Catch up on the week’s harness racing action in our weekly review, thanks to Darren Clayton.
THE GOOD
After returning from a recent suspension, Nathan Dawson was clinging to second placing in the National Drivers Premiership with Western Australia’s Gary Hall Jnr closing the gap.
However, a win on Tuesday at The Creek was followed by a double at The Triangle on Wednesday night, to ease the pressure.
Opening the gap out to 10 wins by the end of Thursday afternoon with Hall Jnr not booked for any drives at Gloucester Park on Friday, Dawson will be out to consolidate this week with the advantage of four race meetings before the season closes on Friday.
The 10-win buffer was set up courtesy of a stellar day in the bike at Redcliffe on Thursday afternoon when steering home four winners.
It was not until race five that Dawson had landed his first winner, Little Arrows using her gate speed to full advantage to claim successive wins for trainer Ross Fletcher.
Rifling off the arm from barrier three before releasing for a trail, it proved the winning move as Dawson was able to get the mare home for victory along the passing lane.
One race later and Dawson was back in the winner’s enclosure with Illbewatching (pictured below) for trainer Stew Dickson, the son of Hes Watching scoring his eighth win this season, with Dawson in the seat for three of those wins.
Forced to sit parked, the four-year-old proved too strong, pulling clear to claim the victory by just over four metres.
Dawson’s next winner came in the ninth race of the day, this time it was an all-the-way effort aboard Lorimer Lady for trainer Peter Greig.
Sent straight to the front from gate four, the Courage Under Fire mare was never in danger, making it a good week for owner Alan Whitecross, adding to his victory with O B Legal at Albion Park on Tuesday.
The final win of the quartet came aboard the Graham Dwyer-trained Little Change, with Dawson positioned perfectly in the trail behind the leader from the inside second line barrier.
Angled to the passing lane when the gap presented, Little Change responded to charge through and claim victory, his fifth success this season at Redcliffe.
Heading into the Final week of the 2021 season, Dawson has second place in the Queensland title behind his cousin Pete McMullen wrapped up, holding a 66-win margin over third placed Grant Dixon.
Second place in the National Title now looks a ‘two-horse’ battle with Chris Alford squeezing past Hall Jnr and with success at Ballarat on Sunday now sits eight wins adrift of Dawson.
It could come right down to the wire with Alford, the nation’s leading driver for the past five seasons certain to have big numbers with the huge night of Vicbred action on Friday at Melton along with the Silver and Bronze Vicbreds at Bendigo on Thursday.
It has been a stellar season for Dawson with highlights for the term including reaching 1,000 career wins, driving 200 winners in a season for the third time and claiming a pair of Group 1 victories with Teddy Disco in the Redcliffe Sales Final and My Ultimate Levi in the Brisbane APG Final.
THE BAD
Sometimes it is often regarded that the most pressure comes with securing the first win of a horse’s career.
For owners Jamie Donovan and Rachel Walsh, that pressure was rising with their three-year-old filly Im Plain Jane who had been winless in 28 career starts.
Donovan feeling even more of the pressure as the trainer of the filly that had been able to secure just three placings in those 28 starts.
Now based in Tamworth, Donovan has returned ‘home’ to Queensland with a small team over the Christmas break and with some of his team QBRED-eligible, hoped to pick up a Christmas bonus.
Entering Im Plain Jane in a maiden event on the Peninsula Club’s Christmas Cup night, Pete McMullen was entrusted with the drive aboard the Hurrikane Kingcole filly.
Starting from inside the second line, the filly settled back in the pack as Sunny Cove set a strong tempo out in front, before McMullen found space going down the back straight the final time to angle into the clear.
Sensing it was a tired bunch of chasers and the leader vulnerable, McMullen put his drive into attack mode with 700 metres left to run, charging after the leader and within 150 metres had hit the front.
Continuing to drive the filly, she had quickly put a big gap on the field that continued to grow all the way to the wire, blitzing her rivals to score by a huge margin.
On the line the official winning margin came in at 62.4 metres, the biggest winning margin recorded in recent seasons in Queensland.