Adding to the success of the night, both winners claimed a QBRED bonus for their connections.
Miss Magdalena secured her owner and breeder Kylie Rasmussen the $7,500 second win bonus by taking her record to five starts, recording two wins and one minor placing.
Mullum Guido was able to add some new year cheer with $14,000 jumping in the coffers of his owner’s courtesy of the first win bonus that has been increased from this season.
If the form holds from that race - which looks likely - both Mullum Doc and Bejiggity can be adding the first win bonus to their record as both are QBRED.
After a Darren trifecta, the trainer of the fourth placed runner?
Darren McCall.
THE BAD
During the week Kay and Kevin Seymour through their Solid Earth Enterprise announced that Egmont Park Stud would be ceasing its commercial operation.
Egmont Park Stud has been a name synonymous with breeders Australia-wide with over four decades of breeding excellence.
In that time, the Seymours have bred a massive number of their own QBRED champions, with names that fill the honour rolls across many Queensland and Australia’s top races.
A lot of the success traces back to two extremely influential broodmares in Call Girl and Mistron.
The most recent start tracing back to Call Girl is the reigning Queensland Horse of the Year, Colt Thirty One.
It was only fitting that following the announcement late in the week, Colt Thirty One returned to winning form when successful at Menangle on Saturday night.
After going winless in season 2021, a change in scenery has proven the perfect tonic for the now seven-year-old when claiming victory over the 2300-metre trip with Robbie Morris taking the drive for trainer Grant Dixon.
As well as breeding and racing some of the best known and performed horses out of Queensland, the commercial side of the operation for the Seymours has seen Egmont Park also be the birthplace of some of the greatest horses to come out of Queensland.
Blacks A Fake (below), Be Good Johnny and Slipnslide all began their journey at the famed Darling Downs Nursery.
![ZHygkXag.jpeg ZHygkXag.jpeg](/getattachment/News/January-2022/Queensland-Harness-Racing-Wrap-January-17/ZHygkXag.jpeg.aspx?width=800&height=533)
While it has also been the base for some terrific stallions, none more so than the breed shaping Fake Left, a stallion that left an incredible mark on the Australian and New Zealand breeding landscape.
Arriving in Queensland in 1993, Fake Left would go on to produce 955 starters for 809 individual winners, at an incredible 84.7%.
Other stallions to have spent time at Egmont Park include Vanston Hanover, Land Grant, Perfect Art, Hurrikane Kingcole, Ohoka Punter and Mr Feelgood.
It has also been the home for many Queensland Broodmare of the Year recipients, including the current holder of that title Washington Lass.
Although still maintaining some individual interests at Egmont Park, the commercial side will cease later this year, with a dispersal sale to coincide with the reduction.
THE MILESTONE
It may still be early in the season, but Ryan Veivers became the leading trainer in the state thanks to a winning double at The Creek on Thursday.
Starting the day, there were 12 trainers all sitting on three winners for 2022 with Veivers moving one win clear of Ben Battle to an outright lead after 13 days of the season.
It may have been a short-lived time leading the premiership, with Battle claiming the top spot by the completion of Friday afternoon, but by the end of the weekend, Veivers was holding second spot, just one win in arrears of Battle.
The first win came courtesy of Geldof in race four, the gelding sent forward to sit parked by driver Taleah McMullen, with a steady second quarter aiding his chances in the run.
Putting the leader Missinmemate away just before the home turn after eyeballing him throughout, Geldof proved too strong to pull clear for a strong victory.
With just one more runner engaged for the day, hopes were high of another victory with Glenledi Commander starting as the favourite from gate one.
Again, it was Taleah McMullen at the reins and with a steady first half of 61.2, the race was there for the taking.
After a 29.1 third split, the five-year-old only had to sprint the closing stages to claim victory by close to four metres for the third win of his career.