Day 2 Champs Weekend Preview

We had big runs in our colours on Day 1 of the Championships at Randwick from Nugget and Berkshire Shadow in the Doncaster! 


The weekend preview is live ahead of Day 2 ! Professional punter and mounting yard expert John is back with Luke to deep dive all the races. 


We have a huge team this week. Ashrun is a massive player in the Group1 Sydney Cup... Willinga Freefall and Willinga Beast are live hopes in the Provincial Championship final.. And Miss Busslinger & Midnight Opal are set to peak early on the card. 


Plus comments on all of the feature races including stars Orchestral & Via Sistina 


Show Notes; 

Australian Bloodstock Update ( 1.55 ) 

Greyhound ownership opportunity with Luke (4.45) 

Doomben R9 Mayfair Spirit ( 6.20 ) 

Randwick R1 Miss Busslinger ( 9.30 ) 

Randwick R2 Midnight Opal ( 14.15 ) 

Randwick R3 Provincial Championship final -- Willinga Beast, Willinga Freefall, Baltic Coast ( 20.00 ) 

Randwick R7 Group1 Sydney Cup -- Ashrun ( 38.38 ) 

Best Bets ( 1:02.04 ) 

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Luke Murrell
April 12, 2024

Latest News

By Laurence Schuberth April 14, 2025
KRIS Lees has set a new goal with narrowly beaten Provincial-Midway Championships Final favorite Lord Of Biscay. It’s the same track (Royal Randwick) where the import just failed to overhaul the talented Matcha Latte in last Saturday’s $1m PMC Final (1400m) – but this time it’s an even richer target. That’s the $3m Listed Big Dance (1600m) at headquarters on November 4. Lees won the inaugural running in 2022 with Rustic Steel, ridden by Nash Rawiller. “Lord Of Biscay was very gallant last Saturday, and the extra distance of the Big Dance won’t be a problem,” Lees said this afternoon. “He became eligible for the race when he easily won the Ballina Cup over 1590m in January.  “Lord Of Biscay has done a terrific job this campaign, winning a couple of races and also being placed twice from five starts. “He will spell and we’ll get him ready for the Big Dance.”
By Laurence Schuberth April 13, 2025
Wandjina’s quality sprinting daughter Infancy produced a career best on day two of The Championships at Randwick when resuming off a break to win the Group II Sapphire Stakes (1200m). Showing her customary lack of early speed, Jason Collett settled Infancy back near the rear but found himself tracking short-price favourite Commemorative (I Am Invincible). That pair came widest in the straight with plenty to offer but Infancy produced a powerful drive in the final 100 metres to outgun the favourite and win by half a length with with Lady Laguna (Overshare) third. “She got a lovely ride from Jason and she's done the rest,” said trainer Kris Lees. “She's got a really good Randwick record. She's a back marker, so if you go through her form, there's a few hard-luck stories amongst it, but she had the luck today.” Bred by Australian Bloodstock, Infancy is one of two winners from two to race for Childhood (USA), an American-bred daughter of Lonhro, who won two of five starts in Ireland before failing at her only start in America. A half-sister to three stakes winners, including the Grade III winner Baby J and the Grade 1-placed Laureate Conductor, Childhood (USA) was a 60,000 gns buy for Ronald Rauscher from the Godolphin consignment at the 2017 Tattersalls July Sale. McEvoy Mitchell Racing / Belmont Bloodstock Agency (FBAA) shelled out $60,000 for a now to year-old filly by Graff consigned by HP Thoroughbreds to the 2024 Inglis Classic Yearling Sale. Her 2025 yearling, also by Graff made $90,000 to Tasman Thoroughbreds, again at Classic. She didn’t produce a foal last year and has been served by Tassort. Infancy is one of six stakes winners for Larneuk Stud’s Group 1 Australian Guineas hero Wandjina (Snitzel). He’s enjoying a strong year with three stakes winners including this season’s Group II winner and Group I placed Hong Kong galloper Galaxy Patch.
By Laurence Schuberth March 28, 2025
Australian Bloodstock director Luke Murrell is not afraid to take a decent punt on overseas stayers in his quest for more Melbourne Cup glory. Usually, though, the horse is younger than seven-year-old Vauban. “We’ve only bought a couple of expensive ones like him at that level, and they’ve always been three or four-year-olds,” Murrell said. “This one was older, but it’s probably like buying the Camry off the one-owner lady that’s got only 20,000kms on it, even though it’s 10 years old. “When you look at his record, he’d won eight of 21, and he was always a tough, sound horse, because those VRC protocols are ridiculous, so for him to pass them, he’s very sound.” Murrell and fellow Australian Bloodstock founder Jamie Lovett have built their syndication company on buying the right horse and giving clients a shot at the Melbourne Cup, and other features along the way. Protectionist put them on the map with his dominant Cup win in 2014 and Gold Trip, which cost more than $2 million, repaid them with victory in 2022. Vauban, though, is a new direction for Australian Bloodstock, which went halves with trainers Gai Waterhouse and Adrian Bott in a purchase believed to be close to $2 million after last year’s Cup.
By Laurence Schuberth March 26, 2025
Two strong juvenile maiden races at Randwick on Wednesday very nearly produced a winning double for Coolmore based shuttler Wootton Bassett (GB) with his colt Regulated Affair missing by a whisker on debut and then his talented filly Wootton Lass made amends with a stylish victory at her second start.
By Laurence Schuberth March 16, 2025
Vauban started his new chapter in Australia in fine style when thundering home to win the Sky High Stakes at Rosehill on Saturday. On his first start since finishing 11th in the Melbourne Cup for trainer Willie Mullins and owners Rich and Susannah Ricci, Vauban made a winning debut for Australian Bloodstock following his A$2 million (£1.02m/€1.22m) sale shortly after the Flemington feature last November. Almost three years to the day since the now seven-year-old won the Triumph Hurdle at the Cheltenham Festival, he was racing in very different conditions to what he is used to, with temperatures soaring to a sweltering 36C in the Sydney suburbs. The 1m2f trip of the Group 3 Sky High was also the shortest distance Vauban has run over in his career, which yielded eight wins in 21 starts in Europe. Despite those challenges, he proved up to the task as he overhauled Arapaho on the line to score by a nose under Tim Clark.
By Laurence Schuberth March 16, 2025
Gai Waterhouse admits her hopes of a triumphant return to the track for former Irish star Vauban were thinning moments before Saturday’s Group 3 Sky High Stakes (2000m) at Rosehill
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