Fresh Don Hugo has the right form for a Eureka win

05 September 2024 | RACING & SPORTS
Logo
Don Hugo.

Don Hugo. Photo by Club Menangle

Trainer Luke McCarthy’s decision to drive Don Hugo has added weight to the entire’s chances of winning this Saturday night’s TAB Eureka at Menangle.

The Eureka is the world's richest harness race and McCarthy's choice to take the seat behind Don Hugo over stablemate Eye Keep Smiling was the final piece of the jigsaw puzzle that has been this year's race.

The lead-up to the Eureka has involved plenty of intrigue as the line-up has gradually taken shape with a few substitutions along the way, the latest twist occurring earlier this week when Rising Sun winner Wisper A Secret was called in to the field as a late replacement for the ailing Fighter Command.

Don Hugo has form around the Queenslander, finishing a brave and luckless second to him in the G1 Rising Sun in July.

That was part of a successful Brisbane carnival that saw Don Hugo emerge as a real Eureka contender having last raced when beating older rivals from the back row in the Blacks A Fake consolation at Albion Park.

That victory was over 2680m so he is tough and he also owns a strong record at the 2300m distance of the Eureka, an important factor in a race where many of the combatants are more accomplished at the mile.

Don Hugo has been freshened since Brisbane but was kept ticking over with two trial wins.

He starts from closer to the outside of the line than the pegs but has the form to win if the breaks go his way.

Luck could also determine the fate of boom WA pacer Never Ending who will have to overcome the widest barrier in his bid for a successful raid on the Eureka.

Never Ending arrived in Sydney with a terrific strike rate and was a real eye-catcher in his first local appearance when also drawn the extreme outside, settling at the rear before steaming home for second against older rivals.

It's never an easy task to win from out there but the draw does give him time to balance up and he is a big talent so class could still get him home.

Sure Thing Captain gained his Eureka berth at the eleventh hour by winning at Menangle last week where he led and kicked on strongly.

More pressure is likely in the Eureka but he is the lowest drawn of the four-year-old males and can push forward again so could prove hard to catch.

Wisper A Secret draws on his outside and it is a barrier that gives him every chance to take advantage of his late call-up.

The preferential barrier draw conditions of the Eureka mean the two mares Eye Keep Smiling and Major Delight should both secure soft runs in their attempt to follow in the footsteps of inaugural Eureka winner Encipher.

Both mares are highly-accomplished multiple Group 1 winners with good strike rates and Eye Keep Smiling in particular owns a strong record at this distance so both are prospects for a top-three finish.

Some of the country's top milers will do battle in the night's other feature, the Group 1 Len Smith Mile.

The race has drawn together a stacked field of accomplished pacers from multiple states and the race promises to be an interesting betting affair.

Major Moth holds early favouritism after drawing the coveted inside draw.

The six-year-old has won all three starts since joining Jason Grimson for this campaign, making a successful first visit to Menangle last start where he led from wider and kept going to score by 3.7m.

His three wins this prep have all been over further so the drop back to the mile is a new challenge but he did win his only attempt at it and possesses the gate speed to take advantage of the inside draw.

Last week's resuming winner Speak The Truth looks a betting prospect as he has the statistics to suggest the Len Smith Mile is a winnable race for him.

Speak The Truth has raced at this circuit and distance four times for three wins and a Miracle Mile placing and flies second-up with four wins and a placing from five attempts so should be improved.

Catch A Wave is a previous Miracle Mile winner over the distance at Menangle and showed good improvement in the last-start second at Melton.

He has won four of six third-up attempts so should be ready to peak.

Better Eclipse will have to overcome a wide draw but looks to have returned in terrific order having come from the back row to beat Catch A Wave in his resuming win while Mach Dan goes well at the mile and must be respected off back-to-back Melton wins.

Listen to the Racing & Sports TAB Eureka Podcast below:

Racing & Sports Podcasts · The TAB Eureka Podcast

 

Related News

16 September 2024
Davis with 18 reasons to celebrate
Concession driver Brodie Davis capped off a big weekend when driving Tambros Tilly ($3.20) to victory in the opening race in Launceston on Sunday night. Davis, who celebrated his 18th birthday only 48 hours prior, had the three-year-old daughter of Bling It On positioned three-back the pegs from the...
16 September 2024
Dashman's harness examination - September 16
Catch up on the week's harness racing action in our weekly review, thanks to Darren Clayton. CAIN PLANE ON GRASS RUNWAY With seven drives on the eight race card at Kilcoy, Sunday afternoon proved to be a picnic on the grass for driver Leonard Cain. Cain was the runner-up on three occasions, secured...
16 September 2024
A guardian angel and hard work helps McCloy prove a point
On the surface the winning column of Katie McCloy’s training record showed one start for one win, but digging beneath the surface is a story laden with decades of hard work and a guardian angel watching over. The night Talknplay took out the Hunter Rural four-year-old and older maiden pace at Shepparton...
16 September 2024
Hamilton: Why Kilmore could shape a NZ raid for the Vics
It is quite fitting Friday week’s Kilmore Cup meeting will help shape the strength of the Victorian raid on New Zealand’s most prestigious trotting race, the $400,000 Dominion Trot. CLICK HERE TO READ THE FULL COLUMN AT THETROTS.COM.AU
16 September 2024
Barker's night to remember with double Group 1 delight
Heading into Saturday night’s Vicbred Super Series Finals night young reinswoman Jackie Barker was yet to taste Group 1 success in her 501-win career. The 28-year-old Barker left the course a dual Group 1 winner!
Click for more