze) into second spot on the medal tally behind the US (five gold, 10 silver, five bronze). Mollie O'Callaghan started as the hot favourite in the women's 100m freestyle final, but her late charge wasn't enough to beat Dutchwoman Marrit Steenbergen, who prevailed by 0.12 of a second. It means O'Callaghan's bid to surpass Ian Thorpe's Australian record of 11 world championship gold medals will have to wait for another day. 'Look, I'm tired,' O'Callaghan said after the race. 'Like, I'm not gonna lie, last night was a big night. None of those girls did what I did last night. 'I'm happy to walk away with a medal. 'Honestly, I would always love to win. But honestly, to get on the podium after such a s***-show of a year, I'm pretty happy. 'It just shows the strength that I have and the block I can do in the future knowing that I've barely done any training for this.' The only other medal for Australia on Friday night was a bronze to the men's 4x200m freestyle relay team of Flynn Southam, Charlie Hawke, Kai Taylor and Maximillian Giuliani. The quartet entered their final as big underdogs, but they came within a whisker of nabbing silver. Great Britain won gold in a time of 6:59.84, with China (7:00.91) just edging Australia (7:00.98). While day six didn't result in a gold rush for Australia, things could be different on Saturday night. McKeown is a two-time Olympic champion in both the 100m and 200m backstroke. The 24-year-old won the 100m world championship backstroke final ahead of arch rival Regan Smith on Wednesday. And McKeown will have the chance to add the 200m crown to her name on Saturday night when she goes up against the likes of Smith, Xuwei Peng, Anastasiya Shkurdai and Claire Curzan in the final. McEvoy qualified fastest with a time of 21.30 seconds for the men's 50m freestyle final, and the Olympic champion is hoping to come up trumps on Saturday night. 'I can't complain, it's only 0.05 off what I did to win Paris,' McEvoy said of his Friday night semi-final swim. 'It's good, but the job's not done. I've got one more tomorrow. 'I need to let the finals atmosphere kind of lift me up a bit. Don't think about the end time. Don't go down that rabbit hole. Let the body speak for itself and see where I end up.' Australians Alexandria Perkins and Lily Price both qualified for the women's 50m butterfly final, while Matt Temple qualified sixth fastest for the men's 100m butterfly final. During the daytime heats on Saturday, Isaac Cooper will feature in the men's 50m backstroke, Meg Harris and Olivia Wunsch are in the women's 50m freestyle, while Sam Short will be hoping to overcome illness to compete in the men's 1500m freestyle. O'Callaghan said tiredness from a busy schedule meant she wasn't at her best in Friday night's 100m freestyle final. Thorpe is sure it's just a matter of time before the 21-year-old surpasses his record mark of 11 world championship gold medals - possibly even in Saturday night's 4x100m mixed freestyle relay final. 'I'm certain and I can't wait to see Mollie surpass that,' Thorpe told the Nine Network. 'What she has the opportunity to do is create her own legacy in swimming, which will continue to inspire people in future generations … leading into the Brisbane Olympics in 2032.'


West Australian
3 hours ago
- West Australian
Swimming World Championships: Kaylee McKeown, Cameron McEvoy hold the hope of an Aussie gold rush
Backstroke star Kaylee McKeown and freestyle sprinter Cameron McEvoy will lead the charge as Australia attempt to claw their way back above the US at the swimming world championships in Singapore. A silver and bronze medal on Friday night dropped Australia (five gold, two silver, six bronze) into second spot on the medal tally behind the US (five gold, 10 silver, five bronze). Mollie O'Callaghan started as the hot favourite in the women's 100m freestyle final, but her late charge wasn't enough to beat Dutchwoman Marrit Steenbergen, who prevailed by 0.12 of a second. It means O'Callaghan's bid to surpass Ian Thorpe's Australian record of 11 world championship gold medals will have to wait for another day. The only other medal for Australia on Friday night was a bronze to the men's 4x200m freestyle relay team of Flynn Southam, Charlie Hawke, Kai Taylor and Maximillian Giuliani. The quartet entered their final as big underdogs, but they came within a whisker of nabbing silver. Great Britain won gold in a time of 6:59.84, with China (7:00.91) just edging Australia (7:00.98). While day six didn't result in a gold rush for Australia, things could be different on Saturday night. McKeown is a two-time Olympic champion in both the 100m and 200m backstroke. The 24-year-old won the 100m world championship backstroke final ahead of arch rival Regan Smith on Wednesday. And McKeown will have the chance to add the 200m crown to her name on Saturday night when she goes up against the likes of Smith, Xuwei Peng, Anastasiya Shkurdai and Claire Curzan in the final. McEvoy qualified fastest with a time of 21.30 seconds for the men's 50m freestyle final, and the Olympic champion is hoping to come up trumps on Saturday night. 'I can't complain, it's only 0.05 off what I did to win Paris,' McEvoy said of his Friday night semi-final swim. 'It's good, but the job's not done. I've got one more tomorrow. 'I need to let the finals atmosphere kind of lift me up a bit. Don't think about the end time. Don't go down that rabbit hole. Let the body speak for itself and see where I end up.' Australians Alexandria Perkins and Lily Price both qualified for the women's 50m butterfly final, while Matt Temple qualified sixth fastest for the men's 100m butterfly final. During the daytime heats on Saturday, Isaac Cooper will feature in the men's 50m backstroke, Meg Harris and Olivia Wunsch are in the women's 50m freestyle, while Sam Short will be hoping to overcome illness to compete in the men's 1500m freestyle. O'Callaghan said tiredness from a busy schedule meant she wasn't at her best in Friday night's 100m freestyle final. Thorpe is sure it's just a matter of time before the 21-year-old surpasses his record mark of 11 world championship gold medals - possibly even in Saturday night's 4x100m mixed freestyle relay final. 'I'm certain and I can't wait to see Mollie surpass that,' Thorpe told the Nine Network. 'What she has the opportunity to do is create her own legacy in swimming, which will continue to inspire people in future generations … leading into the Brisbane Olympics in 2032.'