Weekend Herald

It’s looking like a Karaka for the northern sale

Aussie market heavily targeted after top results

- Michael Guerin

The good news for vendors at the Karaka standardbr­ed sale on Monday is even when Kiwis have been losing this summer, they have been winning.

Harness racing’s sales week starts with a parade at Karaka tomorrow before the northern sale on Monday followed by two days of selling in Christchur­ch.

It will be the second year of harness sales for New Zealand Bloodstock since they opened their standardbr­ed division and quickly cornered the market, winning rave reviews last year for their promotion and the streamlini­ng of the sales series payments for what is now known as the Harness Millions.

But why they were still getting their feet under the table last season, NZBS has had longer to prepare for next week’s sales and as they did with the recent thoroughbr­ed sales they have heavily targeted the Australian market.

And they have had plenty of help on the racetrack. Kiwi-bred horses have dominated every facet of Australian harness racing in the last 12 months, even when our best have not turned up or even been beaten.

New Zealand quinellaed the Miracle Mile last season, had great success at the Breeders Crown with a smaller than usual team and even though many of the big guns were beaten at the recent Victorian carnival still almost every major race was won by if not a New Zealand-trained horse, one bred and often raced here before being sold.

Even when Australian-trained horses won the Hunter Cup (King Of Swing) and the Great Southern Star (Tornado Valley) at Melton two weeks ago, both started their careers here so are an equine advertisem­ent for our breeders’ superiorit­y.

New Zealand-bred horses won 64 group one races in Australia alone last season.

Even the most bias Australian harness racing fan only has to scan their local fields, particular­ly the better races, to see the NZ attached to so many names to realise why so many Australian trainers, and many of their biggest-spending owners, will be coming to New Zealand tomorrow.

“We have definitely targeted that market and I am confident there will be even more Australian­s here than last year,” says NZBS boss Andrew Seabrook.

“The results our horses have recorded in Australia have been incredible, and that is right across the spectrum from young horses to the Cups and Inter Dominions and of course the Miracle Mile.”

The quality of stock won’t be a problem, with sales and racetrack king Bettors Delight leading the world class stallions on show while over 90 lots offered this week are either out of group race winning dams or dams who have left group race winners.

The mild winter and brilliant summer of the last few months have been perfect horse growing weather and reports from our leading trainers suggest their are plenty of welldevelo­ped yearlings while some of the lesser commercial families that were hanging on a decade ago have disappeare­d from the catalogue.

While repeating last year’s huge results at Karaka would be a win, bettering them may be difficult because it was so strong.

But the standardbr­ed industry looks in for a good week.

 ?? Photo / Stuart McCormick ?? King of Swing (inner) wins the Hunter Cup.
Photo / Stuart McCormick King of Swing (inner) wins the Hunter Cup.

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