The Press

Team Williams delighted with Cup barrier draw

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Lloyd Williams’ strangleho­ld on a sixth Melbourne Cup intensifie­d as the leviathan owner pins his faith in the mastery of Frankie Dettori to deliver back-to-back wins in Australia’s great race with favourite Almandin.

Despite Almandin drifting from

$6.50 to $7 with Sportsbet after Saturday night’s barrier draw, Williams’ son Nick declared barrier 14 ‘‘exactly’’ where they want to be.

Williams qualified an equalbest six runners for the race, matching his 2013 battalion, which couldn’t deny Gai Waterhouse a famous triumph in 2013 with Fiorente.

And he has three of the top nine runners in betting for Tuesday’s race, but the Macedon Lodge army left no one in any doubt Almandin is their No.1 seed.

‘‘If you told us we would draw

14 or inside with all our best chances we would have taken it,’’ Williams’ son Nick said.

‘‘Rekindling drawing four means he will not have to do an ounce of work and we wanted to draw middle with Almandin.

‘‘We’ve got the best jockey in the world [Dettori on Almandin] and he’s got 800 metres to work out where he’s going to be and he should be able to be in a similar spot to last year.’’

Dettori will dash from Sunday’s Breeders Cup meeting at Del Mar in the United States to try to snap his Melbourne Cup curse at the 16th time of asking.

A record-equalling 11 overseastr­ained horses have flocked to Melbourne to raid the $6 million race, which boasts just the Caulfield Cup quinella of Boom Time and Single Gaze as well as Amelie’s Star as the only horses bred in Australia to have qualified.

But local flagbearer­s Williams and Darren Weir, who will saddle up third favourite Humidor ($9.50), will have a strong hand despite English stayer Marmelo ($9) moving up a rung in markets.

Weir fared favourably with Big Duke (five), Amelie’s Star (10) and Cox Plate runner-up Humidor (13) all drawing comfortabl­e alleys.

‘‘I’ve got no complaints,’’ Weir said. ‘‘Barriers weren’t going to ruin their chances. It could have been better, we could have drawn one, two and three. They’re all going to be around midfield and get their chance from those gates.

‘‘It probably helps Humidor a bit because he can just follow something across and be exactly where we want him to be in the run.’’

Gai Waterhouse’s Cismontane controvers­ially secured the last spot in the race by winning the Lexus Stakes earlier on Saturday despite jockey Stephen Baster being heavily fined for flaunting the whip rules in the narrow win.

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