By Michael Guerin
The real battle for today’s $600,000 IRT New Zealand Cup isn’t just between 15 of our elite pacers. It will be a battle of tactics. And who ends up where in the running.
In the blue corner stands Mark Purdon, training freak and six-time New Zealand Cup winning driver looking to equal Ricky May’s record of seven driving wins in the great race.
Back from a staccato training sabbatical he has concentrated his efforts on his stable stars today, horses like defending Cup champion Self Assured and new buzz pacer Franco Indie in the $170,000 Sires’ Stakes.
It is easy to assume with the favourite today much of Purdon’s work is done but Self Assured is swimming against the tide and that is the total domination of marker peg runners in any pacing race that matters in the last 18 months.
He won from the Cup from the trail last year and the Auckland Cup, Miracle Mile, NZ Free-For-All, Victoria and Hunter Cups and just about any other important pacing race these days is won by horses saving ground on the inside.
The development of the standardbred has far outstripped that of the already more refined thoroughbred in the last two decades and that, coupled with faster tracks and more aggressive driving, means swoopers are an endangered species.
With key rivals like Copy That and Classie Brigade drawn to get forward and to the marker pegs while Self Assured faces having to move mid-race to get handy, he will be bucking that trend if he is to defend his title.
Self Assured hardly looked the dominant member of this crop when he fell in to win the Flying Stakes two weeks ago after an easy lead, albeit in sizzling late sectionals.
Copy That looms as the huge danger because he feels big and strong when he can lead and roll, almost all his major wins coming from in front.
He may be a more natural sprinter than a true 3200m horse but his brave third in last year’s Auckland Cup is proof enough he can win today.
Classie Brigade clearly can’t count because he is basically nine (old) but racing like he is five and his manners and likely field position make him a huge factor today.
Perhaps the only other winning chance today is South Coast Arden, a steamroller of pacer who will take enormous catching if he bullies his way to the front but he may settle a long, long away from that goal starting on the unruly.
Purdon’s other pet project for today Franco Indie should have enough x-factor to outmuscle Republican Party in the Woodlands Stud Sires’ Stakes Final.
Who wins today’s Livamol NZ NZ Trotting Free-For-All may come down to which version of Bolt For Brilliance turns up.
The two-time Harness Jewels winner is the best horse in today’s sprint but has two very different personalities: the get up and go, I can trot a half (800m) in 54 seconds Bolt For Brilliance and the “this is all a bit boring I’d rather be somewhere else” Bolt For Brilliance.
Luckily for punters the second BFB doesn’t rear his head very often, usually early in campaigns or when he is allowed to relax too much early, disengages and gets stuck in second gear.
The racey one can win today because that version of Bolt For Brilliance can show decent gate speed which, coupled with respect, could be enough to see him head to the marker pegs early in the Group One trot and then trail loveable leader Majestic Man.
Sitting in the trail behind Majestic Man the 100 per cent Bolt For Brilliance would win.
Driver Jim Curtin has been looking after the exciting trotter for trainer Tony Herlihy, trapped in lockdown land, and says he expects an improved performance after Bolt For Brilliance’s last start fifth.
“We were in trouble straight after the start when we went back and we should have gone forward,” admits Curtin.
“But I think he will be handier this time and I also think he will be fitter.”
That tips the scales in his favour over Majestic Man while Oscar Bonavena could end up in no-trotters land from his wide draw.
Another multiple Group One winner looking for redemption today is Krug in the Dunstan Feeds Junior Free-for-all and back to a mobile start he has the blinds on and driver Blair Orange has been instructed to send him to the front and don’t look back.
If he is going to be the horse he promised last season he should win today. If not he raises questions about the depth of last season’s three-year-old crop.