logo
‘Makes you 10 times hungrier': Lachlan Neindorf's success drives jockey Ben Price to pull off upset aboard Sghirripa in The Goodwood

‘Makes you 10 times hungrier': Lachlan Neindorf's success drives jockey Ben Price to pull off upset aboard Sghirripa in The Goodwood

News.com.au07-05-2025

Young gun hoop Ben Price watched on as Lachlan Neindorf snared another Group 1 in the South Australian Derby, and the deeds of his great mate has him determined to make his own mark on the Group 1 stage.
Price, 22, will pilot local sprinter Sghirripa in Saturday's $1m The Goodwood (1200m) at Morphettville, which is headlined by Everest winner Giga Kick.
Saturday will mark Price's third opportunity at Group 1 level.
He finished 11th aboard Beautiful Jewel in the Australasian Oaks last month and 13th aboard Beau Rossa in 2022's Goodwood.
A Group 1 win is the pinnacle for any jockey, many dream of it, yet few achieve it, and Neindorf's feats in last year's Robert Sangster and the Derby has only fuelled that desire for Price, the son of multiple Group 1-winning jockey, Simon Price.
'Lachy and I are very good mates, I've been mates with him before he'd even had a race ride,' Price said.
'Seeing him ride Group 1 winners makes me even more hungry, if Sghirripa is the horse that could get me a Group 1, I'd be really rapt.
'It obviously makes you 10 times hungrier seeing your mates win them.'
Sghirripa cruises home to take out our feature race the Standish Handicap, gaining an automatic start in the Newmarket Handicap on Super Saturday at Flemington on Saturday 9 March.
ðŸ'½ @racing #SummerRacing
— Victoria Racing Club (@FlemingtonVRC) January 13, 2024
Group 1 opportunities are scarce for Adelaide jockeys, there is only four majors on the Adelaide's racing calendar, and competition for Group 1 rides interstate is fierce.
'We all want rides in Group 1's, us Adelaide jockeys probably struggle to secure Group 1 rides throughout the carnival, but we can do it,' he said.
'Lachy has showed that in the last two years, we are capable of riding in Group 1 races and we can win them, we just need the stock underneath.
'I don't think putting an Adelaide jockey on is any disadvantage to any horse – that's for sure.'
Grey flash Sghirripa, trained by Shane and Cassie Oxlade, is a $41 hope with Sportsbet for The Goodwood, and comes into the race following a runner-up performance in the Group 3 Irwin Stakes behind Asfoora.
The son of Lonhro is a five-time Group 1 performer, and may have stolen last year's Oakleigh Plate, won by stablemate Queman, with even luck.
'I'm very excited, I'm very grateful to Shane and Cass for giving me the ride,' Price said.
'He went very well a fortnight ago in the Irwin, it wasn't the idea to be out in front like that, I thought he had every chance and he acquitted himself very well.
'He's had a good trial in-between, his trial was fantastic, he moved really well, I thought his action was probably ten times better than it was before I rode him a fortnight earlier.
'We know he's a solid galloper on his day, there's obviously a strong two or three chances, but anything can go wrong in those sort of races, all we need is a bit of luck and he's a horse that can be right in the finish.'
• Jolly has hopes of Volcanic explosion in Goodwood
Allocated the widest gate on Saturday, tactics will be determined by how well Sghirripa jumps.
'If he jumps, he'll probably roll forward and make the running again, if he steps a stride slow, there's plenty of options for horses we can get on the back of,' he said.
'I'm looking forward to it, it's a small field, anything can happen and he deserves his chance in a race like this.'
For a second time, Price will line up against older brother, Will, at Group 1-level, the pair contested the 2022 Goodwood, and Will is aboard Clarken and O'Shea-trained mare Prairie Flower in this year's edition.
'I actually got him the ride to be honest, Will Clarken rang me a week ago and said 'I'm struggling to find a rider for the horse', I said 'why don't you chuck Will on?',' he said.
'Five minutes later he rang me back and said 'Will's booked', he can obviously ride as well, it's good to see him have a ride in the race.'

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Tall jockey Corey Sutherland is still on cloud nine after his first city win last Saturday
Tall jockey Corey Sutherland is still on cloud nine after his first city win last Saturday

News.com.au

time30 minutes ago

  • News.com.au

Tall jockey Corey Sutherland is still on cloud nine after his first city win last Saturday

