Catch up on the week's harness racing action in our weekly review, thanks to Darren Clayton.
THE GOOD
The Ricky Gordon-trained and driven Major Paint ended a 16 year hoodoo at Redcliffe on Thursday with the distinctive coloured pacer claiming victory through the passing lane.
Owned by Gordon’s partner Lacey Hinze, coloured pacers are very rare and those with the ability to win are even more scarce.
White Fire was the last skewbald pacer to win a race in Queensland on October 10, 2006.
Major Paint was able to claim the maiden breaking victory at his 14th race start, darting through to stop the clock in a mile-rate of 2.00.9, becoming the first skewbald successful under race conditions in Queensland since White Fire’s lone victory.
“It has taken a lot of patience to get him to this point,” Lacey said.
“Rick deserves most of the credit, I did what I could with him, but Rick is so good with younger horses, even though he is not young now, he is still young in the head but he gave him the right education.”
Another component that might just have helped the five-year-old was the time spent at the Royal Brisbane Show, or Ekka as it is known.
Although Show wins are not credited to a horses official career statistics, Major Paint technically won his first race back in August at the Ekka.
“The Ekka definitely helped him and he stayed in there during the week, that show racing can certainly help a horse and it has for him,” Hinze said.
“And, they loved him in there, he was popular in there and I had a lot of people asking about him when he finishes racing.”
Given what he achieved on Thursday and how the five-year-old has been improving, there are still plenty of racing days ahead of the entire.
“We will take each day as it comes, we know he is no superstar, but he is something different and there are no plans for him at this stage," she said.
“He is more of a pet to us and has a really good temperament, my son R Jaye is six years old and he can walk him around without any trouble."
Not specifically looking for a skewbald pacer at the time, Hinze and Gordon were happy enough to take the colt to give him the opportunity.
Developing an association with breeder Anne O'Donoghue from Victoria through the mare Nevaeh that Hinze raced, the chance to take on the unnamed colt by Major Bronski out of Havilah Mistress beckoned.
“Anne and Steve had him and they asked did we want to take him on, but it certainly was not a yes straight away," she recalls.
“They asked again and again but basically gave him to us, and we took him more so that he could have a chance.
“Rick broke him in and we really liked him early on as he had speed, but he did not know how to control it.
“I took him to Calvert for a while and that seemed to calm him down, but Rick got him tractable and now he has really started to improve”.
Gaining plenty of admirers even before his first victory, he is sure to become a crowd favourite following his latest victory and while not spoken about initially, the striking stallion might yet have a career beyond racing in the breeding barn.
Taking each day as it presents, Hinze remains philosophical about Major Paint.
“Whatever happens, happens," she said.