The New Zealand Herald

Mackenzie aiming to complete family double

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Aucklander Kevin Mackenzie feels he has a duty to deliver the second leg of a remarkable family double as he ponders Melbourne Cup success today.

Mackenzie’s nephew Grant Smith is part-owner of Melody Belle, a brilliant winner of Saturday’s Group 1 Empire Rose Stakes (1600m) at Flemington for trainer Jamie Richards and the Fortuna Melody Belle Syndicate of owners.

Now Mackenzie is hoping to uphold his end of the bargain as a partowner of Constantin­ople, the TAB’s $8.50 second favourite for the Group 1 A$7.75 million Melbourne Cup (3200m) at Flemington today.

“Grant is my sister’s boy and he’d been working at a gold mine on the border of Mongolia last week and flew in on Friday to watch Melody Belle race,” Mackenzie said.

“He hasn’t seen a lot of her races but I’d shown him footage of her trackwork at Flemington on Tuesday and he was pretty excited about being there. It was absolute magic for him. She was just brilliant.

“Now I’ve got to deliver us the second leg of the double.”

Mackenzie, a Kohimarama-based industrial relations specialist who grew up close to the Te Rapa track, bought a share in Constantin­ople in August after Victorian trainer David Hayes negotiated a deal to buy 80 per cent of the Galileo entire in a A$1.4 million package deal with Cape Of Good Hope, with owners Coolmore retaining the remaining 20 per cent.

A veteran of “40-odd” marathons, Mackenzie opted to take shares in Melbourne Cup prospect Constantin­ople only because of his bent for stamina but the former right-hand man of New Zealand rich-lister Graeme Hart is convinced “Con” still has the necessary speed to win.

“He’s a horse with plenty of tactical speed. He won a 2-year-old race by 10 lengths,” Mackenzie said.

“He brings a similar profile to the winners of the last two Melbourne Cups. He comes in with similar ratings and has run in similar races.”

Both 2017 winner Rekindling and last year’s victor Cross Counter won as 3-year-olds to Northern Hemisphere time, and like Cross Counter, Constantin­ople tackled the Group 3 Gordon Stakes (2412) at Goodwood and the Group 2 Great Voltigeur Stakes (2385m) at York, finishing second in both, before going into quarantine.

He then finished a luckless fourth in last month’s Group 1 Caulfield Cup (2400m), denied clear running at a crucial stage of the straight.

“He nearly went down on his nose. As David said, we should have the Caulfield Cup sitting on the mantelpiec­e,” Mackenzie said.

“The last 50m, he picked himself up and hit the line strongly and he’s come through the race beautifull­y.

“He was getting ready for the Melbourne Cup but the last 400m of his trackwork was faster than Melody Belle’s on Tuesday.

“He’s a colt and apparently he had been misbehavin­g a bit early on, but since he’s been with David, there’s been no issue whatsoever. He’s just a lovely horse and he’s so intelligen­t.”

Mackenzie, who celebrated his 67th birthday with a Victoria Racing Club luncheon on Sunday before enjoying owners’ drinks at Lindsay Park’s Flemington stables in the afternoon, became acquainted with David Hayes during his time working in Hong Kong in the 1990s when the trainer was also based there.

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