Horowhenua Chronicle

Date change and stake increase for Levin Classic

Thoroughbr­ed horse race moves to January date with purse now $500,000

- Paul Williams

One of New Zealand’s classic thoroughbr­ed horse races will have a hike in prizemoney and change of date this season. The Group One Levin Classic will run on the first day of the Wellington Cup carnival on January 13 — the same day as the Telegraph Handicap — after an experiment­al move to March the last two seasons.

Levin Racing Club president Mark Goodwin applauded the decision by New Zealand Thoroughbr­ed Racing’s Pattern Committee to move the Levin Classic back to the January date from 2024 onwards, and this week announced the club’s intention to boost the prize purse of the race from $450,000 to $500,000.

Last season the Levin Classic was worth $350,000.

Goodwin said the earlier January spot should harmonise well with the Karaka Million Mile at Ellerslie on January 27, providing connection­s with the opportunit­y to run for money and prestige over the classic distance of 1600m with a fortnight buffer.

The shift of the Levin Classic back to a January date had come at the behest of NZTR’s Pattern Committee (NZPC).

“Levin Racing Club fully supports this decision and the efforts of the New Zealand Pattern Committee in ensuring the retention in status of classic and iconic New Zealand races such as the Levin Classic,” he said.

“Parallel to this decision, our club is continuing to work hard on plans to generate income from its landholdin­gs that will be returned directly to the industry with the view of further improving stakemoney funding in the near future.

“It is an exciting time for the industry. It’s an exciting time for our club.”

Since its inception in 1981, the Levin Classic has been won by some of New Zealand’s very best gallopers, the likes of Altitude, Bonecrushe­r, O’Reilly and Veandercro­ss, and its most recent runnings have unearthed more greats of the New

Zealand turf.

In 2022, Imperatriz beat home I Wish I Win — both currently ranked among the best gallopers in the world — while last season’s Levin Classic runner-up Skew Wiff had since beat home a vintage WFA field in the Group One Tarzino Trophy at Hastings

— arguably the strongest in years.

In its decision, the NZPC said the Asian Pattern Committee had unanimousl­y voted that the Levin Classic remain at Group One status under a warning, subject to returning to its former January date.

The NZPC had operated under the

Asian Pattern Committee (APC) for more than a decade, which used a series of complex formulas to rank horses and races internatio­nally to ensure consistenc­y between jurisdicti­ons.

In a direct swap with the Levin Classic, the Group 2 Wellington Guineas (1400m) will move from January to March.

The Levin Classic was first staged in 1981 and with an introducto­ry stake of $100,000 — the third highest in NZ at the time — it immediatel­y captured the imaginatio­n of the racing public, attracting crowds of more than 10,000 for what was essentiall­y a midweek provincial meeting.

The event has had several changes in date since those halcyon days, most notably a shift to Otaki in 1990, then a move to Trentham in 2014.

 ?? ?? Champion galloper Bonecrushe­r made a guest appearance at the Levin Classic meeting in 2003 — some 17 years after winning the race himself.
Champion galloper Bonecrushe­r made a guest appearance at the Levin Classic meeting in 2003 — some 17 years after winning the race himself.
 ?? Photo / Race Images ?? Patrick Campbell trained Burletta to win the 1983 Levin Bayer Classic, ridden by Jim Cassidy.
Photo / Race Images Patrick Campbell trained Burletta to win the 1983 Levin Bayer Classic, ridden by Jim Cassidy.

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