Catch up on the week's harness racing action in our weekly review, thanks to Darren Clayton.
THE GOOD
How good is he?
That question might just be rhetorical when it comes to describing Queensland’s latest pacing star, Leap To Fame.
The Grant Dixon trained colt was breathtaking in claiming the Victoria Derby on Saturday night at Melton, giving Dixon his second Victorian Derby in the past five years.
It was a case of déjà vu for Leap To Fame, finishing as the runner-up in the main Derby lead-up in Queensland behind Cantfindabettorman, he was second to Captain Ravishing in the Victorian Derby heat seven days prior.
But like he did in Queensland, Leap To Fame displayed his ascendancy in the Victorian Derby Final, making a one-act affair of the Blue Riband feature.
It was a domination of his rivals from start to finish as Leap To Fame claimed victory by 7.9 metres over the Bernie Hewitt trained Ripp, the biggest winning margin in a Victorian Derby since Scandalman won by 12 metres in 2012.
Not only was it a decisive margin, but it was also a powerful display where Dixon laid down the gauntlet to his challengers, running through the last mile in quarters of 28.8, 28.8, 27.5 before bringing it home in 28.5, never looking in danger of defeat.
Leap To Fame joins elite company with the victory, becoming just the fourth three-year-old to claim the Victorian, New South Wales, Queensland Derby treble.
He joins Paleface Adios (1973), Courage Under Fire (1999) and Captain Joy (2009).
Dixon’s star colt will now likely have two more runs this season, the semi-final and then assuming he qualifies, the Final of the NSW Breeders Challenge, before he is shut down for a long spell.
While the Chariots of Fire is normally a logical target for high quality four-year-old’s, it comes as no surprise that Leap To Fame will miss that race in early 2023.
“I’m probably not that worried if I miss the Chariots with him, I don’t know, but there always seems to be lots of casualties out of the Chariots, after they seem to run such quick time," Dixon said in mid-September.
“We will get through this season and map out next year and see which races Kevin and Kay Seymour would like to go to.”
His four-year-old campaign will likely now include local features highlighted by The Rising Sun in the Constellations Carnival and then the new $2m race The Eureka, a slot race which looks an obvious target with the Seymour’s holding one of the ten slots.
So how good is Leap To Fame?
Well, the man who knows the horse the best, Grant Dixon, is best placed to answer that.
“At the moment, I think he is the best one me and Trista have ever had," he said.