One of the tallest jockeys in Australian horse racing, apprentice Corey Sutherland's first metropolitan victory on Tattersall's Tiara Day at Eagle Farm on Saturday is still sinking in for the hardworking 21-year-old. The 181cm Sutherland named fellow tall hoops Jimmy Orman and Jamie Mott as his idols when growing up and he aims to utilise his claiming advantage in the months ahead after his impressive performance on the big stage last Saturday. Sutherland was still floating on cloud nine on a rare Sunday off after riding the Desleigh Forster -trained five-year-old gelding He's Heaven to victory in a Benchmark 85 Handicap (1200m), getting the better of top Sydney jockeys Tim Clark and Jason Collett. 'It's a bit of a weight off my shoulders to get that first metro win,' said the well-mannered Sutherland, who only received his metropolitan jockey's licence two weeks ago. 'It didn't really hit me until I was driving home and started thinking about it. 'My first time at Eagle Farm on a Saturday on Tatt's Tiara day, a Group 1 day, it's pretty special. 'It was pretty surreal when I got on He's Heaven, it's just a different atmosphere. It's like going from junior football to playing in the NRL.' He's Heaven alright! Corey Sutherland didn't let the rest get near him in the second at Eagle Farm🥇 @Desracing74 — 7HorseRacing ðŸ�Ž (@7horseracing) June 28, 2025 Sunshine Coast resident Sutherland hasn't let his height hinder his ability to progress as a jockey since leaving school at age 15. British rider Jack Andrews (193cm) is considered to be the tallest jockey in the world, according to several reports in the UK while Sutherland stands at the same high as NSW-based apprentice Ben Osmond. 'I'm about 181cm or just under six foot,' Sutherland said. 'Jimmy Orman is just below me and Jamie Mott is a tall jockey as well. 'Early on when you first start everyone's got their opinion and they all say 'you're too tall, you'll get too heavy' but it's just how hard you work and how much you want it. 'I rode the last eight days between Toowoomba to Ipswich and Mackay to Dalby and finished the week off at Eagle Farm. 'For five of those days I rode at 55.5kg and it wasn't too much of a problem. I ride anything between 10 and 14 horses at trackwork in the morning. 'I work hard and I can still live a normal life. It's not a big deal to walk around at about 56kg during the winter time.' Sutherland has ridden 296 times in the country and had just nine metro races for 47 career wins. He said it was surreal sitting in the jockeys' room on Saturday at Eagle Farm alongside stars such as James McDonald, Tommy Berry, Kerrin McEvoy, Collett and Clark. 'Timmy Clark was the first person to say to me 'good job' after I won and we pulled up which is pretty insane coming from him,' Sutherland said. 'You look up to these types of jockeys because they've won that many Group 1s and they're big-day riders and you're riding against them, it's pretty surreal.' The Ipswich-born Sutherland did much of his schooling in Tamworth before moving back to Lowood near Gatton when his mum Lisa's mother became ill. He performed on the rodeo circuit until the Covid pandemic hit and then worked as a trackwork rider and stablehand under country NSW trainer Brett Cavanough in Scone and later with his uncle Trevor in Wagga Wagga. Sutherland started his racing career in Tamworth for Cody Morgan, riding his first winner Talbragar in March, 2023. Ironically, Talbragar is owned by Corumbene Stud, which bred and race Saturday's Tattersall's Tiara champion Tashi, trained by Peter Snowden. Kelly Schweida, Billy Healey and Natalie McCall.

McDonald backs Konstas as Australia brace for more tricky tracks
McDonald backs Konstas as Australia brace for more tricky tracks

Sydney Morning Herald

time2 hours ago

  • Sydney Morning Herald

McDonald backs Konstas as Australia brace for more tricky tracks

Bridgetown: Australian coach Andrew McDonald has called for patience with teenage opener Sam Konstas after a rocky return to the Test team on a pitch that caught the tourists by surprise in what could be a sign of things to come in Grenada. Members of the Australian team celebrated with piña coladas on a Barbados beach after their comprehensive 159-run win in the first Test against the West Indies. Alex Carey's tongue-in-cheek remark on Triple M that '60 on that deck is probably worth 200' underlined how difficult Australia's batsmen found conditions in Bridgetown, including Konstas, who made scores of three and five. The second Test begins Thursday at the National Cricket Stadium in Grenada — a venue that's hosted just four Tests since 2002. The most recent, in 2022, didn't see a team make more than 300. 'We were definitely put under pressure throughout that whole game,' McDonald told reporters the morning after Australia's win. 'Incredible partnership from Travis [Head] and Beau [Webster] to navigate through and give us something to bowl at. 'The wicket surprised us. There was enough seam and variable bounce, which made it difficult for batting. 'It's a step into the unknown [in Grenada]. We'll make an educated guess as to what the surface may do. I think it could lend itself to being a pace bowling dominated series if they keep the surfaces similar to that.' McDonald all but confirmed Konstas would be retained for the second Test with Khawaja at the top of the order and gave his verdict on the youngster's scratchy five off 38 balls in the second innings after being dropped twice on zero.

McDonald backs Konstas as Australia brace for more tricky tracks
McDonald backs Konstas as Australia brace for more tricky tracks

The Age

time2 hours ago

  • The Age

McDonald backs Konstas as Australia brace for more tricky tracks

Bridgetown: Australian coach Andrew McDonald has called for patience with teenage opener Sam Konstas after a rocky return to the Test team on a pitch that caught the tourists by surprise in what could be a sign of things to come in Grenada. Members of the Australian team celebrated with piña coladas on a Barbados beach after their comprehensive 159-run win in the first Test against the West Indies. Alex Carey's tongue-in-cheek remark on Triple M that '60 on that deck is probably worth 200' underlined how difficult Australia's batsmen found conditions in Bridgetown, including Konstas, who made scores of three and five. The second Test begins Thursday at the National Cricket Stadium in Grenada — a venue that's hosted just four Tests since 2002. The most recent, in 2022, didn't see a team make more than 300. 'We were definitely put under pressure throughout that whole game,' McDonald told reporters the morning after Australia's win. 'Incredible partnership from Travis [Head] and Beau [Webster] to navigate through and give us something to bowl at. 'The wicket surprised us. There was enough seam and variable bounce, which made it difficult for batting. 'It's a step into the unknown [in Grenada]. We'll make an educated guess as to what the surface may do. I think it could lend itself to being a pace bowling dominated series if they keep the surfaces similar to that.' McDonald all but confirmed Konstas would be retained for the second Test with Khawaja at the top of the order and gave his verdict on the youngster's scratchy five off 38 balls in the second innings after being dropped twice on zero.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store