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Bit Of A Yarn

Chief Stipe

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Everything posted by Chief Stipe

  1. Rule Number(s): 638(1)(d)Following the running of race 6, Waipa Home of Champions 1400, an Information was filed pursuant to Rule 638 (1)(d). The Informant, Mr Jones, alleged that Mrs Satherley permitted her mount SECRET DREAMS to shift inwards when not sufficiently clear of SEIRIOS which was forced inwards crowding MISTER PINNS ...View the full article
  2. Although Racing debate is an important part of BOAY there are plans to widen the appeal of the site. The site name is neutral but still represents what I am trying to achieve - people getting together to have a yarn, share some stories and to argue amongst ourselves.
  3. Emerging stayer Blue Breeze will do his family proud if he can produce another special performance o… View the full article
  4. A better Doomben 10,000 barrier draw for In Her Time has trainer Ben Smith thinking her luck in Bris… View the full article
  5. Cossastock is in good shape to resume his New Zealand career this weekend. View the full article
  6. Well-performed winter galloper Taurus surprised his connections with his recent bold first-up showin… View the full article
  7. Pop Star Princess will head to the paddock at the top of her game. View the full article
  8. Every race night a Premier Meeting 09 May 2018 By Michael Guerin The Auckland Trotting Club is taking a dramatic approach to becoming the country’s premier harness racing club --- by turning every race night into a premier meeting. In it’s largest stakes increase yet the ATC will boost stakes for all meetings next year to be at what is now the premier level, an increase of $40,000 per meeting. At the moment in New Zealand premier meeting have minimum $20,000 stakes and from next March that will be the average stake at Alexandra Park for all meetings. ATC president Bruce Carter has announced starting March 2019 the club’s normal Friday night meetings will consist of two $25,000 races, two $15,000 races for maidens or those for the weak 40-50 rating band and the rest of the races will be worth $20,000. That means the non-group races at Alexandra Park from next March will average $20,000. “The stakes are based on nine-race programmes at our meetings and they will be guaranteed, we won’t be relying on external funding from things like the race fields legislation which we can’t control,” says Carter. “We realise stakes have to go up because costs continue to go up and we want to show this commitment now. “We need more horses racing at Alexandra Park, at the moment that number is about 9.3 per race on average and we aim to get that to 11 per race and then more after that. “That is crucial to helping boost turnover but also make the industry more sustainable for trainers.” The two $25,000 race guaranteed each night will usually be for the tightest class pacing and trotting races, meaning some meetings in winter races mere two or three-win front races will carry the $25,000 stake. “We realise how hard it is to keep those intermediate grade horses in the country because owners get tempted to send them off-shore or sell them. “But this should mean those horses who are in that grade or just below the best open class horses can race here every meeting for usually $25,000 at never below $20,000, which makes them very viable.” The new stake levels will catapult Alexandra Park further ahead of the pack Australasian wide but their greatest problem is still field sizes. “It is remarkable, we can’t attract rating 40-50 horses for plenty of meetings now racing for $14,000 whereas trainers will race at Cambridge instead for a lot less than that. “And the thing about it is, they are still racing the same horses, rating 40-50s, who are hardly the stars of the game. “So I think some trainers and owners could look at their attitudes to racing here and hopefully this will help with that.” The ATC will not raise stakes for their actual premier meetings but the most comforting part of Carter’s announcement is that it isn’t reliant on the New Zealand Racing Board reaching its financial targets, which are being hampered by the delays to the race fields legislation being passed. The money will come from the completion of the of the two major real estate developments at Alexandra Park, with their commercial and residential spaces. The first tower has already been significantly delayed but almost all the owners of the apartments pre-purchased are sticking with the development as they have increased in price since they were originally purchased. “The delay is unfortunate but were circumstances beyond our control but we are confident we will have the first building open in the New Year. “And with that money coming online I want to thank the board and management who have worked incredibly hard to make this all happen.” The latest series of stakes increases means Alexandra Park have almost doubled stakes in five years.
  9. Leading Sydney jockey Kerrin McEvoy has been suspended for failing to ride out favourite Galina in a… View the full article
  10. Premier Brisbane trainer Tony Gollan has been quick to use local knowledge to have top Queensland ho… View the full article
  11. Alexandra Park have reaffirmed their previous commitment to increase stakes by $40,000 per meeting n… View the full article
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  14. News Flying Spur dies at 25 Wed, 09 May 2018 AAP Turf The 1995 Golden Slipper winner and champion sire Flying Spur died last night aged 25, Arrowfield Stud has announced. Flying Spur was trained by Lee Freedman to win the Golden Slipper, and he added the Australian Guineas and All Aged Stakes to his Group One tally before being retired to stud. Bred at John Messara's Arrowfield Stud near Scone in the New South Wales Hunter Valley, Flying Spur carried the farm's famous racetrack silks before joining his birthplace's stallion roster after standing his first season in Victoria. A son of breed-shaping stallion Danehill, Flying Spur made an immediate impact at stud, ending 1999-2000 as Australia's leading first-season sire. Flying Spur claimed the general sires' premiership in 2007, the year his daughter Forensics won the Golden Slipper. Declining fertility led to Flying Spur's retirement from stud duties in 2012, but his legacy continued this season as the sire of the Caulfield Cup winner Boom Time. "One of the pillars of Arrowfield, he signs off like the great Australian Sir Donald Bradman on 99 stakes winners," Arrowfield posted on Twitter.
  15. The 1995 Golden Slipper winner and champion sire Flying Spur died last night aged 25, Arrowfield Stu… View the full article
  16. Multiple stakes-winning filly Dijon Bleu has been sold to overseas interests. View the full article
  17. Doomben 10,000 favourites Redzel and In Her Time have drawn middle barriers for the Group One sprint… View the full article
  18. The well-related Cyber Attack showed the benefit of a spell when he made the perfect return at Te Aw… View the full article
  19. The Black Sticks both womens and mens teams had great success at the recent Commonwealth Games. The women especially where they came away with the Gold medal after thrashing Australia in the final. A friend of mine has a daughter in the women's team and it was extra special when my 12 year old hockey playing daughter got to meet her and wear the Gold medal. Unlike our Rugby players of both sex's hockey gets very little funding even though their athletes are essentially full time. For example two weeks after getting back from the Games the Black Sticks went into an eight week training camp. Not a camp where they meet after work but a full day camp every day for 8 weeks. They are preparing for the upcoming tri-series and the world cup. As netball declines and hockey surges I hope that funding shifts as well. My daughter used to play both netball and hockey but had to make a choice this year between the two. She chose hockey for the reasons that she didn't have to be six feet tall to be competitive and the game was a lot simpler in terms of rules. The latter have been enlightening to me as I never realised until she started playing that there was no off-side rule! Great watching a fast paced game with very little whistle blowing!
  20. A brazen and long-running conspiracy to cheat could end the careers of the five trainers and three s… View the full article
  21. Reading that decision I would say these guys will get life. Interesting the colourful descriptive language in the decision!
  22. Full decision attached. 2018-05-04-rad-board-decision---aquanita.pdf
  23. After purchasing the top lot on day one of New Zealand Bloodstock’s May Sale, Sydney-based bloodstoc… View the full article
  24. Trainer Brad Mowbray says he and his partners in the horse received an offer they couldn't turn down… View the full article
  25. Senior rider Andrew Calder is fit and raring to go as he eases back into life in the New Zealand rac… View the full article
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