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The many State of Origin lives of New South Wales halfback Nathan Cleary

The many State of Origin lives of New South Wales halfback Nathan Cleary

As the weather gets colder and the battle between New South Wales and Queensland heats up, you can bet your last dollar Nathan Cleary is set for another run in the State of Origin discourse machine.
If it feels like an annual tradition at this point, that's because it is — and given he started so young, it's hard to think of Cleary as a veteran, even though at just 27, his time served says that's exactly what he is.
His NRL debut was almost 10 seasons ago to the week, which is long enough to see a generation of players come and go. With news coming through on Origin eve that Bryce Cartwright was leaving Parramatta, just eight of the 33 other players who took the field in Cleary's first NRL game are still in the league.
Cleary is level with Latrell Mitchell and Angus Crichton as the state's longest-serving player and level with Crichton and Isaah Yeo as the side's most capped current player.
On Wednesday night, he will draw level with Andrew Johns and Mitchell Pearce with 16 caps at halfback for New South Wales, the most of any player in Blues history.
He has been around long enough at there is little that has not already been said about Nathan Cleary in Origin football and little he has not been.
There were the early years, where he rode shotgun to James Maloney as the junior partner in the halves combination for two series that, given what's happened since, seem like they're from a different player in a different life even if a few old feelings returned for Cleary ahead of Game I, which marked his first Origin match in two years.
"It comes with more expectations now, with the standing in the game and the amount of games I've played," Cleary said.
"But I'm in a position to play my best footy, I had a very simplified role (back then) and contributed where I could. It's the same now, I want to do my role and my best for the team, but it's having a greater influence on what we're able to do.
"Coming back I have a lot more confidence in my own ability and what I'm able to do. But I was definitely still nervous, I felt like the new kid at school and even coming into the game I was quite nervous."
It's hard to see the arc of history when you're in the middle of it, but it's worth remembering how much had changed for Cleary in his two years between Origin appearances.
From the 2023 series opener to the 2025 equivalent, Penrith won two more premierships and Cleary played what might always be the greatest 20 minutes of football in his entire life.
He cannot be the same player, because too much has happened to him, but Cleary's performance at Lang Park fits in well with his middle years of Origin football, which have happened as he was building that legacy with Penrith which is as towering as it is undeniable.
His form for New South Wales from 2020, the year everything changed, is harder to parse because there is enough of everything to twist reality into anything you want it to be.
His exemplary play in the 2021 series, where he helped steer the Blues to two of the most dominant wins in Origin history, is offset by the series losses in 2020 and 2022, which is then complicated given Cleary was a deserving choice for man of the match in each of New South Wales wins in those series, which came by near record margins, and around and around it goes because in Origin more than anywhere else in rugby league, we turn a team game into an individual sport.
Likewise, his efforts in Game I proved a lightning rod. He played a role in each of New South Wales' four tries, straightening the attack particularly well for Brian To'o's try and Zac Lomax's second score and he ran the ball directly and well.
Of all the things to come under the microscope, goalkicking would have been the least likely — Cleary is literally the most accurate kicker in first-grade history — but it did after he went one from four from the tee. He couldn't sleep afterwards thinking about it.
That game, like Cleary's Origin journey as a whole, does not fit neatly into the boxes we make for our interstate heroes. None of them really do, until we retrofit it after the fact to flatten out and simplify their greatness, sanding out the rough edges and fine details so it fits more neatly into our memories.
Johns is the best playmaker the Blues have ever had but he did not start at halfback for all three games of a winning series until eight years after his Origin debut. Peter Sterling has the most man-of-the-match awards of any player in New South Wales history and he only won a single series.
Ricky Stuart, who is currently tied with Cleary for most matches won as a Blues halfback (they're also the only two Blues halfbacks to play more than 10 games and have a winning record), had an Origin career that only lasted five years due to the Super League war.
Laurie Daley and Brett Kenny, who both have a claim to be the best player New South Wales ever had, were only judged best on ground in an Origin game once each.
None of this denigrates their legacies — if anything, it enhances them because it creates a fuller, truer picture and because peaks are made more towering by the valleys from which they rise. Ask for perfection, even from your memories, and you're asking to be let down.
Cleary would never ask to be put in the company of those legends. That would tempt a terrible fate. But by the virtue of his accomplishments, and the fact he could have another five series or more to play if injury permits, means that is what he'll be measured against, for better and for worse.
That's why his part in this side is changing and why, if the Blues can wrap up the series on Wednesday night in Perth, it could mark the beginning of a third and final stage of Cleary's Origin career, one which could have the longest of tails.
A halfback must always be a leader — Cleary was first made vice-captain of the Blues when he was just 22- but that's not the same as being a senior player. He is a young veteran, but a veteran all the same and that changes things. There is less to prove even if there's more to do.
It's a transition Cleary began with Penrith this year and one he's trying to bring to Origin with a slightly different bent. At the Panthers, he is mentoring players who grew up watching him but for New South Wales he is tasked with leading other leaders.
"I've been challenged as a leader (for Penrith), trying to get around younger guys and inexperienced guys to help them get the best out of themselves but also for them to feel confidence and not that they have to fill the jersey of guys like Jarome Luai and James Fisher-Harris," Cleary said.
"As much as the start of the year has been a bit of a challenge I really do believe it's going to benefit me in the future with leadership and the way I play.
"You come in here and you're surrounded by guys who are experienced at NRL level but Origin is a different arena.
"They all bring their own leadership qualities, it's nice to rub shoulders with leaders at other clubs and understand their ideologies and combine to be a greater force."
Cleary's certainty there are still changes to come for his game, things he can learn and improve on and implement at all levels, is striking.
The greatest football careers are never completed — they are abandoned. The best players never feel as though they are fully formed even if they seem it to the outside.
There is no finished product for Cleary, no endpoint on the winding path he started almost ten years ago now.
That thinking has carried him through the ups and downs of Origin for the past seven years and as a new era potentially dawns for him in sky blue it will do the same for some time to come.

