logo
Taree preview: ‘Big Red' is in the black

Taree preview: ‘Big Red' is in the black

News.com.au21 hours ago

TRAINER Jake Hull will break the seal on the latest 'limited edition' foal by the unheralded and underrated stallion Red Henno at Taree on Monday.
Hull's hitherto unraced filly Diva Rouge is one of only 15 named foals sired by the former Michael Tubman-trained now 12-year-old stallion, Red Henno.
Red Henno has been on stud duties, albeit light ones, since the 2020 season.
In that time, the stallion has fathered a total of a mere 37 foals, 15 of them named, and most of those sent Hull's way via owner/breeder – John O'Connor.
'Red Henno had three horses to the races, two of them have won and one of the others ran second so he is building a nice little record,'' Hull said.
'(Offspring) Red Spectre won impressively and Rebellious Red won impressively, Qui Rouge has run a couple of seconds and is knocking on the door.'
While Red Henno isn't quite a 'revelation' as yet, his early success has come as no surprise to his chief backer O'Connor and trainer Hull.
'He is by Redoute's Choice out of Kishkat so he's as well bred as good as any of them and it was just a shame that he carried injuries in his career, I am sure he could have had a lot better record than what he had,'' Hull said.
Red Henno's next opportunity to add one more winner to the tally comes in Monday's opener at Taree via O'Connor's home-bred Diva Rouge who is the sixth foal out of the one-time Warwick Farm winning mare Go Diva Go.
'The horses we have had out of the mare have all been quite quick and won their fair share of races,'' Hull said.
'Diva Rouge has done everything right so far.
'I am not sure how much ability she has got, but I am happy enough with her work and her trials leading into her first attempt.
'She shows a bit of gate speed, she travels well, and she seems to have a bit more up her sleeve.
'I am not afraid to take on a heavy track if it's that wet on Monday, personally I think it will only be to her advantage.'
Diva Rouge will be ridden by Ben Looker who shares an extraordinary 31.4 per cent winning strike rate with his former jockey's room colleague and long time friend, Gosford-based Hull.
Diva Rouge will have company on Monday's 500km round-trip from her much older stablemate Browned Off which has made the trek himself twice before with success.
The son of Australian Guineas winner Wandjina is almost 12 months without a win but to be fair has only raced three times since that Grafton victory on June 8 last year.
'He likes the track and the distance, he has raced there twice for a win and a third,'' Hull said. 'He is definitely hot and cold but he could run okay at the odds.
'He is an older horse and he is limited but he'll head round there and hopefully he can find his old form.'
Browned Off can lay claim to one of the most intriguing pedigrees imaginable.
His ninth dam was by The Welkin out of imported British mare, Light.
If that doesn't give any clue as to her majesty, her name certainly will – Gloaming's Sister.
A winner of the first ever AJC Kirkham Stakes in 1925, Gloaming Sister was foaled eight year after her namesake, Gloaming, who won 57 of his 69 races.
He was second on every other occasion barring the one time when he fell after becoming tangled up in the starting tape.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Carlton president Rob Priestley says coach Michael Voss won't be sacked
Carlton president Rob Priestley says coach Michael Voss won't be sacked

News.com.au

time13 minutes ago

  • News.com.au

Carlton president Rob Priestley says coach Michael Voss won't be sacked

Under-siege Carlton coach Michael Voss's position has been locked in for the rest of the season by club president Rob Priestley before the situation is addressed in a 'really calm and measured way'. The Blues are in free fall after a horror loss to Port Adelaide last Thursday resulted in upset fans spraying graffiti on the walls outside the club's headquarters calling for the board to be sacked. Finals hopes appear dashed and clashes against ladder leaders Collingwood and reigning premiers Brisbane over the next two rounds could heap more pain on both Voss and the club. The Blues have moved to fast-track incoming chief executive Graham Wright's shift into the top job, and he will now take the reins on August 15 instead of the October scheduled handover. But in a move to take the heat off Voss, Priestley confirmed the coach, who is contracted until the end of 2026, would remain in charge for now. 'Voss is contracted until the end of 2026 – that doesn't change,' Priestley said on Monday. 'There's no doubt all Carlton people are disappointed in where we're up to – the season hasn't panned out so far as we'd like, there's no doubt about that and we can't shy away from that. 'The really important thing is we're focused on the next eight weeks and provide all the right support to our footy department, our playing group, our coaching group to really maximise what we can get out of the next eight weeks moving into the off-season.' Priestley said a post-season assessment would take place because that's what 'all good organisations do'. 'In terms of assessing what they're up to, what gaps they might have, and as a collective working through that and making decisions we need to make in a calm and reasonable way,' he said. AFL great and former coach Nathan Buckley declared the Blues look 'rudderless' at times having slipped to 11th on the ladder with a 6-9 win-loss record. 'It looks like there is no clear direction, isn't that understandable when you look at the questions on the coach's tenure, the expectations of the season compared to the way the season has panned out, the performance of the talented players, and the inconsistency?' Buckley said on SEN. 'There are so many questions at Carlton, and rightfully so, because their performances haven't supported the talent they have on their list. But, as we know, at the top level of footy, it's not as much about the talent you have on the list as much as it is about getting the most out of what you have available, and that's not necessarily when things are going your way. 'It's how you are going to get in the trenches and get your hands dirty and come together when the going gets tough. 'Carlton haven't done that well enough or often enough.'

