logo
Reigning horse of the year Pride Of Jenni to visit Yarraman Park stallion I Am Invincible this breeding season

Reigning horse of the year Pride Of Jenni to visit Yarraman Park stallion I Am Invincible this breeding season

News.com.au03-06-2025
Yarraman Park has confirmed that its three-time champion stallion I Am Invincible will be the first mating for reigning horse of the year Pride Of Jenni this breeding season.
I Am Invincible, who will command a $220,000 service fee this season, leads this year's sires tables for both individual winners (180) and two-year-old stakes winners (5). He's the sire of champion sprinter Imperatriz and this year produced Vinrock, the winner of the Group 1 Sires Produce Stakes in Sydney.
It looks a match made in heaven with Pride Of Jenni, a winner of 10 races – including her dashing victory in the 2024 Group 1 Queen Elizabeth Stakes – and more than $10 million in prizemoney.
Pride Of Jenni's owner Tony Ottobre said in a Yarraman Park announcement that he was 'in awe' of what I Am Invincible had done in his stallion career so far.
'I did look at the top stallions that were already here and I Am Invincible came up as a really good cross with her line of Street Cry, but also the fact that it's doubling to a superstar broodmare, Eljazzi,' he said.
'Eljazzi being the mother of Rafha, being the mother of Invincible Spirit. And Eljazzi, who's the mother of Al Anood who's the mother Pride Of Dubai (Pride Of Jenni's sire).'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Phil Gould cops brutal truth bomb as Bulldogs' roster management called into question
Phil Gould cops brutal truth bomb as Bulldogs' roster management called into question

News.com.au

time17 minutes ago

  • News.com.au

Phil Gould cops brutal truth bomb as Bulldogs' roster management called into question

Questions have been raised over the Bulldogs' roster management following confirmation of Reed Mahoney joining the Cowboys and Lachlan Galvin's mid-season arrival. Galvin joined the club from the Tigers on a big-money deal while starting halfback Toby Sexton and Mahoney have been forced out the door, with the pair signing deals with other clubs for 2026. FOX LEAGUE, available on Kayo Sports, is the only place to watch every game of every round in the 2025 NRL Telstra Premiership, LIVE with no ad-breaks during play. New to Kayo? Get your first month for just $1. Limited-time offer > The Bulldogs were on top of the ladder from Round 4 to Round 16 but have lost three of their past five games to drop down to third. Daily Telegraph Journalist Phil Rothfield penned a column for The Daily Telegraph Monday morningwhere he declared Bulldogs seemed to be 'a little bit all over the shop'. He also questioned Bulldogs general manager of football Phil Gould's lack of recent success, pointing to instances in the past where he's made surprising roster management decisions involving big name players. 'I've pointed out it's been 23 years he's been out of the winners circle. The last time was when he was the head of football in 2002. Having said that, I think he's done a very good at the Bulldogs like he did at Penrith,' Rothfield said on the Big Sports Breakfast. 'There's no doubt Gus can set up clubs to win a premiership but the jury is out whether he can actually deliver one or if he has to leave and then they can enjoy the success. 'Having two key spine players announce they're going midway through the year for a side that was leading the competition two weeks ago I think is madness. 'Gus has done this previously at Penrith. He brought in Jamie Soward, cut him early. He brought in Trent Merrin and said he'd be the next NSW captain but cut him early. James Maloney, cut him early. 'I just think there's a lot of confusion at the Bulldogs. A lot of chopping and changing, moving Matt Burton to the centres, one wing to the other. 'One week Mahoney plays 50 minutes and get hooked then another he plays the full 80. Bailey Hayward starts one week and then gets benched. So does Josh Curran 'They are a little bit all over the shop. They're struggling to find the right position in the side for Galvin. The young half has shown glimpses of brilliance in his four games at the Bulldogs but there have been some obvious growing pains. The fact the Bulldogs halves weren't able to close out the game against the Broncos despite leading 18-0 with 20 minutes to go is worrying. Galvin and the Bulldogs' indifferent form led NRL legend Gorden Tallis to opine that it would have been better for the club to sign the young gun at the end of the season. 'You reckon in a perfect world the Dogs would have wanted him at the end of the season so he had a full pre-season?' Tallis said on Triple M's Sunday Sin Bin. 'Because it looks like to me that they're trying to please the kid.' Rothfield noted those comments from Tallis, believing Galvin is under further pressure given he's joined a ladder-leading team mid-season. 'It probably in hindsight it might have been a little bit smarter to bring Galvin in at the end of the season and leave him at the Wests Tigers (for 2025),' Rothfield said. 'Give him a full off-season – three or four months – with the rest of the club and it might have been easier for him to fit in with this side. 'There is no player under the blowtorch as much as Lachlan Galvin is. Each and every week he runs onto the field, we don't just watch the game we're looking to see where he is. That's a lot of pressure on a young fella.' Even though Galvin joined on a big money contract worth over $2 million, that shouldn't mean he is guaranteed a place in the best 17 according to Fox League's Greg Alexander. The Panthers legend said that at the moment, he can't find a space for Galvin in the Bulldogs 17. 'What would your Bulldogs side be in Round 27. Let's fast forward two rounds,' Alexander said on Fox League. 'My answer is Sexton at halfback, Burton at five-eighth and Bailey Hayward on the bench. I don't know if I could find a spot for Lachlan Galvin. 'You probably can carry Galvin and Hayward but because Hayward does such a good job in the halves, he can play at the back of the scrum. 'At the moment, and how they are in their development of their career, I have Hayward ahead of Galvin because Hayward covers dummy-half and the halves. Not just covers the halves, but does a damn good job in the halves.'

