29 June 2015



 Stewards Inquiry

OFF THE HOOK FOR FISH

Senior Jockey Jason Whiting escaped with a reprimand from stewards following an inquiry into his performance on Bravo Romeo, at Belmont on June 13.
In that race the Paula Wagg trained galloper finished 10th behind form galloper Savanarola.
Resuming at Ascot, on June 29th, Stewards said they had investigated betting transactions and were satisfied that following an investigation into a UK internet bettor, whose account history followed a regular pattern of backing horses not to run a place, there were no irregularities.
The reason for this investigation was because Bravo Romeo was $12 for a win and was paying a generous $7.20 for a place. Stewards also looked at local betting on Bravo Romeo and were satisfied that the galloper had been supported by the connections.
Chief Steward, Brad Lewis, then pressed Whiting on why he had stayed on the heels of the horse in front of him instead of switching to the inside of Jarrad Noske’s horse, Friarpak, earlier.
Under Australian Rules of Racing 135(b) a rider must take all reasonable and permissible measures to ensure that his horse is given all possible chances to win or obtain the best possible place.
Whiting said he did not wait too long as Noske’s mount rolled back in “and made it tight and I didn’t think there was an opportunity on the inside.”
Steward Paul Criddle asked Ms Wagg, as the trainer what her instructions were to Whiting. “As an ex-jockey I do not give many to my riders. Essentially, in running, I wanted Bravo Romeo neither too close to the lead or too far back. It was his first time over this ground (2000m). I also told Jason he sometimes rolls in.”
Wagg said she didn’t expect him to win but anticipated he would run a place.
The Chief Steward continued to press Whiting on why it took 12 strides for the jockey to move Bravo Romeo through the gap presented between Paseo Del Prado and Friarpak.
Paula Wagg, interjecting, said with hindsight that maybe the jockey took too long, “but that happens all the time in races.”
Whiting, who was riding Bravo Romeo for the first time, replied that it was not always easy to balance a horse and to get momentum going. “The horse was not quick enough to get up there and it is not always easy to change direction- a lot of horses can’t do that.”
Paul Criddle asked whether Whiting was unaware of the inside run presented when Peter Hall, on Raising Dubai, shifted to the outside.
Whiting replied: “It took a couple of strides and then I shifted but it took the horse a while to get up momentum. I thought Peter would take it. If you look at his recent form he loves the inside run.”
Wagg: “Jason thought they weren’t going to move.”
Lewis: “We are talking about a fair period of time.”
After deliberating the Chief Steward summed up that during the race Whiting had followed behind Hall’s mount, until he moved out at the 600m mark, then later behind Noske’s horse from the 300m mark, before moving inwards in the home straight.
Mr Lewis said the stewards had to decide whether that move was delayed excessively.
Essentially for some 12 strides Whiting did not take advantage of a gap that had appeared for him. For the first six of those strides stewards accepted he was too close to heels to change direction but argued that he was slow making the change of line thereafter, something the jockey defended.
The Chief Steward told Whiting that although there was an error of judgment on his part it was not to the extent that warranted a penalty under ARR 135(b).
 “However, we expect a higher quality from you in future,” Mr Lewis concluded.

20 June 2015



Racing News

Renee Forrest Transfers

Apprentice jockey Renee Forrest has transferred to Simon Miller in the last weeks of her apprenticeship.
Forrest parted company with David Harrison, amicably, and will become a fully fledged jockey on August 1.
“David and Jenny were like family to me and I have enjoyed my association with them over the last six years,”Forrest said.
Forrest made the move to be more available to other trainers for trackwork as Harrison has his own private track at Serpentine and his horses do not need to come to Ascot and Belmont for work.
She will still be riding for her old master in the future and is excited at new prospects with Miller.
Miller said, “Renee has a great work ethic and I will try to give her rides in the remainder of her apprenticeship and beyond.”
Forrest is currently a 2kg claiming apprentice and has ridden 31 winners in the 2014/15 season at metropolitan and provincial racecourses.
Overall she had 120 winners in her 1936 career rides.

