Paul O’Sullivan lavished praise on veteran Harrier Jet after the nine-year-old again defied Father Time – and younger rivals – to land the second section of the Class 4 Morrison Handicap (1200m) for Purton.
Contesting his 72nd start in Hong Kong after competing in 10 races for Chris Waller in Australia – and winning three in 2014/15 – the Dane Shadow gelding showed he had lost none of his competitive zest by charging along the fence to down Fortune Carrier by a short head.
“He’s done a great job in Hong Kong, he’s been here seven years and a race hasn’t gone by where he hasn’t put in and he’s remained sound and enjoys the environment,” O’Sullivan said after Harrier Jet’s fifth win in the jurisdiction boosted his earnings to HK$7.947 million.
“He’s damn near 10-years-old and he got all the favours and just got up. We’re very pleased with him. It’s very satisfying with an old horse like that.
“It will certainly be his last race of the season, he’s owned in Beijing and I don’t know what they want to do. It’s fair to say there are more runs behind him than he’s got in front of him.
“If he was to come back next year, he’d have a pretty quiet season.
“You can walk in the box with him and he’s the kindest horse I’ve ever trained. He tries hard and remains sound, physically and mentally.”
Benno Yung attributed Amazing Rocky’s effortless victory in the Class 4 Jervois Handicap (1000m) to a perfect barrier (gate one) and another measured Purton ride.
“The barrier was really good and it worked out well,” Yung said. “He’ll probably go up to Class 3 now and have a chance.”
Joao Moreira solidified his grip on the jockeys’ championship by guiding Francis Lui’s Winning Volatility to victory in the Class 4 Wellington Handicap (1800m) before Derek Leung and Chris So combined with Goodluck Goodluck to land the second section of the Class 3 Cleverly Handicap (1200m) Handicap.
Hong Kong racing continues at Sha Tin on Sunday (6 June).