Sunday Territorian

TRAGEDY AND TRIUMPH SHARE THE SADDLE

More often than not, there’s an amazing backstory to the winner, as ANDREW RULE reveals

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WE ARE back. Flemington reopens to 10,000 hard-core racegoers on Tuesday in time to see if the best runner from Queensland since Cathy Freeman can reclaim our greatest race for the Australian heartland.

His name is Incentivis­e, “Splinter” to his mates, and proof that great horses make good names.

This is the skinny, gangly animal who humiliated the Caulfield Cup field with the sort of extravagan­t run that only champions can get away with, swooping around the mob like a kelpie herding sheep, the way Winx used to.

Tuesday’s Melbourne Cup might be the last time Incentivis­e runs in a handicap for fear of having to “carry the grandstand”, as the saying goes.

It’s good for racing, if not for his rivals, that the handicappe­r didn’t weight him out of the race, because the Cup needs a reason for an increasing­ly distracted and divided public to love it the way it used to.

The race that used to stop a nation has never stopped the world because, Ireland apart, the world doesn’t care for racing as much as Australian­s and Kiwis traditiona­lly have.

But the 10,000 people who get to Flemington on Tuesday will provide atmosphere for a broadcast audience of millions that can reasonably expect to see one of the most memorable Melbourne Cups in years.

There are honourable exceptions to every sweeping statement, of course. In 2002, the Irish wizard Dermot Weld returned to Australia with a big chestnut horse called Media Puzzle. After winning the Geelong Cup with ease, Media

Puzzle seemed likely to repeat Weld’s success ss with Vintage Crop, who became the he first truly internatio­nal Melbourne e Cup winner in 1993. The occasional al imported horse had won before, re, trained by a local trainer, but Weld was a raider in the way Kiwis always had been.

Media Puzzle was to be ridden by Damien Oliver but the week before the Cup, his brother Jason died after a fall in a trial in Perth. Their father Ray had also been killed in a race fall when en Damien was three. So, when he insisted on riding Media Puzzle, wearing Jason’s breeches in tribute, ute, the win was what one observer called alled a victory “by Hollywood out of Sentiment”.

As a touching story, it seemed hard to top, but the win of Michelle le Payne on 100-1 outsider Prince Of f Penzance in 2015 came close. Both victories prompted films. Media Puzzle and Ollie made the superior r combinatio­n on the track but the Payne film was better. Both prove that a memorable story outstays a mere performanc­e.

Piping Lane wouldn’t get within 100m of imported gallopers like Spanish Mission, but when he and John Letts won the Cup in 1972, it struck a chord. He was owned by Tasmanian farmer Ray Trinder, who rode his own horses in Tasmania as an amateur.

Trinder trained horses in Tassie but sent Piping Lane to the cagey George Hanlon to be set for the Cup and the rest is history. After the race, Trinder and his wife were seen standing in the street outside the course lugging a cardboard box,

trying to hail a taxi. In the box was the Melbourne Cup trophy.

In 1983, another farmerhors­eman, Snowy Snow Lupton, arrived from New Zealand Ze with a rangy chestnut horse ho named Kiwi, who’d been educated rounding up cattle on his property at Waverley. A cheeky ch kid named Jimmy Cassidy steered Kiwi from the back of the t field, pumping with chara characteri­stic vigour as the big horse ho swept home to nail an electrifyi­ng ele win. In 2001, 2001 Sheila Laxon trained Ethereal to win the Cup Cups double, only the 11t 11th horse to do it. If In Incentivis­e wins on Tuesday, he will be the 12th and the first in 20 years to nail the big double. Odds makers and odds takers ta say he can do it, with wi the resurgent Brett Prebble riding in what might be the

greatest comeback in Australian racing in decades.

This year’s field is not the strongest, experts say. It doesn’t seem to have great depth once you get past Incentivis­e, Chris Waller’s temperamen­tal star Verry Elleegant, and the import Spanish Mission.

Authoritie­s are understand­ably, and belatedly, gun shy about letting imports race if there is any doubt about their soundness. Horses raised and trained in Britain and Ireland have had a string of breakdowns in the Cup or while preparing for it here.

Verry Elleegant, of course, was foaled in New Zealand but in the jet age that qualifies her as an honorary Aussie. Australian­s have been quick to adopt racehorses, not to mention actors and singers, from across the Tasman ever since Phar Lap’s day.

Verry Elleegant’s story is as unconventi­onal as the spelling of her name. Her sire, Zed, stands on a former Taranaki cattle farm, Glenwillia­m Stud. Zed is about as well bred as an Australasi­an horse can be, but he started life standing at $1000 a service because his racing career was cut short before he could prove himself.

Zed’s opportunit­ies were so limited they sent him to the isolated Erewhon station in the mountains, where he fathered foals from draught horse mares to be used as jumpers and stock horses. He got a reprieve and returned to Glenwillia­m Stud after some of his early thoroughbr­ed offspring started to win races.

Verry Elleegant is the standout of Zed’s progeny. She has won more and better Group races than anything in the Cup, but her temperamen­t doesn’t match her ability. If she feels like rising to her best on Tuesday, she will give Incentivis­e and Spanish Mission and any surprise contenders something to beat.

There are, of course, another 20 runners who could “do a Prince Of Penzance” if something goes amiss with the favourites. One is Sir Lucan, an Irish four-year-old carrying only 50kg, a full-brother to the ill-fated Sir Dragonet, who was put down after injuring himself in slow trackwork.

Horses aged four and five have by far the best strike rate, though that did not stop last year’s winner getting up as an eight-year-old – and going around again this week at nine. Let’s hope the rain has softened the track enough that his joints don’t feel it.

Omen bettors might like the idea that a horse called Lord Lucan raced in Victoria with success a few years ago. The horse, possibly named after the fugitive lord who vanished from London after murdering his children’s nanny in the 1970s, was a proven Cup winner. That is, he won the Mt Wycheproof Cup of 2009.

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 ?? ?? Jockey Damien Oliver raises his arm to the heavens in memory of his brother Jason, killed in a riding accident just days before the 2002 Melbourne Cup.
Jockey Damien Oliver raises his arm to the heavens in memory of his brother Jason, killed in a riding accident just days before the 2002 Melbourne Cup.
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NTNE01Z01M­A - V1
 ?? ?? Verry Elleegant, sired by a $1000-a-service stallion in New Zealand, wins last year’s Caulfield Cup in the hands of Mark Zahra.
And so they came – Vintage Crop and Mick Kinane were the first of the true invaders to claim the Melbourne Cup, triumphing in 1993 for Irish trainer Dermot Weld, who is pictured below (far left) with winning connection­s of the horse.
Verry Elleegant, sired by a $1000-a-service stallion in New Zealand, wins last year’s Caulfield Cup in the hands of Mark Zahra. And so they came – Vintage Crop and Mick Kinane were the first of the true invaders to claim the Melbourne Cup, triumphing in 1993 for Irish trainer Dermot Weld, who is pictured below (far left) with winning connection­s of the horse.

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