Jump to content
Bit Of A Yarn

Chief Stipe

Administrators
  • Posts

    484,721
  • Joined

  • Last visited

  • Days Won

    666

Everything posted by Chief Stipe

  1. It's a right not an obligation.
  2. Well @Newmarket they didn't get what they wanted for it hence they are still racing it.
  3. Place holder there now called M7 Te Aroha Extra.
  4. Or the Stipes arrived on course just before Race 1 and left as soon as they abandoned the meeting forgetting to complete the report.
  5. Again for @Pete Lane and @JJ Flash the orange and dark green colours mean rain.
  6. @Huey you prattle on about the Waikato Mafia and the favoured few. Can you explain how these abandonments favour them?
  7. These abandonments must be doing the Trainers heads in. Even the logistics of travel. Isn't there a plane due to leave to fly south soon?
  8. Just for @Pete Lane and his sidekick @JJ Flash There is 25mm+ forecast tonight for Te Aroha and more tomorrow morning/early afternoon.
  9. No odds available yet for the Te Aroha version of the Annie Sarten. 🤫
  10. I don't think it is Lethal that is making it into a major. Afterall it isn't him that has made the decisions recently to abandon. I watched him at Hastings and he had minimal interaction if any with those making the decisions.
  11. What if you moved it the other way? I.e. inside to outside?
  12. Doesn't everyone want to race their horses on a Good rates track? Honestly I think the NZTR protocols are a big part of the problem. If the forecast rain had have happened they would have run on a S5 or even a G4 but with the horses getting through the surface. That's just my opinion based on observation. I literally followed the forecast and records hourly for the 24 hours prior to start time. There are NZTA intersection cameras on the Wairere Rd/Te Rapa road intersection. Barely any of the 15mm+ happened and then around 11am it hosed down for a brief period. Otherwise it would have been a perfect surface. The fact is the soil is spent. A bit like most of the buildings there.
  13. Long term forecast looks OK. Big high pressure system cooking in the Tasman with preceding Nor'Westers. If it is Heavy it will be because of irrigation.
  14. Yes but probably only one of them is heading to the 2000 Guineas. Plus they have a 14 day backup.
  15. Well enough of them don't given the attendances at both the Victorian and NSW spring carnivals. It's all in the mind of the declining woke generation. Perhaps Jimmy Cassidy might make a comeback.
  16. Since when has Leith been a Steward?
  17. Pray tell can you list those you have deemed to be "battlers"? Assuming you mean trainers you have 8 to choose from.
  18. A soft 6 yesterday morning. 18mm of rain forecast later today and heavy rain tomorrow. Would you risk flattening your Guineas destined horse on a Heavy track 10 days from the 2000 Guineas?
  19. No way Te Aroha is going to be a "risk". The track is a soft 6 now and showers are forecast for tomorrow and Wednesday. Hopefully it doesn't get worse.
  20. Probably thought it wouldn't be published till tomorrow. Must have been an eager sub-editor working a statutory.
  21. Thanks. Many seem to be playing the man or defending the man or blaming God. The tracks are the biggest single issue for the future of racing in NZ. Time everyone dropped their swords and sorted. Even divert some of those exorbitant "aspirational" stakes to fixing them.
  22. Another thing to consider in support of the Track Manager is the protocol about not irrigating so many hours before racing. Is it a protocol? OZ Track Managers can irrigate race morning. The 24 hours before 8am Race Day at Te Rapa had forecast about 15mm+. If my memory serves me right. It didn't happen. If it had the track would have been alright to cope with showers on raceday.
  23. Two horses slip: Te Rapa track faces abandonment of Sarten Memorial meeting due to safety concerns By Michael Guerin NZ Herald· 28 Oct, 2024 06:27 PM4 mins to read Ess Vee Are winning Race 1 before the abandonment. Photo / Kenton Wright Race Images There is a sad irony in the fact the Te Rapa track that has carried New Zealand racing through such a turbulent last two years finally had a major meeting of its own partially abandoned yesterday. The Sarten Memorial meeting was abandoned after race 3 when jockeys suggested they could not ride competitively because of safety concerns. Those were first raised after winner Ess Vee Are slipped on the home bend in the first race, something which was attributed at least partially to him losing a shoe immediately before. But after two horses slipped in race 3, jockeys Joe Doyle and Warren Kennedy raised further concerns and after a jockeys’ meeting stewards had no option but to call the remainder of the meeting off. That means the $150,000 Sarten Memorial could not be run but New Zealand Thoroughbred Racing (NZTR) moved quickly to ensure it is run in time to still allow the 3-year-olds involved to then also head to Riccarton for the two Guineas races there next month. The Sarten will be held in the same field at Te Aroha on Wednesday, with NZTR still working on the exact time. “We could put it on at the end of the programme already in place there but we don’t really want to do that,” said NZTR’s head of racing operations Tim Aldridge. “These are top-class 3-year-olds so we want them to race on as good a surface as possible but also give their trainers the option to get them home early as we know many will be wanting to head to Christchurch the following week.” Most of those starting in the Sarten are being aimed at either the 2000 Guineas at Riccarton on November 9 or in the case of filly Captured By Love potentially the 1000 Guineas a week later. As messy as Monday’s abandonment is by holding the Sarten on Wednesday it is still realistic those who compete in it and want to continue on to Christchurch can, with the fact they can fly from Auckland to Christchurch a huge help. What it does increase the possibility of though is superstar fillies Alabama Lass and Captured By Love clashing in the 1000 Guineas at Riccarton on November 16. Co-trainer Ken Kelso confirmed to the Herald on Monday he is warming to the 1000 Guineas with Alambama Lass and she is now more likely to go than not while the Captured To Love team were already worried about the planned 12-day gap between the Sarten and the 2000 Guineas. With that now closing to 10 days if Captured By Love heads to Riccarton it would seem more likely she would target the 1000 Guineas a week later for the extra rest. While the 3-year-old campaigns may recover from Monday’s setback it is another dent in the confidence around New Zealand thoroughbred racing after a horror run with major meeting abandonments in the last two years. It feels like almost no major metropolitan track has been spared but Te Rapa has been a saving grace, carrying the load for tracks like Ellerslie during its redevelopment, Trentham for an abandoned Captain Cook Group 1 and most recently holding the Livamol meeting moved from Hastings. The Te Rapa track has been remarkably resilient during that time and track manager Bart Cowan is widely acknowledged as one of the best in the business so at least there aren’t concerns about the issue that caused Monday’s abandonment becoming a regular occurrence. But for the thoroughbred industry, the connections of all the horses affected and those involved at club and TAB level it was another black eye nobody needed.
×
×
  • Create New...