While Ohope Wins is also highly rated for the New Zealand Derby, co-trainer O’Sullivan is adamant the current focus is this weekend’s assignment.
“As always we’re treating it as one race at a time,” he said on Tuesday. “Any consideration for a Derby start will only come after we’ve discussed that with her connections and not until after Saturday.
“We’re very happy with how she came through that last run at Te Rapa and everything has gone to plan since.
“Joe Doyle came across to ride her in her main gallop this morning and she worked very well on the course proper. Clara Bow will be ridden by Warren Kennedy and she also worked well, as did Acer. All three fillies are very well.
“Erin Leighton, who rode Acer well when she won the fillies’ race at New Plymouth and had a close association with the stable when she was in Matamata, will ride her again.”
The stable’s star weight-for-age performer Waitak has not raced since his unplaced run in the Group 1 Zabeel Classic (2000m) on Boxing Day and has been freshened for the drop back in distance on the weekend.
“We made the decision to back off and freshen him up, after all he had already had a big year with more to come,” O’Sullivan said. “That way he would get the opportunity to perform up to his best in the last two.
“We’re very happy with him heading into the mile race, and that will work well for the step up to 2000 in the Bonecrusher Stakes.”
Yamato Satona will be out to enhance his New Zealand Derby prospects when he lines up in the Avondale Guineas off the back of late-finishing thirds in the Listed Gingernuts Salver (2100m) and Group 2 Waikato Guineas (2000m).
“Those were both very good runs and he’ll continue along that traditional Derby path on Saturday,” O’Sullivan said. “There’s still plenty of improvement in him and by the time he gets to his main target he won’t lack anything in fitness.
“Genki is still a maiden but we do like him as a stayer. But first he has to get a start on Saturday and try and qualify, otherwise he’ll go to Pukekohe next week for a last chance to make the field with a maiden win.”
L’Aigle Noire and Panther will both have blinkers added when they line up in Saturday’s Group 3 Uncle Remus Stakes (1400m), which for virtually all runners will be a final dress rehearsal for the NZB Kiwi (1500m) on Champions Day.
A win by either could well secure Wexford’s slot for the rich 3-year-old race. However, O’Sullivan is not getting ahead of himself.
“That was some run by Panther when he ran second at Ellerslie with nothing going his way and he’s coming to form at the right time,” he said.
“L’Aigle Noir had nothing go his way in his last run either, but his form before that was very good.
“They worked well together this morning and will go into Saturday sound and happy.
“We figure the addition of blinkers will sharpen them, so along with the rest of the team, it will be interesting to see how they go.”
– LOVERACING.NZ News Desk