McKenzie Stakes Field – 2014

Race 6 – 3:25PM Essendon Nissan McKenzie Stakes (1200 METRES)
Of $120,000.1st $72,000, 2nd $21,600, 3rd $10,800, 4th $5,400, 5th $3,000, 6th $2,400, 7th $2,400, 8th $2,400 LISTED
Set Weights plus Penalties, Three-Years-Old, Colts and Geldings, Apprentices cannot claim.
This race carries a SUPER VOBIS Nominators Bonus of $10,000 for qualified horses.Field Limit: 13 + 4 EM

MCKENZIE STAKES OFFER: get a $700 FREE BET on any runner!

No Horse Trainer Jockey Barrier Weight
1 MERION (NZ) Michael Moroney Steven Arnold 11 56.5kg
2 ORUJO John O’Shea Nicholas Hall 10 55kg
3 PETROLOGY David Hayes & Tom Dabernig Damien Oliver 4 55kg
4 TUDOR Doug Harrison Craig Williams 8 55kg
5 CORAM Leon & Troy Corstens Chris Symons 6 55kg
6 TURFANE Saab Hasan Damian Lane 5 55kg
7 FAST CASH Wendy Kelly Daniel Moor 9 55kg
8 ARMAGEDDON ON IT Chris Calthorpe Ryan Maloney 7 55kg
9 BELFLYER John Moloney Patrick Moloney (a) 12 55kg
10 CAVEKA Peter G Moody Vlad Duric 1 55kg
11 RICH ENUFF Ken Keys Dwayne Dunn 2 55kg
12 SOVEREIGN DUKE Lloyd Kennewell Craig Newitt 3 55kg

News:

Racehorse syndicators Dean and Adam Watt have been fined $20,000 after a stewards’ inquiry found they registered website domain names designed to mislead visitors.

Found guilty of improper conduct at a Racing NSW stewards’ hearing earlier this month, the Watts have lodged an appeal against the findings that they registered thoroughbred industry-related domain names.

Dean Watt is the managing director of Dynamic Syndications and his son Adam is an employee of the business which publicly sells shares in racehorses.

Stewards found the Watts acted improperly in setting up websites relating to premier Sydney trainer Chris Waller and rival syndication firm Triple Crown Syndications.

Dean Watt was fined $5000 while Adam Watt was slugged $2500 for setting up a website branded Chris Waller Racing without the trainer’s permission.

Stewards also fined Dean Watt $10,000 for creating a website with Triple Crown Syndications branding and they again fined his son $2500.

“The strategy was designed in form and content to mislead visitors to the (Triple Crown) site into believing that the website was owned and operated by Triple Crown Bloodstock Pty Ltd and could result in those website visitors being encouraged, enticed or invited to purchase shares of a horse syndicated by Dynamic Syndications,” a stewards statement read.

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