19 June 2015



Humour of Racing

NEW TRICKS COMES TO BELMONT
 
Before the first race at Belmont on Wednesday June 17 I thought Lucy Warwick and Ryan Hill were auditioning for the show New Tricks.
If you are not familiar with the BBC show, shown on the ABC, it involves veteran police officers of UCOS (Unsolved Crimes and Open Case Squad) investigating cases that have long gone cold.
Most of the squad are old ‘plods’ put back into work.
So why do I think young riders like Lucy and Ryan qualify for such a role.
Well, for starters while Lucy is clearly going to win the Apprentice Jockey premiership, in her first full year, she is dead slow when it comes to mounting up!
Believe me, while she is great in the saddle she gets run off her legs when the pace goes on in the mounting yard.
Please explain? I hear you say, in the best traditions of Pauline Hanson.
Lucy was on Foxinator in the first race (sixth) and obviously the galloper thought she was too slow mounting and he decided it was time to get on the track. With Lucy running alongside she just couldn’t ‘go the pace, early,’ and Foxinator was brought back to her by a very smart strapper who I am going to keep my eyes on.
As for Ryan he decided to go one better, emulating Hopalong Cassidy (aka William Boyd) the famous black clad fictional cowboy of film and TV.
With trainer Vern Brockman bent over like the Hunchback of Notre Dame, trying to leg Ryan up, on The Girl of Vasse, this too became a Hill too far! (Sorry, the Devil made me write that pun).
The filly had unbalanced Hill by throwing her head up as he tried to mount. So, with Brockman, often known as the Earl of Vasse, running along bent over and hanging on to the jockey’s ankles, it was a case of the hunchback, Quasimodo meeting Hopalong!
Finally, Ryan stopped doing the hop-step and jumped, into the saddle. Vern’s back should come good in another six months.
 His mount eventually finished last after losing ground at the start.
Just as well you have me at the races to capture these momentous events.
You simply can’t beat Old Tricks.

18 June 2015



Horse Racing

A VIKING MARAUDER PUTS THEM TO THE SWORD

She may be blonde and petite but the attack that Lisa Staples launched in the fourth race, The Sunday Times Handicap (1200m) at Belmont, on June 17, did justice to her famous Viking forebears.
Staples, (nee Bivemark,) started her career as a jockey in Sweden. However, since having a solitary ride in Perth 2006-7, WA has become home and culminated in her marriage to fellow jockey Craig Staples in March 2013.
Aboard Smarty Wilson, resuming since last December, Staples had her charge near the rear with only three behind her.
Coming down the extreme outside Staples unleashed a charge on the leaders as fearsome as those of her invading ancestors when alighting from the dreaded longboats, in medieval times.
Just as Renee Forrest seemed set to prevail on Bells Tower, from stablemate Boy Byrnes (Chloe Azzopardi), it was Smarty Wilson that nailed them both, right on the winning post in a run timed to perfection.
In an all female apprentice jockey finish, Lucy Warwick was a close, but weakening fourth, on Sanctitude, at her first ride for the Paul Jordan stable.
Of the winner, an $11 chance, Staples said, “he was travelling well and I thought he could get a place but as we were back in the field I was not expecting to win.”
It was also Lisa Staples first ride for veteran trainer Don Daniels and he described it as “beautiful.”
“Lisa is very genuine has worked the horse, deserved the ride and I couldn’t fault her,” he said.
Daniels said the horse had plenty of potential and would probably be appreciate more ground, “up to a mile,” an opinion echoed by Staples.
“It is has been a learning curve with him, he is a bit of a fruit loop at times and I have just relied on the old style training formula, work slow and finish fast. We have also changed his feed,” Daniels said.
Peter Hall and Lucy Warwick both rode doubles at the meeting.
Hall showed good race judgement to land Cosmic Storm a winner in the sixth race, coming from midfield to score convincingly. Trainer Grant Williams said the jockey had said his galloper would appreciate the distance and was vindicated.
Williams said Cosmic Storm was beautiful at home but tendered to be nervy at the track.
Hall’s vigour was also illustrated when he rode a different style of race, leading all the way, on Hold Your Tongue in the next race, the Skyy Vodka Handicap (1400m).
Hall lifted the horse when it appeared Chilly Reception (Joe Azzopardi) was set to run past him at the 150m mark.
Trainer Dion Luciani scratched the horse from last Saturday’s fixture (13/6) because of a wide barrier draw. When the horse again drew the outside gate Luciani decided it was better having a go than earning nothing by staying at home.
Hall replaced Jerry Noske (unwell) on Hold Your Tongue. Noske probably got even sicker when Lucy Warwick replaced her on, and scored with Sandpipers (E2), in the last, for Fred Kersley.
Earlier in the day Warwick had won on Prohurst Express, the galloper firming from $8-$5.50 and he proved too strong for High Limit (Jordan Turner).
Trainer Brett Pope, who has been steadily ticking over winners, said Prohurst Express was one of those horses who needed well-spaced starts and very light campaigns of two-three races.
Another female rider successful at the meeting was Kate Fitzgerald on Dawn’s Flyer for David Harrison. Other successful riders were Shaun O’Donnell and Jarrad Noske, for trainers Neville Parnham and Chris Gangemi, repectively.

