
Let the party begin: Early Aussie joy at Royal Ascot
There was no winner for King Charles III and Queen Camilla on the opening day of Royal Ascot, but there was for Australian jockey Mark Zahra riding Australian-owned Docklands.
The double Melbourne Cup-winning rider triumphed despite losing the whip in the closing stages.
Piloting the 14-1 shot Zahra managed to hold off Rosallion in the Group One Queen Anne Stakes as the 5-2 favourite tried to make a late run for the winning post.
Zahra, who won the Melbourne Cup on Gold Trip in 2022 and on Without A Fight in 2023, said his ride was merely planned as a working stopover on his way to the Spanish party island of Ibiza - where tennis superstar Carlos Alcaraz took a break after his French Open success earlier this month.
"This just started as a stop-off on the way to a trip to Ibiza, so to turn into a massive win like this is very special," the 42-year-old said.
"It was a very slow, slow speed and I just crept as much as I could, we got room at the right time and he just kept responding, it was such a tough win.
"Hearing all the Aussies over the fence, even though the horse is English, you'd have thought he was Aussie by all the screams. It was amazing."
As for dropping the whip, he joked: "Everyone kept scaring me about the whip rules, I thought it was just easier to throw it away at the 200m."
The well-travelled Docklands, trained by England's Harry Eustace, is owned by Australian group OTI Racing and was previously unplaced in the Champions Stakes at Flemington and the Hong Kong Mile.
Cairo, a 100-1 shot, came home third in the traditional Royal Ascot curtain-raiser.
Australian horse Asfoora, trained by Victorian Henry Dwyer, was unable to back up her victory in last year's King Charles III Stakes, coming fifth behind American Affair.
Asfoora flagged late on, which was not a surprise as Dwyer had said she did not have the preparation in England she had last year. August's Nunthorpe Stakes at York are seen as more fertile ground.
"There's not much for us at home so it will be Goodwood, York and beyond hopefully," said Dwyer.
There was also no joy for the King and Queen as their horse, Reaching High, failed to back up his status as 3-1 favourite in the Ascot Stakes, finishing ninth under jockey Ryan Moore.
Hours earlier, the monarchs arrived at the course at the head of the traditional carriage procession in front of tens of thousands of racegoers.
The royal procession is celebrating its 200th anniversary, with the tradition beginning during the reign of George IV in 1825 when the monarch was accompanied by the Duke of Wellington.
There was no winner for King Charles III and Queen Camilla on the opening day of Royal Ascot, but there was for Australian jockey Mark Zahra riding Australian-owned Docklands.
The double Melbourne Cup-winning rider triumphed despite losing the whip in the closing stages.
Piloting the 14-1 shot Zahra managed to hold off Rosallion in the Group One Queen Anne Stakes as the 5-2 favourite tried to make a late run for the winning post.
Zahra, who won the Melbourne Cup on Gold Trip in 2022 and on Without A Fight in 2023, said his ride was merely planned as a working stopover on his way to the Spanish party island of Ibiza - where tennis superstar Carlos Alcaraz took a break after his French Open success earlier this month.
"This just started as a stop-off on the way to a trip to Ibiza, so to turn into a massive win like this is very special," the 42-year-old said.
"It was a very slow, slow speed and I just crept as much as I could, we got room at the right time and he just kept responding, it was such a tough win.
"Hearing all the Aussies over the fence, even though the horse is English, you'd have thought he was Aussie by all the screams. It was amazing."
As for dropping the whip, he joked: "Everyone kept scaring me about the whip rules, I thought it was just easier to throw it away at the 200m."
The well-travelled Docklands, trained by England's Harry Eustace, is owned by Australian group OTI Racing and was previously unplaced in the Champions Stakes at Flemington and the Hong Kong Mile.
Cairo, a 100-1 shot, came home third in the traditional Royal Ascot curtain-raiser.
Australian horse Asfoora, trained by Victorian Henry Dwyer, was unable to back up her victory in last year's King Charles III Stakes, coming fifth behind American Affair.
Asfoora flagged late on, which was not a surprise as Dwyer had said she did not have the preparation in England she had last year. August's Nunthorpe Stakes at York are seen as more fertile ground.
"There's not much for us at home so it will be Goodwood, York and beyond hopefully," said Dwyer.
There was also no joy for the King and Queen as their horse, Reaching High, failed to back up his status as 3-1 favourite in the Ascot Stakes, finishing ninth under jockey Ryan Moore.
Hours earlier, the monarchs arrived at the course at the head of the traditional carriage procession in front of tens of thousands of racegoers.
The royal procession is celebrating its 200th anniversary, with the tradition beginning during the reign of George IV in 1825 when the monarch was accompanied by the Duke of Wellington.
There was no winner for King Charles III and Queen Camilla on the opening day of Royal Ascot, but there was for Australian jockey Mark Zahra riding Australian-owned Docklands.
