Horse Racing
Season
Champion’s Way for Purton and Size

By David Morgan
20/02/2019 23:53

Zac Purton celebrates with fans after Champion’s Way’s victory.
Zac Purton celebrates with fans after Champion’s Way’s victory.

When Zac Purton walked Champion’s Way into gate two for the Class 4 Volunteers’ Challenge Cup Handicap (1200m) at Happy Valley tonight (Wednesday, 20 February) it was his first ride for John Size since a 13th of 14 finish back on 25 November.

That fact has everything to do with Joao Moreira who has enjoyed a slick run of form as Size’s stable jockey since his return to Hong Kong in early December.

But Purton had enjoyed five wins from 15 Size rides this term prior to that, and, with the Brazilian ace suspended, the champion trainer turned to the champion jockey to take the sit on one of the stable’s exciting young hopes.

“We’ve got a great record together so hopefully it stays that way,” Purton said after improving his season’s win strike rate on Size gallopers to an impressive 37% – dipping to 35% after Har Har Heart ran second for the pair in the finale. 

Champion’s Way, for his part, overcame immaturity to nail an impressive follow-up to his career debut success three weeks ago. The Hinchinbrook three-year-old quickened like a smart talent when the Australian switched him four deep out of the turn; the bay drifted inward, finding the rail’s comfort, and scored by two and a quarter lengths in 1m 09.28s.

“He caught me by surprise and he impressed me with his turn-of-foot and acceleration into the straight,” Purton said of the top-weight.

“After watching his first start he looked like he was off the bit all the way and he was similar in that regard early in the race; when they were trying to cross him he was reluctant to hold his position, he was a little bit unsure about where he was.”

Champion’s Way maintains his perfect record in the Volunteers’ Challenge Cup

The 1.4 favourite is clearly talented but raw.

“Once he got there he idled so I think there’s more to come and I think he’s a horse that will continue to improve as he goes along. In the last 100 metres he was easing himself up, so if he had something to chase he would have found more,” Purton said.

Champion’s Way completed a Purton double at mid-point on the eight-race card: the Danny Shum-trained Come On Wongchoy had already prevailed for the rider in race two, the Class 5 Fo Tan Handicap (1800m).

The in-form jockey, fresh from a Group 1double at Sha Tin on Sunday, made it a treble when the Ricky Yiu-trained Little Bird dueled hard for the lead and still had reserves to kick on down the straight for a two-length win in the Class 3 Tai Po Handicap (1000m). That was Purton’s 72nd win of the season.

No pressure

Merrygowin lands the Rotary Centenary Challenge Cup under Karis Teetan
Merrygowin lands the Rotary Centenary Challenge Cup under Karis Teetan

Paul O’Sullivan, meanwhile, landed only his eighth win of a difficult campaign when Merrygowin got the run of the race to capture the night’s second trophy contest, the Class 4 Rotary Centenary Challenge Cup Handicap (1650m).

But the handler is not one for feeling pressure’s pinch – “I’ve been here too long” – and believes he has plenty to look forward to in the coming months.

“I’ve got a lot of young horses about to step out and a few of them look alright, too,” the Kiwi said. 

“I predicted I was going to have a tough first half – not quite this tough – I looked at the horses and knew they had to come down the handicap before they could win. But I’m pretty happy with the young ones – it’s just a matter of being patient and keeping your head on your shoulders.”

Merrygowin (128lb) tracked the front-running Glory Star (119lb) and kicked on in the straight for a grinding win over the unfortunate runner-up Naboo Star (120lb) – Purton’s mount got tied up in traffic on the final turn but stormed to within half a length at the line.

“He’s an honest horse,” O’Sullivan said of the winner. “He ran well in Class 3 two starts back, he drew the gate tonight and things fell into his lap. He’s going to go back up to Class 3 and do his best.”

Karis Teetan drove the O’Sullivan gelding to victory and the Mauritian was busy again in the last contest, pushing vigorously to snag the Class 3 Tsuen Wan Handicap (1650m) on the Tony Millard-trained Arcada.

London Master and Neil Callan swoop by the Silvestre de Sousa-ridden Royal Chocolate
London Master and Neil Callan swoop by the Silvestre de Sousa-ridden Royal Chocolate

The David Ferraris-trained London Master nailed back-to-back wins under Neil Callan, driving wide in the home run to take race three.

Trendiful gave first-season handler Jimmy Ting his 26th win of the campaign in the Class 5 opener, with Vincent Ho the man in the plate.

Victor Wong has hit a rich vein of form and the seven-pound apprentice scored on the front-running Frankie Lor-trained sprinter Speed Vision in the Class 3 Sai Kung Handicap (1200m). 

Hong Kong racing continues at Sha Tin on Sunday, 24 February.