Weekend Herald

Drying Te Rapa track a key in Great Northern races

- Racing Michael Guerin

The epic finale to the New Zealand jumping season could be decided by the drying Te Rapa track.

The Great Northern Hurdles and Steeples will be run there tomorrow, as Te Aroha, which is supposed to be the new home of the iconic races since Ellerslie closed for jumps racing, is still having rebuild issues.

While that means a flat track rather than any undulation­s, a more telling factor in the outcome of the $150,000 steeplecha­se could be the arrival of spring and Te Rapa possibly getting back to a soft6 for tomorrow’s meeting.

The steeplecha­se brings two wonderful jumpers together in The Cossack and West Coast, who share the 73kg topweight but have been so dominant winning their recent major steeplecha­ses, it is still hard to make a case for one of the pair not winning.

They have met only once over the big fences, when West Coast was magnificen­t winning the Wellington Steeplecha­se, but The Cossack lost no fans when a brave third after being flattened at the 600m.

With the pair also sharing each other’s fan clubs, the track could be the factor that moves the market most heavily towards The Cossack.

Both are at their best ploughing through winter mud, the natural habitat for most jumpers, but West Coast has never won on anything but a heavy surface, albeit he has never contested a steeplecha­se better than heavy.

He is a huge, raw-boned throwback type of a jumper whose brute strength is perfect for heavy tracks but his trainer Mark Oulaghan believes tomorrow’s likely improved surface won’t bother him.

“I think he will handle it okay and he will love the distance [6500m],” says Oulaghan.

The Cossack also revels in the heavy but destroyed many of his rivals (West Coast excluded) on a soft7 in the Pakuranga Hunt Cup here last month and even won a flat race over 2200m on a soft6 in June, so if the Te Rapa track keeps drying, it should favour him.

Earlier in the programme, the weather could also decide the $150,000 Great Northern Hurdles in which Nedwin is clearly the best horse.

But trainer Paul Nelson is adamant he prefers heavy tracks.

“If the track gets back to the soft range, I think our other horse Taika becomes our better chance of winning,” Nelson told the Weekend Herald.

“He is a real up-and-comer, and I think a soft track will suit him, so it and the weight would really close that gap between him and Nedwin.”

The Te Rapa meeting, which also sees the return of high class sprinting mare Bonny Lass, is by far the highlight of the domestic racing weekend.

New Plymouth’s open sprint today is deep but should suit Mustang Valley, while there is plenty of North Island interest in the Canterbury Belle Stakes at Riccarton.

 ?? Photo / Race Images ?? West Coast loves the heavy going over fences.
Photo / Race Images West Coast loves the heavy going over fences.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand