Catch up on the week’s harness racing action in our weekly review, thanks to Darren Clayton.
THE GOOD
Border restrictions from the COVID pandemic may have meant that trainer Grant Dixon was unable to be trackside, however the state’s leading trainer was still able to claim a Group 1 victory at Menangle on Saturday night.
Dixon sent two pacers South for the New South Wales Breeders Challenge with many expecting Leap To Fame to be a serious contender for the Series.
Partnering Leap To Fame on the trip was Tims A Trooper, a pacer that had been in the placings on three successive occasions behind Leap To Fame prior to making the trip to NSW.
Placing third in both his heat and semi-final, Tims A Trooper had forced his way into the Final while his more credentialed stablemate missed out on a semi-final spot and his Series was done.
Starting in the Final from barrier four, Robbie Morris took the gelding straight to the pegs to avoid any of the speed in an early duel that saw the first quarter run in a sizzling 26 seconds.
With the undefeated My Ultimate Byron pressing forward to find the front, Tims A Trooper was now shuffled to five back along the markers and looking in need of plenty of luck.
A solid tempo suited his situation and as the field swung in for the long run down the Menangle straight, Morris had extricated from the pegs and sliding across runners was now the widest runner as they straightened.
With the final quarter run in 27.9 seconds, Tims A Trooper had the closing power to finish over the top, handing My Ultimate Byron his first race defeat despite a brave run to hold on for second.
The triumph handed the gelding the winner’s cheque of $90,000 along with Group 1 glory and a new winning benchmark of 1.51.9 against his name.
Tims A Trooper was purchased from the 2020 Sydney Australian Pacing Gold Sale for $17,000 and was one of seven of progeny of Tintin In America to go under the hammer in that sale.
Owned by the Seymours under the banner of Solid Earth Pty Ltd, the win was the second career victory for Tims A Trooper this season, taking his record to two wins and six minors for earnings in excess of $100,000.
In passing the $100,000 barrier, the gelding became the third Queensland trained two-year-old this season to eclipse the six-figure mark, joining fellow Group 1 winners Cat King Cole and Teddy Disco - who is also a son of Tintin In America
While he may not have been able to get past his stablemate yet when they have battled on the track, the pecking order in the Dixon stable might now be up for debate.
THE BAD
“They’re off and pacing” is the now familiar line we hear by Chris Barsby when a race gets underway.
On Saturday night in the first race at The Creek, a more accurate start to the first race could have been they’re off and swimming and it would have described the conditions the field faced.
The weather turned nasty soon after the horses moved out for the first race and a heavy deluge swept across the Breakfast Creek track.
When the barrier released the field, the rain was still reasonably light, however as the race progressed, the downpour intensified.
By the time the field had completed one lap of the 2138-metre race, visibility had deteriorated and if you were watching on a television, identifying any horse or driver proved nigh impossible.
Luckily those watching on a screen had Barsby’s call to rely on and somehow in the poor visibility, the accuracy was pinpoint.