Greece lightning: Efharisto poised to storm home again after stunning return
Efharisto hadn't raced since beating all but the winner on debut as a two-year-old in the Max Lees Classic at Newcastle in mid-November 2023.
But she was found to have bled from both nostrils, enforcing an automatic ban followed by other setbacks.
After a very long and frustrating stint in the paddock, Efharisto got back on track with a steady trial in January.
She was spelled for a further 16 weeks before two improving trials on both synthetic and turf from late autumn.
Finally, late last month, after more than 80 weeks away, the daughter of fashionable Irish sprint sire Blue Point stepped up in a Maiden at Hawkesbury, and the market took very few chances, firming her from $2.05 into a hot $1.80.
Despite an awkward jump and some early buffeting; Efharisto settled down in the second half before cutting loose over the final 300m with a barnstorming finish to win by more than two lengths, giving the impression she could have won by much further.
It was the sort of eye-catching return that has Godolphin eyeing off some early spring targets if that ability, together with natural improvement, holds together.
She lines up in a Benchmark 64 Hcp for the fillies and mares over 1100m at Gosford from a draw where she can obtain cover back in the field, with Rachel King keeping the ride.

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The Advertiser
5 hours ago
- The Advertiser
Scott backs Cats' Jezza watch after Port demolition
Chris Scott admits Jeremy Cameron's teammates had an extra eye out for him as the Geelong spearhead continued his pursuit of a rare century with six goals in an 88-point thumping of Port Adelaide. But the two-time premiership coach doesn't believe it has become an issue that is hurting the Cats, who pressed their case for a top-two spot in the dominant 23.15 (153) to 9.11 (65) victory at GMHBA Stadium on Sunday. It lifted fourth-placed Geelong (14-6) to within one win of top sides Adelaide and Collingwood, and two points shy of Brisbane, with three rounds left in the home-and-away campaign. Cameron, who kicked a career-best 11 goals against North Melbourne in round 20, had four goals to halftime against Port under close attention from Lachie Jones. The 32-year-old's tally stands at 75 for the year and he has another three games, plus finals, to become the first player since Hawthorn's Lance Franklin in 2008 to kick 100 in a season. "Trying to put myself in that position, I'd be a bit enthused around the idea," Scott said. "My sense is that it's still so far off. Like, he's going to have to play a few finals, which is a long way from a guarantee for us. "I think we're a better team when he has the ball but there is a line there where if we're choosing him over better options then we'd need to address it. "I'm not seeing it too much, but they're clearly looking for him." Cameron benefited multiple times when teammates handed off the ball from positions where they could have taken shots at goal themselves. "There are certain positions on the ground where him snapping the ball on his left (foot) is a higher percentage than one of the best kicks in our team on their right," Scott said. "I'm happy for him to get the ball in that situation." Max Holmes (35 disposals, two goals), Bailey Smith (30 touches, eight clearances) and Gryan Miers (30 disposals, one goal) also stood out for Geelong, who kicked 20 goals to Port's six after quarter-time. Irish tagger Oisin Mullin limited Port star Zak Butters to just 10 disposals and Cats substitute Jack Martin kicked four goals in a superb third-quarter cameo. The only concern for Geelong was Tom Stewart's high contact on Ollie Wines, which will be scrutinised by the AFL match review officer. Stewart jumped off the ground in an attempt to smother a Wines handpass and landed on his Power opponent. But Stewart's act did not appear malicious and he immediately showed concern for Wines, who was able to play out the game. Wines (32 disposals, eight clearances) and Travis Boak (24 touches, one goal) fought hard for Port, who lost captain Connor Rozee (illness) as a late withdrawal. Jase Burgoyne was subbed out with an ankle complaint, adding to the Power's injury woes, while Mitch Georgiades finished with three goals. "All this considered, it wasn't totally unexpected that we'd battle our way through a game down here against Geelong," Port coach Ken Hinkley said. "It was a full-strength Geelong against clearly an undermanned team that we took out there. "But I thought the boys hung in there as much as they possibly could for most parts of the game. "Geelong had that dominant third quarter with nine goals and outside of that we weren't too far off probably what most people would've expected." Chris Scott admits Jeremy Cameron's teammates had an extra eye out for him as the Geelong spearhead continued his pursuit of a rare century with six goals in an 88-point thumping of Port Adelaide. But the two-time premiership coach doesn't believe it has become an issue that is hurting the Cats, who pressed their case for a top-two spot in the dominant 23.15 (153) to 9.11 (65) victory at GMHBA Stadium on Sunday. It lifted fourth-placed Geelong (14-6) to within one win of top sides Adelaide and Collingwood, and two points shy of Brisbane, with three rounds left in the home-and-away campaign. Cameron, who kicked a career-best 11 goals against North Melbourne in round 20, had four goals to halftime against Port under close attention from Lachie Jones. The 32-year-old's tally stands at 75 for the year and he has another three games, plus finals, to become the first player since Hawthorn's Lance Franklin in 2008 to kick 100 in a season. "Trying to put myself in that position, I'd be a bit enthused around the idea," Scott said. "My sense is that it's still so far off. Like, he's going to have to play a few finals, which is a long way from a guarantee for us. "I think we're a better team when he has the ball but there is a line there where if we're choosing him over better options then we'd need to address it. "I'm not seeing it too much, but they're clearly looking for him." Cameron benefited multiple times when teammates handed off the ball from positions where they could have taken shots at goal themselves. "There are certain positions on the ground where him snapping the ball on his left (foot) is a higher percentage than one of the best kicks in our team on their right," Scott said. "I'm happy for him to get the ball in that situation." Max Holmes (35 disposals, two goals), Bailey Smith (30 touches, eight clearances) and Gryan Miers (30 disposals, one goal) also stood out for Geelong, who kicked 20 goals to Port's six after quarter-time. Irish tagger Oisin Mullin limited Port star Zak Butters to just 10 disposals and Cats substitute Jack Martin kicked four goals in a superb third-quarter cameo. The only concern for Geelong was Tom Stewart's high contact on Ollie Wines, which will be scrutinised by the AFL match review officer. Stewart jumped off the ground in an attempt to smother a Wines handpass and landed on his Power opponent. But Stewart's act did not appear malicious and he immediately showed concern for Wines, who was able to play out the game. Wines (32 disposals, eight clearances) and Travis Boak (24 touches, one goal) fought hard for Port, who lost captain Connor Rozee (illness) as a late withdrawal. Jase Burgoyne was subbed out with an ankle complaint, adding to the Power's injury woes, while Mitch Georgiades finished with three goals. "All this considered, it wasn't totally unexpected that we'd battle our way through a game down here against Geelong," Port coach Ken Hinkley said. "It was a full-strength Geelong against clearly an undermanned team that we took out there. "But I thought the boys hung in there as much as they possibly could for most parts of the game. "Geelong had that dominant third quarter with nine goals and outside of that we weren't too far off probably what most people would've expected." Chris Scott admits Jeremy Cameron's teammates had an extra eye out for him as the Geelong spearhead continued his pursuit of a rare century with six goals in an 88-point thumping of Port Adelaide. But the two-time premiership coach doesn't believe it has become an issue that is hurting the Cats, who pressed their case for a top-two spot in the dominant 23.15 (153) to 9.11 (65) victory at GMHBA Stadium on Sunday. It lifted fourth-placed Geelong (14-6) to within one win of top sides Adelaide and Collingwood, and two points shy of Brisbane, with three rounds left in the home-and-away campaign. Cameron, who kicked a career-best 11 goals against North Melbourne in round 20, had four goals to halftime against Port under close attention from Lachie Jones. The 32-year-old's tally stands at 75 for the year and he has another three games, plus finals, to become the first player since Hawthorn's Lance Franklin in 2008 to kick 100 in a season. "Trying to put myself in that position, I'd be a bit enthused around the idea," Scott said. "My sense is that it's still so far off. Like, he's going to have to play a few finals, which is a long way from a guarantee for us. "I think we're a better team when he has the ball but there is a line there where if we're choosing him over better options then we'd need to address it. "I'm not seeing it too much, but they're clearly looking for him." Cameron benefited multiple times when teammates handed off the ball from positions where they could have taken shots at goal themselves. "There are certain positions on the ground where him snapping the ball on his left (foot) is a higher percentage than one of the best kicks in our team on their right," Scott said. "I'm happy for him to get the ball in that situation." Max Holmes (35 disposals, two goals), Bailey Smith (30 touches, eight clearances) and Gryan Miers (30 disposals, one goal) also stood out for Geelong, who kicked 20 goals to Port's six after quarter-time. Irish tagger Oisin Mullin limited Port star Zak Butters to just 10 disposals and Cats substitute Jack Martin kicked four goals in a superb third-quarter cameo. The only concern for Geelong was Tom Stewart's high contact on Ollie Wines, which will be scrutinised by the AFL match review officer. Stewart jumped off the ground in an attempt to smother a Wines handpass and landed on his Power opponent. But Stewart's act did not appear malicious and he immediately showed concern for Wines, who was able to play out the game. Wines (32 disposals, eight clearances) and Travis Boak (24 touches, one goal) fought hard for Port, who lost captain Connor Rozee (illness) as a late withdrawal. Jase Burgoyne was subbed out with an ankle complaint, adding to the Power's injury woes, while Mitch Georgiades finished with three goals. "All this considered, it wasn't totally unexpected that we'd battle our way through a game down here against Geelong," Port coach Ken Hinkley said. "It was a full-strength Geelong against clearly an undermanned team that we took out there. "But I thought the boys hung in there as much as they possibly could for most parts of the game. "Geelong had that dominant third quarter with nine goals and outside of that we weren't too far off probably what most people would've expected."

