YEAR: 2013 TOM BRANKIN YEAR: 2013 JACK SMOLENSKI - HORSEMAN YEAR: 2012 Omn Friday, February 17, 2012 when the family and friends of Les Hope were gathering after his funeral, his filly, Gayless Delight was running at Motukarara. Ricky May wore a black armband and the Trackside team spoke about Les's passing. Gaylees Delight ran courageously for a second. Hope who was 72, was a Marlborough man, the youngest boy of 11 children. As a youngster, he represented Marlborough at rugby and cricket. At 15 years, he left school and became a butcher's boy. He then went shearing with his brother 'Bluey' and followed the seasons from Marlborough through to Southland. He would winter over working in the meatworks in Gore. It was there he met his wife Gaynor. He took her back to Marlborough and into their own very successful butchery and other businesses. Hope was a publican, a property developer, a farmer and latterly he and Maurice McQuillan operated a Super Liquor outlet. Regrettably, Gaynor died some 24 years ago. In his early life, Hope's father was a teamster with horses and dray carting gravel and goods throughout Marlborough. This love of horses took the family into racing with 'Bluey' racing the talented free-legged pacer Robalan during the 1970's. Les had many horses including some good ones, and his interest flourished particularly in later years when he had them trained by his nephew Greg Hope. Hope was one of the many on whose support harness racing relies. They hope one day to make some money but they do not expect to, they love the horses and the convivial company and they dream that one day they will have a champion. Credit: HRWeekly 29Feb2012 YEAR: 2012 Kevin Ryder, who died in Christchurch recently aged 88, was a remarkably versatile horseman. He crossed many paths successfully, as a breeder, owner, trainer, driver and notably as a trader. He was never shy at voicing his opinion, an irregular contributor to the 'Weekly's' Letter columns, an author, and latterly an advisor of sorts to the Meadowlands video streaming. He performed with distinction on the international stage, training and trading in the US when he was based at Yonkers in the 1970s. Ryder was born in Blackball, one of five children raised on the family farm at Inchbonnie. In 1937, when he had just left school to work on the farm, he bought his first horse, a 2-year-old by Grattan Loyal. "I had no idea how to train a horse, but I pressed on regardless," he said. Six years later he put down a track, and 10 years after that he won his first race, at Westport in 1953 with Helen Patch, a mare he'd leased from Iris Litten. Not only did she win on the first day, but on the second day as well, by two lengths off 36 yards. Other winner for him during this time were First Dieman, Bay Prince, Private Lady (4 wins), Conquistador and Chiefly. Ryder moved into thoroughbreds in the late 50s, standing at stud the stallions Red Jester and Prince Mahal, and they were joined by Allegiance, an unraced son of Light Brigade and Princess Medoro. In 1963, Ryder moved to Canterbury with his wife Bev and their six children - Patricia, Gavan, Francis, Melvin, Chris and Peter - living first at Clarkville then at Kaiapoi. He worked at this time for Jack Litten and Clarrie Rhodes, where Leicester Tatterson was Clarrie's private trainer. Ryder recalled: "It always amazed me how fast Leicester could harness and unharness a horse. He seemed to pick up a set of harness, hopples, bridle and boots, and in a flash the horse was all harnessed up." He had three stints working for Litten, when he trained the speedy Peerswick, and he was with Litten when he bought Westland King as a weanling. By Goodland, Westland King set a mile trotting record from a standing start as a 2-year-old in 1966 of 2:12 2-5 which still stands today. He ran a mile record against time at the same age of 2:08 2-5, and won two at the Kaikoura meeting as a 3-year-old. "He was probably my favourite horse but sadly had bad legs." He raced just nine times in four seasons and won five races, later siring the grand trotter, Stormy Morn. In 1967 he bought land and moved Westland King to Yaldhurst where he started a short career as a public trainer. Two of his best horses there were Apollo King - "the fastest beginner In ever saw" - and Tullamore Dew, another by Goodland - he said was "a heartbreak." Tullamore Dew could pace and trot, and in fact set records at both gaits. Ryder had thoughts he could be a Cup or Dominion Handicap horse. Philipino, yet another by Goodland, had ability at both gaits and was a good horse later for Denis Nyhan. Another acquistion to the stable at this time was Robert Dunn, sent from Wellington by his parents because he was "horse mad." They told Ryder: "Work the hell out of him; see that he gets sick of it so he'll come back to Wellington and get on with his studies." Soon after, in 1972, Ryder was off to America, as an attendant on air shipment of horses. He returned home and went back in 1974, taking Banksey Butler, a horse he had bought in Australia for $4000. "The business-like manner of racing in the United States always impressed me," he said later. Horses he bought and sold while in the States included Highland Champ, Brown Brazil, Logan Lady, Urbinoro, Le True and Sogo, and those he sold while back later in NZ were Whispering Campaign, Hal Tempa, Timely Hostess, Via Vista, Tempo Cavalla, Tebaldi, Smooth Dave, Doctor Inglis, Countess Gina, Tac Warrior, Nautilus, Lumber Leon, Jester Boy, Lady's Rule, Matt Flinders, Bound To Be, Big