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Courier-Mail
3 days ago
- Sport
- Courier-Mail
Brisbane Cup on cards for Kiwi import Campaldino after third straight win at Eagle Farm
Don't miss out on the headlines from Horse Racing. Followed categories will be added to My News. Former Kiwi Campaldino must have felt like he was back in his former homeland as he relished the heavy Eagle Farm conditions to take out the Group 3 Queen Elizabeth II Cup (2400m). There were wild betting fluctuations in the staying event, raced on a Heavy 8 surface, as one-time favourite Immediacy took a bath in betting and blew from $4.20 to $7. • 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! Immediacy was given a good run in transit by James McDonald but the Trent Busuttin and Natalie Young-trained gelding never fired a shot and was beaten out of sight. Punters zeroed in on former import Dillian, trained by locals Will and Peter Hulbert, and he was backed from $10 to $5.50 favourite in the belief he was a swimmer. Dillian was also well beaten but, meanwhile, Gai Waterhouse and Adrian Bott-trained Campaldino ($7.50) was enjoying the conditions under jockey Tim Clark. This was a big step up from wins at a midweek event and the Orange Cup. But the four-year-old who started his racing career on the other side of the ditch has now put three consecutive wins on the board. 'He relished the conditions and he's been a progressive horse and he is starting to put is all together now,' Bott said. 'There's more upside there and he is racing with a bit of confidence. 'We came up here with a bit of confidence the way he'd been working since his last run and the way he's been all preparation. 'When the rain came it filled us with confidence.' Bott said it was onwards and upwards towards the Group 2 Brisbane Cup over 3200m on Stradbroke Handicap day at Eagle Farm in a fortnight. Clark said Campaldino felt like a new horse. 'He made a really big leap there coming from midweeks,' Clark said. 'He's just been a different horse since Gai and Adrian took the blinkers off him. 'He was wanting to overdo it. With the blinkers off he relaxes really well. 'He conserves his energy and it was a really dominant performance there. 'The way he's relaxing in his races is the key and I'm sure over two miles he'll do the same.' The Waterhouse and Bott and Clark team was back in business in the following race with New Endeavour taking out the Group 3 Lord Mayor's Cup (1800m). It was the former import's first win Down Under but he did boast a runner-up finish in last year's Group 1 Doomben Cup. Originally published as Brisbane Cup on cards for Kiwi import Campaldino after third straight win in Queen Elizabeth II Cup at Eagle Farm

The Age
24-05-2025
- Sport
- The Age
‘I'll look after you': Rider banned for trying to avoid missing weight
He was suspended for three weeks on the first charge and four on the second, but they are to be served concurrently from June 7. Hutchings said of the first charge that he'd made 'a massive mistake'. 'I've just come back from a three-month injury. Financially, it's put a lot of pressure on me,' he said. 'The last two days, we've been flooded in our home, so that's interrupted my preparation, hence my weight was a little bit bad. 'I felt the pressure because it was a Chris Waller runner, and I'm trying to establish myself again in NSW. I do regret it, and it's just possibly a brain snap on my behalf.' As for the second charge, he said: 'It sort of didn't hit me until we were sitting in here and he said those words and I thought, 'Geez, this is pretty big'. I'm all for the integrity of racing. Obviously, the words are serious, but it's a long way from what I meant.' Freedman flyer eyes Oaks Trainer Will Freedman believes Let's Fly is bred to tackle the 2400m of the Queensland Oaks after she rocketed into calculations with a wet-track demolition at Randwick on Saturday. A $31 chance, the filly relished heavy going in the 1800m benchmark 72 handicap for three-year-olds to win by almost six lengths and was quickly posted as a $15 (TAB) for the group 1 Oaks on June 7 at Eagle Farm. Leading Sydney apprentice Braith Nock raced Let's Fly outside the leader before she took over on the home turn under hands and heels riding. Nock then asked for an effort, and she gapped her rivals. Owners now seem certain to pay a late nomination fee for the Oaks. 