The Age
10 hours ago
- The Age
Promising mare primed to make immediate imprint at Wagga
Albury's premiership-winning trainer is out to start the new season with a bang by unveiling a promising four-year-old mare at Monday's Wagga meeting on the Riverside course. Impending Imprint is a first starter in the Donna Scott stable by Group 1 winner Impending and out of a mare by renowned wet-track performer Hinchinbrook. She opens her career after two improving trials, the latest a real eye-catcher when settling at the back over 900m at Albury on a soft 7 before cruising down the middle to win with something in hand. It was the work of a debutant primed to find the line in suitable going when she tackles a Maiden Plate over 1200m, with leading jockey Blaike McDougall in the saddle. Scott finished the 2024-25 season with a solid run, yielding three winners from her last 20 runners, significantly all on heavy ground. Meanwhile, fellow Albury trainer Ron Stubbs takes an even bigger team to Wagga on Monday after finishing the past season with three winners from his last 25. And he has two first starters – Lover Man, a four-year-old by Golden Slipper winner Vancouver, and McPhillamy, a three-year-old by Flying Artie – accepted to run against Impending Imprint. But it's later on the program where he will be banking on one of his more talented runners reproducing his best in a competitive and open Class 1 Handicap over 1065m. Ti Tree Royal, an often unreliable four-year-old son of Irish sire Royal Meeting, has only one win from five starts since debuting 10 months ago.

Sydney Morning Herald
14 hours ago
- Sydney Morning Herald
Tupou's redemption: From Waratahs woes to Lion tamer
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