Sunday Territorian

Pre-race butterflie­s settle as Ryan colt proves real deal Standout spears clear

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GERALD Ryan arrived at Randwick for the Expressway Stakes meeting with butterflie­s in his belly and he left with a tear in his eye after Standout proved himself the real deal.

Taking on older horses for the first time, the colt emulated the feat of former stablemate Trapeze Artist to become the latest three-year-old to win the 1200m event yesterday.

Standout ($7.50) showed the benefit of time, patience and hours of training, relaxing beautifull­y in the run for Tommy Berry and spearing clear to beat last year’s winner Alizee ($1.90 fav) by 1½ lengths.

White Moss ($14) ran a terrific race to finish another halflength away, just ahead of the Chris Waller-trained Kolding ($4.20) who warmed up late.

Ryan said he felt anxious pre-race in anticipati­on of what Standout could do, and emotional after it.

“I was confident coming in he could do that but you don’t know until you try them,” Ryan said.

“You’ve got Chris’ horse (Kolding) who is probably one of the best horses in Australia and Alizee, who is probably the best mare in Australia and that little white thing (White Moss) never knows when to run a bad race.

“It was his test and sure, he’s got to make the next level and take on the best horses but he’s got a Group Two against his name now.”

Standout showed enormous potential in the spring winning three of his four starts, including a stakes victory.

His Expressway performanc­e has given Ryan the confidence to dream big and possibly follow the path of Trapeze Artist, who went on to claim the TJ Smith-All Aged Stakes double.

“He has always shown that he had Group One ability,” Ryan said. “He hasn’t got there yet but he’s certainly going to have a crack at it this autumn.

“A race like the Canterbury Stakes could be on the agenda and I’ve had luck in the TJ with Melito and Trapeze Artist as three-year-olds.”

Berry was content to keep Standout in a rhythm and sit wide, rather than try to restrain him.

He said the colt quickened so well coming around the home turn he knew his rivals, including Hugh Bowman on favourite Alizee, would struggle to run him down.

“I said to Hugh as we pulled up ‘did I beat you on the corner?’ He said yes and I felt it,” Berry said. “When I asked him to quicken he put them away very quickly.”

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