“He is a 42.4 second dog every day of the week. So, if Valpolicella comes out and runs 41.50 seconds, he is no chance.
“But, just remember, last week’s 710 metre prelude (which included Group 1 queen Valpolicella, the very talented Icy Eyes and Tom Tzouvelis’ always competitive foursome of Amendola, Scintillate, Pursuer and Scarlatti) was won in 42.73 seconds.
“Bandit is an old war horse, but on Thursday night, if the leaders stumble, if they fan out at the turns, if they give him a chance, he will take it.”
Paull bought Midnight Bandit as a tried race dog from South Australia.
He had followed a similar path previously with success.
Bandit certainly was ‘tried’. He came north with 59 starts already under his belt.
“I was more interested in his brother (Midnight Blast) and Bandit came as part of the deal,” Paull explains.
“I remember he had won about $18,000 in prize money and I bought him for $1,000. His prize money is now just over $62,000. So that’s not a bad return.”
Paull and Bandit’s ‘dream big’ moment may be unlikely, but far from impossible, on Thursday night.
The six-dog Final certainly gives Valpolicella more room to exert her dominance, but overall it is a good field without being an outstanding line-up for a state Final.