Hawke's Bay Today

Bay owners share glory as Aussie star emerges with feature victory

- John Jenkins

Havelock North veterinari­an David Mossman has raced a number of thoroughbr­ed horses over the years with moderate success but now he and his wife Bry have hit the jackpot.

The couple own a 5 per cent share in Australia’s latest racing superstar Mazu.

The three-year-old gelding is the winner of his last six starts, with his most recent victory coming in last Saturday’s Group 1 A$1 million ($1.2m) Doomben 10,000 (1200m) in Brisbane. He has now amassed more than A$1.7m in prizemoney and has been assured a start in Australia’s richest race for the next two years.

Even before last Saturday’s win, Mazu had already been snapped up by a slot holder for the next two runnings of the A$15m The Everest (1200m).

Australian company The Star and Arrowfield Stud have done a deal that will see Mazu contest both this year’s Randwick feature on October 15 and the 2023 running, with the horse’s present ownership group retaining a financial interest.

“We have done a two-year deal because I think he will be in full bloom probably next year, but on his current trajectory he is probably good enough to give the race a bit of shake in October,” explained Arrowfield Stud manager John Messara.

David Mossman says he has to thank a close friend from Australia, Marc De Stoop, for getting him and his wife involved in Mazu.

“Marc has been a longtime friend and he and his family own Parsons Creek Farm in the Hunter Valley in New South Wales,” Mossman said this week.

“We went to see them about four years ago and Mazu was there as a rising yearling.

“I liked the look of him and was keen to take a share in him.”

But Mossman was also aware that his wife Bry had expressed concern that he was spending a lot of money racing horses without much return.

So he decided to put the 5 per cent shareholdi­ng in Bry’s name as a peace offering and it has subsequent­ly turned into a windfall for the couple.

Mazu is now raced by Bry Mossman and Marc De Stoop in partnershi­p with a group that includes Triple Crown Syndicatio­ns and is trained by the Sydney-based father and son combinatio­n of Peter and Paul Snowden.

The son of Maurice was having only his 11th race start when he lined up in last Saturday’s feature race at Eagle Farm and broke through for his first Group 1 success. He now has a record of seven wins and a third.

He had won one race as a two-year-old

colt and added the Listed Crowley Stakes (1200m) at Randwick in October last year but was said to be becoming unmanageab­le so the decision was made to geld him.

Mazu has come back a vastly improved horse, so much so that he is unbeaten in five starts since.

Mossman and his wife were at Brisbane’s Eagle Farm racecourse last Saturday to watch Mazu and share in the celebratio­ns.

“He is a sensationa­l horse,” an excited Mossman said after arriving back in New Zealand earlier this week.

“It is beyond your wildest dreams to have a share in a horse like him and it was great to be there.

“It was the first time Bry and I have seen him race because of Covid and they certainly turned it on for us. To win a race like the Doomben 10,000 was remarkable.

“We have got a slot in The Everest for two years which is just amazing, especially with the winner’s cheque being $6 million,” Mossman added.

“He’s only a young horse now and he will be even better with a bit more time.”

Mazu, who won two listed races and the Group 2 Arrowfield Sprint (1200m) in Sydney in the autumn, settled off the speed in the Doomben 10,000 and took a bit of riding from jockey Sam Clipperton to hit the front inside the last 300m. However, he showed his class to hold off fellow three-year-old Paulele and the fastfinish­ing New Zealand mare Entriviere.

Co-trainer Paul Snowden said, “He does hit that flat spot but that ability to absorb the pressure and still be strong at the end — that is why we have got a slot in The Everest and that is why we are going to be there. A lot of work has gone into him. It’s really good.”

Winning jockey Sam Clipperton was notching up his third Group 1 win and broke a run of 14 second-placings at the highest level since his success in the 2016 All Aged Stakes. He was full of praise for his mount post-race.

“He’s just a star, this horse. He knows how to win and we’ve got a great rapport with each other. Even when I was concerned, he was always going to pick up and I just had to have faith in the horse and in the end I got to the front too early and he thinks his job is done,” Clipperton said.

With an Everest deal locked away, Mazu is now likely to spell before the spring, and last Saturday’s win has seen the TAB slash his price for the big spring classic to be a $7 second-favourite behind last year’s winner Nature Strip at $4.