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British and Irish Lions lose 28-24 to Argentina in Dublin ahead of Australia tour
British and Irish Lions lose 28-24 to Argentina in Dublin ahead of Australia tour

ABC News

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  • ABC News

British and Irish Lions lose 28-24 to Argentina in Dublin ahead of Australia tour

The British and Irish Lions of 2025 have had an inauspicious start to their tour of Australia, losing 28-24 to Argentina at a raucous Aviva stadium in Dublin. It is the first time that the Lions have lost an opening tour match since 1971 and 20 years since Argentina drew with the Lions in Cardiff. First-half tries to Ignacio Mendy and player of the match Tomás Albornoz gave Argentina a 21-10 lead at half-time, local favourite Bundee Aki crossing for the Lions in a sloppy defensive display. But after that disappointing first half the contest developed into a thrilling game in which both teams threw the ball around with the apparent abandon of a post-season friendly. The Lions hit back early in the second half through a penalty try and a Tadhg Beirne score to give the hosts the lead. But a trilling score by Santiago Cordero saw the Lions fall to a deflating defeat as the Pumas celebrated in style on the pitch and reminded the Lions hierarchy that perhaps South America too would one day be a worthy tour destination. The Lions rarely play matches on home soil and, in the bright sunshine of a summer Friday night in Dublin, there was a degree of frivolity in the sold-out stands far from the pressure cooker of a Test match — albeit one where the Lions were not handing out official Test caps. Any suggestion that this was a fun kickabout in the Dublin sun was dispelled by the stern words that veteran tourists Maro Itoje and Elliot Daly imparted in the post-match huddle. No doubt those conversations will continue on the plane Down Under, with the squad departing for Australia on Saturday morning. "I think there are a few learnings. I think we showed glimmers of what this team can be about," Itoje said post-match. "I think there were a few teething issues, [it was] our first run out. "We'll take our lessons … we'll learn from our mistakes and move forward." Many of those teething issues came at the lineout, where the Lions were awful, and in defence, where Argentina's pacing attack tore the line to shreds. This is not the first-choice Lions team that will likely suit up in Brisbane on July 19 — just three Irish players made the starting XV due to the Leinster contingent's participation in the United Rugby Championship final last weekend. But it was still an all-star-packed side that will have been chastened by the enthusiasm and skill of the Argentina side, who were missing plenty of players themselves, in front of them. "We're building a team," Itoje added. "We were nowhere near as consistent or accurate. "We'll learn, we'll get better." Despite the defeat, that improvement was evident as the game went on. The Lions offered a glimpse of how Farrell wants his side to play and, against a ready and willing Argentine side that have claimed the scalps of all three southern hemisphere giants in the past 12 months, they showed glimmers of real class. The scrum was utterly dominant — even with Irish pair Andrew Porter and Tadhg Furlong not involved — as Ellis Genge showed all his power. It also indicated some combinations that Farrell may be interested in using, including a power-packed centre partnership of Aki and Sione Tuipulotu. Fin Smith started at 10 but Marcus Smith, playing 15, popped up at first receiver with abandon in the latter stages of the match, flashing his fast feet and poking his nose through the line with increasing regularity. That being said, both were overshadowed by the superb play of Benneton flyhalf Albornoz. The polish may not have been there from the Lions, but the speed at which they attempted to play was indicative of the assault the Wallabies line will be under whenever they are without the ball — this Lions team will be coming to entertain as well as win. Winger Tommy Freeman in particular was supreme in the air, a warning to avoid kicking in his direction should he make the cut for the test team. But the pack, admittedly shorn of many of its key personnel, will need to step up — particularly in the lineout, which was desperately poor. The Lions will have precious little time to regroup, with post-match briefings perhaps taking place on the long flight Down Under this weekend. The nine-match tour, with three Tests and six tour matches, kicks off in Perth on Saturday, June 28 against the Western Force, where the Lions will no doubt be desperate to kick off their tour proper with a win. British and Irish Lions: Marcus Smith; Tommy Freeman, Sione Tuipulotu, Bundee Aki, Duhan van der Merwe; Fin Smith, Alex Mitchell; Ellis Genge, Luke Cowan-Dickie, Finlay Bealham, Maro Itoje (c), Tadhg Beirne, Tom Curry, Jac Morgan, Ben Earl. Replacements: Ronan Kelleher, Pierre Schoeman, Tadhg Furlong, Scott Cummings, Henry Pollock, Tomos Williams, Elliot Daly, Mack Hansen. Argentina: Santiago Carreras; Rodrigo Isgró, Lucio Cinti, Justo Piccardo, Ignacio Mendy; Tomás Albornoz, Gonzalo Garcia; Mayco Vivas, Julián Montoya (c), Joel Sclavi, Franco Molina, Pedro Rubiolo, Pablo Matera, Juan Martin González, Joaquín Oviedo, Replacements: Bautista Bernasconi, Boris Wenger, Francisco Coria Marchetti, Santiago Grondona, Joaquín Moro, Simon Benitez Cruz, Matías Moroni, Santiago Cordero.

