Catch up on the week's harness racing action in our weekly review, thanks to Darren Clayton.
THE GOOD
The third running of the Peak of the Creek has seen the husband-and-wife combination of Pete McMullen and Chantal Turpin score victory, with the Somerset Farms team able to claim their second success in the race.
In that short time, the race has quickly developed into a calendar highlight, with the 2023 renewal arguably the strongest gathering of quality since the race was introduced in 2021.
With a small tweak to the series this season with heats held two days earlier on the Tuesday afternoon, four strong heats were assembled to chase a spot in the $52,000 Final.
Last Tuesday the four heats produced some slick performances and a spousal rivalry, with Grant and Trista Dixon each driving a heat winner, while Turpin and McMullen drove the winners of the other two heats.
With the barriers for the Final selected by connections with the fastest winner gaining first choice, it was the Turpin-trained Aardies Flash that was given pick of the board, following from is 1.51.7 heat victory.
McMullen did not need to think too hard in choosing barrier one for the talented three-year-old, while Grant Dixon had second pick for his gelding Aroda and after initially considering gate two, picked gate eight for the heat winner.
Ok Boomer, trained by Trista Dixon, had gate two selected, while the slowest of the four heat winners, Wisper A Secret, who is trained by Turpin, had the fourth pick and connections opted for gate nine.
As the barrier pulled away in the Final, McMullen did not hustle Aardies Flash out of the machine and was content to allow Ok Boomer to work to the front and take the trail, while Mossdale Terry for trainer and driver Shane Graham had a good look at the leader in the opening 300 metres.
Ok Boomer repelled the early challenge and was able to back off the pace through the second stanza, with 31.8 seconds appearing on the board before a steady 29 seconds down the back, meant those chasing from back in the pack were facing a mammoth task.
Turning into the home stretch, Mossdale Terry continued to dig in for the fight, while McMullen angled Aardies Flash into the passing lane.
Picking up once finding open space, the gelding rattled along the inside and had the speed to reel in the leader and pull clear to claim a 3.2 metre victory.
It was the seventh career victory for the gelding, who is owned by Mike Tanev.
Tanev is based in Canada but has experienced plenty of success over the past few seasons with horses he has exported to North America and those he has raced in Australia and New Zealand.
It was a double celebration for Turpin with the victory.
The win continued her excellent strike rate this season, bringing up 150 training wins for the year, the third successive season that the Somerset Farms team have reached 150 for the term.
With eight weeks remaining in the season, Turpin looks set to move past her benchmark season of 2022 where she recorded 157 wins, while her lead in the metropolitan trainer’s premiership is now out to 19 wins, with 61 next to her name.