Weekend Herald

Dave O’Sullivan beat best in the world

- Michael Guerin

Dave O’Sullivan, one of the legends of New Zealand horse racing who beat the best in the world, has died.

The Matamata training genius passed peacefully late yesterday morning. He was 90.

O’Sullivan won 11 New Zealand training premiershi­ps, 10 in partnershi­p with son Paul, while another son, Lance, was one of New Zealand’s best jockeys.

But for all his Hall of Fame feats at home and in Australia, it was in Japan that Dave O’Sullivan recorded his greatest win and arguably the biggest by a New Zealand-trained horse on the world stage.

Dave and Paul trained Horlicks to win the 1989 Japan Cup in world record time back when that race was one of the strongest and most soughtafte­r in the world. Lance rode the champion mare.

“I think that was Dad’s greatest moment, and for Paul and I, too,” Lance O’Sullivan told the Weekend Herald. “To go to Japan and overcome all those challenges and beat world class horses in a world record time, that is pretty hard to top.”

But Lance says one of his father’s most famous defeats led to another of his most satisfying victories.

The O’Sullivans trained Our Waverley Star, who finished second to Bonecrushe­r in the spine-tingling 1986 Cox Plate, dubbed by many as Australasi­a’s race of the century.

“Dad was proud of being part of that race and what it meant to so many people, and it also made him even prouder when we went back there to win it [the Cox Plate] with Surfers Paradise in 1991.”

O’Sullivan was a handy jockey before he started training in 1961, setting up Wexford Stables from where Lance and Andrew Scott train with enormous success today.

His first good horse was Oopik, who won the 1976 Sydney Cup, but a string of greats followed, including one of New Zealand’s most iconic sprinters in Mr Tiz, the only horse to win the Railway three times.

Like so many other O’Sullivan stars, he beat Australia’s best on their home turf in the 1991 Galaxy in Sydney.

“Dad, and then Dad and Paul, had so many great horses, I remember being in the stables one day, and we had a whole row of boxes full of Group winners, like 12 of them in a row,” says Lance O’Sullivan.

Paul says much of that success was built off his father’s eye for a horse.

“We took My Blue Denim to the Melbourne Cup and gave her her final trackwork gallop on the Saturday before as planned,” says Paul, who went on to a great training career in Hong Kong.

“Dad had a good look at her as she was coming back in and said she needed more, so we gave her another gallop the next morning, which you’d never do.

“She came out and ran second in the Cup two days later and it wasn’t something I would have done but Dad’s eye was right.”

Off the track, O’Sullivan was the embodiment of his training philosophy: impeccably dressed, wellmanner­ed, cheerful and thoughtful — little things done well to achieve the best results for man and horse.

“He was a very deep thinker, very considered in how he did things and how he trained,” says Lance.

O’Sullivan trained more than 1900 winners between New Zealand, Australia and that famous single victory in Japan.

Made an Officer of the Order of the British Empire (OBE) in 1992, Dave O’Sullivan and his late wife Marie, who passed in 2015, had five children, tragically losing daughter Lisa after a long illness in 2014. He is survived by Lance, Paul, Mark and Debbie, and 11 grandchild­ren.

His funeral will be at Matamata on Thursday at 11.30am, with a gathering soon after, most fittingly, at the Matamata racetrack.

 ?? ?? Dave O’Sullivan (right) with champion jockey son Lance.
Dave O’Sullivan (right) with champion jockey son Lance.

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