13 June 2015



SPORTS POLITICS

‘PRECIOUS,’ BOOFHEADS AND REAL RACISTS 

Adam Goodes is a goose and some of his overheated supporters are even worse.
According to journalist Ruby Hamad, the Goodes on-field dance of defiance was an exhilarating act in protest against ‘relentless racism.’ Oh, please, give us a rest from the race polemics.
‘Precious’ (Goodes) is disliked because he appears to many ordinary Australians, as one AFL supporter described, “as someone with a permanent chip on his shoulder and a carrot up his arse.”
Well, the description is as colourful as Goodes is precious. In the long run it does not really matter whether you see Goodes as a defiant warrior or a candidate for the John Cleese Ministry of Silly Walks award.
But to compound the madness the NSW Legislative Council passed a motion of censure on Collingwood Football Club president, Eddie McGuire, for his rather moderate criticism of ‘Precious.’
McGuire, commentating, said at half time: “we haven’t seen that before and frankly I don’t think we want to see it again.” This was a measured opinion that people could either agree with or disagree, without rancour.
Perhaps it was appropriate that a Greens MLC, introduced the ‘boofhead’ motion into the plush red Upper House chamber of the NSW Parliament.
Yes, the word ‘boofhead’ was deemed parliamentary in describing McGuire which clearly shows the level to which the NSW Parliament has descended, namely into the gutter, a place where the Greens normally reside.
The parliamentary motion read:
 That this House condemns Eddie MacGuire (sic), the President of the Collingwood Football Club for: a) His comments that ‘‘this is a made up dance, this is not something that has been going for years,’’ and
b) for being a continual boofhead.
Well, the Greens ‘boofhead’ who moved it, Jeremy Buckingham MLC, despite claiming to be a Collingwood supporter, cannot even get the spelling of his club president correct. As for being a ‘continual boofhead’ the Greens should know as they have had long experience of being just that in various parliaments.
‘Eddie Everything,’ as McGuire is known, was perfectly correct in stating that the ‘Goodes jig’ was a made up dance with no long tradition. You do not need to be a member of God’s elect (Hawthorn FC and West Perth FC) to appreciate that fact!
Australians instinctively dislike people pushing their own barrow, or who they perceive as having a ‘chip on the shoulder.’ Goodes did himself great harm when he made another ‘song and dance,’ over some 13 year old female Collingwood supporter who called him an ‘ape.’
Goodes on that occasion, in 2013, actually stopped the game and pointed the girl out, to security. Was that really necessary? Goodes is a grown man, he should be ignoring comments from juveniles, in the crowd.
He has further alienated people by calling Australia Day, ‘Invasion Day.’ That is why he was poorly regarded as Australian of the Year, last year. He was seen by many as a 'politically correct' choice.
However, make no mistake, racism in sport has been real in the past and continues today.
Take Graham ‘Polly’ Farmer and Bill Dempsey, two of the all time greats of Football.
Farmer played for East Perth, Geelong and West Perth-a premiership player at all three clubs. In his last four years as captain-coach of the Cardinals (1968-71) he took West Perth to premierships in both his second and final year.
Dempsey played all of his football at West Perth and was a three time premiership player in his 343 games in the cardinal red and blue colours.
Those two fine Aboriginal footballers were truly subjected to vicious racist taunts, and sledging, yet never ‘batted an eyelid.’ One of the worst perpetrators was Jack Clarke, of East Fremantle, who in later life sought Farmer out and apologised for his offensive language, when they were on-field opponents.
Because they ignored the contemptible attacks on them both Farmer and Dempsey are still held in great esteem- and it is why Goodes, because he is seen as a petulant moaner with a chip on his shoulder, will never be similarly regarded.
Ironically, racism is colour blind and impacts on blacks and whites.
The great South African Springbok sides (Proteas, today) of 1963-70 are a case in point.
In that era only whites could be considered for selection in the national side. However, by the time the Apartheid Policy of the South African Government pushed the cricket side into isolation for a generation, in 1970, they were clearly the best side in the world.
This writer was a schoolboy when ‘Captain Decent,’ Trevor Goddard, brought his young side across the Indian Ocean in the summer of 1963-4. (Goddard was all class and would later became a personal friend).
In that distant Australian summer the Springboks shared the series with Australia 1-1 with three draws. The South Africans generally had the best of the drawn matches.
In 1966-7, at home, the ‘Boks won the series 3-1-1, the first time they had beaten Australia in a series.
In 1970 the ‘Boks smashed Australia 4-0 in a four test series, and this writer was in the RSA for the first three Tests.
Trevor Goddard, then 39, had his last hurrah in the Third Test at Wanderers,  and the great all rounder took his third wicket of the innings with what was the last ball of the Third Test –having Alan Connolly caught in the deep by Barry Richards.
