Otago Daily Times

Wolfgang may follow father’s footsteps

-

WELLINGTON: Peter McKay reached the pinnacle of New Zealand racing with Puccini, and now the Matamata trainer is vying to reach the same heights with Puccini’s son, Wolfgang.

The promising juvenile became his sire’s first stakes performer when he finished runnerup to Quattro Quinta by a halfhead in the Wellesley Stakes over 1000m at Trentham last month.

McKay was pleased with his run and said his charge is improving with every start.

“It was a really good run and he had improved a lot off his previous start, which we were hoping for,” McKay said.

“He has always shown he has got the ability, he’s just not known how to turn it on.

“When he came home I was going to give him a week off, but he started bouncing around and carrying on after about three days. He got through the run so easily. That’s a feather in his cap to be like that.”

Wolfgang will once again meet Quattro Quinta in the group 3 Woburn Farm Stakes over 1200m at New Plymouth tomorrow, and McKay is hoping the step back up to 1200m will suit his charge.

“At Taranaki, if the speed gets on around that corner, I am not sure whether that will suit him or not. Hopefully the 1200m suits him,” he said.

Having trained his sire, McKay said there are not a lot of similariti­es between the two.

“He has just done everything we have asked and he has a bit of presence about him,” he said.

“The only similarity between him and Puccini is that everything he does he keeps improving on. That’s what you want to see.

“Whatever he is doing at the moment is a bonus and he will improve on once he gets to a 3yrold.

“I have got a couple of Puccinis at the moment and they are really nice horses. I wouldn’t mind getting a few more.”

Wolfgang is raced by McKay and his wife Kim in partnershi­p with Mapperley Stud’s Simms Davison, who stands Puccini at his Matamata farm.

McKay will also take Sagunto down to New Plymouth to contest the r74 1800m race, but admitted he is more there for his younger stablemate.

‘‘It is not a strong field but if he puts himself there he should be competitiv­e, but he is more of a travelling companion really,” McKay said.

Meanwhile, McKay is ruing a change in race tactics with group 1 winner The Mitigator when he attempted to defend his crown in the Thorndon Mile (1600m) at Trentham last Saturday.

The perennial pacemaker was ridden towards the rear of the pack and finished sixth in the Trentham feature.

“It came down to an error in judgement,” McKay said. “I had a talk with the trainer of Deerfield [Chrissy Bambry] and they said they were going to lead or sit outside us, which I thought wouldn’t suit us.

“We decided we would ride him totally different and ride him back last. The race definitely wasn’t run to suit. Deerfield missed the kick and a few other things went wrong in the race.

“We will just have to reassess things with him now.” —

 ?? PHOTO: RACE IMAGES ?? Promising beginning . . . Wolfgang (outer) finishes runnerup to Quattro Quinta in the Wellesley Stakes at Trentham last month.
PHOTO: RACE IMAGES Promising beginning . . . Wolfgang (outer) finishes runnerup to Quattro Quinta in the Wellesley Stakes at Trentham last month.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand