THE BAD
While the night may have finished in great fashion for the Crones, earlier in the night Matt was driving Attack On Command, with the gelding having its first start for the stable.
Approaching the winning post with two laps to travel, Attack On Command became unbalanced and moving inside the markers, crashed to the track right at the winning post.
Matt was not injured in the fall and although some lacerations required treatment to the horse, it also escaped serious injury.
After the upsetting moment of an unwanted first race fall and the joy of the first race win in the same week, it was a welcome end to the night.
The bad luck was not over for the week however, with Sunday’s Marburg a mixed bag for the Crone Crew where the stable had three runners engaged.
All three lined up in the same race - the Graham Harriott Memorial Trot - with Kyvalley Tinman driven by Matt, Come At Me with Gavin in the sulky and Kay behind Defence Got Jumped.
Securing another ‘quinella’ in the results, unfortunately this time it was from the other end; both Kyvalley Tinman and Come At Me striking trouble in the run to trail the field home.
However, in the process another record may well have been set - with both parents and child all competing in the same event.
The result may not have been what was hoped, yet the achievement capped a week of firsts for the Crone family.
THE MILESTONE
The Marburg Young Drivers Series held over four races and two meetings concluded at the weekend with Hayden Barnes claiming the title.
Barnes had a day out at the meeting, driving a treble from just four drives, with the first win courtesy of the Wayne Davis-trained My Ultimate Hell.
Sent straight to the front, the ten-year-old was never in danger as Barnes dictated the tempo in front to score the easiest of victories, winning by over 14 metres.
The third heat of the Series saw Hayden’s drive Cannan, sent out as the race favourite from gate one.
Content to take the trail on Domestic Art, a solid tempo ensued and angled clear at the right time, Cannan claimed a two-metre victory.
In the fourth and final Heat of the Series, Barnes had the drive on the Graham Dwyer-trained Sixpenny Red who looked awkwardly drawn off the second line.
Making an early error and missing the start, it looked a big ask around the tight Marburg circuit thereafter for the mare.
Angled wide around the home turn after slicing between runners down the back straight, Sixpenny Red exploded to the line, with Hayden high fiving the crowd he was that wide as he swept home to score.