In the second Test at Durban I have never forgotten Graeme Pollock (274) and Barry Richards (140) simply destroying Australia. After Bradman these two were surely the best Test batsmen, in a side that had many other greats: Barlow, Bacher (capt), Irvine, Peter Pollock, Gamsy, Lance, Lindsay, Proctor, Traicos.
It was the best Test side this writer has seen but international politics saw them, subsequently excluded, until 1992.
What made South Africa an international pariah, in the first place, was its apartheid policies and celebrated sporting cases such as cricketer, Basil D’Oliveria.
Dolly, as the talented all-rounder was known, was a Cape Coloured who had to migrate to England to pursue his career as a professional cricketer. D’Oliveria was picked to represent England, against South Africa, in 1968. However, the Vorster Government (1966-78) played into the hands of its critics by denying Dolly entry to return to the country of his birth.
The snowball effect then saw an intensive trade, sport, and disinvestment boycotts against the RSA.
With the accession of the reformist president, FW de Klerk (President 1989-94), South Africa re-surfaced in international competition and in May 1994 Nelson Mandela became the first black president of the Rainbow Nation, serving for five years.
Mandela, loved cricket, and his first question to a former Australian PM, Malcolm Fraser, during the latter’s visit to see him when he was in Pollsmoor Prison (1986), was , “ is Don Bradman still alive?”
Fraser assured him, the world’s greatest political prisoner, that the world’s greatest ever batsman was indeed still alive. Later Fraser presented Mandela with a bat signed by The Don. It read: “To Nelson Mandela in recognition of a great unfinished innings.”
 Bradman (1908-2001) lived to see his words fulfilled with Mandela, after release, serving a full five years as RSA president (1994-99).
 However, the super former SA cricket stars became reviled by the new black Cricket establishment and it is worth looking at how they have been treated in post-Apartheid South Africa.
The 1970 side is not only regarded as the best South African side ever but also close to one of the all time great Test sides.
You would expect such players to still be honoured mightily. The reverse was the case, particularly from 2000, when the new chief of Cricket South Africa, Gerald Majola, was the chief tormentor of them.
Ultimately Majola was sacked by Cricket South Africa (19 October 2012) for failing to disclose unpaid bonuses, misuse of a travel allowance and lying. He was to SA Cricket what Robespierre was to the French Revolution. His reign saw strife, fear, loathing and division. His own detestation of the pre-1971 players simply stemmed from the fact they were white. Their 'crime' was simply that they had the unfortunate experience to play during the long reign of the white Nationalist Government (1948-94).
It was a classic case of reverse racism.
Majola made sure that former white players were snubbed in many ways including:
*ensuring privileges to ex-players and their wives were removed or reduced
* snubbing of white ex- players who offered their expertise as coaches
* purging of honour boards and old photos of white cricket sides before 1992 
* players from that era also had their numbers taken away and CSA basically started from one in 1992, despite SA being a foundation nation of Test Cricket, first playing Test cricket against England in 1888 and Australia, 1902
* waging an unsuccessful two year campaign to have South African Test matches expunged from the record books, pre-1992, but instead he was sent packing by Lord’s
*when legend Graeme Pollock remonstrated with him about unfairness Majola, dismissed him in front of some old members with the words: “you guys had your day now get lost”
* Majola followed that up by another classless act of renaming South Africa’s national schools’ cricket week after his brother, claiming he may had played for SA but for his colour
* bought in racial quotas, favouring blacks, but used weasel words like ‘targets’ to describe them.
Incredibly Barry Richards had, at that stage, never been invited to a South African cricket function by the new regime; neither he or Graeme Pollock have been honoured by having grandstands named after them, (as in the Lillee-Marsh stand, or the John Inverarity Stand at the WACA); Basil D’Oliveria has been similarly snubbed because, despite being a Cape Coloured, he refused to toe the line of the ruling ANC government, post 1994.
Incidentally, this writer has had some experience of the ‘whiting-out’ of history in Africa. In April 1986 I paid a visit to the Zimbabwe Parliament. On the front door, doing guard duty, was a white BSAP policemen. I asked him whether he was ‘a dinosaur’ and he laughed, asking me my business at the House. After telling him,  “I want to compare an African zoo with an Australian one,” he duly offered to escort me around the Parliament. It was six years after Mugabe had taken over and it was interesting to see that all the portrait paintings, on the walls, were of ZANU ‘comrades.’
When I asked what had become of the previous portraits of Rhodesian (white) prime ministers he led me up to the attic! There they were, Huggins, Whitehead, Todd, Field, Smith, Welensky et al, all gathering dust.
Thus it can be seen that racism is a two edged sword and Adam Goodes’ complaints are really rather precious, and insignificant, by comparison to some others.

Reference: The Silencing of South Africa’s Greatest Cricket Side, RW Johnson, Standpoint Magazine, 2012