It’s Show Day with four Group1s at Addington

It’s Show Day and that means four Group 1s and two $500,000 slot races at Addington Raceway.

Can Merlin win the New Zealand Pacing Free For All again against Leap To Fame and co and who will prevail in the battle of the three-year-olds – will be it Marketplace or Got The Chocolates?

Butcher with key Show Day drives  

By Michael Guerin

Leading New Zealand driver Zachary Butcher says the hard edge the Australians are bringing to Cup week at Addington could actually help him today.

Today’s Show Day twilight meeting features six black type races including the superstars of pacing and trotting backing up from the New Zealand Cup and Dominion on Tuesday into their respective Free-For-Alls.

But the meeting also boasts the two $500,000 slot races and two major juvenile events and Butcher will find himself starting on the back foot in a few of them.

He partners defending champion Merlin (R12, No.10) in the $200,000 Allied Security Pacing Free-For-All, in which he is the only horse drawn on the second line, while favourite Meant To Be starts on the unruly, the outside of the second line, in the $500,000 Majestic Horsefloats THE ASCENT. 

Which is where Butcher hopes the aggression the Australians have shown dominating this week so far actually plays into his hands.

“They have really made Cup week, even though I’d like to see the Kiwis winning a few more races,” says Butcher.

“It has made the racing harder to predict and rather than sometimes here when you think you know your opposition or what the driver may do, it has been more unpredictable.

“I reckon for a horse like Meant To Be that could be a real factor and maybe even a positive.

“In a lot of his races here he has been able to work and get parked or lead and still be too good but that might not be the case this time.

“But that could work in his favour. We have had to be really aggressive on him sometimes but I think he could be potent driven for one run.

“If a couple of those horses up front get rolling like the Aussies can I think he could sit off then, get into a nice rhythm and show some real speed at the end.”

Meant To Be has the motor to overpower his local rivals but the two Australians in the three-year-old trot, Gatesys Gem and Tracy The Jet, are both high class fillies.

On their recent Victorian form Tracy The Jet is going to be awfully hard to run down if she leads.

Merlin bounced out of the New Zealand Cup to win the Free-For-All sitting parked last year but Butcher says that won’t be happening from one on the second line tonight.

“I was stoked with him in the Cup and we know he loves the short course racing but from one on the second line I will have a decision to make,” says Butcher.

“There is a lot of gate speed from the really good horses out wide and if they come straight across one of them will likely lead and I am not sure we can run them down from three or four back on the markers.

“But if they go hard then we might get a shot at them late.”

Leap To Fame is favourite even from barrier 8 as he was enormous in Tuesday’s Cup even after sitting parked and of course his conqueror then Kingman isn’t in today’s field.

Much like in the Cup, Leap To Fame’s chances could be determined by what Republican Party does inside him.

If Republican Party leads again and stays there Leap To Fame can still win but becomes vulnerable again whereas is Leap To Fame rolls to the front early it is hard to imagine him being attacked and he should win.

Butcher partners Greased Lightnin in the $500,000 Velocity for three-year-old pacers as he tries to defend the title trainers Barry Purdon and Scott Phelan, with Butcher in the sulky, won with Better Knuckle Up last season.

“I have a good horse with an okay draw but we all know how well Got The Chocolates and Marketplace have been racing,” says Butcher.

“The race shape will come down to whether Marketplace wants to stay in front or hand to Got The Chocolates but I think rather than burning early and undoing my horse I am better floating across to parked, hopefully taking a sit on Got The Chocolates and getting the last shot at them.”

Butcher has his own mare Mantra Blue (R8, No.8) in the Bob McArdle Classic, a race he’d love to win because of a close family connection while he finally gets a good draw with the talented War Cry (R9, No.2) in the Dunstan Sires’ Stakes Final.

It’s Marketplace vs Got The Chocolates again in THE VELOCITY 

By Michael Guerin

Marketplace has been woken up for the richest race of his career at Addington tonight.

The glamour boy of our classic pacing crop has a few dents in his crown after arch rival Got The Chocolates has beaten him in their last two clashes, once when Marketplace trailed him but more painfully when Got The Chocolates sat parked outside him at Ashburton last start.

“Got The Chocolates was awesome last start and I didn’t think he could do that,” says Marketplace’s trainer Regan Todd.

“I don’t think our horse is going any worse but Got The Chocolates has improved and the gap has closed.”

So Todd has reached for the turbo buttons by applying blinkers to Marketplace for today’s $500,000 slot race the Hill, Lee and Scott THE VELOCITY as well as removing his usual earplugs.

“We think that will get him keener and we think he can handle that because he is such a laid-back horse.

“I’d like to think it will have him up and running early and keep him keen.”

While that could raise concerns for some horses about them over-racing the reality is today’s sprint trip is likely to be run hard anyway so Marketplace will be close enough to his top end of his cruising speed for much of the race.

“It is all about the next two weeks now,” says Todd.

“This race and the Derby next week are what he has been set for and I think we have him peaking.”

As talented as Marketplace is, Got The Chocolates has gone to another level and he can still win even though he is likely to have to sit parked.

One way or the other we should know who New Zealand’s best three-year-old pacer is by 7.45pm tonight.
 

 

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