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The Inglis Digital Online Sale produced another winner on Saturday when Irish import Glounthaune scored a last stride win in the Midway. It was a very significant win for Warwick Farm trainer Greg Hickman who played a prominent role in the creation of the Midway concept almost four years ago.
Glounthaune was winless in 16 starts for the Bjorn Baker stable before turning up on the September Online sale last year. With the help of observant friends, Hickman was able to identify the gelding as a likely prospect and was thrilled to secure him for a realistic $30,000. The trainer shares the story with us this week.
Punters entering or exiting Grafton Racecourse in the early 1970’s were sometimes stunned to see a teenage boy perched in the boughs of a Jacaranda tree outside the racecourse adjacent to the home straight. That youngster was Michael Beattie whose passion for racing was evident at a very early age. Michael is now 66 years old and has been back in Grafton since 2012 as CEO of the Clarence River Jockey Club.
In the intervening years he worked extensively as a stipendiary steward at home and in Macau where he completed two stints. Michael’s boyhood love of harness racing led him to the role of Harness Racing NSW Chairman of Stewards, during the transition from Harold Park to Menangle and at the time of the Equine Influenza outbreak. This man’s a good storyteller and he’s got some rollicking tales to tell. Michael joins us on this week’s podcast.
Tappy
(Banner image courtesy Steve Hart Photographics.)
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JOHN TAPP RACING PODCAST
When Michael Beattie became Deputy Chairman of Stewards for the Hunter And North Western Racing Association in 1985 he wasn’t made welcome by all of his new colleagues. (CLICK ON IMAGE FOR MORE PHOTOS)
Racing has seen few more distinguished careers than the one enjoyed by Ron Quinton over six rewarding decades. (CLICK ON IMAGE FOR MORE PHOTOS)
There’s no busier jockey in northern NSW than Wauchope based Luke Rolls, an expat Kiwi who drives huge mileage to honour commitments at northern rivers and tablelands tracks. (CLICK ON IMAGE FOR MORE PHOTOS)
TAPPY'S TURF TOPICS
The significance of Greg Hickman’s Midway win with Glounthaune (Ire) on Saturday was lost on many racing fans. It’s likely that Greg himself had forgotten he’d trained the winner of the very first Midway ever staged on July 3rd, 2021.
Most horse trainers agree there’s nothing more satisfying than having a long range plan come off without a hitch.
A veritable army of people performing specialist duties play a vital role in the running of high profile race meetings. From jockeys, trainers and strappers to general stable staff.
The thrill of a Doncaster win on Celestial Legend in the autumn of 2024 kept Tyler Schiller in a buoyant frame of mind for many months.
The opportunity to double his team numbers was the primary catalyst in Luke Pepper’s return to Canberra last November.
Everybody was talking about Private Harry long before Yulong Investments tied up fifty percent of his ownership under a deal reported to value the colt at sixteen million dollars.
Many commercial horse trainers drive themselves to the races while their horses are transported by major floating companies. Life’s a bit different for Rebecca Dunn.
When Vauban arrived in Melbourne for his first Cup mission in 2023, he’d raced fourteen times for seven wins, including three over hurdles.
Darryll Kell was still pinching himself on Sunday morning in the wake of Mahogany Girl’s gutsy win in the Polytrack Provincial-Midway Championship Qualifier at Hawkesbury.
As El Morzillo swamped the opposition to win Saturday’s $1 million dollar Inglis Sprint, it was hard to believe this was only her second win and a full thirteen months after the first.
TAPPY'S TROTS TOPICS
There was one heart stopping incident in the mid seventies which could have halted Dean Chapple’s love affair with harness racing before it got off the ground.
There’s nothing I’ve enjoyed more over the years than the many conversations I’ve had with veteran horsemen - especially harness horsemen who were around in the days when the sport was drawing big crowds all around Australia.
You’ll be hard pressed to find a horseman who isn’t enamoured of the sight of a talented trotter in full flight. Power Productions have kindly allowed me access to a video production highlighting the poetry of the trotting horse and the devotion of those who train them.
Wayne Dimech was in his mid-teens when Hondo Grattan was dominating the harness racing headlines in the early 1970’s. He had obviously inherited the harness racing genes from his Maltese forebears.
Ian Verning doesn’t mind his life long nickname of “Spud” although he is frustrated by the fact that he has no idea of its origins.
Australian harness racing currently boasts a plethora of talented drivers in the 20-25 age bracket. Those who appear regularly on metropolitan tracks enjoy the bulk of available media attention.
Trainers lucky enough to have a runner at a major trots meeting are conscious of the atmosphere only big time racing can generate. Miracle Mile night is something else again.
There’s no better pointer for punters than a Darren Hancock trained horse turning up at Penrith. The leading horseman has been an unabashed fan of the 1400m Menangle circuit since its inception in 2008
The 2022 Penrith racing year concluded on December 29th with what looked to be a run of the mill programme on paper. It took a rare training double by father and daughter duo David and Katie McGill, to inject a little “buzz” into the night.
Sean Grayling is emerging as a pretty serious race driver, and he appears to have a good handle on the art of training a harness horse.
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Top Toowoomba trainer Rex Lipp would have you believe he’s considering retirement. It didn’t look like it when he s… https://t.co/xLxAlhyD2D