Thomas Lyons Stakes Field – 2014

Race 9 – 5:15PM Tattsbet.com Thomas Lyons Stakes (1400 METRES)
Of $100,000.1st $60,000, 2nd $18,000, 3rd $9,000, 4th $4,500, 5th $2,500, 6th $2,000, 7th $2,000, 8th $2,000 LISTED
Standard Weight for Age, Apprentices cannot claim.Field Limit: 14 + 5 EM

Form Guide

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No Horse Trainer Jockey Barrier Weight
1 YOUTHFUL JACK Adam Trinder Robert Thompson 9 59kg
2 ROAD TRIPPIN’ Stephen Theodore Craig Newitt 1 59kg
3 JAKCORIJIM Glenn Stevenson Ms Shannon Brazil 7 59kg
4 PENGALAS GEE GEE John Luttrell David Pires 2 59kg
5 MISTER JOHN Royston Carr Stephen Maskiell 5 59kg
6 BARYSH QUEST Gary White Bulent Muhcu (a) 8 59kg
7 PRINCE OBAMA Jason Clifford Ms Sigrid Carr (a) 6 59kg
8 BISHOPS CASTLE (NZ) Michael Moroney Glen Boss 10 59kg
9 REBEL BRIDE Leon Wells Michael Walker 3 57kg
10 BLACK ’N’ TOUGH Leon Wells Brendon McCoull 11 57kg
11 RAYHAN Damien Williams Craig Williams 4 57kg

In the news:

Former Racing Queensland chairman Bob Bentley is among 10 people recommended to be referred to Australia’s corporate watchdog after an exhaustive three-month inquiry into the state’s racing industry.

Racing commissioner and retired Justice Margaret White delivered her 488-page report to Attorney General Jarrod Bleijie and Racing Minister Steve Dickson in Brisbane on Friday.

White found there were reasons to refer Bentley and former board members Bill Ludwig, Tony Hanmer, Bob Lette, Brad Ryan, Wayne Milner and Kerry Watson to the Australian Securities and Investment Commission (ASIC).

Employees Malcolm Tuttle, Paul Brennan and Sharna Reid were also recommended to be referred to the watchdog.

Bleijie said the report outlined a range of issues, including a “flat” and “unsatisfactory” management whose members “may also be found not to have acted in the best interests of the company”.

“It also found then chairman Bob Bentley ‘did not act with integrity’ at times and, along with board member Bill Ludwig, ‘compromised its ability to fulfil its functions in accordance with good corporate governance principles’,” Bleijie said.

“In addition, the report found senior officers and executives’ salaries went unchecked and contracts were awarded without due process.”

The inquiry was commissioned by the government in May and took more than 100 submissions with about 25 witnesses called to public hearings.

The hearings finished in October, but various witnesses were informed White had found adversely against them in some matters, which were not made public.

Those witnesses then provided additional statements for further consideration.

White’s brief was to look at wide-ranging aspects of Queensland’s strife-torn, multimillion dollar racing industry.

They included tender processes for various projects, aspects of the boards’ corporate governance, payouts given to four former Racing Queensland staff and the movement of $20 million from a racing development fund shortly before the 2012 state election.

She also examined dealings between Racing Queensland’s money gathering arm Product Co and Tatts Bet, which has had exclusive rights to gambling in Queensland.

White was assisted by leading Queensland barrister James Bell QC.

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