Jump to content
NOTICE TO BOAY'ers: Major Update Coming ×
Bit Of A Yarn

pete

Members
  • Posts

    772
  • Joined

  • Last visited

  • Days Won

    5

Everything posted by pete

  1. Actually Magoo is a great name for you. Blind as a bat.
  2. The joke is on you as always. You've got a bloody cheek telling anyone off for changing the tone of threads and, anyway, how do you know I wasn't serious? My comment had a hell of a lot more to do with the topic than yours did - that's for certain. Keep making as many comments you like - all you do is confirm your lack of intelligence to anyone who has the intestinal fortitude to actually bother reading them.
  3. Great so you've managed to hijack another racing thread with bloody politics again. Just stick to the subject in hand. I think everyone knows you are infatuated with Ardern. Just give it an f'ing rest. It's getting really tedious.
  4. Imagine how good he'd be with blinkers on ?
  5. https://www.nzherald.co.nz/sport/news/article.cfm?c_id=4&objectid=12156054 Here's the counter argument. Really nice piece of journalism. Well done to the author.
  6. Yeah it's a very strange day o publish something historic like this.
  7. https://www.stuff.co.nz/sport/108321403/horse-trainer-michael-breslin-sexually-assaulted-woman-but-penalty-not-tough-enough
  8. Didn't say I backed it Barry. Just noted that it normally pings the gates. The fourth horse looks a class animal and will win something big over a longer distance if they can keep him sound.
  9. When even Rich Billie Marsh is slow away you just have to say it's one of those days.
  10. Or DA's alluded to....
  11. "And then you'll be joined by Marc Cookson in Auckland for a stellar afternoon of racing" Don't go Matt. Please stayýyyyyyyy...........
  12. And then you watch Noel Callow. Genius...
  13. Very much so.
  14. Any chance in the Melbourne Cup after that run yesterday? I thought he went pretty well and if you watch the finish he was actually taking a bit of ground off the winner at the end. Huge step up though. My initial thoughts are that it is too much of a step up for him.
  15. Back Benbatl anywhere he runs from now on. He is a class animal (clearly not up to Winx) but best of the rest. Also impressed with the way Humidor finished it off as well. Taking nothing away from the best horse I've seen in my lifetime. I remember backing her way back in the Queensland Oaks and saying wow. She should never have won that day. Knew she was something special even then. Hope she's better at stud than Sunline was.
  16. Trolling
  17. Agreed Newmarket. I'm no Bridges fan but even less of an Ardern/Peters fan. The low wage economy we have is historical. It goes way back before the last National government. The Clark years were just as bad, worse probably, because they saw fit to impose a "'rich prick's tax" and institutionalised a whole layer of NZ society by introducing Working For Families.
  18. So because you suddenly had a midlife crisis and embraced the dark side it must flow on that JA is wonderful because you think so? Also anyone who says capitalism doesn't work is clearly on the sauce. Socialism doesn't work. Never has. Never will. Venezuela anyone?
  19. I don't know if there's any sort of implication in your post regarding Baker Forsman and Bjorn Baker horses but you need to be careful. They have consistently been the stable that produces winners over the last few seasons and only one of a few who consistently produce results in Oz. I'm find your bagging of them quite laughable. Results speak louder than rather ill-informed comment from a nobody.
  20. Got a sneaky for Youngstar. She really impressed me in Queensland. Blinkers on?
  21. Don't think it's the same bloke PD.
  22. Can't say I ever heard of him but this is a really interesting article from the Independent in 2008. Henry Joseph Oliver, racehorse trainer: born Droitwich, Worcestershire 7 February 1935; married first June Geary (marriage dissolved), secondly 1978 Sally Goodwin (two sons, three daughters, one stepdaughter); died Broad Green, Worcestershire 16 January 2008. Henry Oliver's roguish charm as a mercurial trainer of racehorses was often mistaken as concealing a mind forever calculating how to skin the bookmakers. He was a horseman through and through, but his trait of being the hidden hand on the tiller rather than the publicly named trainer only added to a frisson of mystique that somehow never left him. Though a trainer in his own name at the age of 18, he was to win repute by training in all but name for