'Her half sister, Mimi's Award, won over 2800 and 3200, so there's definitely pedigree to run over a trip, but she's come to hand a lot quicker than I thought,' said Will, who trains in partnership with his father, Richard. 'I thought an Oaks was way too ambitious, but she's beaten them like a good thing.' Sargent on weather watch Randwick trainer John Sargent has his fingers crossed for a wet Brisbane Cup on June 14 after Casual Connection showed he is up for another shot at the group 2 3200m test with a dominant win on Saturday. The six-year-old cruised to a three-length win in the 2400m benchmark 78 race, which he also won narrowly last year from Quantum Cat on a soft track. On a heavy surface on Saturday, he was never threatened. Last year, Casual Connection went onto the Brisbane Cup, where he ran ninth on a good 4 Eagle Farm surface. 'He's been a great horse, especially on this type of ground,' Sargent said. 'I wouldn't take him again, he's getting older now, unless it was wet. I took him last year, and it was rock hard, and he didn't like it, so we'll just tick away for a few weeks and see how the weather is. 'He loves the wet, he's only a one-paced horse so she rode it a treat.' Stanley breaks through Newcastle-based apprentice William Stanley celebrated his best moment in racing when scoring a first Saturday city win thanks to a strong effort from John Thompson-trained Flying Embers in the Midway Handicap (1400m). Stanley, who had his first city winner, Opal Fields, also for Thompson at a midweek Warwick Farm meeting, produced a calm ride on the favourite, which was caught wide but still powered to a one and a quarter length victory. Stanley, who hails from Orange, moved to join the Kris Lees stables, through a connection with former jockey Corey Brown, six months ago and hopes to land more city rides. 'That's my No.1 so far,' Stanley said of the win. 'All the family are in racing. Dad [Peter] was a jockey for 30 years and is now a trainer. All my sisters and brothers are jockeys. They weren't going to stop it [me becoming one]. 'I'm happy where I am at the moment and how things are going.' Agarwood brings spring promise The Adrian Bott-Gai Waterhouse stable is likely to spell Agarwood and target the spring after the promising filly stamped her potential with a commanding win at Randwick on Saturday. An odds-on favourite in the 1200m race for two-year-olds, the daughter of Wootton Bassett scored a two-and-a-quarter-length victory from Godolphin's Matima. Bott said before the race that Agarwood would be spelled to prepare for a spring campaign. Jockey Adam Hyeronimus said Agarwood was very professional on Saturday after she was a handful for Tim Clark behind the gates before winning on debut at Warwick Farm on May 7. 'She's really improved from that mentally, and she was such a professional today,' Hyeronimus said. Howlett hope seasoned for cups Hunter trainer Todd Howlett had his eye on wet-weather country cups for A Pound Of Salt after he burst through the pack late under Zac Lloyd to take out the Highway Handicap on Saturday. The five-year-old, which came to Howlett from Orange trainer Peter Stanley - the father of Saturday's Midway-winning apprentice William, raced away with the class 3 1200m event. It was his third win in eight starts for Howlett and the first in Highway grade. 'It was a good turn of foot under heavy conditions,' Howlett said. 'He's a little fella and when I got him, I wouldn't have expected him to be winning a Highway, so he's done a great job. 'I'll just try to find the right races, but maybe he could go into those country cups now. He does [handle heavy tracks]. That was the query today and he's done well.'

