Catch up on the week's harness racing action in our weekly review, thanks to Darren Clayton.
THE GOOD
If there were any doubts about the standing start conditions facing Leap To Fame in the Flashing Red Handicap, they were soon allayed within two strides.
Stepping safely into stride from his 20-metre mark, Leap To Fame was into a pace immediately as trainer and driver Grant Dixon allowed the five-year-old plenty of time to balance up and find rhythm through the first 1000 metres.
Aroda was the best to start and the four-year-old was able to lead early before handing over to Northview Hustler which made a flyer and was in front by the winning post on the first occasion with two laps to travel.
Moving down the back straight with one mile left to travel, Send It was on a forward march and worked to the front as the first quarter of the last mile was put behind them in 29.6 seconds.
Making his move three-wide at the 1400 metre mark, Dixon flushed out Turn It Up who worked forward and handed over the breeze to Leap To Fame with 1000 metres to travel.
Running the second quarter in 29.9 seconds, the power started to go on as Leap To Fame got to the wheel of Send It, with the third split in 28.8 seconds.
Reaching the quarter pole, Kelli Dawson was starting to feel for Send It, while Dixon still had a stranglehold on his champion, sitting confidently as the big field made the swing for home.
Pulling clear over the closing stages, Leap To Fame was never troubled, taking a winning margin of 12.6 metres stamped by a sizzling 26.7 second close out to stop the clock in a 1.55.5 rate.
That was enough to take one full second off the track record of Mach Shard, set in this same race two years ago, and give Leap To Fame his third Albion Park track record.
Send It was able to grip on for second, continuing his rejuvenated season and great standing start record which has seen him finish top-three in all eight appearances from behind the tapes.
A winner of the race back in 2019 and running in his fourth Flashing Red, 10-year-old veteran Northview Hustler grabbed third place for Hayden and Al Barnes.
Leap To Fame will now head to the Redcliffe Cup and likely the New Zealand Cup later in the year off the back of the impressive victory, his 13th in succession.
As the wins continue to pile up, Leap To Fame keeps surpassing records.
Unbeaten in eight starts this season and eclipsing $1 million in stakes for the term, the win created history for an Australian-bred pacer, becoming the first to record successive $1 million seasons and the first to achieve it racing exclusively in Australia.
The only horse to have ever recorded successive seven-figure stake seasons is Lazarus, who completed the feat in 2017 and 2018, winning races in both New Zealand and Australia in each season.
For Leap To Fame his 13 successive wins also eclipsed a record once held in the Dixon stable by Majestic Mach.
‘Razzle’ reached 12 successive wins on two occasions, with 'Larry' now taking that mantle, with that tally only looking at expanding.