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Ciaron Maher plotting another Group 1 Queensland Oaks upset
Ciaron Maher plotting another Group 1 Queensland Oaks upset

Courier-Mail

time18 hours ago

  • Entertainment
  • Courier-Mail

Ciaron Maher plotting another Group 1 Queensland Oaks upset

Don't miss out on the headlines from Horse Racing. Followed categories will be added to My News. Socks Nation 2.0 is about to rock the Group 1 Queensland Oaks. The mystique of Ciaron Maher went to a new level last year when he conjured a training miracle and masterclass to score the Oaks with $101 bolter Socks Nation. Few saw it coming, not even Maher's great mate Tony Gollan who questioned what Socks Nation was even doing in Brisbane when he first saw the travelling filly in his stables. • 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! Fast forward 12 months and Maher might have another Socks Nation, ready to land a knockout blow and shock punters. The team of Maher and jockey Ryan Maloney, who stunned everyone with Socks Nation, will combine with Amplify in the Oaks (2200m) at Eagle Farm on Saturday. Amplify, a $60,000 buy as a weanling and who was sent to country Bathurst to win a race two starts ago, won't go out $101 but after Tuesday's barrier draw was a $34 chance. Maher said there are similarities between Amplify and Socks Nation. He said a remarkable slice of racing history could be repeated. 'Socks Nation seemed to run fourth in everything she raced in before the Oaks, it didn't matter what race we ran her in she still ran well,' Maher told Racenet. • 'It jeopardises the Stradbroke': Benedetta back-up gamble 'Socks Nation to be fair probably shouldn't have been $101, but I wasn't complaining. 'It was a bit of a roll of dice at the trip but she was a consistent, hearty, sort of filly. 'Amplify is not too dissimilar and you can draw some similarities through their toughness and their demeanour. 'I quite like Amplify. 'The Bathurst run was to give her some confidence and she has done well since then.' The Ciaron Maher-trained Queensland Oaks hope Amplify (outside) winning her maiden at Wyong in March. Picture: Bradley Photos Maher said in terms of the shape of the Oaks this year, it wasn't too different to the previous year when Socks Nation surged to unexpected glory. David Vandyke's winning machine Philia and Glen Thompson's Australasian Oaks winner Benagil are the fancied ones in betting but Maher thinks it's an open race. • 'You'll see the best of her Saturday': Vandyke's warning to Oaks rivals 'The Oaks shapes up similar to last year, there were a couple of shorter ones in the betting market and then the rest of the field,' Maher said. 'I think it is a relatively open Oaks, again. 'It's all about timing and I think my filly should present well. 'She ran solidly for second in her last start in The Bracelet and that was an indifferent day, the way the track was on the Gold Coast.' Socks Nation causing a huge boilover in the Queensland Oaks last year. Picture: Trackside Photography Chris Waller's filly Belle Detelle, scratched on race morning of last Saturday's Queensland Derby with a minor foot issue, is set to contest the rescheduled Derby on Saturday rather than the Oaks. Champion trainer Maher feels jockeys may have been premature to withdraw their services from riding on Group 1 Queensland Derby day last Saturday. The races were called off after jockeys complained about visibility, leading to both the Derby and the Group 1 Kingsford Smith Cup being rescheduled to this Saturday. 'They (jockeys) are certainly very quick to call them off,' Maher said. 'The track was rained on, but it was fine. 'They ran the Kentucky Derby in mud and the jockeys didn't seem to have much of a problem seeing what was going on that day.' Originally published as Ciaron Maher plotting another Group 1 Queensland Oaks upset with Amplify

Ciaron Maher plotting another Group 1 Queensland Oaks upset
Ciaron Maher plotting another Group 1 Queensland Oaks upset

