Catch up on the week's harness racing action in our weekly review, thanks to Darren Clayton.
THE GOOD
The annual Our Overanova Trotters Marathon was run on Saturday night with the Richard Hutchinson-trained Kingdom Come defying age and market expectation to claim victory.
The race named to honour the greatest square gaiter ever trained in Queensland, came with plenty of symmetry aligned to the winner.
Our Overanova sits second for most ever race victories at Albion Park with 51, only Destreos has won more races around 'The Creek'.
The last of those wins came in July of 2021 with the Grant Dixon-trained square gaiter bowing out in style with the race plates taken off for the final time with a win next to his name.
Kingdom Come competed in that same race, finishing seventh on that occasion when Lachie Manzelmann took the reins.
The symmetry extends further, with Kingdom Come and Our Overanova both from the same 2009 New Zealand crop of Monarchy and both are bred on the same cross, being out of Sundon mares.
Our Overanova retired after 203 career starts, while for Kingdom Come, his win on Saturday night was at his 206th race appearance, both trotters sporting the distinctive pacifiers as part of their gear.
Taking over the training of Kingdom Come in December 2020, Hutchinson has kept the veteran happy in his environment and been able to start him 127 times since joining his stable.
“He is just such a happy horse, nothing bothers him,” Hutchinson said after the win.
Saturday night’s win was the ninth time the gelding has won for Hutchinson, with a further 29 placings and $162,000 stakes banked in that time.
For driver Leonard Cain, the win was his first victory aboard Kingdom Come after 31 previous drives aboard the veteran, with Narissa McMullen recording one win and the other seven Queensland victories all secured by Lachie Manzelmann.
“That’s the first time Leonard has won on him, he drove him exactly how he needs to be driven,” Hutchinson said after the win.
“I did think we might have been behind the leader, not three back.
“He needs some things to go his way, that is how it works with his style, but that worked out perfectly."
Perfect it was, Cain angling off the pegs at the right moment with the leader, Indefensible starting to feel the pinch at his first run back from a spell.
Edging to the front with 400 metres to travel, Kingdom Come responded to Cain’s urgings and held off a fast-finishing Tam Oshanter.
Stopping the clock in a rate of 2.01.8, amazingly the 14-year-old shaved 0.6 seconds off the track record set by C K Spur in last year’s marathon.
With some records hard to locate, Kingdom Come would certainly be up there as the oldest horse to win a Saturday night feature event at Albion Park.