Canterbury preview: Luke Price wants a soft option for Mogwai
Despite Mogwai having a heavy track win to his credit, Price believes a soft track is ideal for the former Godolphin gelding.
'While he has won on a heavy track once before, he is a horse whose best form is on Good 4 to Soft 6,' said Price, who trains in partnership with his father, Robert.
The son of Epaulette made his way to the Price's Kembla base late last year when purchased on Inglis Digital for $75,000.
He kicked off for his new trainers in the best possible fashion with an all-the-way win from Tartana and So Good So Cool at Kembla on December 28.
He then stepped straight to Saturday city grade when a neck third behind Zondee at Rosehill on January 18 before two unplaced runs.
'He did a good job last campaign after a long time off,' Price said.
'He scored a nice win first-up albeit in a provincial race on his home track but he did carry a big weight.
'He went great at his next start in city grade when he ran third.
'I think he's a horse who likes to stride along. He doesn't like being held up which happened at his last run.'
The four-year-old is leading contender in the Benchmark 72 Handicap (1250m) first-up provided the track improves.
'He is coming up really well, I like Tommy Berry on him and I don't mind the barrier. It gives him room to stride along where he is comfortable,' he said.
'If he lobs outside the leader, he can run a very cheeky race.'
Price believes Canterbury is the ideal track for Invade And Conquer who likes to control things in front.
Like Mogwai, Price said the track condition is all important to the gelding who was unplaced in both runs on heavy ground.
'He's honest but he just needs a Soft 5 track at worst,' he said.
'I'm not sure if he will go around this week. We will just see how the track comes up on race morning.'
The four-year-old was a dominant winner on his home track back on March 22 before a wide run when eighth at Hawkesbury followed by a fourth at Kembla.
He led and give a good kick on straightening at Kembla last start before being caught on the post by Hyperbolic.
From barrier 3, he would be a good chance in the Benchmark 72 (1550m) with Rachel King aboard.
'He was brave the other day. He just didn't see the horse come down the outside,' said Price.
'He's drawn well and has a good jockey on in Rachel who rates them very well in front.'
The Price's other runner for the day is Miss Hvar in the Benchmark 72 (1550m) for fillies and mares.
The daughter of Ocean Park debuted with a strong closing run from well back to grab Kuwait on the line at Kembla on April 19 before jumping up to a Benchmark 68 when fourth to Hyperbolic on May 10.
'I thought she ran really well the other day in a slowly run race that was dominated by the on speed horses,' Price said.
'She had to make a sustained run from near last and the track was starting to get a doughy for her.
'She has a good rider on in Tyler Schiller, has no weight and will go back any way so the barrier is not a huge concern.
'Like the other two, I just hope the track dries up a bit.'
■ ■ ■ ■ ■
Connections of Gunroom are banking on three key factors in the gelding's bid to break through for his first win.
After leading at Warwick Farm last start, Gunroom looked home before being caught late be the flying Hopper.
The son of Snitzel, who hails from the family of eight-time Group 1 winner Apache Cat, will give his rivals something to catch in the Broadsiding @ Darley Handicap (1250m).
'I thought he had the race won last start hence why we have opted to claim this week and the blinkers go on,' said Ben Vassallo, racing manager for B K Racing and Breeding.
'Also, getting him around a tighter circumference track that is rain affected as well as two kilo claim with Braith Nock.
'I think those factors can have him in a good position to break his maiden this week.'
The Joe Pride-trained three-year-old was actually first past the post on debut at Hawkesbury last October before losing the race on protest to Lady Zodiac followed by a third at Wyong.
This campaign, Gunroom resumed with a sixth at Hawkesbury before second placings to Maori Chief and Hopper in Super Maidens at Kensington and Warwick Farm taking his overall record to four placings from six starts.
'He hasn't been disappointing. It's just been frustrating to be so close to be honest,' Vassallo said.
'The jockey was soft on him late. It probably would have helped us in the (stewards) room if he pushed him out.
'Since then, he has had some good runs but some frustrating seconds.
'His pedigree says he will be better over further but we just want to win that maiden and then we can look to step him up in trip next preparation to 1400m or a mile.'
B K Racing and Breeding also have Long Legs making her debut in the Ranvet Handicap (1100m) for two-year-old fillies.
The Gary Portelli-trained daughter of Russian Revolution have been very good in both barrier trials on wet ground with Andrew Calder aboard who sticks with her.
'She is a beautiful filly. She is probably more of a three-year-old type than a two-year-old but we are late in the season now,' Vassallo said.