The Last Say: Tips, market movers and inside mail for Saturday's racing on June 21, 2025
The Last Say: Tips, market movers and inside mail for Saturday's racing on June 21, 2025

News.com.au

time2 hours ago

  • News.com.au

The Last Say: Tips, market movers and inside mail for Saturday's racing on June 21, 2025

Headley Grange has been confidently backed to win the Listed $200,000 Civic Stakes (1400m) at Royal Randwick and Warnie has attracted heavy market support for the Listed $200,000 Eye Liner Stakes (1350m) at Ipswich on Saturday. The Joe Pride -trained Headley Grange, an impressive first-up winner at Randwick two weeks ago, has firmed from $4.60 to $3 favouritism with TAB Fixed Odds while his odds with Ladbrokes have been slashed from $4.50 to $2.90 including bets of $500 at $4.40 and $1000 at $3.10. Warnie, trained by Ciaron Maher, has been a big mover with Ladbrokes punters backing the sprinter from $3.20 to $2.60 favouritism after bets of $900 at $3.20, $1000 at $3.10, $1000 at $3.05, $1000 at $2.90, $2000 and $1000 at $2.85, $1100 and $750 at $2.80 and $780 at $2.70. But this betting plunge pales in comparison with the sheer weight of money invested on Splash Back in the Brian Beattie Handicap (1420m) at Flemington. Grahame Begg 's promising mare has firmed from $2.70 into $1.80 favouritism after Ladbrokes took a string of big bets including six bets of $1180 and four bets of $1000 at $2.70, four bets of $1670 plus $1600, $1100 and four $1000 bets at $2.20, and a $2000 wager at $1.85. The Ladbrokes betting plunge for Godolphin two-year-old Observer in the Flemington opener, the TAB We're On (1420m) has also been significant as he's firmed from $2.15 into $1.60 with some big bets including $1750 twice and $1700 at $2.15, $1570 and six $1000 bets at $2, $2100 twice, $2000 and $1800 at $1.95 and $2100 at $1.80. England's famous Royal Ascot carnival finishes tonight with plenty of Australian interest in Storm Boy who runs in the Group 1 Queen Elizabeth II Jubilee Stakes (1200m). There has been a confident push from Coolmore that crack colt Storm Boy will bounce back to his best with the three-year-old expected to challenge French raider and Golden Eagle runner-up Lazzat for favouritism. Storm Boy is currently at $5.50 with Lazzat heading betting at $3.60. â– â– â– â– â– ROYAL RANDWICK Weather: Cool, mostly sunny day and a forecast top temperature of 18c. Track: Soft (5). Rail: 3m out. FLEMINGTON Weather: Cold, most sunny day with a forecast top temperature of 15c. Track: Good (4). Rail: 11m out. IPSWICH Weather: Warm, sunny day with light winds and a forecast top temperature of 25c. Track: Good (4). Rail: 0.5m out. MORPHETTVILLE Weather: Cool, mostly sunny day with a forecast top temperature of 19c. Track: Soft (6). Rail: 13m out from 1200m to the winning post. "He could well go to another level. I figure he has a ceiling there somewhere." Civic Stakes favourite Headley Grange can scale new heights at Royal Randwick on Saturday. @PrideRacing — Racenet (@RacenetTweets) June 20, 2025 • â– â– â– â– â– BE WARY: Royal Randwick is rated a soft 5 and likely to move into the good range at some stage during the meeting. The rail is out 3m but the track should race fairly. Flemington's into the good range for winter racing but the rail is out 11m. Watch for any discernible track bias in early races. Ipswich's rail is out half a metre with the track in the good range for Cup Day and the likelihood the track will race evenly. 