others; firstly Jackie Brutton, then Katie Gaze and finally in tandem with his wife Sally. A winner's enclosure inhabited by a beaming Oliver regularly inspired headlines of gambles landed, often at long odds, but such planning was always played down. Oliver was in it for the horses. From effectively being forced to like them, when despatched by his father to New Zealand at the age of 15 to find his way in life, Oliver grew to cherish their effect on him and his family. At the time of his death he had been associated with the winners of more than 1,000 races, either as trainer or buyer. He gave the illustrious Peter Scudamore a record-breaking, eight-time champion jockey, his first ever win, on Bruin at the Whitwick Manor point-to-point, and on many return trips to New Zealand after retiring as a trainer he unearthed 69 horses who have won nearly 250 races, for earnings of £1.5m. The son of a Droitwich horse trader, Oliver developed his own unerring touch. He helped Brutton to record marvellous results when joining her in Andoversford in Gloucestershire. The mare Snowdra Queen won 10 races, Lord Fortune won 23, so when Oliver left to work for Gaze there was a bit of a rumpus. While Gaze's name was on the licence, Oliver was the unnamed director of the show. Their relationship was not without incident, indeed they teamed up for a defeat still recounted in the point-to-point fraternity in Wales. Riding at the Tredegar Farmers fixture in Gwent in 1970, Oliver jumped the final fence on Frozen Dawn with a substantial lead over Silver Too. He then eased his mount so much that Silver Too was able to catch up, go past, and win. For reasons not recorded, and to the amazement of the crowd and race stewards, the judge gave the verdict to Frozen Dawn, the odds-on favourite. Oliver's time with Gaze reached a heady crescendo at the Cheltenham Festival of 1972. Gaze trained barely a dozen horses, yet two of them won: Even Dawn in the Aldsworth Hurdle and Cold Day in the County Hurdle. The fact that two horses from such a tiny yard could win at such a prestige event, at odds of 40-1 and 15-1 respectively, added several layers to the Oliver mythology. His work continued after he married for a second time. With Sally Goodwin he established one of the foremost husband-and-wife teams to have graced British racing. Together they rekindled the brilliance of the hurdler Aonoch who had won six in a row for the champion trainer Fred Winter before slipping out of the spotlight. With the Olivers he bounced back by winning the 1985 Christmas Hurdle at Kempton and at the 1986 Grand National meeting, trouncing the Champion Hurdle winner See You Then. For good measure, Aonoch won the Aintree contest again the following year. There was no doubt that Oliver liked to bet, though he did not look upon himself as a gambler. However, a gamble reportedly worth £80,000 was landed when County Player won at Nottingham, and Shu Fly won what is now one of the season's biggest handicap races, the Greatwood Hurdle, at 10-1. Though the Olivers never had more than 12 horses in a season they managed the remarkable feat of winning races with four of them – Shu Fly, Bolshoi Boy, Knights and Noble Ben – on a single afternoon in 1991, and it would have been five had another not fallen at the last. Oliver retired from training in 1997 and took up scouting for raw talent in New Zealand with his eldest son, Nick. The Cheltenham Festival winners Lord Relic and Our Armageddon were recruits, as was Spandau, who became the subject of a Jockey Club investigation after it landed an alleged £500,000 gamble at Newton Abbot in 2003. Oliver was one of those who backed the horse but denied he was part of a well-orchestrated coup. There seemed little need, given that the win was the 101st for Oliver's New Zealand imports. Always a devoted family man, Oliver must have taken immense pride in the knowledge that three of those 1991 winners were ridden by his daughter, Jacqui, while Nick, Sharon and his stepdaughter Sophie all rode in races.
  23. No not Tommy. Fascinating acceptor for the Jakkalberry on Saturday. All previous racing in the UK. And the breeder is HRH Queen Elizabeth 2. Has clearly had some issues as this is first start for 3 years.
  24. What a storm in a teacup. These left wing types really are very thin skinned aren't they? Of course it's ok if you write a song about wanting to rape John Key's daughter. That's just humour isn't it? All the lefties had a real laugh about that one. Grow a pair Tommy and stop being such a snowflake.
×
×
  • Create New...