AFL 2025: Melbourne forward Jake Melksham on his out-of-contract status
AFL 2025: Melbourne forward Jake Melksham on his out-of-contract status

News.com.au

time17 minutes ago

  • News.com.au

AFL 2025: Melbourne forward Jake Melksham on his out-of-contract status

In-form Melbourne forward Jake Melksham is in 'no rush' to sign on for another season. Melksham is poised to challenge his career-best goal tally of 32 in 2018, having kicked 20 in 12 games in the final year of his contract this season. Melbourne is yet to hold any serious conversations with Melksham about his future and he is unsure if he would even accept the offer of an extension. 'I haven't made that decision up in my mind. Once we talk about it, sit down, we'll start to discuss the nuances of it all,' Melksham, in his 16th AFL season, said. 'I'll have a chat with my family as well. I've got young kids that play sport on weekends – I think my son has played 10 games and I've been to two of them. 'He would probably like me at a few more of his games, but in saying that he does like coming to watch his dad at the 'G as well. 'They're all just little things we've got to talk about. As I said, I haven't thought about much of it all to date. 'We've got eight weeks, no rush, I'm not going anywhere – I'll either be at Melbourne or I won't.' Melksham has grown in a leadership capacity in recent seasons, developing into an on-field coach of sorts. But when the curtain does fall on his playing career, Melksham says he is more looking to chase lost time away from footy than a seat in the coaches' box. 'At certain stages when I had my knee and I was putting time into that each week with the group, I enjoyed (coaching),' he said. 'I have a few other off-field interests I like as well that I am doing in parallel with my career at the moment. 'I think when the time comes, when I do finish up, I will stick to those. 'When you finish footy you want to get some of your life back; coaching is probably double the hours we do as players, we have it pretty good.'

Fair Work Commission rules against BHP in ‘same job same pay' decision on Queensland coal mines
Fair Work Commission rules against BHP in ‘same job same pay' decision on Queensland coal mines

News.com.au

time17 minutes ago

  • News.com.au

Fair Work Commission rules against BHP in ‘same job same pay' decision on Queensland coal mines

Some 2200 coal mine workers in Queensland's Bowen Basin are in line for a $30,000 pay bump following a landmark ruling from the Fair Work Commission against mining giant BHP. The Mining and Energy Union and Australian Manufacturing Workers' Union took the $200bn behemoth to court over the Same Job Same Pay reforms. Passed in 2023, the changes are designed to equalise pay rates between direct hire and labour hire employees at large-scale enterprises if they are performing the same job. The unions argued BHP had undercut worker wages at its coal mines by using an in-house labour hire service called OS Production and Maintenance. Late Monday evening, the FWC determined the work performed by OS employees at the company's Saraji, Peak Downs and Goonyella Riverside mines was not 'for the provision of a service, rather than for the supply of labour' and so delivered 'regulated labour hire arrangement orders'. The orders clear the way for average worker pay bumps of $30,000 at a cost of $66m to the company, the ACTU has claimed. 'This is about Australian unions winning wage justice for workers, which stops labour hire workers being treated as second-class citizens,' ACTU secretary Sally McManus said after the ruling. 'Wealthy mining companies like BHP have clawed money out of workers' pay packets for many years when the income should be returned to workers, their families and the communities they support.' Several factors contributed to the ruling. First, the FWC determined BHP held significant control and direction of where OS employees would work, what they would do and details of how the work would be performed. Second, the workers were compelled to adhere to 'detailed and highly prescriptive requirements imposed by BMA (BHP Mitsubishi Alliance)'. Further, the FWC found OS workers used 'virtually entirely, plant and equipment supplied by BMA to perform work'. 'That consideration supports a conclusion that the work performed by employees of OS Production is not for the provision of a service, rather than the supply of labour,' the bench ruled. It also concluded that although the work performed by OS employees might be specialised, it was of the 'same nature and involves the same specialised and expert skills as are exercised by employees of BHP Coal performing the same work'. The ruling also covers employees with labour hire companies Workpac and Chandler McLeod, who the commission found were 'performing the same work in the same crews and BMA employees and receiving substantially lower remuneration because of the identity of their employer'. The landmark decision could up-end labour arrangements across the country's massive and lucrative mining sector. Minerals Council of Australia CEO Tania Constable called the decision 'incredibly disappointing' and said it would 'directly threaten thousands of specialised contractors who play a vital role in mining operations across the country'. 'Unlike labour hire, these businesses exist to provide a specialised service, not just workers, and should never have been covered by these laws,' she said. 'These businesses now face the risk of being drawn into complex and costly legal proceedings, creating instability in employment arrangements that have long supported operational flexibility, efficiency and mining productivity. 'The commission's ruling confirms what the MCA has long argued: that the government's legislation goes well beyond its original promise to target only the 'limited circumstances' where 'labour hire' is used to deliberately undercut wages.' BHP, meanwhile, has railed against what it sees as an escalation in excessive cost burdens on its Queensland operations, citing complex industrial relations demands and the state's sharp coal royalty regime. The company has reduced its footprint in the Bowen Basin in recent years, offloading its Daunia and Blackwater mines to Whitehaven Coal in April last year. It now runs five mines in conjunction with Mitsubishi: Saraji, Goonyella, Caval Ridge, Broadmeadow and Peak Downs.

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