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Home / Whanganui Chronicle

Whanganui farmer Raymond Connors wins sixth Great Northern Steeplechase

By Iain Hyndman
Sport Reporter·Whanganui Chronicle·
10 Sep, 2019 05:00 PM3 mins to read

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Wise Men Say clears a fence in effortless fashion on his way to victory in the Great Northern Steeplechase at Ellerslie. Photo / Trish Dunell

Wise Men Say clears a fence in effortless fashion on his way to victory in the Great Northern Steeplechase at Ellerslie. Photo / Trish Dunell

Whanganui dairy farmer Raymond Connors has done the unthinkable in winning his sixth Great Northern Steeplechase run on the hallowed turf at Ellerslie.

Wise Men Say added his name to the Ellerslie record books when he took out one of the world's iconic jumping races, the Network Visuals Great Northern Steeplechase (6400m), for the second time on Saturday. The Great Northern is the Holy Grail of New Zealand jumps racing.

The 10-year-old, which had won the race in 2017, adopted tearaway tactics as he led from go to whoa to defy his rivals under the urgings of rider Shaun Fannin.

The pair gave a faultless display of jumping in front throughout after taking command at the first fence of the 6400m journey. Coming down the famed Ellerslie hill for the third and final time Wise Men Say had an eight-length advantage on his nearest pursuer, Crash Bandicoot, with the rest of the field chasing hard a further 10 lengths away.

The Yamanin Vital gelding jumped the last neatly and slogged his way home over the final 250m to win by a rapidly diminishing one and a half-length margin from rank outsider Kings Kite who charged home to claim second from the tiring Crash Bandicoot and race favourite Lacustre.

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The first three home are trained in the greater Whanganui region with Kings Kite prepared in Marton by Stephen Beatson and part-owned by Whangaehu dairy farmer Michael O'Leary and Crash Bandicoot trained by Kevin Myers and owned by Jo Rathbone, Simon Harrison and David Macnab who all enjoyed the experience of making history in Australia when their other galloper Tallyho Twinkletoe won the Australian Grand National Hurdle-Steeplechase double.

Connors races the majority of his horses with father Mark Connors. The pair combined to also produce Hypnotize to with the northern three times (2010, 2008, 2007) and Our Jonty to claim the race in 1998 when Raymond Connors rode as an amateur jockey.

"It was a 10 out of 10 ride," trainer Raymond Connors said of Fannin's handling of Wise Men Say on Saturday.

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"I told him to ride him handy but I wasn't expecting that to be honest. This race suits him, it's tailor-made as he is a true stayer."

Fannin was happy to take control of the race after following his instructions from Connors.

"I was just happy to have him up there as there looked no speed in the race on paper," Fannin said.

"He was happy in his action out in front, jumping nicely and he is a very dour stayer so it was catch me if you can.

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"He was really relaxed and I didn't think I was going too hard. I gave him a squeeze coming down the hill and he quickened nicely.

"I know how tough he is as he had already won it two years ago so I wasn't going to sit around at that stage and he proved too tough at the finish.

"I'm two from two on the horse now so I have a big thank you to say to Mark."

Fannin went close to scoring a coveted double on the day after being narrowly beaten on Laekeeper in the other feature jumping event, the Boutique Body Corporates Great Northern Hurdle (4190m).

Ironically, Fannin was beaten to the punch in the Great Northern Hurdle when outstayed by Bad Boy Brown trained by Harvey Wilson and ridden by fellow Waverley farmer Isaac Lupton. Lupton is stable rider for Connors and elected to ride Max for his mate in the Great Northern Steeplechase finishing down the track.

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