The double Melbourne Cup-winning rider triumphed despite losing the whip in the closing stages.
Piloting the 14-1 shot Zahra managed to hold off Rosallion in the Group One Queen Anne Stakes as the 5-2 favourite tried to make a late run for the winning post.
Zahra, who won the Melbourne Cup on Gold Trip in 2022 and on Without A Fight in 2023, said his ride was merely planned as a working stopover on his way to the Spanish party island of Ibiza - where tennis superstar Carlos Alcaraz took a break after his French Open success earlier this month.
"This just started as a stop-off on the way to a trip to Ibiza, so to turn into a massive win like this is very special," the 42-year-old said.
"It was a very slow, slow speed and I just crept as much as I could, we got room at the right time and he just kept responding, it was such a tough win.
"Hearing all the Aussies over the fence, even though the horse is English, you'd have thought he was Aussie by all the screams. It was amazing."
As for dropping the whip, he joked: "Everyone kept scaring me about the whip rules, I thought it was just easier to throw it away at the 200m."
The well-travelled Docklands, trained by England's Harry Eustace, is owned by Australian group OTI Racing and was previously unplaced in the Champions Stakes at Flemington and the Hong Kong Mile.
Cairo, a 100-1 shot, came home third in the traditional Royal Ascot curtain-raiser.
Australian horse Asfoora, trained by Victorian Henry Dwyer, was unable to back up her victory in last year's King Charles III Stakes, coming fifth behind American Affair.
Asfoora flagged late on, which was not a surprise as Dwyer had said she did not have the preparation in England she had last year. August's Nunthorpe Stakes at York are seen as more fertile ground.
"There's not much for us at home so it will be Goodwood, York and beyond hopefully," said Dwyer.
There was also no joy for the King and Queen as their horse, Reaching High, failed to back up his status as 3-1 favourite in the Ascot Stakes, finishing ninth under jockey Ryan Moore.
Hours earlier, the monarchs arrived at the course at the head of the traditional carriage procession in front of tens of thousands of racegoers.
The royal procession is celebrating its 200th anniversary, with the tradition beginning during the reign of George IV in 1825 when the monarch was accompanied by the Duke of Wellington.
There was no winner for King Charles III and Queen Camilla on the opening day of Royal Ascot, but there was for Australian jockey Mark Zahra riding Australian-owned Docklands.
The double Melbourne Cup-winning rider triumphed despite losing the whip in the closing stages.
Piloting the 14-1 shot Zahra managed to hold off Rosallion in the Group One Queen Anne Stakes as the 5-2 favourite tried to make a late run for the winning post.
Zahra, who won the Melbourne Cup on Gold Trip in 2022 and on Without A Fight in 2023, said his ride was merely planned as a working stopover on his way to the Spanish party island of Ibiza - where tennis superstar Carlos Alcaraz took a break after his French Open success earlier this month.
"This just started as a stop-off on the way to a trip to Ibiza, so to turn into a massive win like this is very special," the 42-year-old said.
"It was a very slow, slow speed and I just crept as much as I could, we got room at the right time and he just kept responding, it was such a tough win.
"Hearing all the Aussies over the fence, even though the horse is English, you'd have thought he was Aussie by all the screams. It was amazing."
As for dropping the whip, he joked: "Everyone kept scaring me about the whip rules, I thought it was just easier to throw it away at the 200m."
The well-travelled Docklands, trained by England's Harry Eustace, is owned by Australian group OTI Racing and was previously unplaced in the Champions Stakes at Flemington and the Hong Kong Mile.
Cairo, a 100-1 shot, came home third in the traditional Royal Ascot curtain-raiser.
Australian horse Asfoora, trained by Victorian Henry Dwyer, was unable to back up her victory in last year's King Charles III Stakes, coming fifth behind American Affair.
Asfoora flagged late on, which was not a surprise as Dwyer had said she did not have the preparation in England she had last year. August's Nunthorpe Stakes at York are seen as more fertile ground.
"There's not much for us at home so it will be Goodwood, York and beyond hopefully," said Dwyer.
There was also no joy for the King and Queen as their horse, Reaching High, failed to back up his status as 3-1 favourite in the Ascot Stakes, finishing ninth under jockey Ryan Moore.
Hours earlier, the monarchs arrived at the course at the head of the traditional carriage procession in front of tens of thousands of racegoers.
The royal procession is celebrating its 200th anniversary, with the tradition beginning during the reign of George IV in 1825 when the monarch was accompanied by the Duke of Wellington.
