The Gold Coast Bulletin

MORE BAD LUCK THAN YOU’D CARE TO THINK OF

- MARK OBERHARDT

TRAINER Matt Dunn is almost getting to the stage where he doesn’t want to talk about barriers for Care To Think who reaches his winter grand final in the Stradbroke Handicap on Saturday.

Care To Think is overdue for some good luck at the barrier draw today ahead of Brisbane’s premier sprint at Doomben.

The gelding was an eyecatchin­g sixth in the Group 1 Doomben 10,000 on May 12 when he came from second last after drawing a wide gate.

His run of bad barriers continued in the Group 1 Kingsford Smith Cup at Doomben on May 26 when he drew the outside barrier and again had to go back to last in running.

At his past six starts, Care To Think has drawn a singledigi­t barrier once.

An exasperate­d Dunn said it was no use whingeing about the bad barriers.

“He just can’t get a decent barrier. We have just had to make the best of them,” the Murwillumb­ah-based Dunn said. “Care To Think doesn’t have to go back. If there is no pace inside him he can roll forward and get a good position. It is a matter of where he draws.”

Care to Think drops from 59kg in his recent weightfor-age assignment­s to 52kg in the Stradbroke (1350m).

Sydney jockey Tim Clark will take over from James McDonald who can’t make the weight in the Stradbroke.

Clark has been in great form in Brisbane over the carnival highlighte­d by his wins on English in the Doomben 10,000, Dark Dream in the Rough Habit Plate and two stakes wins on Perast who he will be riding against in the Stradbroke.

 ?? Picture: AAP IMAGE ?? Care To Think wins at Doomben over summer but his winter campaign has been a disaster due to wide barriers.
Picture: AAP IMAGE Care To Think wins at Doomben over summer but his winter campaign has been a disaster due to wide barriers.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Australia