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Otaki was only filling in for Awapuni in Palmerston North , usually their 3rd day of their cup meeting . Their track is being re-laid .
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Did you measure that first with a turnip then check it with an orange? Full circle = 360 degrees divided by 4 = 90 degrees. Clue; running rail, so as to run parallel to itself = 180 degrees. A line at right angles to the running rail = 90 degrees. This will NOT help you pick a winner.
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First time back after the renovation work so it may take a little time to build the atmosphere back though it got some decent coverage on the main evening news. As for the racing, couldn’t fault it for drama and in SNAZZYTAVI and LA CRIQUE, you have two seriously good horses and any rematch should be hyped for all it’s worth. Otaki rather got lost in the day which is unfortunate - I’m sure it’s a meeting with great tradition and history but sometimes less is more. As for Wingatui, there looked to be a decent crowd and LETSBRINGTHEBLING in the last was, along with TOMMY SHELBY in the first, ridiculously easy winners, I know heavy turf can exaggerate superiority but the latter in particular won so easily he’ll probably have done himself out of a handicap.
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Marvelloue achievement, Samantha, hearty congratulations. Your drive on Piccadilly Pete was an absolute peach. Re an earlier comment, it was February 8, 1954 when Douglas Clifford (D. C.) Watts drove 7 in a row on an 8-race programme. A record that, I believe, still stands today.
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My first ever New Zealand Boxing Day and I watched a fair bit of the Trackside 1 coverage. Overall, not too bad and certainly no worse than you’d get from the specialist racing channels in the UK. Good move to have only NZ racing in the early part of the afternoon ensuring as much time as possible but if a race goes off five minutes late it does throw the coverage - it shouldn’t and in the UK the BHA would tell the other courses to let the start times slip a couple of minutes. The drone coverage at Ellerslie added a valuable dimension to the early part of the races - if you were playing in running, you could see how badly MALT TIME fluffed the start. Obviously, they wanted to give the Ellerslie races as much time and coverage as possible but it was good to see the on-track presence at both Otaki and Wingatui and they made a good fist of trying to build up the atmosphere at Ellerslie - the stewards’ enquiry after the dead heat added a nice layer of drama. In the UK, we hear the testimony from the jockeys and the questions asked by the stewards - that would have been good to hear. The woman at the start on her horse isn’t something we have in the UK - usually it’s Leglock Luke Harvey keeping you up to speed at the big meetings but it’s incredibly helpful for punters to know which horses are sweating or edgy behind the stalls. How to deal with the betting side? The BBC tried to ignore it for years back in the day but following the market moves is vital information for players and while hearing everyone’s quaddie in each race a little over the top, keeping the information about the market (would be nice to see liquidity) is helpful. Nice to get a word with the groom (not “strapper” please) as well as they convey the emotion better than the jockey, trainer and owner on many occasions.
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Is it just me or is the Ellerslie carnival now missing a bit of the buzz? The Zabeel Classic was a good race but with the Railway moved it feels like New Year's Day is far from the raceday it once was and that they're throwing everything at Karaka Millions night when the overseas buyers and corporates are back in town.
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I saw the interview. Rodley looked terrified - I thought he was interviewing the Almighty and questions so soft you could have made them into a nice cushion or pillow. Contrast with the far more assertive questioning of Michael Tabor, Geoff Smith or anyone from Godolphin in Britain. They’ve gone up to Aidan O’Brien and Charlie Appleby after the race and asked why their horse ran badly and that’s before the trainer has spoken to the jockey. There’s a line between obsequious fawning and tough questioning and Trackside are presumably too terrified people will stop talking to them if they ask tough questions but that’s what the punters want, genuine information and opinion.
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By Harry Newshound · Posted
CJ Thoroughbreds' dual graded stakes winner Hang the Moon, last in the Nov. 2 Breeders' Cup Filly & Mare Turf (G1T) at Del Mar, drops in class and is the morning-line favorite in the $100,000 Robert J. Frankel Stakes (G3T) Dec. 27 at Santa Anita.View the full article -
By Harry Newshound · Posted
The Kentucky Oaks (G1) was not just the premier race of the year for 3-year-old fillies. It was the coming out party for the year's belle of the ball, Thorpedo Anna.View the full article -
By Harry Newshound · Posted
Breeders' Cup Sprint (G1) runner-up Bentornato, scratched from the Dec. 26 Malibu Stakes (G1) at Santa Anita Park, has a sore left front foot, trainer Jose D'Angelo said.View the full article
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