Weekend Herald

Ford has a plan to win with Marcoola tonight

- Michael Guerin

Clint Ford didn’t drive a winner last season.

So by his own standards the Canterbury part-timer is having a massive season, having reined home four winners this term, albeit all behind the same horse, trotting muscle man Marcoola.

So when Ford rolls on to Melton behind Marcoola for tonight’s A$250,000 Great Southern Star, with the Inter Dominion champion Tornado Valley holding all the aces against him, he could have every reason to be intimidate­d.

But Ford, who owns an excavation company and simply drives horses for the fun of it, has a plan. He just isn’t telling anybody what it is.

“Sure, Tornado Valley has all the advantages tonight but we have the horse to give him a fright,” says Ford, whose father Ken officially trains Marcoola.

“He (Tornado Valley) has the gate speed, is on his home track, being trained out of his own stable whereas we have come all this way and probably have to give him a start to beat him.

“But our horse is well and we all know how good he can go. So we are in for the fight. And I have watched some videos of the opposition so I have a wee bit of a plan.”

The best version of Marcoola, the one who demolished his Dominion rivals at Addington in November, would even have a chance of sitting parked outside Tornado Valley, at least for the last lap and beating him.

But this whole travelling horses, driving against the Gavin Langs and Chris Alfords of the world thing, is a bit new to Ford.

So if Marcoola is going to prove he is the best trotter in Australasi­a he is going to have to do it the hard way.

The race also has fellow Kiwi trot stars Speeding Spur and Temporale (both poorly drawn) on a night with a huge New Zealand presence.

The most likely New Zealand winner is I’m Another Masterpiec­e, who is drawn to lead the A$200,000 Victoria Derby and should win.

And the Kiwi four-year-olds I’m Pats Delight and Spankem should dominate the A$100,000 Bonanza.

But the Steven Reid-trained pair of Star Galleria (Casey Classic) and Utmost Delight (A$100,000 Ladyship Cup) both face gate speed dilemmas in their respective races.

They are the best horses in their sprint events and while seemingly well drawn they both have gate speed horses determined to lead drawn inside them. “I am really happy with where they are both at but one, or both, might have to sit parked to try and win,” admitted Reid.

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