Mazu’s successful run has now whetted Bry Mossman’s appetite for racing and she has since taken up a share in another horse in Australia. It is a Darci Brahma two-year-old filly called Opito Ballerina, who has had two starts for expat New Zealand trainer Bjorn Baker for a second and a fifth.

The best horse David Mossman has been involved with in the past was Hurricane Mickey, whose 10 wins included a Te Awamutu Cup.

He also raced horses in partnershi­p with the late Laurence Redshaw, most of whom were trained by Bjorn Baker’s father Murray, and they picked up a

Waipukurau Cup win with Veldt.

HB triumph in amateur race at Whanganui

Hastings amateur jockey Leah Zydenbos chalked up her third win from only nine race-rides when successful in a maiden amateur riders’ event over 2060m at Whanganui on Thursday of last week.

The 20-year-old kicked home the Hastings-trained Dictation for a 11⁄2 length victory over Grand Prospect, who was ridden by the country’s most experience­d amateur jockey, Scott MacNab.

Dictation was having his second start for the partnershi­p of Paul Nelson and Corinna McDougal following a fourth over 1600m at Hastings on April 16.

Zydenbos kept her mount on a wide run throughout the race, after Nelson had told her the inside was the worst footing on the heavy 8 track.

Dictation was the widest horse rounding the home turn but kept up a strong run to the line under a hands-andheels ride.

Christchur­ch-born Zydenbos has had a lifetime involvemen­t with horses, attending pony club as a youngster before progressin­g to be successful at showjumpin­g and then competing on the internatio­nal stage in mounted games.

She worked for three years in the top Riccarton stable of Michael and Matthew

Pitman before joining the Hastings stable of Guy Lowry and Grant Cullen last year.

Dictation was having his second start for the Nelson/McDougal stable following a fourth over 1600m at Hastings on April 16.

The Tavistock four-year-old was formerly trained by Cambridge-based Glen Harvey, who gave him six starts for a third over 2200m at Rotorua in December.

The horse was then offered for sale on Gavelhouse and changed hands for $20,000. He is now raced by the I See Red Syndicate, a group of mainly Hawke’s Bay racing enthusiast­s who have raced several successful horses over the years and all trained by Paul Nelson.

The Nelson/McDougal stable also took horses to last Saturday’s Rotorua meeting, where their star jumper The Cossack had his first start since winning last year’s Great Northern Hurdle in October with a run over 2200m on the flat.

The Mastercraf­tsman eight-year-old finished 11th but was only 51⁄2 lengths from the winner and Nelson said he was happy with the run. The horse is now being aimed at the $60,000 KS Browne Hurdle (3100m) at Hastings on June 6.

Big weekend for Waipukurau owner

Waipukurau racehorse owner Michael Ormsby had a day to remember last Saturday.

Ormsby is a shareholde­r in several syndicates run by Te Akau Racing and picked up a win with Synchroniz­e in a $30,000 three-year-old race at Rotorua and a third placing with Entriviere in the Group 1 A$1m Doomben 10,000 in Brisbane, Australia.

Synchroniz­e, who is raced by the Te Akau Flexibeel Racing Partnershi­p, recorded her third win from only six starts when she raced away for a dominant 21⁄2 length win over 1400m.

Entriviere is owned by the Te Akau Buckle Up Racing Partnershi­p and produced a huge performanc­e for her minor placing in the Doomben 10,000, coming from near last on the home turn to finish only half a length behind race winner Mazu.

The Tavistock mare drew the extreme outside barrier in the 14-horse field and jockey Opie Bosson had no choice but to take the mare back in the early running to get in somewhere near the inside rail. She was giving the leaders a huge headstart rounding the home turn but powered home down the outside of the track.

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 ?? ?? Mazu and jockey Sam Clipperton slogged through the rain and mud to win last Saturday’s Doomben 10,000 in Brisbane.
Mazu and jockey Sam Clipperton slogged through the rain and mud to win last Saturday’s Doomben 10,000 in Brisbane.
 ?? ?? Hastings amateur rider Leah Zydenbos brings Dictation back at the head of the field following their win at Wanganui last week.
Hastings amateur rider Leah Zydenbos brings Dictation back at the head of the field following their win at Wanganui last week.
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