Chief Stipe Posted March 12, 2019 Share Posted March 12, 2019 Eminent will need some of his champion trainer’s gold medal-winning form to have any chance at a Group One victory during Sydney’s autumn carnival. The son of Frankel is trained by Sir Mark Todd for Kiwi owner Sir Peter Vela. Star expat New Zealand jockey James McDonald said the five-year-old “felt terrific” after he gave him a workout at the Canterbury Racecourse quarantine centre this morning. The question is whether Eminent can recapture his form in time for March 23, McDonald said, to be competitive in the Ranvet Stakes at Rosehill. Todd told reporters the team still did not know what to expect since he had only taken the horse into his care in October. “We’ve come here knowing that at best he’s a very good horse, but we’ve still got some questions to answer,” he said. “Even when I was training I never ran a horse first up over 2000 metres, so we’re in unknown territory.” The dual New Zealand Olympic equestrian gold medallist, who has not trained racehorses in more than a decade, had to hurriedly get his licence before taking over from English trainer Martyn Meade. “Obviously he (Meade) did a very good job in his early stages. Eminent was a good two-year-old, a very good three-year-old,” he said. Todd has had previous success in training during the early 2000s before he returned to eventing, having won the Gr. 1 One New Zealand Oaks with Bramble Rose and the 2007 Wellington Cup with Willy Smith. A long-time lover of racing, he has also booked Eminent for a clash with champion mare Winx in the Queen Elizabeth Stakes on April 13. He says the team is under no illusions about how difficult defeating the super mare would be, but would love to give it a crack. “Winx is not just an Australian icon, she’s worldwide,” he said. “If we go well in the Ranvet and get a chance to run there, it would be an amazing occasion to be a part of it and hopefully our horse is good enough he can make it into a horse race.” Eminent had several wins including including a French Group Two race in 2017 before a drop in form last year left him unplaced in all four runs, three at Group One level. En route to stud in New Zealand, Eminent spent time doing dressage and jumps work with Todd before it was decided to try the entire in Australia for one last season. The 63-year-old will return to the UK following the Queen Elizabeth to compete in the Badminton Horse Trials but says he hopes to get a few more horses to train. “I’ve always loved racing, so we’ll just see what happens,” he said. View the full article Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.