Sydney Morning Herald
24-05-2025
- Sport
- Sydney Morning Herald
‘I'll look after you': Rider banned for trying to avoid missing weight
He was suspended for three weeks on the first charge and four on the second, but they are to be served concurrently from June 7. Hutchings said of the first charge that he'd made 'a massive mistake'. 'I've just come back from a three-month injury. Financially, it's put a lot of pressure on me,' he said. 'The last two days, we've been flooded in our home, so that's interrupted my preparation, hence my weight was a little bit bad. 'I felt the pressure because it was a Chris Waller runner, and I'm trying to establish myself again in NSW. I do regret it, and it's just possibly a brain snap on my behalf.' As for the second charge, he said: 'It sort of didn't hit me until we were sitting in here and he said those words and I thought, 'Geez, this is pretty big'. I'm all for the integrity of racing. Obviously, the words are serious, but it's a long way from what I meant.' Freedman flyer eyes Oaks Trainer Will Freedman believes Let's Fly is bred to tackle the 2400m of the Queensland Oaks after she rocketed into calculations with a wet-track demolition at Randwick on Saturday. A $31 chance, the filly relished heavy going in the 1800m benchmark 72 handicap for three-year-olds to win by almost six lengths and was quickly posted as a $15 (TAB) for the group 1 Oaks on June 7 at Eagle Farm. Leading Sydney apprentice Braith Nock raced Let's Fly outside the leader before she took over on the home turn under hands and heels riding. Nock then asked for an effort, and she gapped her rivals. Owners now seem certain to pay a late nomination fee for the Oaks. 'Her half sister, Mimi's Award, won over 2800 and 3200, so there's definitely pedigree to run over a trip, but she's come to hand a lot quicker than I thought,' said Will, who trains in partnership with his father, Richard. 'I thought an Oaks was way too ambitious, but she's beaten them like a good thing.' Sargent on weather watch Randwick trainer John Sargent has his fingers crossed for a wet Brisbane Cup on June 14 after Casual Connection showed he is up for another shot at the group 2 3200m test with a dominant win on Saturday. The six-year-old cruised to a three-length win in the 2400m benchmark 78 race, which he also won narrowly last year from Quantum Cat on a soft track. On a heavy surface on Saturday, he was never threatened. Last year, Casual Connection went onto the Brisbane Cup, where he ran ninth on a good 4 Eagle Farm surface. 'He's been a great horse, especially on this type of ground,' Sargent said. 'I wouldn't take him again, he's getting older now, unless it was wet. I took him last year, and it was rock hard, and he didn't like it, so we'll just tick away for a few weeks and see how the weather is. 'He loves the wet, he's only a one-paced horse so she rode it a treat.' Stanley breaks through Newcastle-based apprentice William Stanley celebrated his best moment in racing when scoring a first Saturday city win thanks to a strong effort from John Thompson-trained Flying Embers in the Midway Handicap (1400m). Stanley, who had his first city winner, Opal Fields, also for Thompson at a midweek Warwick Farm meeting, produced a calm ride on the favourite, which was caught wide but still powered to a one and a quarter length victory. Stanley, who hails from Orange, moved to join the Kris Lees stables, through a connection with former jockey Corey Brown, six months ago and hopes to land more city rides. 'That's my No.1 so far,' Stanley said of the win. 'All the family are in racing. Dad [Peter] was a jockey for 30 years and is now a trainer. All my sisters and brothers are jockeys. They weren't going to stop it [me becoming one]. 'I'm happy where I am at the moment and how things are going.' Agarwood brings spring promise The Adrian Bott-Gai Waterhouse stable is likely to spell Agarwood and target the spring after the promising filly stamped her potential with a commanding win at Randwick on Saturday. An odds-on favourite in the 1200m race for two-year-olds, the daughter of Wootton Bassett scored a two-and-a-quarter-length victory from Godolphin's Matima. Bott said before the race that Agarwood would be spelled to prepare for a spring campaign. Jockey Adam Hyeronimus said Agarwood was very professional on Saturday after she was a handful for Tim Clark behind the gates before winning on debut at Warwick Farm on May 7. 'She's really improved from that mentally, and she was such a professional today,' Hyeronimus said. Howlett hope seasoned for cups Hunter trainer Todd Howlett had his eye on wet-weather country cups for A Pound Of Salt after he burst through the pack late under Zac Lloyd to take out the Highway Handicap on Saturday. The five-year-old, which came to Howlett from Orange trainer Peter Stanley - the father of Saturday's Midway-winning apprentice William, raced away with the class 3 1200m event. It was his third win in eight starts for Howlett and the first in Highway grade. 'It was a good turn of foot under heavy conditions,' Howlett said. 'He's a little fella and when I got him, I wouldn't have expected him to be winning a Highway, so he's done a great job. 'I'll just try to find the right races, but maybe he could go into those country cups now. He does [handle heavy tracks]. That was the query today and he's done well.'