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The unanimously supported proposals focused on reducing harm, protecting children and applying a long-overdue public health approach to gambling in this country. But two years to the day, gambling reform advocates, health bodies and church groups say the federal government have been silent. More than 80 per cent of Australians want a gambling advertisement ban, and parents are sick of turning on the TV only to find their 10-year-olds discussing the game in terms of odds, Alliance for Gambling Reform chief advocate Tim Costello said. "Smoking is legal, but kids shouldn't be seeing it. Same with gambling. People can gamble, but there's grooming of kids," Rev Costello told AAP. "We now have, with the two-year implementation (delay), a whole generation of kids who only think of NRL and AFL in terms of odds." Gambling harms lead to suicides, one-in-four 18-to-24-year-old young men are addicted, 600,000 underage Australians gambled last year, and domestic violence spikes threefold if there is gambling in a family, Rev Costello said. "This industry has been treated as having a normal social license when it's actually pushing very addictive products," he said. "We have literally given our kids over to sports betting companies as fodder for their profits." Vested interests, including the AFL and NRL, sports betting companies, and the commercial broadcasting networks, had stalled reforms, Rev Costello said. The nation's peak body for doctors, the Australian Medical Association, is demanding the government immediately action all 31 recommendations, accusing it of exposing millions of Australians to predatory betting companies. "Every day of delay means more Australians fall victim to an industry that profits from harm and despair," AMA President Danielle McMullen said. Wesley Mission chief executive Stu Cameron expressed deep disappointment in the government's failure to act on a bipartisan road map to tackle gambling harm."Two years on, the silence from Canberra is deafening," Rev Cameron said. "While the government hesitates, lives are being torn apart." The three say the government must use their parliamentary mandate to make systematic reforms, including banning gambling ads, implementing a national regulator and treating gambling as a health issue. A spokesman for Communications Minister Anika Wells said she has had several meetings with harm reduction advocates, broadcasters and sporting codes. He said the government had delivered "some of the most significant gambling harm reduction measures in Australian history", pointing to mandatory ID verification and banning credit cards for online gambling and launching BetStop, the National Self-Exclusion Register. Australians top the list for the world's highest gambling losses, placing $244.3 billion in bets every year. National Gambling Helpline 1800 858 858 Lifeline 13 11 14 beyondblue 1300 22 4636 1800 RESPECT (1800 737 732) Men's Referral Service 1300 766 491 Australia risks losing a whole generation of kids to gambling, as criticisms are levelled at the government for failing to implement reforms from a landmark report two years on. The "You win some, you lose more" parliamentary inquiry into online gambling and its impacts, chaired by fierce gambling reform advocate the late Peta Murphy MP, delivered 31 recommendations in 2023. The unanimously supported proposals focused on reducing harm, protecting children and applying a long-overdue public health approach to gambling in this country. But two years to the day, gambling reform advocates, health bodies and church groups say the federal government have been silent. More than 80 per cent of Australians want a gambling advertisement ban, and parents are sick of turning on the TV only to find their 10-year-olds discussing the game in terms of odds, Alliance for Gambling Reform chief advocate Tim Costello said. "Smoking is legal, but kids shouldn't be seeing it. Same with gambling. People can gamble, but there's grooming of kids," Rev Costello told AAP. "We now have, with the two-year implementation (delay), a whole generation of kids who only think of NRL and AFL in terms of odds." Gambling harms lead to suicides, one-in-four 18-to-24-year-old young men are addicted, 600,000 underage Australians gambled last year, and domestic violence spikes threefold if there is gambling in a family, Rev Costello said. "This industry has been treated as having a normal social license when it's actually pushing very addictive products," he said. "We have literally given our kids over to sports betting companies as fodder for their profits." Vested interests, including the AFL and NRL, sports betting companies, and the commercial broadcasting networks, had stalled reforms, Rev Costello said. The nation's peak body for doctors, the Australian Medical Association, is demanding the government immediately action all 31 recommendations, accusing it of exposing millions of Australians to predatory betting companies. "Every day of delay means more Australians fall victim to an industry that profits from harm and despair," AMA President Danielle McMullen said. Wesley Mission chief executive Stu Cameron expressed deep disappointment in the government's failure to act on a bipartisan road map to tackle gambling harm."Two years on, the silence from Canberra is deafening," Rev Cameron said. "While the government hesitates, lives are being torn apart." The three say the government must use their parliamentary mandate to make systematic reforms, including banning gambling ads, implementing a national regulator and treating gambling as a health issue. A spokesman for Communications Minister Anika Wells said she has had several meetings with harm reduction advocates, broadcasters and sporting codes. He said the government had delivered "some of the most significant gambling harm reduction measures in Australian history", pointing to mandatory ID verification and banning credit cards for online gambling and launching BetStop, the National Self-Exclusion Register. Australians top the list for the world's highest gambling losses, placing $244.3 billion in bets every year. National Gambling Helpline 1800 858 858 Lifeline 13 11 14 beyondblue 1300 22 4636 1800 RESPECT (1800 737 732) Men's Referral Service 1300 766 491