“That was partly the reason for giving him a freshen up and bringing him back to the 600 metres, before we go back up to 700 metres and the Nationals (State Final, August 10),” Ayre said.
“I just thought that after his first 700 metre race, when he went super, that there would soon be a little bit more improvement than what he shown.
“He has not gone backwards, but hasn't really gone forwards either.
“At the moment 600 metres is probably his best distance. He has broken 35 seconds, in a trial, so there are no dramas on the clock.
“His runs during a race over the 600 metres have been really good. He does get home really well.”
Ayre says Bogie Hurricane’s race pattern is slow out of the boxes and that is unlikely to change.
“Right from his first trials he has never shown a first split. He has always gone terrible there,” he said.
“He really didn't show anything until he got up to 500 metres as a pup. He doesn't do anything wrong, that's just him. He just likes to come out, have a look, and size them up.
“That's not really frustrating, because in fact sometimes I think it works in his favour. Unless you are a lid pinger you could be caught in the middle and be in trouble.
“But, he seems to be able to navigate through a field quite well.”
Given the right race conditions on Thursday night, Ayre has no doubts his dog will be threatening.
“I always think he can win the race that he's in, but with his race pattern it is hard to be super confident about him knowing that he will be giving them all a start,” he said.
“The dog is feeling really good now, so given a clean run he will break 35 seconds, but it is just getting that clean run.
“Having Valpolicella (trained by Tony Zammit) there, if he jumps on the bunny and runs 34.60 seconds, well.