Bucks and Matai Bret. In 1977, and considering that he'd become a grandfather, Ryder decided to settle down and bought land at West Melton. He did what he was good at - buying and selling. He soon had three smart ones - By The Way, Ambleside and Tempest Tiger. By The Way was a smart trotting mare who won six races in one season. Tempest Tiger raced for only one season, becoming the first mare to win the Messenger Stakes when Jack Smolenski drove her and she shared the NZ mile record for a mare, at 1:58.5, with Westburn Vue. Tempest Tiger left Franco Tiger, who won the Miracle Mile and was considered by Ryder as the best he had. "I started him three times at trials and he won them all. Then two starts at the races, one at Forbury and one at Addington, both of which he won quite easily. Keeping to my policy, I sold him to Australia where he earned over one million dollars. He did not pull an he was a flawless pacer. He had an impeccable nature and a 100% racing attitude, had a wonderful head and a nice homest-looking eye." Ryder used his own theories for training. "I've always held the view that if a horse is really good, it doesn't matter much who trains it. The key is to get to know what suits the horse best. Some take a lot of work and others take very little, and it's just a matter of working this out. I have read various books on training horses but while you may pick up the odd handy hint from them, I don't hold much store with training by the book. I preferred to learn from experts like the legendary Jack Litten. Jack would take his horses out and trot two rounds of the track (2400m) and then gallop five (6000m). He galloped reasonably fast but not off the bit. He would not let any horse pace free-legged. He used no bandages or liniments and had no lame horses, except for his NZ Derby winner Doctor Barry, who was a bad horse to crossfire. However, one bit of advice I can give to young trainers is this: that young horse you are fairly much in love with is only half as good as you think it is." His son Chris said his father wasn't shy of voicing a good an lengthy story, whether it was a West Coast happening, or a rather hair-raising touch and go horse trading experience. "He loved to watch my horses racing live on the computer and he took well to the internet, so much so that he would proudly tell me how he was emailing his racetrack management skills to the No. 1 track in the US. Credit: Mike Grainger writing in HRWeekly 7Mar2012 YEAR: 2012 Rod Geddes was 56 when he died suddenly at his Greenpark home recently. A dairy farmer, Geddes was a passionate and successful breeder, trainer and driver, most of his horses named with the 'Dryden' attachment. His best horse was Dryden Amanda, trained by his father Jim for eight wins and one when they trained in partnership at the end of her career. That was when she won the Ashburton Cup from Ansett and Mytop Sweetie. Rob handled her in nearly all of her 62 starts and in all of her nine wins, including a memorable Show day performance at Addington when she came from last on the corner in a C6-8 free-for-all to beat Mighty Me and Win A Bottle. He trained the good Game Pride - Secret Sign mare Game Dryden to win seven races, and he won six with Honky Tonk Dryden. His last drive was at Addington with Coolit G T Dryden on March 30. "He was into the horses from the day he was born," recalled his brother Jim. "From the time he was five, he was out there helping Dad, and he was driving work when he was ten. And when the kids were young it was non-stop pony club and watching them play rugby, and Rob went right through the grades playing for Waihora." He is survived by his wife Barbara, sons Brent, who is licenced, and Ryan who was, and daughter, Nikki. Both Brent and Ryan are riders for the iconic Crusader horsemen before home Super 15 matches in Christchurch. Credit: Mike Grainger writing in HRWeekly 25Apr2012 YEAR: 2012 Frank Bebbington spent a lifetime involved in all aspects of harness racing - as a breeder, owner, trainer and driver with his latest administrative position being a recent appointment as an Ashburton Racecourse Trustee. He died recently, aged 80, before attending a meeting. Bebbington began his work as a volunteer when he joined the Mid-Canterbury OTB. He became a member of the Ashburton Trotting Club and a steward in 1982 before joining the committee in 1985 and serving as president from 1998 until 2001. His involvement in club activities included the construction of the barn and Davidson stand, track improvements, the centennial fund, the introduction of the Hambletonian, and membership on the joint management committee. On his retirement he was made a life member of the club in 2004. The first good horse Bebbington handled was Robert Medoro - "handy but underrated"- said recently retired club general manager Trevor Robinson, and trained by his father, Reg. He stood at stud Mercedes and Avalon Globe, and had great success with the trotters, Globe Tour and Royal Armour, who both won nine. Globe Tour was by Avalon Globe, by Lordship, and Royal Armour was by Protector and had enormous ability but raced intermittently over four seasons. He won seven races in his 4-year-old season and two from five starts as a 6-year-old, winning a double at the old National meeting, betting Break Through and Tony Bear on the first night and Johnny Gee and Break Through on the second. Robertson said he would br missed for his smile, humour and levelheadedness. Credit: Mike Grainger writing in HRWeekly 25Apr2012 YEAR: 2012 