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Imperatriz Sprinter Miler of the Year 2024


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Girl power reigned at the 2024 New Zealand Thoroughbred Horse of the Year awards in Hamilton on Sunday.

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2023-24 New Zealand Thoroughbred Horse of the Year Awards Results

Girl power reigned at the 2024 New Zealand Thoroughbred Horse of the Year awards in Hamilton on Sunday.

Champion Matamata mare Imperatriz was named Horse of the Year and all five flat racing categories were won by female gallopers.

Imperatriz also took the sprinter-miler category, top filly Orchestral was named as both the champion three-year-old and champion stayer,  Velocious earned the two-year-old title and Legarto topped the voting in the middle-distance category.

The only male horse to triumph was West Coast, who is the jumper of the year.

It is the first time this century that fillies and mares have been so dominant.

Imperatriz’s trainers, Mark Walker and Sam Bergerson, were voted trainer of the year and Waikato couple Denise Bassett and John Elstob , who had a quarter share in Imperatriz, topped an eclectic group of finalists for owner of the year.

Elstob and Bassett have been significant investors in Te Akau Racing syndicates and had 45 individual runners during the season. While Imperatriz was their main flagbearer, they were also part-owners of a second Group I winner, in Move To Strike, and the Group II winners Captured By Love and Ascend The Throne.

The husband and wife training partnership of Peter and Dawn Williams, who retired from training in June, were rewarded for decades of excellence with the award for an outstanding contribution to racing.

Peter began his training career in 1975 and Dawn, who went on to become the first woman to train 1000 winners in New Zealand, joined the partnership in the early 1980s.

They were based in Canterbury for the bulk of their careers but moved north, to Byerley Park, in 2011. They never had a large team but were rarely without a galloper of note.

The 1988 Auckland Cup winner Sea Swift was their first major winner and was followed by top sprinter Loader, who completed the Railway-Telegraph double in 1996.

More recent winners at the top level included the classic-winning fillies Planet Rock and Media Sensation, dual Group I winner Shuka  and their latest star, Desert Lightning, who made his trainers’ final season a memorable one.

Imperatriz made an irrefutable case to be named Horse of the Year with an almost perfect Australian campaign, which produced six wins, including five at Group I level, and two placings, from eight attempts.

The now-retired mare was the most prolific Group I winner in Australasia, with Mr Brightside the next best, with four, while no other New Zealand-trained horse managed more than two elite wins.

New Zealand-trained horses have usually struggled the match the best Australian sprinters but all of Imperatriz’s six wins came at 1200m or less. She will be at short odds to be named sprinter of the year in Australia and will also be a contender for the Australian Horse of the Year, which will be announced in October.

The I Am Invincible mare, who cost A$360,000 as a yearling, earned $6.7 million in stakes in the 2023-24 season, taking her career earnings to $7.5 million. She had a career record of 19 wins from 27 starts, including 10 Group I wins, and only once finished further back than fourth.

She was ranked among the best race-mares in the world and added to the returns for her ownership syndicate when sold as a broodmare prospect, for A$6.6 million, in May. It was an Australasian record price for a broodmare.

The now six-year-old was bought by Yulong, an international thoroughbred racing and breeding operation, and will be based in Australia. She will be mated with the Yulong stallion Pierata this spring.

Imperatriz’s impact in her final season was further illustrated when she was announced as the recipient of the award for outstanding global achievement, which usually recognises the efforts of the human participants.

Imperatriz dominated the Horse of the Year voting receiving 41 of the 51 votes cast, with New Zealand Derby winner Orchestral the runner-up.

Orchestral was never going to threaten Imperatriz’s hold on the main prize but had a similar profile to Sharp ‘N’ Smart - the 2023 Derby winner and Horse of the Year -  and gained all bar two of the votes in the three-year-old section

Warren Kennedy was named Jockey of the Year, after just his second season in New Zealand. The former South African premiership winner made the brave decision to move to New Zealand in his 40s and has been quick to make an impact.

Kennedy, 44, topped the national premiership in 23-24 and was also the leading rider in terms of domestic stake earnings and black type wins. His season included a memorable day at Pukekohe, on January 1, when he rode seven winners at one of the biggest meetings of the  year.

Voting for the leading jumps jockey produced the smallest margin, with Portia Matthews edging Shaun Fannin by three votes.

SENZ  NZ Thoroughbred Horse of the Year: Imperatriz (41 votes) Also: Orchestral (9), Legarto (1).

NZTR Award for Outstanding Contribution to Racing: Dawn and Peter Williams.

NZTR Award for Outstanding Global Achievement: Imperatriz

Champion Two-Year-Old – sponsored by Race Images NZ:  Velocious 52. Other finalists: Captured By Love (1), Move To Strike (1), Bellatrix Star.

Champion Three-Year-Old – sponsored by TAB NZ: Orchestral (54). Other finalists: Crocetti (2), Antrim Coast, Molly Bloom, Pulchritudinous, Quinetssa.

