Sir Lucan heats up again for Winter Cup as Nock gets one hand on title
'But I've got a week's suspension [now], so that probably gives that away a bit, but the apprentices' title is looking pretty good. We'll just keep the momentum rolling and I'm back next Saturday, so I don't miss too much.
'[Morgan] is getting a few good opportunities as well so it's obviously going to be hard to run him down.'
The two-kilogram claimer took Annabel and Rob Archibald-trained Don't Forget Jack ($6.50) and Mickey's Medal ($3) to wins after claiming the Highway Handicap on Matt Dale-prepared Super Norwest.
He gave Don't Forget Jack and Mickey's Medal rails runs before finding clear air to let them chase down Tasoraay and Northern Eyes respectively. Kurrinda Bloodstock-owned Super Norwest went forward from a wide gate before getting a seamless run just behind the speed and a clear shot at Antilocapra, which she beat by a short head.
'It was a good win, and I've got to say, that was a 20 out of 10 ride,' Kurrinda Bloodstock's Sean Driver said.
Andrew Adkins and Dylan Gibbons also rode multiple winners. Adkins won with Freight Train and Motoscafo, while Gibbons took King Of Roseau and pick-up ride Sacred Rocks to victories. Gibbons' day was soured by a four-meeting (June 22-29) careless riding suspension from race nine with Half Yours, which shifted and severely checked Nock's ride, Cormac T.
Filly delivers for Portelli and Calder
Spring prospect Queen Of Clubs eased the pain of Warwick Farm trainer Gary Portelli, while giving group-1 winning New Zealand jockey Andrew Calder a thrill in the opening race.
The Maurice filly, a $300,000 Magic Millions yearling, was near last before storming through a gap and past her rivals for a one and a quarter-length win over Regulated Affair in the 1400m race for two-year-olds.
The maiden win as a $35 Sportsbet chance at her fourth start came a day after Portelli lost Kimochi to a career-ending tendon injury. Kimochi was set to race in the $3 million Stradbroke Handicap, won by War Machine on Saturday at Eagle Farm.
'One door closes and another one opens, and I've been saying all along this is my next best thing,' Portelli said.
'I've been waiting for her, she does things at home that are just … I said she just can't get beat on the weekend, then she drew 10 and I thought, we'll just get a better price.'
Portelli said Queen Of Clubs would likely be spelled before being aimed the major fillies races in the spring, while group 1-winner Kimochi would be retired.
'It's a pretty decent tear and she's more valuable as a broodmare now,' he said.
Saturday's win was also a memorable moment for Calder, whose only other victory in Sydney came 21 years ago.
'I came over just out of my apprenticeship when I was about 20. I rode a listed winner here for Gerald Ryan,' Calder said.
'I've been around. I went to Macau for seven years, Singapore for a year after that, then back to New Zealand for a fair while. Then our whole family moved over here two or three years ago and I've been getting more into it.'
Calder and his family are based at Warwick Farm, where he works with father-in-law, Richard Collett.
Charity benefits from Baker proposal
Warwick Farm trainer Bjorn Baker was again kicking in for a worthy cause after Winning Proposal scored her first win for the stable on Saturday at Rosehill.
In her third start for Baker, the three-year-old filly was strong to the line with an inside run under apprentice Anna Roper to win the 1100m benchmark 72 handicap by a half-length from Overfull as a $10 chance.
Baker pledged on Friday at a calcutta that he would donate $10,000 to Equine Pathways Australia, a para-equestrian program for people with a disability, if he had a winner anywhere on Saturday.
Last month Baker pledged his winnings from Miss Kim Kar's victory at Randwick to Racing NSW's flood relief program for northern NSW participants.
King Of Roseau breaks drought
The biggest cheers at Rosehill on Saturday came from the owners of King Of Roseau when jockey Dylan Gibbons took the Capitalist three-year-old to a second career win in 16 starts.
The Peter Snowden-trained gelding had not won since his debut at Canberra in December 2023 and had since competed several times in stakes and big money races, placing six times.
A $14 chance in a 1300m benchmark 78 on Saturday, King Of Roseau sprinted quickly up the inside to easily beat Snack Bar.
Loading
'Full credit to the horse, he hasn't won in a long time,' Gibbons said.
'I said to the owners pre-race he's probably the nicest class 1 horse going around.
'I was probably back a bit further than I would have liked, but he was in a beautiful rhythm and when he smoked up behind them, I just needed an out. When he got there, he had a bit of a float but then he went right on with the job.'