DAVID McCARTHY INTERVIEWS BOBBY NYHAN YEAR: 2012 MURRAY GRAY YEAR: 2012 Respected harness racing administrator Jim Wakefield has been recognised for his servises to the industry in the Queen's Birthday Honours List. Wakefield has been awarded the New Zealand Order of Merit (MNZM). Pat O'Brien, the chairman of Harness Racing New Zealand, said the award was thoroughly deserved. "It recognises Jim's outstanding contribution to the industry in a number of areas over an extended period. As HRNZ's chairman, Jim was a strong and passionate leader with great integrity. Not only has he provided a significant contribution as an administrator, he has been, and continues to be, heavily involved as a breeder and owner. Harness Racing is certainly richer for his involvement and it is great for him to be officially recognised through this award." Wakefield represented the NZ Trotting Owners Association on HRNZ's Executive from 2000 to 2010, and was Chairman from 2000 to 2003. During this time he played a key role in promoting a number of changes, in particular the development of the Racing Act 2003 on which the current industry is structured. From 2003-06, he was HRNZ's inaugural appointment to the New Zealand Racing Board, and in partnership with his wife, Dr Susan Wakefield, he has bred and raced a number of top performers, including Sparks A Flyin, London Legend, Bettor's Strike and Texican. On the international stage, Wakefield was chairman on the organising committee of the 2007 World Trotting Conference in Christchurch, an event considered a great success. Credit: HR Weekly 7June2012 YEAR: 2012 Q. You seemed to come into race training and driving a bit later than some. Where did it all start? In racing not until I was 28 when I got a job at the old Roydon Lodge in Yaldhurst. We came over from the Coast when I was 12 and I was brought up with horses. Later on, I worked a team in the bush for a while. I played league right through the grades and was still playing when I went to Roydon Lodge after I answered an ad in the paper. I broke my jaw playing football soon after and that was the end of the sport. Captain Adios had just passed on when I started and Thurber Frost was the star stallion then. I worked under Ralph Bonnington who was the stallion manager. Q. You didn't train there though? How did you find it later on taking on training a good team without the background some have had? The granddam, Aspiring Lass, was a good mare in America and Charlie Hunter trained her down here. She had a twisted bowel at one stage. I got her back for a last season and she won the Canterbury Park Cup for us. The dam (Aspiring Gal) broke a pelvis. But she had showed plenty as a two year old. I was going to try her again but it didn't come to anything. But it was no surprise she would leave fast horses. I spent a lot of time watching George Noble. There weren't many people who were better to learn from. A lot of it was just what you know and common sense.I started training after we set up the new Roydon Lodge at Templeton. That was a big job and it took time to get it organised. Scottish Hanover was our anchor stallion then and he did a great job. When that was up and running I was breaking horses in and thought I might as well be training them. Q. Talking of Scottish Hanover, Roydon Scott was your first star? He was a brilliant horse, a great horse really. I don't think people realised how good he was. I firmly believed he would be the first to run two miles in four minutes here and I think he would have done it. He had a big long stride and everything seemed effortless to him. He battled navicular disease for a long time and when Dr Irvine changed the medication rules on what we were treating him with it finished his career really. Q. He still ran as favourite in the New Zealand Cup? It was the owner's decision to run and you can understand wanting to win a Cup. I have to say I would probably not run had it been up to me. Q. He was a different sort from Roydon Glen who ended up with the better record? Roydon Glen had a lot of ability but he was always "seeing things" which made him a hard horse to drive. Peter Wolfenden drove him up north for us and didn't actually seem to think a lot of him and I had to take over when he won the Derby by lengths up there. But I could understand why Peter thought like he did. You had to be careful what you did with him in the race and where you put him. Sometimes driving him what punters might think was the right way was the wrong way. Q. His third in the Cup must have been your biggest disappointment? There wern't any other races to match it. He drew in, actually began too well, got into the trail and when they eased in front we were four and five back on the fence. Then when I was going to work off the fence I got held in. He flew home of course and should have won it but there wasn't a lot else I could have done. Q. He didn't really succeed as a sire apart from the trotter Lyell Creek, and Roydon Albatross was a bit disappointing too? Yes, you wouldn't believe Roydon Glen wouldn't have been a great success with his pedigree. Roydon Albatross was by Albatross but his maternal line was not as strong. He had the bad luck to be foaled down here late in one season instead of early in the next. That meant when he won the Nelson Cup in record time he was really a three year old and it showed what a good stayer he was. Q. Phillipa Frost was a mighty wee mare too? A super little mare, tough as they come. Bluey Steel, who worked at Roydon Lodge then had bred