Nash’s form reminiscent of top hoops
PROBABLY Nash Rawiller wouldn’t win on a rocking horse, but I’d still take the risk and back him.
PROBABLY Nash Rawiller wouldn’t win on a rocking horse, but I’d still take the risk and back him.
UNDER The Sun was on the nose in the betting ring at Rosehill on Saturday long before Thomas Huet turned in a ride that can only be labelled a shocker.
OWNERS who don’t pay trainers should be reminded of the puppy analogy.
THE record-breaking Sydney trainer Chris Waller deserved much better from the ATC yesterday.
WHETHER they get to race or not, the Racing NSW decision to transfer Saturday’s Rosehill races to today was definitely the way to go.
IT is one thing sending Choisir, Takeover Target, Scenic Blast or Miss Andretti to race at Royal Ascot and another sending Shamexpress and Sea Siren.
TALK of strike action is extreme but frustrated Sydney trainers are on a crusade to lower costs for owners.
CHRIS Waller was still in mourning yesterday as the reality of Rangirangdoo’s Doomben 10,000 death started to sink in.
A WEEK ago, Four Corners examined how bookmakers were corrupting sport of its innocence.
PARRA had more hope of winning the NRL than Your Song had of winning the Doomben 10,000 on Saturday by charging for the lead.
THE meeting is so tough at Scone today bookies are likely to be on track from daybreak to make sure they don’t miss out on the spoils.
GAI Waterhouse might instinctively describe a looming storm as sunny skies but relaying information about a racehorse is serious stuff.
I WILL be glad when the More Joyous inquiry is wound up, Gai gets back to being Gai and Singo gets back to running pubs.
TRAINER John Sadler says the best is yet to come for resurgent galloper Linton.
NOT long before Angus Armanasco died, I asked him about Star Kingdom.
THE mix of racing, the sport of controversy, and Sydney, the city of sin, has always produced headlines and the likely duo has done it again.
TOM Waterhouse is now becoming so high profile there are even photos of him in vacant buildings.
IN the racing caper, information is paramount. Inside information is priceless. And that is the perceived problem in the famous Waterhouse family.
STEWARDS are good at some things, like sticking to rules and protocols, and clumsy at others.
THE final day of the Sydney Autumn Carnival at Royal Randwick is tomorrow and hasn’t it been a great festival.
WE have lived in extraordinary times. The days of Nelly, the horse that couldn’t be beaten.
IT took a champion to beat Shoot Out in the Doncaster Mile last year – and I reckon that’s what it’s going to take to deny him today.
Gai Waterhouse is delighted to have the Doncaster favourite, three-year-old champion Pierro, in tomorrow’s race.
COMMENT: BLACK Caviar’s retirement proved Peter Moody is a champion horseman.
LAST week, Peter Moody was in the back of a cab as it raced along Alison Rd adjacent to Randwick Racecourse on his way to dinner.
WAS Black Caviar the best ever? The honest answer is nobody knows.
VICTORIAN racing officials should be making every effort to influence the owners of Black Caviar to let her race on next season.
THE three long odds on favourites, Overreach, It’s A Dundeel and Black Caviar should all win at Randwick today.
IS the great Black Caviar beatable in the $1 million T.J. Smith Stakes?
ROYAL Randwick tomorrow is a red-letter day. It is a compulsory race meeting to attend.
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