'She has thrived off everything we have asked of her.
'She has had a couple of weeks to prepare for this off that second trial.
'I expect her to run right up to her trials especially with the sting out of the ground.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

News.com.au
a day ago
- News.com.au
Tony Gollan targets another win with an ex-Godolphin horse at Doomben to continue his flying start to season
Tony Gollan has started the new racing season with a bang, training more winners than any other Australian trainer at a metropolitan level, and he plans to continue the theme by scoring on Saturday with his latest former Godolphin galloper. The new season is still young but Gollan (13 metro winners at a 28 per cent strike rate) has more wins in city areas than Chris Waller (12) and the likes of Ciaron Maher (6) and Annabel and Rob Archibald (5). Gollan has won 12 consecutive Brisbane training titles and the key to some of that success is that he is not only formidable when Queensland carnivals are on, but also at off-season time. In recent weeks he has won races with former James Cummings -trained ex-Godolphin gallopers Pereille and Amur and on Saturday at Doomben he will unleash Fleetwood, another ex-Blue Army galloper. Fleetwood is the well-fancied $3 favourite to make a winning debut for the Gollan stable when he contests the BM85 Handicap (1110 metres) at Doomben. • Fruit market king eyes another Melbourne Cup Fleetwood, a five-year-old gelding, won five races for Cummings and tuned up for Saturday's race with a trial win for Gollan at Doomben last month. Gollan likes the look of him as a Queensland summer carnival prospect, but there is just one small query in his mind about Saturday's race. 'I sort of wish we were running him in a plate race rather than a handicap, as he has probably more weight (61.5kg) than I anticipated in this race,' Gollan said. 'When Pereille won, he was in a set weights race and you are getting in well under what your handicap is. 'But Fleetwood has actually got to carry his true handicap here. 'It certainly gives horses that have got a weight advantage on him a chance to beat him. 'That's my only negative, the weight, but he is certainly good enough. 'If I can secure a smooth enough run, even with the weight, he's hard to beat. 'Ability wise he has probably got a bit on some of these, I think he's a nice horse. 'Hopefully we can do a job with him on Saturday and then put him away and he can come back in the summer carnival and be a really nice horse. 'I definitely see him as a summer carnival horse.' Gollan said Fleetwood had taken longer to settle into new surroundings than Pereille and other horses that had come to his stable from down south. But he is cherry ripe now and the star trainer is going to have some fun with him. 'I loved his trial, I love the way the horse is going and the way he has settled in now,' Gollan said. 'I don't totally know where his distance range sits yet, but I really like what I have seen of him. 'These horses obviously come to you very fit and well.' . @bendorries76 is liking a Tony Gollan horse at Doomben this Saturday as his best bet ðŸ�‡ Imagine what you could be buying instead. — Racenet (@RacenetTweets) August 14, 2025 As for kicking off the season with a brace of city winners, Gollan said his stable had put significant planning into the off-season campaigns of his horses. The proof is in the pudding. 'We have had a great start to the season and the work that has been done all winter getting some of these horses ready to go is starting to bear fruit now,' Gollan said. 'There are a lot of horses who can really learn their trade and get some confidence under their belt in this off-season racing. 'A lot of these horses are going to make nice horses in the next 12 months. 'They are learning what winning is all about and they are doing things well.'