her. There was nothing of her but she wore a long hopple for the size she was (59 inch). I liked horses in long hopples. Roydon Scott wore a 64 inch hopple and Roydon Glen a 61 inch. Philippa Frost's length was really massive for her size. She had to battle Delightful Lady in the mare's races and she ran third to Hands Down and Lord Module in the NZ Free-For-All. We got a bit mixed up at the start. Slim Dykman was next to us and told me he was going to do one thing but he did it differently when the gate went. When you look back at her record and what she raced against she was a terrific mare. Q. We always have to talk about Sundon at Roydon Lodge but Game Pride smoothed the path for him. He was really the first of the modern trotting sires here, the ones who could leave horses with speed. He did a terrific job year after year once he got established. One thing which surprised me about him is the ability he had. His race record didn't show it but he was a dumpy little guy and we used to have to work him in the cart a bit to get the condition off him. The speed he showed when you chirped him up amazed me. There was a stallion close up in his pegigree called Bill Gallon which the Americans rated highly even though he was not as fashionable as some. He turned up in Sundon's pedigree as well so there was something in it. Q. Sundons had a mixed reception with many trainers and probably still do. What do you put that down to? Basically I think they have so much speed that if you let then show too much of it you can have problems. I had Jo Anne early on and she just had phenomenal speed. But Sundon was a lovely relaxed horse. He would spend a lot of time sleeping. One odd thing about him was that he would pee just before the start of every race he had. His sire Arndon was a bit different. I saw him run his world record at the Red Mile. He was sore then and drifted out into the middle of the track but still ran the fastest mile ever. Phenomenal speed. But he wasn't the relaxed horse Sundon was. Q. There was a bit of a tizz over a positive swab with Sundon at an Inter-Dominions? A veterinary error. I think vets should be made more responsible for their actions in these sort of cases like they are in some other countries. The owner and trainer have to carry the can. Q. And you didn't get to drive him when he won the Dominion? That is a bad memory. I was given three months for not giving him every chance in the Trotting Free-For-All on Cup Day. You wouldn't not try in a $35,000 race then especially a free-for-all. We were the victim of circumstances but the stewards didn't want to know. Peter Jones took the Dominion drive. He had been driving some of my team in the spring and we had talked about Sundon earlier. Then after the Dominion the siren went and they inquired into whether Sundon had checked something early in the race! My charge was quashed on appeal. It left a sour taste. Q. Morgan James was another good horse I remember? Just one of those great everyday horses. My friend from Perth, Mick Lombardo, talked me into selling him in a weak moment. He ended up winning $600,000 over there. Just went on and on year after year until he was about 13. Q. First Jinja Girl and now Royal Aspirations both give you and (grandson) Sam Smolenski Harness Jewels triumphs. How confident were you this year? Very confident. I told Sam it was his race to lose and drive accordingly and he did. Sam has a great temperament for driving. He does his homework, listens to instructions and is patient. He doesn't worry about things and thatis an asset in big races - to stay cool. Q. On paper the immediate breed looked sort of just okay. Did you come from another angle? The granddam, Aspiring Lass, was a good mare in America and Charlie Hunter trained her down here. She had a twisted bowel at one stage. I got her back for a last season and she won the Canterbury Park Cup for us. The dam (Aspiring Lass) broke a pelvis. But she had shown plenty as a two-year-old. I was going to try her again but it didn't come to anything. But it was no surprise she would leave fast horses. Q. Royal Aspirations is a horse which can go on? He's smart as well as fast. He got mixed up at the start of a race at Addington but he still tried to head for the birdcage. He knew where the winners went and wanted to be there. He has a good spell now but he can get better yet. Q. You are a man of many talents, especially with the manipulation of horses. How did that start? I suppose it went back to my sporting days in a way, getting over injuries and that. I started to read up on acupuncture and similar treatments and taught myself how to do them watching others and practicing. I started doing it with the race horses to stretch them before a race like an athlete does with hamstrings and other muscles and then started post race treatments. The horses are running around in circles after all and they can develop specialised ailments. A lot of problems happen in the paddock because the circles they are running in are that much smaller. So I don't like to see them turned out after a treatment as some recommend. Q. You are also a "heartbeat" man with yearlings? I probably did 100 horses this year at the sales. No special science, I just listen to the heartbeat. You can tell quite a lot from it. Some of them sound like a Mack truck. I think it is a fairly credible thing and more people seem to be asking me to do it. Anything you can find out about a horse someone else might not know is an advantage. Credit: HRWeekly 25July2012
|