Chief Stipe Posted 13 hours ago Posted 13 hours ago HASTINGS RACECOURSEhttps://bitofayarn.com A really positive step for Hawke’s Bay - the recamber work at Hastings is tracking well and ahead of schedule. After a recent walk of the track with our consultant Liam O’Keeffe and our Head of Tracks & Infrastructure Tim Lambert, we’re happy with what we’re seeing: strong grass cover, good “give” underfoot, and encouraging signs the surface is continuing to bed in and strengthen.https://bitofayarn.com We’re now moving into the return-to-racing process, with some key milestones ahead - a stakeholder track walk in March, jump-outs and trials in April, and (subject to each step ticking off well) an Industry Day meeting pencilled in for Thursday 21 May with a six-race card under the Hawke’s Bay Racing Inc. licence.https://bitofayarn.com Plenty of work still to do, but it’s heading in the right direction - and it’ll be great to see activity building back at Hastings Racecourse. https://bitofayarn.com 1 Quote
Murray Fish Posted 2 hours ago Posted 2 hours ago Hastings! So Important in the Spring.. up until the last few season perhaps the most sucessful organic new thing to come into being in the last 40 years.. I really enjoyed working there in the early 90's! Top Horse! Great Betting races! Then the horse went over the ditch and were successful! I wonder how many of the Spring G1's will be given back to them? Quote
hesi Posted 1 hour ago Posted 1 hour ago 19 minutes ago, Murray Fish said: Hastings! So Important in the Spring.. up until the last few season perhaps the most sucessful organic new thing to come into being in the last 40 years.. I really enjoyed working there in the early 90's! Top Horse! Great Betting races! Then the horse went over the ditch and were successful! I wonder how many of the Spring G1's will be given back to them? What about the Bayer Classic meeting at Levin/Otaki 1 Quote
Murray Fish Posted 1 hour ago Posted 1 hour ago 3 minutes ago, hesi said: What about the Bayer Classic meeting at Levin/Otaki Hastings lasted... sort of ps, as I have previously, those early L/O meetings were so much fun! fell privileged to have been on course see quite a few!!! one of those meetings, a photo I took was used in https://www.google.com/search?q=Taperstry+of+the+Turf&rlz=1C1CHBF_enNZ1138NZ1138&sourceid=chrome&ie=UTF-8 Quote
hesi Posted 1 hour ago Posted 1 hour ago Bayer were big suppliers of chemicals to the farming and horticultural sector (as well as industry) so there was always a huge crowd on course with many clients invited to partake in the Bayer marquee. Those were the days that the Bayer Classic always attracted the top 3-year-olds, like Veandercross. It was a credit to the Otaki Maori RC that they were able to get a race like that going in 1981 and how quickly it became secondary only to the 2000 Guineas and Derby Quote
Muzza Posted 54 minutes ago Posted 54 minutes ago 5 minutes ago, hesi said: Bayer were big suppliers of chemicals to the farming and horticultural sector (as well as industry) so there was always a huge crowd on course with many clients invited to partake in the Bayer marquee. Those were the days that the Bayer Classic always attracted the top 3-year-olds, like Veandercross. It was a credit to the Otaki Maori RC that they were able to get a race like that going in 1981 and how quickly it became secondary only to the 2000 Guineas and Derby I think you will find Levin started the Bayer Quote
hesi Posted 50 minutes ago Posted 50 minutes ago Apologies getting my wires crossed, it's been a long day The race was first run as the ‘Levin Turf Classic’ at the Levin Racecourse over a mile (1600m) in 1981, an innovative idea by the Levin Racing Club Committee at the time. The inaugural running was won by Altitude. The following year, in 1982, Our Flight became the first, and to date only, Levin trained horse to win the race, trained by Errol Skelton. The significant initial quality of the race resulted in the granting of ‘Group 2’ status from the very early days of the Classic. In 1984, the Club secured the sponsorship of Bayer, a German pharmaceutical company based in Leverkusen, to sponsor the race. Their internationally recognisable brand, and the considerable amount of prize money pumped into the race made it one of the most prestigious and targeted races for three year old horses in Australasia. They would continue to sponsor the race until 2004, but the race today is often still regarded by many as the ‘Bayer Classic’. 1 Quote
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