Hashtags

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

Sydney Morning Herald
19-07-2025
- Sydney Morning Herald
Baker looks to spring targets after Robusto rises to Winter Challenge
The $12 Sportsbet chance overcame the consistent Joe Pride-trained sprinter, which made life difficult for him and jockey Tom Sherry in a messy finish. It followed a heavy track win at Warwick Farm carrying 61 kilograms when first up off a 17-week spell and one trial. The five-year-old now has seven wins and 15 placings from 36 starts. 'He's not one of these million-dollar horses, he was just bred in a back paddock with the owners, and it's just wonderful for them and that these stories can happen,' Litt said. 'He'll go on with this, and I'm hoping there's a couple of races coming up, maybe in listed grade, that he can be competitive in.' It was part of a treble for Sherry, who earlier won on Annabel and Rob Archibald-trained Yoshinobu, which was first-up off a gelding operation. Sherry finished the day with victory on Peter Snowden-trained King Of Roseau. Storm The Ramparts' jockey Reece Jones was fined $400 for an audible obscenity in the scales area after the defeat. He said his frustrations had boiled over, and the breach was out of character. He said he had been 'absolutely hammered' by race goers on the way in. Roper lucky to walk away Jockey Josh Parr labelled wayward country galloper Highway Strip 'dangerous' after its part in the fall of apprentice Anna Roper and Rob Agnew-trained Pony Soprano at Rosehill. Roper, who was stood down by the club doctor from the rest of the day, was fortunate to walk away from the fall. Pony Soprano appeared to escape serious injury. The pair fell near the 750m mark of the 1100m Highway Handicap when Danny Williams-trained Highway Strip shifted out, forcing Roper's mount onto the heels of Never Fails. Roper said Highway Strip was racing ungenerously on her inside, and she believed the fall came from a combination of him hanging out and Never Fails cutting across. Parr told stewards he expressed his disappointment to the stable about the horse's poor racing manners and said 'at no point did I feel I had control of that horse'. 'There was no response from the horse from any command that I gave him, and I'd go as far as to say it's a dangerous horse,' Parr said. Highway Strip, the race favourite, hung out on the turn but finished strongly for fourth. Highway Strip had been sent back to the trials previously for its poor racing manners, and Williams told stewards the horse had worked and trialled well since his last-start second at Randwick on January 25. Stewards ordered that Highway Strip trial twice to their satisfaction before being allowed to race again. Three-year-old Shropshire Lad ($8.50) won the race, breaking through for his first Highway win. Knights Armour Knights Armour provided a career highlight for Braidwood cattle farmer and hobby trainer Ross Lavis and Swedish apprentice Rebecca Bronett Prag when the six-year-old gave both a first Saturday city win. Bronett Prag raced Knights Armour ($12) into second-last spot in the 2400m benchmark 78 handicap before cutting the corner with an inside run on the home bend. Knights Armour, the only horse Lavis trains, made the most of the economical trip to land a half-length victory over Good Banter. 'He tries his heart out, and I knew the 2400, he was going to see it out no worries at all,' Lavis said. Bronett Prag, who came to Australia as a teenager, also scored her first metro midweek win with Knights Armour. Maher 2YO scores surprise win Ciaron Maher-trained Without Peer will race into the spring after scoring a surprise win on debut at Rosehill on Saturday. Coming off two unplaced trials, the Pierata gelding was a $12 Sportsbet chance and near last in the 1200m two-year-old handicap before storming down the centre of the track for jockey Chad Schofield to hold off Spice Prawn by a short neck. Maher assistant trainer Johann Gerard-Dubord said the win 'surprised us a bit'. 'He's a gelding, so we will just go through the grades with him and space his runs heading into the spring,' Gerard-Dubord said. 'He's got a lot of talent, but he's still very raw, and we saw that in both of his trials, especially his first one. 'I don't think it was the deepest two-year-old Saturday race, which is why he ran today. 'We just felt 1200 around Rosehill would be a very good starting point. We just wanted him to have a good experience. 'He's still doing a few things wrong, so I think there's a lot more to come.' Loading Big talent on way to success Premier trainer Chris Waller expects Useapin to kick on after she was strong late to win second up at Rosehill on Saturday. The three-year-old daughter of Waller's Everest winner, Yes Yes Yes, fought off Scott Singleton-trained Dollar Magic to claim the benchmark 78 handicap over 1200m for fillies and mares. It was a 14th runner-up effort from Dollar Magic. Waller expected more success after Useapin's fourth victory in 11 starts. 'It was a long straight and Zac [Lloyd] got her out into plenty of air, but she looked like she was going to be vulnerable with 200 to go, but she did enough and she was brave the last bit,' Waller said. 'She's a big girl and she's always shown us promise, but through that big size has struggled to put it together every start, but she's on her way and she should have a good six months.'

