Sunday Star-Times

Ladies First eyes Aussie after cup win

-

A crack at this year’s Melbourne Cup (3200m) edged a step closer for Ladies First at Ellerslie, where she passed the sternest test of her stamina with flying colours.

The mare overcame a torrid early trip to triumph in yesterday’s $500,000 Auckland Cup (3200m) with her never-say-die attitude leaving her New Plymouth trainer, Allan Sharrock, shaking his head.

‘‘She was posted three wide around one bend and then two bends and I said she can’t win,’’ he said.

‘‘I’m rapt, but I did think she had got beaten on the line. I’m a bit shocked really – I thought she had run second.

‘‘They all thought she was a wet-tracker, but her last three wins have been on firm tracks.

Ladies First prevailed by the barest of margins to successful­ly execute a long-term plan and thoughts are now turning to another cup in Australia.

‘‘We’ve pulled her out of the Sydney Cup and she’ll go to the paddock and then we’ll be looking at the Livamol Classic and the Melbourne Cup,’’ Sharrock said.

The daughter of Dylan Thomas may provide owners Humphrey and Fiona O’Leary with another crack at the famous Flemington race, as they are also part-owners of Who Shot Thebarman, who ran third in the 2014 cup behind Protection­ist.

After Ladies First was caught out on a limb early, rider Johnathan Parkes pressed forward to get one-off the fence on the pace.

The five-year-old challenged early in the run home and rounded off a lionhearte­d effort to pip Five To Midnight by a nose, with Wildflower a short neck back in third. Alinko Prince was just a long neck back in fourth.

‘‘It was such a brave effort,’’ Parkes said. ‘‘I wanted to get handy, but she didn’t have the gate speed to get across and I got caught three wide.

‘‘I thought I would let her roll and she fought so hard to the line. It was a very good performanc­e.’’

A MURRAY Baker and Andrew Forsman are likely to be scouring Australian racing programmes for Saint Emilion following the grand front-runner’s success at Ellerslie.

The Cambridge trainers will be seriously tempted to look further afield after they produced the grey for a career-best performanc­e in the $200,000 Bonecrushe­r New Zealand Stakes (2000m).

‘‘We’ll see what’s about and think about Sydney and Brisbane, we’ll be looking at all the options,’’ Forsman said.

Saint Emilion coasted along in his customary role in front under jockey Leith Innes and he held a strong gallop to the post for his 13th win.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand