Walk The Pier primed to put luckless start behind for O’Shea-Charlton stable

Walk The Pier primed to put luckless start behind for O’Shea-Charlton stable
By Neil Evans

It’s been a testing and very patient ride for connections so far, but a promising colt is set to reignite the faith at the Kembla Grange meeting on Thursday.

Walk The Pier, a three-year-old in the John O’Shea and Tim Charlton stable at Randwick, lines up for only his second start in a strong Super Maiden Plate over 1400m, four weeks after a long-awaited and luckless debut at the same track.

Trainer John O’Shea.Credit: Getty Images

Well backed over 1300m, Walk The Pier settled last before rattling home to only miss by a long neck, and really should have won having been checked and pushed off the track halfway down the straight.

It was enough to suggest plenty of wins were in store for this big-striding colt who will no doubt peak when he gets up to a mile or even beyond.

The market, though, will likely have a big say, with the stable also accepting for debutant Mama Joy, a filly by prolific staying sire Dundeel which starts her career behind two easy trials.

Naturally, the three-year-old metro invasion doesn’t stop there.

The Chris Waller stable has progressive colt Secure engaged second-up, Overland is an each-way chance second-up for the Bryce Heys yard; well-bred Iconify has his second start for Ciaron Maher after an eye-catching debut at Hawkesbury; while Carnegie Hill is another each-way chance third-up for the Michael Freedman stable.

Walk The Pier is by the smart and still under-rated sire Alabama Express, which won the Group 1 C. F. Orr Stakes at Caulfield in 2020 during a brief eight-race career that yielded four wins.

It’s taken a while for his progeny to make waves, but they are now starting to have an impact on both sides of the Tasman.

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Out of the unraced Pierro mare Amazing Pier, Walk The Pier had been a slow work in progress for the stable, with his first trial way back in January as a two-year-old.

But connections quickly knew they had something to work with, Walk The Pier comfortably beating a smart trial field in good time over 789m.

He trialled OK a fortnight later before being spelled, then returned with two more easy and somewhat unflattering trials in winter.

He was then given more time to mature and grow, and finally returned with two more encouraging trials at Hawkesbury before that flashing run on debut.

Off that run, he opened a narrow $5.50 favourite in a wide-betting race, with five other runners also in early single figures.

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