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Scone preview: A chance encounter with Cambridge Stud boss could lead to record season for trainer Rodney Northam

Scone preview: A chance encounter with Cambridge Stud boss could lead to record season for trainer Rodney Northam

News.com.au5 days ago
Scone trainer Rodney Northam has already equalled his best 45 winners for the season but a chance encounter after one of those wins could see him set a new benchmark.
Northam saddles up his first runner for New Zealand's Cambridge Stud with Rockadeel who makes her race debut as a four-year-old in the opening race, the Maiden Handicap (900m).
The daughter of Dundeel had three trials in May and August of 2023 for Brad Widdup but was off the scene until she trialled at Gunnedah on July 25 for Northam.
'I bumped into Henry Plumptre (Cambridge Stud CEO) after winning a Highway and he said they had a mare they think would suit coming to me,' said Northam.
'She injured herself and needed an extended spell.
'She was sound with the pre-trainers and sent her to me to try and get a win on the board.
Straand Care gives @NockBraith and @cavanoughracing a double at @sconeraceclub! pic.twitter.com/qNhLxUj6te
â€' SKY Racing (@SkyRacingAU) January 30, 2025
The Form: Complete NSW Racing thoroughbred form, including video replays and all you need to know about every horse, jockey and trainer. Find a winner here!
'I'm quite pleased with what she has shown me since she arrived and her two trials have been good.
'The 900 metres might be 100 metres short of what she wants but it looks a nice race for her.'
Northam has been pleased with the three runs of See You Then and feels she is a good chance to break through in the Country Boosted Maiden Plate (1100m).
The daughter of Magna Grecia has been runner-up in each run, the latest a long head behind Hellwithasmile over 1000m at Tamworth on June 27.
'She really knuckled down well when she got clear,' he said.
'I think the 1100 metres should be fine, the track should be good and it looks like a winnable race for her.
'She had a foot abscess after her last run which is why the gap between races.'
Smart Buy has been a little unlucky not to have broken through already but gets her chance in the Maiden Plate (1300m).
The filly was held up on the turn when a three-quarter length second over 1300m at Dubbo back in March and found herself in a similar situation when fourth to Nova Centauri over 1000m at Scone first-up this campaign.
'The first-up run was really nice. The 1000 metres was always going to be a bit short for her but she was good through the line,' Northam said.
🟣 Bhima Grad Winner 🟣
3YO filly Tulipwood (Russian Revolution x Lady Lakshmi) is tough to the line and claims her maiden at start two for @ANeashamRacing & @Rob_Arch1 🙌
Bred by Lachlan River Bloodstock, Mr P Treyvaud, Kiscm and Russo Super, she was an Inglis Easter Sale grad. pic.twitter.com/j768MCRZ31
â€' Bhima Thoroughbreds (@BhimaTBreds) March 7, 2025
'She isn't an overly strong but she is a big filly with a decent stride and she takes a bit of balancing up.
'Stepping up to 1300 metres looks ideal and Scone is a great track for her with the big straight.
'It looks the perfect race for her.'
Great Point has failed to produce her nest form in TAB Highways at Rosehill and Randwick at her past two starts but was a winner at Tamworth before that.
Northam expects a return to her home track can see her turn her form around in the Benchmark 66 (1700m).
'I was a bit disappointed with her last run. I was expecting a bit more from her,' he said.
'She just hasn't really done well when we have gone to Sydney. Some horses just don't handle the travelling down there.
'Back on her home track where she has a good record and I think she can race really well.'
Northam was extremely happy with the barrier trial of Upwardly Mobile at Scone on July 16 and expects her run very well when she kicks off her campaign.
Which race that will be in will be determined by scratchings and the weather as she is in the Class 2 Handicap (1300m) and Benchmark 58 (1200m) where she is the second emergency.
'Her trial was super and I'll just weigh up both races,' he said.
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Moruya preview: Absent trainer Joe Cleary to monitor Gerry Harvey pair on way back from Darwin
Moruya preview: Absent trainer Joe Cleary to monitor Gerry Harvey pair on way back from Darwin

The Australian

time6 hours ago

  • The Australian

Moruya preview: Absent trainer Joe Cleary to monitor Gerry Harvey pair on way back from Darwin

The dynamic duo of trainer Joe Cleary and Gerry Harvey can add to their extraordinary tally of shared winners in back-to-back races at Moruya Joe Cleary will be somewhere in the vicinity of 33,000 feet in the air when two of his spring, in partnership with the man he affectionately knows as 'Uncle Gerry', compete at ground level at Moruya on Tuesday. Cleary, as has often been the case, spends the first few days of each new season in the Top End where he invariably saddles up, or owns, a few in action on Darwin Cup day. With his flight home to Queanbeyan, via Canberra, taking up most of the daylight hours on Tuesday, Cleary will be monitoring the Gerry Harvey-bred and raced duo Feedback and Vermicella from the skies. • 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! Blue-blooded mare Vermicella is likely to start a warm favourite in Tuesday's feature Benchmark 66 Handicap despite being rolled at $1.60 at her last start at Moruya on July 11. That said, the Cleary/Harvey mare was a close runner-up in the Benchmark 74 and lost no love at home. 'She was good,'' Cleary said. 'It was probably half my fault. I rode her too close. I just thought Capital Heart would be out and rolling and try and pinch it but as it turned out, it just fell into Your Not The Boss' hands whereas we should have probably been back where it was and have one crack them. 'She will be ridden colder on Tuesday, getting her back into her comfort zone, and I think you'll see the real Vermicella. 'She just runs straight over the top of them.' Cleary has been for years Harvey's go-to man to improve the respective resumes of fillies and mares before they return home to the Widden Valley to join Harvey's elite broodmare band. 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Oscar Piastri finishes second in the Hungarian Grand Prix
Oscar Piastri finishes second in the Hungarian Grand Prix

The Australian

time7 hours ago

  • The Australian

Oscar Piastri finishes second in the Hungarian Grand Prix

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Back-up plan with Stardeel pays off for Bjorn Baker at Rosehill
Back-up plan with Stardeel pays off for Bjorn Baker at Rosehill

The Australian

time7 hours ago

  • The Australian

Back-up plan with Stardeel pays off for Bjorn Baker at Rosehill

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