Cambridge trainers Shaune Ritchie, Colm Murray and Andrew Forsman were all waiting on how their horses Mahrajaan and Positivity had recovered from injuries this week before deciding whether to take their place in the Melbourne Cup.
And champion Kaipaki jockey James McDonald, who rode his 100th group one winner on Via Sistina in the Cox Plate at Moonee Valley – and promptly got fined for his efforts – is hoping the speedy horse’s connections confirm entry into the Cup.
There has already been plenty of drama leading up to the $9 million race at Flemington Racecourse in Australia next Tuesday.
Ritchie and Murray scratched Mahrajaan from the rich Moonee Valley Gold Cup last week after a spider bit the thoroughbred at his Warrnambool base. Mahrajaan, who races under the United States flag, was left with a “leg that’s blown up”.
A scan confirmed it was not a ligament issue and “with all insect bites, they take a little bit of time to get the swelling out”.
Forsman scratched Positivity from the Caulfield Cup when she had bruising in a foot after an early morning gallop. She then came last at the weekend in the Moonee Valley Cup won by fellow Kiwi horse Sharp ‘N’ Smart.
McDonald, who is due to have his name added to Cambridge’s Walk of Fame after The News’ editor Roy Pilott nominated him, copped a $2000 fine for celebrating too early on seven year old Irish mare Via Sistina.
She was so far ahead – eight lengths, in what is traditionally a close appetiser to the Melbourne Cup – that McDonald had time to stand in the irons and pose for a photo before the finish line.
Four New Zealand horses were still in contention when the barrier draw was made on Tuesday. Positivity, Sharp ‘N’ Smart, Kovalica and Trust in You. There could have been a fifth – Mark Twain, trained in Cambridge by Roger James and Robert Wellwood – earned automatic qualification when he won the ballot exempt Listed Roy Higgins in Melbourne earlier this year. But he was ruled out in August of spring racing with a tendon strain.