'AS A PARTY, IT STANDS ALONE' @IpswichTurfClub and @Racing_QLD officials expect a bumper crowd of more than 12,000 people at Saturday's iconic Ipswich Cup meeting, which last year was almost lost due to a grandstand fire. Story: @bendorries76 ðŸ'‡ — Racenet (@RacenetTweets) June 20, 2025 â– â– â– â– â– ROYAL RANDWICK TIPS BEST BET: Race 3 No.4 BRAVE ONE was a $300,000 Easter Yearling Sale purchase who has only had five starts for a debut Randwick win last July and two recent second placings at Canterbury and Rosehill since resuming. Promising three-year-old who didn't shirk his task when second to a smart older horse in Kerguelen last start. Brave One has drawn a little awkwardly but Team Hawkes has found the right race for him and with even luck in running he's going to be very hard to beat. Kerguelen gives @JamesCummings88 and @KPMcEvoy a Rosehill double! ðŸ'° @godolphin | @aus_turf_club — SKY Racing (@SkyRacingAU) May 31, 2025 THE NEXT BEST: Race 2 No.1 SHROPSHIRE LAD came off a brilliant first-up win at Scone with an unlucky second to Bengal in a Randwick Highway over 1100m. He was three-wide albeit with cover most of the way loomed up to win only to be edged out by a narrow margin. Drawn wide again and will need things to go his way but he's at his peak after two runs from a spell and finds himself in a winnable race. Bengal hangs on in the TAB Highway for Luke Pepper and @brodie_loy ðŸ'° @aus_turf_club — SKY Racing (@SkyRacingAU) June 7, 2025 VALUE BET: Race 1 No.6 HOOLIGAN TOMMY has returned in good order this campaign with two wins and two placings from five starts. He comes to Randwick off a career-best effort at Kembla Grange where he gapped his rivals, winning by a widening margin of more than three lengths when shouldering 60.5kg in heavy going. Hooligan Tommy drops 2.5kg, gets onto a more suitable firmer track and he's at value odds near $8. Hooligan Tommy Kembla Grange win on the 31st May 2025 Congratulations to all connections — John Sargent (@jsargentracing) June 2, 2025 THE WHISPER: Race 9 No.13 HEADLEY GRANGE was resuming over the Randwick 1300m two weeks ago and was held up for a run from the top of the straight until the 200m when he gained a split and sprinted through for a brilliant first-up win. Headley Grange's final 200m split of 11.59s was the best of the day. Headley Grange goes out to 1400m for the Civic Sakes which is his best distance. The drying track conditions are in his favour, he hasn't missed a top two finish in eight starts, winning four, and he has drawn perfectly in barrier four. He ticks all the boxes. Headley Grange wins first up to give @PrideRacing a Randwick double! 🙌 @aus_turf_club — SKY Racing (@SkyRacingAU) June 7, 2025 â– â– â– â– â– FLEMINGTON TIPS BEST BET: Race 1 No.2 OBSERVER shaped promisingly on debut when he for home before finishing a close second at Pakenham but made significant improvement going out to 1400m at Sandown at start when he led throughout and bolted in by five lengths. Godolphin has unearthed a promising rising three-year-old in Observer who can get favourite backers off to a winning start. Observer makes an absolute mess of his opposition to break his maiden in dominant style 😤 @godolphin — (@Racing) June 4, 2025 NEXT BEST: Race 7 No.6 SPLASH BACK was dynamic first-up at Caulfield, coming from off speed early with a brilliant burst of acceleration to seep clear of her rivals and win by a widening margin of more than two lengths. Her sectional times were very impressive as she improved her record to five wins from just 11 starts. She's been sensationally backed to win again. The well-supported Splash Back pins the ears back & storms away to win first-up after a long spell ðŸ'¥ @Grahame_Begg — (@Racing) May 31, 2025 VALUE BET: Race 6 No.5 BOLD SOUL won three stakes races including the Tasmanian Derby last season but struggled to regain top form over summer. There has been more encouraging signs from Bold Soul this campaign as he has improved in each of his four starts including a narrow loss to Muktamil over this course and distance last start. He's ready to win. Muktamil thrives on the mile & a half test, throwing himself over the line under @daniel_moor 🙌 @busuttin — (@Racing) June 7, 2025 THE WHISPER: Race 9 No.9 FIELDELO is protecting her unbeaten record here. She won at Kilmore last November when making her debut and then resumed at Bendigo when she carried 62.5kg but toyed with her rivals, winning by seven lengths in fast time. She looks a talent and there is plenty of market confidence to suggest she will maintain her perfect race record. Fieldelo wins like a classy horse on debut for @TLakeRacing & @JyeMcNeil ðŸ¤� — (@Racing) November 24, 2024 • â– â– â– â– â– TAB FIXED ODDS BIG BETS AND MARKET MOVERS – ROYAL RANDWICK Race 1: Callistemon $6-$4.20, Piraeus $8.50-$4.60 Race 2: Shropshire Lad $5-$4.80, Satin Stiletto $8-$5.50 Race 3: Lunaite $5.50-$4.60, Bengal $21-$12 Race 4: Millie De Lune $4-$3.80, Piggyback $8-$6 Race 5: Hopper $8-$5, Rotagilla $11-$5.50 Race 6: Quantum Cat $4.60-$3.10, Zaphod $5-$3.20 Race 7: Storm The Ramparts $3.80-$3.50, Gitalong $4.80-$4 Race 8: Raikkonen $3.40-$3, Fiddlers Green $11-$7.50 Race 9: Headley Grange $4.60-$3, Grebeni $19-$10 Race 10: Fully Lit $19-$7, Pereille $16-$9.50 'THAT IS A GREAT RECIPE' Trainer @JamesCummings88 is cooking up a Randwick rout, with four top chances in the closing event on Saturday. But there's one of the quartet he is particularly confident in. Story: @RayThomas_1 ðŸ'‡ — Racenet (@RacenetTweets) June 20, 2025 LADBROKE BIG BETS AND MARKET MOVERS – ROYAL RANDWICK Race 1: Hellfire Express $1000 at $5.50, Aix En Provence $500 at $9.25, Callistemon $6-$3.90 after a $400 wager at $6 Race 2: Satin Stilleto $7.50-$6.50 after a $300 bet at $7.50, Exit Fee $600 at $5.15 Race 3: Zielle $71-$41 Race 4: She's Unusual $23-$6.50 with a bet of $500 at $7 Race 5: Hopper $8.50-$5, Rotagilla $15-$5 with bets of $140 at $15, $625/ $1000 at $9.75/$3.10, Stallone $27-$15 Race 6: Zaphod $4.80-$3.20 after a bet of $530 at $4.80, Race 7: Lulumon $15-$8.50 with a bet of $145 at $15 Race 8: Raikkonen $3.20-$3.50-$3.10 after bets of $800 at $3.50, $650 and $500 at $3.30, $910 at $3.20, Fiddler's Green $12-$7.50 Race 9: Headley Grange $4.50-$2.90 after bets of $500 at $4.40, $1000 at $3.10 Race 10: Accredited $500 at $9.75, $500 at $8.75, $1000 at $8, Kerguelen $3-$3.50-$2.80 He’s been racing consistently without winning this preparation but trainer Gerald Ryan is confident that’s all about to change for Grebeni in Saturday’s Listed $200,000 Civic Stakes (1400m) at Royal Randwick. Story: @RayThomas_1 — Racenet (@RacenetTweets) June 20, 2025 LADBROKE BIG BETS AND MARKET MOVERS – FLEMINGTON Race 1: Observer $2.15-$1.60 with some big bets including $1750 twice and $1700 at $2.15, $1570 and $1000 6 times at $2, $2100 twice, $2000 and $1800 at $1.95, $2100 at $1.80, Buccleuch $8-$5 with a bet of $290 at $8 Race 2: American Wolf $17-$12, Shockletz $910 at $3.20, $500 at $3.15, $1000 and $680 at $3, Vellasmachine $11-$6 with bets of $500 at $9.75, $250 at $8.5, Frontline Action $15-$11 Race 3: Cleo Cat $2.80-$3.15-$2.35 with bets of $500 at $3.15, $1000 and $500 at $3, $1050 and $520 at $2.90, $1100 at $2.80, $500 at $2.40 Race 4: Taken $500 at $3.10, $1050 at $2.90, From A Distance $13-$7 with a bet of $250 at $9 Race 5: Cafe Millenium with bets of $500 at $4.60, $590 and $500 twice at $4.50, Hard To Cross $500 at $28, Freak Of Nature $18-$10 with a bet of $120 at $18 Race 6: Bold Soul $5.50-$6-$5.50 including a big bet of $4000 win/place at $6/$2.15, Diwali $9-$6.50 Race 7: Splash Back $2.70-$1.80 with bets of $1180 6 times, $1000 4 times at $2.70, $1670 4 times, $1600, $1100 and $1000 4 times at $2.20, $2000 at $1.85 plus many others Race 8: Jimmy The Bear $5-$4.40 with a bet of $500 at $5 Race 9: Salsa Fellow $14-$7 after a bet of $180 at $12, Bridal Waltz $10-$6.50 with a bet of $222 at $10, Fieldelo $3.40-$2.80 after bets of $1000 a $3.55, $1000 at $3.45, $1000 at $3.40, $870 4 times, $640, $540 and $500 twice at $3.30, $950 and $600 at $3.10, She's An Artist $500 at $6 Craig Williams has an impressive book of rides tomorrow at Flemington, with a number of his runners at the top of the market ðŸ�‡ How many will salute? ðŸ¤' — Racenet (@RacenetTweets) June 20, 2025 • Laurie's Longshots: $20 value play on Tassie raider LADBROKE BIG BETS AND MARKET MOVERS – IPSWICH Race 1: No significant bets or market movers Race 2: Boy's Night Out $3.90-$3.10 Race 3: No significant bets or market movers Race 4: Taltarni Fields $4-$2.60 with bets of $1000 at $4.15, $670 at $4, $1000 at $3.90, $830 at $3.40 Race 5: Deep Respect $11-$6.50 with bets of $200 at $11, Just Flying $17-$8.50 with a bet of $145 at $15, Restonica $13-$8 with a bet of $165 at $13, Poseidon Ruler $18-$9.50 after a $120 at $18 Race 6: No significant bets or market movers Race 7: Poetic Drama $9-$6.50 with a bet of $250 at $9, Raf Attack $13-$9 after a bet of $165 at $13 Race 8: Warnie $3-$3.20-$2.60 with bets of $900 at $3.20, $1000 at $3.10, $1000 at $3.05, $1000 at $2.90, $2000 and $1000 at $2.85, $1100 and $750 at $2.80, $780 at $2.70, Devastate $14-$7 with a bet of $180 a $12 Race 9: Kin $9-$6, Gerringong $2.70-$3.10-$2.60 with bets of $525 at $2.90, $590 at $2.70 Trainer James Ponsonby says Philipsburg may be “no world beaterâ€� but is quietly confident the gelding can cause an upset in the Ipswich Cup. — Racenet (@RacenetTweets) June 20, 2025 â– â– â– â– â– INTERSTATE MAIL Ipswich Race 2 No.9 BOYS NIGHT OUT Ipswich Race 7 No.4 OSMOSE Ipswich Race 8 No.2 WARNIE Ipswich Race 9 No.16 GERRINGONG Morphettville Race 3 No.3 STARTS NOW The party-style atmosphere on Ipswich Cup day may not be the ideal sweet spot for a ‘delicate' filly but it is where John Singleton's youngster Gerringong can make a spring carnival statement. Story: @bendorries76 ðŸ'‡ — Racenet (@RacenetTweets) June 20, 2025 â– â– â– â– â–

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