The New Zealand Herald

Excalibur draws first blood

Gingernuts apart, Cambridge colt was perhaps the most impressive of Derby entrants

- Mike Dillon

The $100,000 Retina Specialist­s Avondale Guineas at Ellerslie on Saturday was going to provide us with the perfect guide into the Vodafone Derby next month.

It didn’t, but perhaps Ellerslie’s last race on the card did.

Excalibur might have pushed his handsome frame into the Derby field with a stylish victory against the older horses in the $22,500 Auckland Eye 2100.

It was only a R65 event, a couple of grades below that a handful in the Guineas aspire to, but Excalibur won it like a good horse and, more importantl­y, one that is about to step up to the top ranks as a stayer.

In a depleted field, Excalibur sat third behind the speed for Jonathan Riddell before moving forward to challenge approachin­g the home bend.

The pair settled into what looked like being a desperate battle before Excalibur’s staying potential entered the fray and he powered away late to score easily. The impressive part was how strong the 3-year-old was through the line.

There had been a fair level of pressure for trainer Shaune Ritchie, as Excalibur ran a series of minor placings, mainly as favourite, over short courses through the spring and early summer before being tested in longer races.

“Jonathan said he worried that he might have gone too soon on the horse this time, but he was worried that he would lose concentrat­ion if he had waited any longer.”

Riddell is as strong a rider as we have in New Zealand and exactly the right type for Excalibur who, like some colts, can have their mind somewhere else during a race.

“He’s a beautiful moving horse,” says Ritchie. “He has a long stride and he was always going to get better as the distances increased. He’s going to be a very fit horse come the Derby.”

The ARC run 18 in the Derby and as the order of entry sat on Saturday night Excalibur was at No 18. But if the connection­s of surprise Guineas winner Gingernuts pay the $30,000 late entry fee, which includes the final acceptance, Excalibur goes to first emergency as the field sits, but Gingernuts’ stablemate Shocking Luck, scratched from Saturday after being sold to Hong Kong, will not run and with one or two others considered unlikely, he should make the field.

Co-trainer Stephen Autridge said the decision on Gingernuts will be today or tomorrow. “It’s entirely over to the owners and David Ellis, and I’d say at this stage it’s at least 50-50. A lot depends on how he has come through the race, but at this stage that looks fine.”

Gingernuts raised just about every eyebrow watching Saturday’s Guineas. He was coming off a lowly R65 Te Teko victory and his chances looked hopeless when he gave the rest of the field five or six lengths out of the barriers.

He sat last until the home turn then sprinted past the entire field to score, not effortless­ly, but almost untouched. The bunch he ran past included all the Derby favourites.

“We knew that being out of a mare by Generous he was going to handle the rain-affected track and that he would stay, but you have to say it was a surprise the way he did it,” said Autridge.

That is true, even if the footing — better than most expected it to be, but still testing — hampered most of the leading chances.

Charles Road ran well in finishing second, looking all over the winner until Gingernuts produced an extraordin­ary finish, and Mongolian Wolf and Redeen The Dream were close up next.

Stewards requested a follow-up report from trainer Tony Pike on the favourite Sacred Elixir, who finished three lengths away in seventh, just ahead of the well fancied Camino Rocoso.

Both horses looked to be badly hampered by the testing footing.

Phillip Devcich is one of racing’s nicest guys. However, if he had told you last Friday that 10-year-old El Soldado is probably better than when he made punters cry by winning last year’s Auckland Cup at better than $120, you would have had to hide your laugh.

Well, after a similar upset in Saturday’s $100,000 Go Racing Syndicatio­ns Avondale Cup, this time at a mere $69 on the tote, you might have to give that statement a little more credibilit­y.

As he did in the Auckland Cup a year back, El Soldado led them up Saturday and several top fancies in the race had their chance to run him down and couldn’t. “Well, that’s how he races,” said Devcich yesterday, almost oblivious to the shock he had once again provided for the industry and ready to go back to his main occupation as a fencer.

El Soldado clearly likes leading because he finished last at Te Rapa at his previous start after settling midfield.

Pacing king Lazarus will have to defy the record books in the toughest test of his stellar season after drawing wide in the A$750,000 Miracle Mile at Menangle next Saturday.

The wonder horse will start from barrier six in the great race, with no horse having won from outside barrier five since the Mile moved to Menangle a decade ago.

There was some good news for trainers Mark Purdon and Natalie Rasmussen as Lazarus’s main rivals, Hectorjayj­ay (eight) and Lennythesh­ark (five) also fared poorly, while his stablemate­s Smolda (1) and Our Waikiki Beach came up with inside barriers.

“It is not going to be easy from out there but there should be a lot of pressure in the race,” said Purdon, who has flown back to Auckland for today’s yearling sales.

Lazarus has had a week to freshen up since winning the Chariots of Fire nine days ago and Purdon was pleased with his private work at Menangle on Saturday morning. “He has a tough month, racing four Saturdays in a row but the week off has to help him.

“So I think he will be very close to his peak on Saturday.”

Lazarus’s wide draw could have seen him lose favouritis­m for the Mile had Hectorjayj­ay, who won his prelude on Saturday, drawn well. But his horror run continued.

He has already drawn wide and been beaten by Purdon-trained runners in both the Inter Dominion Final and Victoria Cup this season.

“Bad barriers and Mark Purdon have cost Hector about $1 million this season I reckon,” said a frustrated trainer David Aiken.

“I am not saying it is a disaster because he has such high gate speed he still might be able to lead but obviously an inside barrier would have been better.”

Lennythesh­ark looms as an eachway chance after winning Saturday’s other prelude and will settle forward from barrier five.

He was runner-up last year in Have Faith In Me’s 1:47.5 record Miracle Mile but won’t have to deal with his conqueror this week, who was not invited. Have Faith In Me’s messy season continued when he settled last and barely ran past a horse in Lennythesh­ark’s prelude and he simply couldn’t start in a Miracle Mile in his current form.

There was plenty for the Kiwis to celebrate on Saturday night, as Motu Meteor and Vincent won their NSW Derby heats, Piccadilly Princess her Ladyship Mile lead-up and Partyon remained unbeaten winning her heat of the NSW Oaks.

But the shock of the night was the defeat, in fact thrashing, of New Zealand’s best 3-year-old pacer Ultimate Machete as the $1.04 favourite in his NSW Derby heat.

The Sires‘ Stakes and Sales Series winner was flat all the way chasing stunning local Atomic Red and was run down into third.

He will still join his stablemate­s in the Derby but Purdon was surprised by the ease of his defeat. “I have had a few horses struggle fresh-up at Menangle and I think he will improve with the run and be better for the

 ?? Picture / Trish Dunell ?? Excalibur draws clear to win at Ellerslie on Saturday to stake his claim for the NZ Derby.
Picture / Trish Dunell Excalibur draws clear to win at Ellerslie on Saturday to stake his claim for the NZ Derby.
 ??  ?? Hectoryjay­jay had few problems winning his prelude on Saturday night.
Hectoryjay­jay had few problems winning his prelude on Saturday night.

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