Daily Telegraph

time18 hours ago

  • Entertainment
  • Daily Telegraph

Ciaron Maher plotting another Group 1 Queensland Oaks upset

Don't miss out on the headlines from Horse Racing. Followed categories will be added to My News. Socks Nation 2.0 is about to rock the Group 1 Queensland Oaks. The mystique of Ciaron Maher went to a new level last year when he conjured a training miracle and masterclass to score the Oaks with $101 bolter Socks Nation. Few saw it coming, not even Maher's great mate Tony Gollan who questioned what Socks Nation was even doing in Brisbane when he first saw the travelling filly in his stables. • 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! Fast forward 12 months and Maher might have another Socks Nation, ready to land a knockout blow and shock punters. The team of Maher and jockey Ryan Maloney, who stunned everyone with Socks Nation, will combine with Amplify in the Oaks (2200m) at Eagle Farm on Saturday. Amplify, a $60,000 buy as a weanling and who was sent to country Bathurst to win a race two starts ago, won't go out $101 but after Tuesday's barrier draw was a $34 chance. Maher said there are similarities between Amplify and Socks Nation. He said a remarkable slice of racing history could be repeated. 'Socks Nation seemed to run fourth in everything she raced in before the Oaks, it didn't matter what race we ran her in she still ran well,' Maher told Racenet. • 'It jeopardises the Stradbroke': Benedetta back-up gamble 'Socks Nation to be fair probably shouldn't have been $101, but I wasn't complaining. 'It was a bit of a roll of dice at the trip but she was a consistent, hearty, sort of filly. 'Amplify is not too dissimilar and you can draw some similarities through their toughness and their demeanour. 'I quite like Amplify. 'The Bathurst run was to give her some confidence and she has done well since then.' The Ciaron Maher-trained Queensland Oaks hope Amplify (outside) winning her maiden at Wyong in March. Picture: Bradley Photos Maher said in terms of the shape of the Oaks this year, it wasn't too different to the previous year when Socks Nation surged to unexpected glory. David Vandyke's winning machine Philia and Glen Thompson's Australasian Oaks winner Benagil are the fancied ones in betting but Maher thinks it's an open race. • 'You'll see the best of her Saturday': Vandyke's warning to Oaks rivals 'The Oaks shapes up similar to last year, there were a couple of shorter ones in the betting market and then the rest of the field,' Maher said. 'I think it is a relatively open Oaks, again. 'It's all about timing and I think my filly should present well. 'She ran solidly for second in her last start in The Bracelet and that was an indifferent day, the way the track was on the Gold Coast.' Socks Nation causing a huge boilover in the Queensland Oaks last year. Picture: Trackside Photography Chris Waller's filly Belle Detelle, scratched on race morning of last Saturday's Queensland Derby with a minor foot issue, is set to contest the rescheduled Derby on Saturday rather than the Oaks. Champion trainer Maher feels jockeys may have been premature to withdraw their services from riding on Group 1 Queensland Derby day last Saturday. The races were called off after jockeys complained about visibility, leading to both the Derby and the Group 1 Kingsford Smith Cup being rescheduled to this Saturday. 'They (jockeys) are certainly very quick to call them off,' Maher said. 'The track was rained on, but it was fine. 'They ran the Kentucky Derby in mud and the jockeys didn't seem to have much of a problem seeing what was going on that day.' Originally published as Ciaron Maher plotting another Group 1 Queensland Oaks upset with Amplify

Ciaron Maher plotting another Group 1 Queensland Oaks upset
Ciaron Maher plotting another Group 1 Queensland Oaks upset

The Australian

timea day ago

  • Entertainment
  • The Australian

Ciaron Maher plotting another Group 1 Queensland Oaks upset

Socks Nation 2.0 is about to rock the Group 1 Queensland Oaks. The mystique of Ciaron Maher went to a new level last year when he conjured a training miracle and masterclass to score the Oaks with $101 bolter Socks Nation. Few saw it coming, not even Maher's great mate Tony Gollan who questioned what Socks Nation was even doing in Brisbane when he first saw the travelling filly in his stables. • 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! Fast forward 12 months and Maher might have another Socks Nation, ready to land a knockout blow and shock punters. The team of Maher and jockey Ryan Maloney, who stunned everyone with Socks Nation, will combine with Amplify in the Oaks (2200m) at Eagle Farm on Saturday. Amplify, a $60,000 buy as a weanling and who was sent to country Bathurst to win a race two starts ago, won't go out $101 but after Tuesday's barrier draw was a $34 chance. Maher said there are similarities between Amplify and Socks Nation. He said a remarkable slice of racing history could be repeated. 'Socks Nation seemed to run fourth in everything she raced in before the Oaks, it didn't matter what race we ran her in she still ran well,' Maher told Racenet. • 'It jeopardises the Stradbroke': Benedetta back-up gamble 'Socks Nation to be fair probably shouldn't have been $101, but I wasn't complaining. 'It was a bit of a roll of dice at the trip but she was a consistent, hearty, sort of filly. 'Amplify is not too dissimilar and you can draw some similarities through their toughness and their demeanour. 'I quite like Amplify. 'The Bathurst run was to give her some confidence and she has done well since then.' The Ciaron Maher-trained Queensland Oaks hope Amplify (outside) winning her maiden at Wyong in March. Picture: Bradley Photos Maher said in terms of the shape of the Oaks this year, it wasn't too different to the previous year when Socks Nation surged to unexpected glory. David Vandyke's winning machine Philia and Glen Thompson's Australasian Oaks winner Benagil are the fancied ones in betting but Maher thinks it's an open race. • 'You'll see the best of her Saturday': Vandyke's warning to Oaks rivals 'The Oaks shapes up similar to last year, there were a couple of shorter ones in the betting market and then the rest of the field,' Maher said. 'I think it is a relatively open Oaks, again. 'It's all about timing and I think my filly should present well. 'She ran solidly for second in her last start in The Bracelet and that was an indifferent day, the way the track was on the Gold Coast.' Socks Nation causing a huge boilover in the Queensland Oaks last year. Picture: Trackside Photography Chris Waller's filly Belle Detelle, scratched on race morning of last Saturday's Queensland Derby with a minor foot issue, is set to contest the rescheduled Derby on Saturday rather than the Oaks. Champion trainer Maher feels jockeys may have been premature to withdraw their services from riding on Group 1 Queensland Derby day last Saturday. The races were called off after jockeys complained about visibility, leading to both the Derby and the Group 1 Kingsford Smith Cup being rescheduled to this Saturday. 'They (jockeys) are certainly very quick to call them off,' Maher said. 'The track was rained on, but it was fine. 'They ran the Kentucky Derby in mud and the jockeys didn't seem to have much of a problem seeing what was going on that day.'

Ciaron Maher plotting another Group 1 Queensland Oaks upset with Amplify
Ciaron Maher plotting another Group 1 Queensland Oaks upset with Amplify

News.com.au

timea day ago

  • Entertainment
  • News.com.au

Ciaron Maher plotting another Group 1 Queensland Oaks upset with Amplify

Socks Nation 2.0 is about to rock the Group 1 Queensland Oaks. The mystique of Ciaron Maher went to a new level last year when he conjured a training miracle and masterclass to score the Oaks with $101 bolter Socks Nation. Few saw it coming, not even Maher's great mate Tony Gollan who questioned what Socks Nation was even doing in Brisbane when he first saw the travelling filly in his stables. Fast forward 12 months and Maher might have another Socks Nation, ready to land a knockout blow and shock punters. The team of Maher and jockey Ryan Maloney, who stunned everyone with Socks Nation, will combine with Amplify in the Oaks (2200m) at Eagle Farm on Saturday. Amplify, a $60,000 buy as a weanling and who was sent to country Bathurst to win a race two starts ago, won't go out $101 but after Tuesday's barrier draw was a $34 chance. Maher said there are similarities between Amplify and Socks Nation. It’s an absolute boil over in the @Channel7 Queensland Oaks 😳 SOCKS NATION stays the strongest to gift @cmaherracing his second Group 1 this Queensland Racing Carnival! ðŸ�† What a ride @RMaloney_Jockey ðŸ'� — RaceQ (@RaceQLD) June 8, 2024 He said a remarkable slice of racing history could be repeated. 'Socks Nation seemed to run fourth in everything she raced in before the Oaks, it didn't matter what race we ran her in she still ran well,' Maher told Racenet. 'Socks Nation to be fair probably shouldn't have been $101, but I wasn't complaining. 'It was a bit of a roll of dice at the trip but she was a consistent, hearty, sort of filly. 'Amplify is not too dissimilar and you can draw some similarities through their toughness and their demeanour. 'I quite like Amplify. 'The Bathurst run was to give her some confidence and she has done well since then.' Maher said in terms of the shape of the Oaks this year, it wasn't too different to the previous year when Socks Nation surged to unexpected glory. David Vandyke's winning machine Philia and Glen Thompson's Australasian Oaks winner Benagil are the fancied ones in betting but Maher thinks it's an open race. • 'You'll see the best of her Saturday': Vandyke's warning to Oaks rivals 'The Oaks shapes up similar to last year, there were a couple of shorter ones in the betting market and then the rest of the field,' Maher said. 'I think it is a relatively open Oaks, again. 'It's all about timing and I think my filly should present well. 'She ran solidly for second in her last start in The Bracelet and that was an indifferent day, the way the track was on the Gold Coast.' Chris Waller's filly Belle Detelle, scratched on race morning of last Saturday's Queensland Derby with a minor foot issue, is set to contest the rescheduled Derby on Saturday rather than the Oaks. Champion trainer Maher feels jockeys may have been premature to withdraw their services from riding on Group 1 Queensland Derby day last Saturday. The races were called off after jockeys complained about visibility, leading to both the Derby and the Group 1 Kingsford Smith Cup being rescheduled to this Saturday. 'They (jockeys) are certainly very quick to call them off,' Maher said. 'The track was rained on, but it was fine. 'They ran the Kentucky Derby in mud and the jockeys didn't seem to have much of a problem seeing what was going on that day.'