The Age
19-07-2025
- The Age
Baker looks to spring targets after Robusto rises to Winter Challenge
The $12 Sportsbet chance overcame the consistent Joe Pride-trained sprinter, which made life difficult for him and jockey Tom Sherry in a messy finish. It followed a heavy track win at Warwick Farm carrying 61 kilograms when first up off a 17-week spell and one trial. The five-year-old now has seven wins and 15 placings from 36 starts. 'He's not one of these million-dollar horses, he was just bred in a back paddock with the owners, and it's just wonderful for them and that these stories can happen,' Litt said. 'He'll go on with this, and I'm hoping there's a couple of races coming up, maybe in listed grade, that he can be competitive in.' It was part of a treble for Sherry, who earlier won on Annabel and Rob Archibald-trained Yoshinobu, which was first-up off a gelding operation. Sherry finished the day with victory on Peter Snowden-trained King Of Roseau. Storm The Ramparts' jockey Reece Jones was fined $400 for an audible obscenity in the scales area after the defeat. He said his frustrations had boiled over, and the breach was out of character. He said he had been 'absolutely hammered' by race goers on the way in. Roper lucky to walk away Jockey Josh Parr labelled wayward country galloper Highway Strip 'dangerous' after its part in the fall of apprentice Anna Roper and Rob Agnew-trained Pony Soprano at Rosehill. Roper, who was stood down by the club doctor from the rest of the day, was fortunate to walk away from the fall. Pony Soprano appeared to escape serious injury. The pair fell near the 750m mark of the 1100m Highway Handicap when Danny Williams-trained Highway Strip shifted out, forcing Roper's mount onto the heels of Never Fails. Roper said Highway Strip was racing ungenerously on her inside, and she believed the fall came from a combination of him hanging out and Never Fails cutting across. Parr told stewards he expressed his disappointment to the stable about the horse's poor racing manners and said 'at no point did I feel I had control of that horse'. 'There was no response from the horse from any command that I gave him, and I'd go as far as to say it's a dangerous horse,' Parr said. Highway Strip, the race favourite, hung out on the turn but finished strongly for fourth. Highway Strip had been sent back to the trials previously for its poor racing manners, and Williams told stewards the horse had worked and trialled well since his last-start second at Randwick on January 25. Stewards ordered that Highway Strip trial twice to their satisfaction before being allowed to race again. Three-year-old Shropshire Lad ($8.50) won the race, breaking through for his first Highway win. Knights Armour Knights Armour provided a career highlight for Braidwood cattle farmer and hobby trainer Ross Lavis and Swedish apprentice Rebecca Bronett Prag when the six-year-old gave both a first Saturday city win. Bronett Prag raced Knights Armour ($12) into second-last spot in the 2400m benchmark 78 handicap before cutting the corner with an inside run on the home bend. Knights Armour, the only horse Lavis trains, made the most of the economical trip to land a half-length victory over Good Banter. 'He tries his heart out, and I knew the 2400, he was going to see it out no worries at all,' Lavis said. Bronett Prag, who came to Australia as a teenager, also scored her first metro midweek win with Knights Armour. Maher 2YO scores surprise win Ciaron Maher-trained Without Peer will race into the spring after scoring a surprise win on debut at Rosehill on Saturday. Coming off two unplaced trials, the Pierata gelding was a $12 Sportsbet chance and near last in the 1200m two-year-old handicap before storming down the centre of the track for jockey Chad Schofield to hold off Spice Prawn by a short neck. Maher assistant trainer Johann Gerard-Dubord said the win 'surprised us a bit'. 'He's a gelding, so we will just go through the grades with him and space his runs heading into the spring,' Gerard-Dubord said. 'He's got a lot of talent, but he's still very raw, and we saw that in both of his trials, especially his first one. 'I don't think it was the deepest two-year-old Saturday race, which is why he ran today. 'We just felt 1200 around Rosehill would be a very good starting point. We just wanted him to have a good experience. 'He's still doing a few things wrong, so I think there's a lot more to come.' Loading Big talent on way to success Premier trainer Chris Waller expects Useapin to kick on after she was strong late to win second up at Rosehill on Saturday. The three-year-old daughter of Waller's Everest winner, Yes Yes Yes, fought off Scott Singleton-trained Dollar Magic to claim the benchmark 78 handicap over 1200m for fillies and mares. It was a 14th runner-up effort from Dollar Magic. Waller expected more success after Useapin's fourth victory in 11 starts. 'It was a long straight and Zac [Lloyd] got her out into plenty of air, but she looked like she was going to be vulnerable with 200 to go, but she did enough and she was brave the last bit,' Waller said. 'She's a big girl and she's always shown us promise, but through that big size has struggled to put it together every start, but she's on her way and she should have a good six months.'

The Age
11-07-2025
- The Age
Death-defying bush galloper out to beat the odds at Randwick
Scone trainer Jeremy Gask was told a couple of times that Who Ever Thought might have to be put down as a series of unfortunate events delayed his racing debut until he was five. Now almost seven, the gelding's fighting qualities will be called on again when he faces his greatest challenge on the track at Randwick on Saturday. Who Ever Thought, a Highway Handicap winner at Rosehill last October, steps up out of country-only grade on a Saturday when he races in a benchmark 78 handicap (1600m), following wins at Scone and Canterbury. A $27 chance with Sportsbet from the outside gate with Tom Sherry aboard, Who Ever Thought will have to defy the odds, but Gask says that's nothing new. 'There were a couple of times that the vet suggested we might have to put him down,' said Gask, a former Adelaide horseman who spent 10 years training in England before moving to the Upper Hunter in 2018. 'He had a spider bite to a leg and another to a sheath. He got his leg stuck in a stable as a young horse and nearly lost his hind fetlock. He impaled his chest, running into a fence, we think, during a storm at night. 'Through that time, he never got close to racing. I probably never galloped him until he was four. 'He's probably become a bit of a favourite because of all that, and he's got a few hang ups. He's a bit quirky.'