Catch up on the week's harness racing action in our weekly review, thanks to Darren Clayton.
THE GOOD
The rise of the trotter continues in Queensland and the strength of the square gait in this state was on display at Menangle on Saturday night.
Queensland trained trotters were able to claim two races on the night, with the Shane Graham-trained Agent Black and the Shannon Price-trained Van Sank both successful.
Agent Black remains undefeated and despite being bred and trained in Queensland, he is yet to have a race start in his home state.
Taken South for the APG Series, the two-year-old was a smart winner on debut to progress through to Saturday night’s Final.
Beginning smartly from barrier seven, Graham had the son of Sebastian K in front just past the winning post with one lap to travel.
Turning for home, Agent Black was trying to shake off the chasers and pinched a small margin.
The further the long Menangle home stretch continued, the more vulnerable the colt looked to be.
However, he was able to dig deep and under the urgings of Graham, hold on for the barest possible margin and claim the lions share of the $125,000 prize money on offer.
A big season beckons for the talented two-year-old with targets including the New South Wales Foundation Series and Breeders Challenge, the QBRED Triad Series and even The Redwood in Victoria.
In claiming the win, Agent Black becomes the first Queensland-trained winner of an interstate juvenile trotting feature, highlighting how far the trotting gait has progressed in the past 15 years, that progression even more evident in the past five years.
Further highlighting the strength of the Queensland trotting ranks, Van Sank continued his affinity with the spacious 1400 metre Menangle track, securing his third win in seven attempts on Saturday night.
Sent forward from gate eight, Adam Sanderson was able to find the space to drop in behind the leader and secure the perfect trail over the mile journey.
As the field swung for home and Credit Master had moved up to challenge the leader Funky Monkey, Sanderson was able to extricate from the trail, move wider and set out for the run to the judge.
In driving rain, it was Van Sank that had the superior closing speed to claim the prize, establishing a new career benchmark of 1.56.7 with the win.
The win was the second of a training double for Price, following the win of Speak The Truth earlier in the night.
Second-up from a spell, the richly talented four-year-old franked the strength of his first up Albion Park victory a fortnight prior with another classy victory, stopping the clock in 1.51.7 for the mile.
Speak The Truth looks the obvious runner to fill the slot for "Team Raboki" in the inaugural Hayden where, off current form, he could be strongly fancied to claim the win and subsequently gain the slot for the Eureka in September.