Hundreds of millions in tax money goes to contracts for DEI groups, watchdog finds: 'Total racket'
Hundreds of millions in tax money goes to contracts for DEI groups, watchdog finds: 'Total racket'

Fox News

time2 days ago

  • Business
  • Fox News

Hundreds of millions in tax money goes to contracts for DEI groups, watchdog finds: 'Total racket'

EXCLUSIVE: Over the last several years, a few dozen diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI) consultant groups have racked up over a hundred million dollars in taxpayer-funded contracts from K-12 schools across the country, a new report by Defending Education found. The report, shared with Fox News Digital, details how 41 DEI consultant groups garnered millions in taxpayer-funded contracts from 303 school districts and public education entities from 2021 until now. In total, the groups collected over $123 million from public schools in 40 states. The report found public school DEI contracts in both red and blue states, from Florida and Alabama to California and Washington. Erika Sanzi, a spokesperson for Defending Education, described the schools-consultants partnership as a "total racket that makes schools worse" and often takes no consideration of age-appropriateness in curricula. According to the report, the biggest winner in the scheme was Amplify, a firm that provides professional development and curricula to school districts, which scored a total of over $70,500,000. The report states that in a now-scrubbed statement on its website, Amplify said its mission is to "make education, and thereby the world, more equitable and accessible" and to "help teachers support their students in constructing, questioning, expanding, and strengthening knowledge of where they come from and who they are becoming." In response, a representative for Amplify told Fox News Digital that the group "publishes textbooks and other instructional materials that help students learn reading, math and science" and that "there is no place anywhere in Amplify's products, or in the training programs about how to use them, for ideologies or political agendas." The representative said "our programs help students learn how to think, not what to think." The report highlights another consultant group, Adjusted Equity Solutions, which it says is associated with the Culturally Responsive School Leadership Institute, that claims to help schools challenge "whiteness and hegemonic epistemologies in school," use "equity audits to measure student inclusiveness, policy, and practice" and serve as "advocate and social activist for community-based causes in both the school and neighborhood community." This group took in over a million dollars from public schools during the study period. "Tinkering in the minds of other people's children is big business and countless K-12 schools across the country are active participants," Sanzi said. "They pay big bucks to enter into contracts with ideologues and activists who, in turn, gain access, directly or indirectly, to a captive audience of young minds." Speaking with Fox News Digital via Zoom, Sanzi said that "rather than this being a focus on sort of academic interventions, it's a lot of jargon that so far has not proven itself to be measurable. And there's really not much evidence, if any, that any of this is helping students or helping schools or helping staff." Sanzi said that though these DEI groups couch their activities in agreeable terms like "belonging" and "empathy," they often end up being a "wolf in sheep's clothing." "At first, you're thinking lesson on empathy, like that's good," she said. "Who wouldn't want their child to be empathetic? We want that. Until you realize that the lesson on empathy is going to be about something like a little girl in her bathroom at school, a staff member who's trans, so biologically male, but identifies as female, comes into the restroom with her. She naturally feels uncomfortable because that's a very natural feeling in a circumstance like that. But she's told that she needs to have 'empathy' for this grownup who identifies as female, right? And that her discomfort is the problem… That feeling discomfort in that situation is wrong or makes her un-empathetic." The Trump Department of Education has warned state education departments in all 50 states that they must remove diversity, equity and inclusion policies or risk losing federal funding. Despite this, Sanzi said many of these consultant groups have adjusted by scrubbing references to DEI on their websites and using other words to describe the same thing. "We see a lot of renaming," she said. "So, they might say, 'Well, we're getting rid of our DEI office or we're getting rid of our equity officer.' [But] the proof will be in the pudding because what we notice often is that you'll see a switch, like suddenly we hear the word belonging a lot more now. And so the question becomes, 'Are you getting rid of it? Or are you just rebranding it and shifting it somewhere else and taking it off your website?'" "What many people don't understand is that the founders of these consultant companies and the people who run them and the practitioners are activists. They are ideologues," she went on. "They have every right to believe that what they're transmitting is the right thing, but in a public-school setting that is required to maintain viewpoint diversity, these really have no place, not only because of the cost, not only cause it's public money, not only because they're not very transparent about what they're doing, but also because they are really trying to push an ideological agenda on other people's children." The Culturally Responsive School Leadership Institute did not respond to Fox News Digital's request for comment.

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