Sydney Morning Herald
3 days ago
- Sydney Morning Herald
Race-by-race preview and tips for Thursday meeting at Newcastle
Track Heavy 9 and rail out 6m. Race 1 2. Storm Park is an improving four-year-old ready to win again third-up in only his second prep. Worked home okay when resuming at Wyong before again doing his best work late at Hawkesbury. At peak fitness now in a race with less depth, 2kg jockeys' claim is pivotal and bred to relish these conditions. 7. Faye Runaway hit the line impressively second-up over a mile, and is drawn to be in the finish. 3. Hippy Dreams improves sharply third-up back on preferred ground. 4. Farraige is trained on the course and has only missed a place once in his last four. 1. Artzino is a market watch having his first start for the new Hawkesbury stable after switching from Queensland, where he hadn't won in a long time. How to play it: Storm Park to win Race 2 3. Dollars is a fit four-year-old who can finally break through in suitable going after placing in three of his last four. Charged home here as a solid favourite in a handy maiden two starts back before again close-up when ridden on speed in a metro two and three-year-old battle. Back at home and drawn to get plenty of cover just off the speed, he only needs a clear shot at them over the final 350m. 1. Ridgeback didn't shirk the task when chasing home a dominant winner at Kembla, and the step-up 300m in trip is an obvious plus. 2. Brut Nature, a four-year-old by Brutal, debuts for the Blake Ryan stable behind two forward trials. Big gap to the rest, headed by 7. Painted Wings down in weight at her fourth start. How to play it: Dollars to win Race 3 10. Savvy Hallie is a smart provincial filly, and the clear one to beat resuming behind two strong trials. Placed three times from four starts as a two-year-old in autumn, the latest a close second to high-class Tempted in the group 2 Percy Sykes after leading. Will start very short after the early market rival was preferred at Wednesday's Kensington meeting. 4. Ruination can run a big race on debut for the Michael Freedman stable after three improving trials, while 7. Dietrich ran home okay on debut in the country. How to play it: Savvy Hallie to win Race 4 8. Quein Step is a tough and consistent metropolitan mare resuming in an ideal short-course affair, 11 weeks after a dominant country maiden win. Ran a good time from the front that day on a soft 7 rating, and fresh here with significant weight relief, can either lead or sit right behind from the inside draw. 2. Wal's Me Mate is a progressive four-year-old who let down powerfully from the trail to thrash his maiden opposition first-up at Wyong. Can take that form into this, although the drop back to a flying 900m is a query in what is a more than handy Class 1 field. 4. Zounaka is a consistent mare resuming off two progressive trials, winning the latest and beating home a talented one who then scored first-up. 1. Last Druid, an ex-Godolphin four-year-old resuming for the new Tracey Bartley stable at Wyong, and 3. Rockbarton Max reloading seven weeks after a fighting Super Maiden win here; are both capable of running into the minor money. How to play it: Quein Step to win

The Age
3 days ago
- The Age
Race-by-race preview and tips for Thursday meeting at Newcastle
Track Heavy 9 and rail out 6m. Race 1 2. Storm Park is an improving four-year-old ready to win again third-up in only his second prep. Worked home okay when resuming at Wyong before again doing his best work late at Hawkesbury. At peak fitness now in a race with less depth, 2kg jockeys' claim is pivotal and bred to relish these conditions. 7. Faye Runaway hit the line impressively second-up over a mile, and is drawn to be in the finish. 3. Hippy Dreams improves sharply third-up back on preferred ground. 4. Farraige is trained on the course and has only missed a place once in his last four. 1. Artzino is a market watch having his first start for the new Hawkesbury stable after switching from Queensland, where he hadn't won in a long time. How to play it: Storm Park to win Race 2 3. Dollars is a fit four-year-old who can finally break through in suitable going after placing in three of his last four. Charged home here as a solid favourite in a handy maiden two starts back before again close-up when ridden on speed in a metro two and three-year-old battle. Back at home and drawn to get plenty of cover just off the speed, he only needs a clear shot at them over the final 350m. 1. Ridgeback didn't shirk the task when chasing home a dominant winner at Kembla, and the step-up 300m in trip is an obvious plus. 2. Brut Nature, a four-year-old by Brutal, debuts for the Blake Ryan stable behind two forward trials. Big gap to the rest, headed by 7. Painted Wings down in weight at her fourth start. How to play it: Dollars to win Race 3 10. Savvy Hallie is a smart provincial filly, and the clear one to beat resuming behind two strong trials. Placed three times from four starts as a two-year-old in autumn, the latest a close second to high-class Tempted in the group 2 Percy Sykes after leading. Will start very short after the early market rival was preferred at Wednesday's Kensington meeting. 4. Ruination can run a big race on debut for the Michael Freedman stable after three improving trials, while 7. Dietrich ran home okay on debut in the country. How to play it: Savvy Hallie to win Race 4 8. Quein Step is a tough and consistent metropolitan mare resuming in an ideal short-course affair, 11 weeks after a dominant country maiden win. Ran a good time from the front that day on a soft 7 rating, and fresh here with significant weight relief, can either lead or sit right behind from the inside draw. 2. Wal's Me Mate is a progressive four-year-old who let down powerfully from the trail to thrash his maiden opposition first-up at Wyong. Can take that form into this, although the drop back to a flying 900m is a query in what is a more than handy Class 1 field. 4. Zounaka is a consistent mare resuming off two progressive trials, winning the latest and beating home a talented one who then scored first-up. 1. Last Druid, an ex-Godolphin four-year-old resuming for the new Tracey Bartley stable at Wyong, and 3. Rockbarton Max reloading seven weeks after a fighting Super Maiden win here; are both capable of running into the minor money. How to play it: Quein Step to win