Kris Lees will have his bases covered for the first group race of the Sydney season, regardless of whether the forecast rain arrives.
Subscribe now for unlimited access.
$0/
(min cost $0)
or signup to continue reading
The Newcastle horseman, who finished last season as the leading trainer in NSW with 193 winners, has stable mainstay Le Romain and the emerging Special Reward in the group 2 Missile Stakes (1200 metres) at Rosehill on Saturday.
Showers are predicted in Sydney late this week and, while a heavy track will pose no problems for Le Romain, Lees is not so sure about Special Reward.
"He has terrific form on soft, although from his trials I would say he's not going to be good on heavy ground," Lees said. "I scratched him the other day with that testing track. It looks like that could come back in with the forecast.
"But he's had another trial since and this is a more suitable journey."
Le Romain will be bidding to win the Missile at his third attempt, having finished runner-up to stablemate Invincible Gem in 2017 and third to Godolphin mare Alizee 12 months ago.
Lees is adamant the eight-year-old still has something to offer and expects him to again be competitive fresh.
"As he's getting a bit older he probably takes a run or two but we should get a favourable track for him and he likes that type of ground," Lees said.
"He could easily run a race."
Mares have a superior recent record in the Missile winning four of the past six and they are again predicted to give Saturday's renewal a shake.
New Zealander Melody Belle is an early favourite while Godolphin mares Flit and Savatiano are at single-figure odds.
Melody Belle will need to pass a fitness test before she is cleared to run after trainer Jamie Richards advised stewards she was being treated for a rash on her chest.
She has not missed any work and Richards reports the mare is otherwise in good order.
A field of 13 has been accepted for the Missile with weights headed by Epsom Handicap winner Kolding, one of three runners for premier trainer Chris Waller who is chasing his first win in the race.
Meanwhile, NSW champion Andrew Gibbons believes But I Know can kick-start his season at the Coffs Harbour Cup meeting on Thursday.
The Thornton-based jockey claimed his maiden NSW title last week, riding 124 winners in the 2019-20 campaign to edge out Blaike McDougall (122.5).
The 42-year-old is yet to snare a win for the 2020-21 season, which started on Saturday, but he had strong chances with the Kris Lees-trained Top Prospect in the $150,000 cup and Snowzone in the Daniel Baker Sprint before both were scratched on Wednesday.
It left him with the Ross Stitt-trained But I Know in the opening race as his best chance.
"He's not a bad horse on his day," Gibbons said. "He seems to be mixing his form lately but early on he looked to be a handy horse. And two starts back he ran a ripper in the Mother's Gift, then it went to a Highway where it drew bad, raced back and never really got into the race."
He also has Rockin' Ruga and The Red One at the meeting.
While you're with us, did you know the Newcastle Herald offers breaking news alerts, daily email newsletters and more? Keep up to date with all the local news - sign up here
IN OTHER NEWS
- NRL: Knights coach declares Blake Green's mid-season signing a game changer
- NRL: Injured Best's date with destiny as Moga dropped for match against Tigers
- A-League: Jets sale talks not impacted as Mariners put on the market
- NNSW NPL: Broadmeadow keen to regain Majurovski's touch for Olympic derby
- Rugby Union: New No.10 to help Wildfires kick-start Shute Shield campaign