Champion Sprinter-Miler (up to 1600m) – Sponsored by RACEFORM: Imperatriz (50). Other finalists: Bonny Lass (3), Desert Lightning, La Crique.

Champion Middle Distance Horse (1601m-2200m) sponsored by Happy Hire: Legarto (33). Other finalists: Campionessa (20), El Vencedor (2), Ladies Man.

Champion Stayer (2201m & further) – sponsored by Entain Australia & New Zealand): Orchestral (31). Other finalists: Mahrajaan (24), Mary Louise (1), Asterix, Mark Twain.

Champion Jumper – sponsored by Sandfield: West Coast (46). Other finalists: The Cossack (7), Berry The Cash (3), Nedwin.

Jockey of the Year – sponsored by betcha: Warren Kennedy (34) Other finalists: Opie Bosson (15), Michael McNab (1), Sam Spratt (1), Joe Doyle, Craig Grylls.

Jumps Jockey of the Year – sponsored by NZ Equine Academy: Portia Matthews (29). Other finalists: Shaun Fannin (26), Hamish McNeill.

Trainer of the Year – sponsored by Dunstan Horsefeeds: Mark Walker and Sam Bergerson partnership (49). Other finalist: Robbie Patterson (5).

Owner of the Year – sponsored by TAB NZ: Denise Bassett and John Elstob (17). Other finalists: Brendan & Jo Lindsay (12), Daniel Nakhle (7), Eddie Bourke (4), Waikato Stud (4), Gerry Harvey (2), Ben Kwok (2), Colin & Helen Litt (1), Kelvin & Vanessa Tyler (1),  Barneswood Farm, The Oaks Stud.

NZ Stablehand of the Year – sponsored by Saddlery Warehouse, Cambridge & Tauranga: Joanne Pearson (Central employed by Lisa Latta, Awapuni). Other finalists: Jonathon Richardson (Northern),  Lexi Porteous (Southern).

LOVERACING.NZ Award for Contribution to Media, Digital & Content: Trackside Premier. Other finalists: Auckland Thoroughbred Racing, Blow Up! Broadcasting, SENZ's The Mail Run. 

Jockeys’ Premiership – sponsored by OnTrack: Warren Kennedy.

Trainers’ Premiership - sponsored by OnTrack: Mark Walker & Sam Bergerson.

Apprentice Jockeys’ Premiership: Lily Sutherland.

Owners’ Premiership – sponsored by OnTrack: Brendan & Jo Lindsay.

Newcomer to Training – sponsored by gavelhouse.com: Sam Mynott.

NZ Bloodstock Filly of the Year: Molly Bloom.

Corporate Communications
New Zealand Thoroughbred Racing
Contact: Catlyn Calder
+64 27 252 2803

nztrcommunications@nztr.co.nz

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Imperatriz%20BC%202.JPG Imperatriz has been crowned Australian Sprinter of the Year.  Photo: Bruno Cannatelli

Imperatriz crowned Australian Sprinter of the Year

LOVERACING.NZ News Desk
9 October 2024

New Zealand Horse of the Year Imperatriz had a near perfect season in Australia last term and was duly crowned Champion Sprinter at the Australian Horse of the Year Awards in Adelaide on Tuesday.

Trained by Mark Walker, Imperatriz recorded each of her five Group One wins last season in the hands of Te Akau Racing’s stable rider Opie Bosson, who recorded his 98th Group One win when she retained her crown in the Gr.1 William Reid Stakes (1200m) at The Valley in March.

“It was a great honour to win Australian Sprinter of the Year and it was thoroughly deserved,” Walker said.

“It was an unbelievable season of racing that she had in 2023/24 and everyone involved was so proud of her, which included those that worked with her at Te Akau Stud, the stables at Matamata and Cranbourne, and every part of the Te Akau training operation played its part in her success.

“The ownership group were fantastic to deal with and she was a dream horse ever since Dave (Ellis, Te Akau Racing principal) bought her as a yearling at Magic Millions.”

Ellis purchased Imperatriz out of Bhima Thoroughbreds’ 2020 Gold Coast Yearling Sale draft for $360,000 and she went on to win 19 of her 27 starts, including 10 Group Ones, and earned more than $7.5 million in prizemoney.

Imperatriz was retired earlier this year, and in a full circle moment was offered at Magic Million’s Gold Coast National Broodmare sale where she was purchased by Yulong for A$6.6 million, becoming the highest priced filly or mare ever sold in the southern hemisphere.

“Ben (Gleeson, Te Akau Racing Cranbourne assistant trainer) and I visited her last week at Yulong Stud, north of Melbourne, and we were amazed at the facilities there, simply world-class, and we got to give Imperatriz a pat and see what wonderful order she’s in after being served by Pierata (Pierro) the week before,” Walker said.

“She’s on to the next stage of her career as a broodmare and mother and we look forward with great interest to seeing her progeny racing."

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