The lights will be back on at Toowoomba's Clifford Park racecourse on Friday, July 4
The lights will be back on at Toowoomba's Clifford Park racecourse on Friday, July 4

News.com.au

timean hour ago

  • News.com.au

The lights will be back on at Toowoomba's Clifford Park racecourse on Friday, July 4

The lights will be back on at Toowoomba Turf Club on Friday and no-one is happier than its chief executive Grant Sheather following a 'significant' drop in revenue for the turf club. Night racing was initially scheduled to return to Toowoomba on Saturday but it would have clashed with the $1 million Group 1 Brisbane Cup greyhounds final at the new Q22 Parklands at Ipswich. The Clifford Park track was plunged into darkness on March 15 when the lights failed midway during a race after a contactor in a distribution board burnt out. Jockey Cobi Vitler later told Racenet he feared his mount would clip heels in the ensuing chaos as the five riders in the small field opted to continue racing. The last two races of the meeting were abandoned and an investigation was launched into the power failure, fast-tracking an upgrade of the outdated electrical system. Sheather said the club had been through a tumultuous period without any upgraded lights to help ignite its revenue streams. 'Primarily it's been about the juggling of sponsors' expectations and hospitality bookings that we had previously,' he said. 'It's been quite enjoyable racing during the day, especially during the winter months, but there's just no opportunity to get revenue outside of that hospitality which we traditionally have in the past. 'With nearly 700 horses in work, that costs a lot of money so we need to make a lot of money from hospitality to pay for the black hole which is training.' Sheather said having Saturday racing during the day had forced Toowoomba race meetings from Sky Racing 1 to the broadcaster's secondary channel, which had hit wagering revenue hard. 'You could say the wagering is only half (when on Sky Racing 2) so I think Racing Queensland has been looking forward to us getting back on Sky Racing 1 too,' he said. Sheather said the lights were fixed soon after the March blackout but industry participants such as the Queensland Racing Integrity Commission and the Australian Jockeys' Association wanted to ensure the electrical system was ultra reliable. 'The last three months that's what Racing Queensland and the (Toowoomba) club have been doing – investing in the infrastructure to make sure it is reliable,' he said. 'We've got a few other plans to make the lights are more reliable and reduce any risk, which were identified as part of the engineer's report, but that's something the club will do internally.' Sheather did not wish to divulge Toowoomba Turf Club's financial loss over the past three months or the cost of the light infrastructure upgrade but said both were 'significant'. He said Racing Queensland had helped fund a new synthetic crossing that would be used for the first time on Friday night. Toowoomba was the first racing club to host meetings under lights in 1992.

Every NRL club will have an NRLW team in the future as the league's administration makes big plans
Every NRL club will have an NRLW team in the future as the league's administration makes big plans

News.com.au

timean hour ago

  • News.com.au

Every NRL club will have an NRLW team in the future as the league's administration makes big plans

The NRL is planning for all clubs – including the incoming teams in Perth and PNG – to have sides in the NRL and NRLW in the coming years. The women's competition has expanded to 12 teams this season, with the Warriors returning to the league alongside the Bulldogs who will play their first game against Newcastle on Friday night. There are still five NRL clubs that don't have a team in the NRLW yet – the Storm, Panthers, Dolphins, Sea Eagles and Rabbitohs – but chief executive Andrew Abdo remains confident they will eventually join in the not-too-distant future. 'We're in dialogue with all the clubs that don't currently have a licence around a number of factors – their investment into pathways and grassroots football in their geographical regions, high-performance facilities, centres of excellence and their plans and strategy and stadium as well,' Abdo said at the season launch in Sydney. 'How they're planning a strategy for growth and how that fits in with our overall plan. 'We're all aligned around the vision of ultimately having each team housing both a men's and women's team and we're in dialogue with each club on a bespoke strategy for that.' Expansion isn't as simple as bringing in more teams given the game doesn't want to rush things and risk thinning the talent pool too quickly. Record participation numbers mean growth will occur naturally, while there's clearly a thirst for more footy given the record TV ratings and crowd figures for this year's women's State of Origin series. 'It's a key strategic question and it's one that we're working on with everyone in the system – the clubs, the players association (and others),' Abdo said. 'The commission is really focused on growing the women's game, but that growth doesn't necessarily mean just more teams. 'It's making sure that we have an increase in talent, and it's also the type of competition that we run and the length of that competition. 'That's multiple factors, so it's not just the number of teams.' Meanwhile, Abdo says he's not concerned by the Rugby League Players Association's stance on the ARL Commission's proposed new powers that allow them to now charge players for on-field offences. An RLPA statement earlier this month said it had 'serious concerns' with the decision to amend the judiciary code that gives the ARLC 'absolute discretion and extraordinary powers' to charge players. It has now reportedly filed a formal dispute on the grounds that it wasn't properly consulted about the mid-season change. 'They're entitled to say what they want to say,' Abdo said. 'They've made their representations both publicly and to us, so we'll consider those and meet with them to try to continue the dialogue in a positive and constructive manner. 'We're not concerned (because) we feel like we followed due process, but we'll sit down and talk through it. 'I think it's an insurance policy in rare circumstances where the commission might feel that the policy hasn't been properly applied.'

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