Weetwood Handicap nominations – 2017

View the nominations for the 2017 Weetwood Handicap. The Weetwood Handicap will be run on Saturday 8th April at Toowoomba racecourse.

Horse
1 AMEXED (NZ)
2 CANTBUYBETTER
3 CASUAL CHOICE
4 CHARGE MISSILE
5 CHOICE BRO
6 COL ’N’ LIL
7 DAISY DUKE
8 DIVINE CENTURI
9 DIVINE SERVICE
10 DOUBLE IMPACT
11 EMPHASIS
12 FALINO
13 FIERY HEIGHTS
14 GOOD JOB BRO
15 HARD STRIDE
16 HELAROCITY
17 HI I’M BACK
18 I’M ALONE
19 IN HIS STRIDE
20 JUMBO PRINCE
21 LAUTERBRUNNEN
22 LONDEHERO
23 LOVE AND LIES
24 LUCKY TOM
25 MAN OF DESTINY
26 MANA MANU
27 MOUNT NEBO
28 MR FAVULOUS
29 PINCH RIVER
30 POLSKIE PRINCE
31 PUNTA NORTE
32 QUATRONIC
33 ROCK ROYALTY
34 SHARPE HUSSLER
35 SIEGFRIED
36 SKYLIMIT
37 STEEL ZIP
38 TISANI TOMSO
39 TRUBIA
40 UNO BEST
41 UPSTART PRIDE

News:

Winx naturally caught the eye with a track gallop on day one of The Championship, yet for once the mighty mare was upstaged.

Ultimately, it was a history-making Chautauqua that captivated a crowd of more than 20,000 at Randwick on Saturday as he surged from dead last with 400m to travel to claim his third successive $2.5 million TJ Smith Stakes.

There were doubters – or, in co-trainer Wayne Hawkes words, “knockers” – who thought the world’s best sprinter might have been his prime when he finished third to Winx in the George Ryder Stakes on March 18.

That left the grey without a win in five starts since he claimed the $10 million Chairman’s Handicap (1200m) at Sha Tin almost a year ago – a statistic that became irrelevant once Tommy Berry worked Chautauqua into clear ground with just enough time to nab the Gai Waterhouse and Adrian Bott-trained English.

Chautauqua burst into the frame at the 50m mark and scored by a short neck, leaving all but the Hawkes brothers, Wayne and Michael, in disbelief.

“This horse defies everything. There were a lot of knockers. This horse is the king. He always has been,” said Wayne Hawkes after the six-year-old gelding banked $1.5 million to boost his earnings to $8.36 million and eclipse the legendary Black Caviar’s winnings.

“Hong Kong was special, last year here was special, this is special. For everyone who loves the horse, what a thrill.

“He was cool as a cucumber. He’s a rock star and owns the 1200 metres at Randwick.”

An unprecedented three-peat looked fanciful when Chautauqua was six lengths off the leaders with 600m remaining but Berry was happy to play a waiting game.

“I came up underneath them as I couldn’t come around them and win. Gee, once he got through he was so good.

“He’s incredible, isn’t he? I said to the doubters the whole way along: don’t worry about it, the Hawkes Team train him. They are freaks at what they do,” he said.

As he waited to embrace Berry, Wayne Hawkes paid tribute to his father, John, who had a bearing on the race strategy before Berry weaved his magic.

“(John) said to Michael: stay near the fence, stay near the fence, cut up the inside, don’t come to the outside. That was the difference between him winning and losing. Goes all right, that bloke on the couch.”

Meanwhile, despite leading until the shadow of the post, Blake Shinn was never complacent aboard English ($12 at Williamhill).

“You can never go the early crow when Chautauqua is in the race. I wasn’t going to do that today but I really felt all over a winner, all bar the post.

“Then out of nowhere the big grey came and got me.”

The Matt Dale-prepared Fell Swoop ($21) ran a game third, 1-1/4 lengths further back.

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