By Neil Evans
It might only be a provincial sprint at Benchmark 68 level, but the penultimate battle at Thursday’s feature Hawkesbury meeting threatens to be a race full of future form.
And it also promises to be the toughest and most open on the program with nearly 70 per cent of the field opening under $10.
Among a string of good value chances, the most scrutinised horse in the yard will be Godolphin three-year-old Selous who resumes for a second prep as a gelding off a 23-week break.
A powerful son of Caulfield Guineas winner Shooting To Win and out of an Octagonal mare, Selous was thrown into group 2 company last spring at only his third start after a dominant first-up maiden win at Goulburn.
But he failed to handle a very heavy track in the Roman Consul Stakes over 1200m, and finished tailed off.
The stable freshened him up and switched states to Flemington a month later, but again he failed to flatter from well back in the field.
Given time, and gelded before two steady open class metro trials, Selous can come back a much stronger galloper. But there’ll be little or no room for error over the short course at Hawkesbury on a likely Soft 6.
Heading a stack of rivals is tough Canberra six-year-old Washington Towers who is out to break a drought that stretches back nearly a year.
That said, Washington Towers still boasts a healthy near 30 per cent winning strike rate from 29 starts for trainer Todd Smart and a swarm of owners, and has gone under narrowly in his last two in Open and BM 88 country grade.
Back to his pet 1000m trip it’s a case of the more rain the better for this mudlark, with six of his eight wins coming on rain-affected ground.
But the rivalry doesn’t stop there. Both metropolitan-based and talented three-year-olds Yiska and Fast Response resume behind two trials; while another Godolphin runner, Lascars reloads off a month break and easy trial, with blinkers back on.
Best bets:
Race 2 (4) Lipscani
Race 6 (2) Good Lieutenant
Best value:
Race 7 (11) Super