The New Zealand Herald

Tricky heat for Lazarus in Interdoms

Trainer Mark Purdon knows the public expectatio­n on the series favourite

- Michael Guerin

The early bird may catch the worm but more importantl­y he avoids he flies. Which is why Kiwi pacing hero Lazarus has been working in the dark this week.

The two-time New Zealand Cup champ kicks off his Inter Dominion campaign in a very tricky opening heat at Gloucester Park in Perth around midnight ( NZT) on Friday, drawing the worst possible barrier with hard-running local Soho Tribeca drawn to lead and burn over the 2100m mobile.

Trainer Mark Purdon knows the public expectatio­n on the series favourite and realises there can be no easy introducti­on to the series. Lazarus is probably going to have to work to sit parked and outmuscle Soho Tribeca, who has even opened favourite with Tabcorp.

“He is a good horse Soho Tribeca, I saw him winning here last year and he will be hard to catch,” said Purdon.

“But we are there to win, we have to be with Laz’s following.

“So I guess we will probably circle them at some stage but it won’t be easy, I can tell you that.”

While Purdon doesn’t know what result to expect from Friday night’s opening heat he is at least happy Lazarus and his three stablemate­s Have Faith In Me (Inter), Ultimate Machete (four-year-old races) and Piccadilly Princess (mares) handled the long haul to Perth well.

“Ultimate Machete was the one who was tiredest but that is understand­able considerin­g he raced older horses and beat them in a fast time on Friday. But seeing Laz arrive in such great shape makes me happy we missed the free-for-all with him.”

The All Stars quartet at staying at the same Gary Elson stables from where Smolda won the Interdom last season and Purdon says lessons learned from that campaign have already been incredibly valuable.

“Last season I was learning as I went along but I know the environmen­t and a few more tricks now.”

Two of those tricks are avoiding flies and the heat, which means the alarm clock goes off a bit earlier.

“Back home we would work Laz anywhere between 7 and 9.30am but here he is usually done by 5.30am.

“Once the sun comes up it not only gets hot very quickly but the flies come out and they can be a real pain, even for the local horses but especially ours because they are not used to them.

“If you work them when the flies start buzzing around the horses can kick out at them and potentiall­y kick you out of the cart or get their legs over the hopples.

“So we get their work over and done with before 6am and then they can go out in the paddock where they wear mesh rugs and covers for their necks and faces.

“These are all things I learned last year and although the training track here is a little different from home it is not going to make a huge difference to how we work.”

If Lazarus can sit parked outside Soho Tribeca and beat him it will send shivers down the spines of rival connection­s but defeat would not be a disaster for Purdon.

The brutal nature of the series and lack of depth in the heats means energy and legs conserved with a placing can pay dividends without jeopardisi­ng Grand Final hopes. Cases in point: both Lennythesh­ark and Smolda (twice) were beaten during the series before winning the last two Perth finals.

Have Faith In Me meets local star Chicago Bull in the third heat on Friday in which a placing would be a good result while Lennythesh­ark will be unbackable in the second heat.

 ?? Picture / Scott Hamilton ?? Lazarus arrives in Perth in great shape having sidesteppe­d the free-for-all at Addington on Friday.
Picture / Scott Hamilton Lazarus arrives in Perth in great shape having sidesteppe­d the free-for-all at Addington on Friday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand