Mercury (Hobart)

Hope for jockeys

- BRAD WATERS

A GLIMMER of hope remains for interstate jockeys wanting to enter Victoria to ride in the Melbourne Cup and Cox Plate.

The Australian Jockeys’ Associatio­n was buoyed by the outcome of a meeting with Victorian Racing Minister Martin Pakula last Thursday.

The meeting was held before Victorian Premier Daniel Andrews announced a roadmap for the easing of restrictio­ns as vaccinatio­n rates rose, leaving open the chance for the VRC to have crowds at some stage of the Melbourne Cup carnival.

AJA chief executive Martin Talty said Pakula gave the jockeys a fair hearing and did not squash their hopes of entering Victoria for hit-andrun trips to Flemington and The Valley. “They wanted to know whether there was a chance because it’s getting to that stage where if they are going to get a Cox Plate ride or a Melbourne Cup ride, that they have to start looking,” Talty said.

“It’s no good hanging around and getting the message that, ‘yep, you can come down’ and not having a ride.

“The jockeys weren’t after any special treatment whatsoever; they were just gauging whether it would be possible.” Talty said it was unlikely Sydney jockeys would want to head to Melbourne for rides on Caulfield Cup or Victoria Derby Day with The Everest and Golden Eagle meetings set for those days.

Talty stressed jockeys weren’t looking to jump the queue to enter Victoria, adding Pakula told the AJA health advice in the coming weeks would determine any decision.

“Mr Pakula was fantastic,” Talty said. “He said there won’t be any special dispensati­on for jockeys, which they understood, because there’s a lot of other Victorians based in NSW that, up until then, weren’t able to return. “The priority is with those people. “Other states have allowed special dispensati­on for sportspeop­le, but it wasn’t going to get to that stage and the jockeys understood that.

“It was more of a response that, ‘everything’s a possibilit­y but it would be determined by the state’s health advice’.” AFL clubs were able to travel into other states on a hit-and-run basis at several stages during the season.

Clubs travelled interstate on chartered flights, head straight to stadiums where they would play before heading straight back to the airport, minimising contact with the public.

 ?? ?? Jye McNeil and Twilight Payment win the Melbourne Cup. Picture: Alex Coppel.
Jye McNeil and Twilight Payment win the Melbourne Cup. Picture: Alex Coppel.

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