And, while Butler most certainly got Jeradas Delight going smartly in the Sunshine State – collecting a handful of victories early on – even a Group 1 triumph was unimaginable for Cahill.
The mare’s trainer had other ideas.
“I never got involved or told Jack what to do – I do not believe in that sort of stuff – I just leave it to him,” Cahill says.
“I am still to this day I cannot believe it; she could not win a race at Parkes before she left.
“He told me that she would go on an compete with the top mares – this is seven or so months before she did win the Group 1 – he told me that and she did.”
The decision to soon retire the seven-year-old mare may surprise some.
"She seems to be a better horse than last year, I think," Barnes said on the eve of the recent carnival.
Since she came back from a spell ahead of the 2022 carnival, she has won once as well as being placed on two other occasions, from half a dozen attempts.
That included running third while trying to defend her title in The Golden Girl.
Jeradas Delight is hardly battling to be competitive, with her retirement not being forced, but Cahill, who has long been in the breeding game, can see a long-term vision.
“A mate of mine recently asked me why I was retiring her as she is still racing so good,” he said.
“I just think maybe I can get something just as good or even better than her in the breeding barn."
He raced the mare’s mother - Jerada Ace – as well, who he eventually gave away.
He already has plans to send Jeradas Delight to Captaintreacherous and will do so in partnership alongside Jackie Gibson at Success Stud.
“She is going so well but it is the time,” Cahill said of Jeradas Delight’s imminent retirement.
“My intentions are that she will go race in Sydney for about a month to try and get a time next to her name at Menangle with a couple of mare’s races coming up.
“That will be it after that for her and then she is off to Success Stud.”
All Cahill’s mares are based with Jackie Gibson at Success Stud.
He has long had an affinity with the Gibson family and their standardbred business, starting with Jackie’s father John.
“He father, I loved her father, he was great and he always made you feel good,” he says.
“He was very good at what he did John.”
Jeradas Delight will soon retire as a Group 1 champion and like her early racing days in NSW, her time as a race horse did not start promisingly.
Cahill had long raced horses with Victorian man Jack Eichhorn before his death some time ago.
While they were in partnership with their standardbreds, Cahill and Eichhorn rarely actually saw each other in person, often speaking on the phone about their plans for their next crop of horses.
When Eichhorn passed away, a half share in Jeradas Delight was handed to his son, John.
John did not want to take on the mare so Cahill was left on his own.
“No one really wanted her and I just took her on myself,” he remembers.
“From there, she just went on and she was an ordinary horse, I did not think much of her.
“She was racing around Parkes and Bathurst and not doing much so I thought I would just send her to Queensland to earn maybe $30,000 to get her over $100,000.
“The thought was to do that and bring her back and breed with her, but that was nearly two years ago.
“To think she would go on and win a Group 1 and to claim the Queensland Harness Horse of the Year after that start to her career, it is amazing.”
Cahill will make the trip north to Brisbane for her last Albion Park start this Saturday night.
In a fitting culmination of her career, Jeradas Delight will finish her racing days at Menagle with Jack Trainor – the driver and trainer who won the 2022 edition of The Golden Girl.