logo
Dubbo preview, best bets and inside mail for Sunday May 4, 2025

Dubbo preview, best bets and inside mail for Sunday May 4, 2025

News.com.au03-05-2025

It took plenty of time and effort from trainer Scott Singleton and his team to get Zoomorphic to show his best but it was worthwhile when he blitzed his rivals to finally break his maiden.
The son of Zoustar and Group 1-winning mare Spright took until start 10 to land that maiden win at Mudgee two weeks ago but he certainly did it in style.
After racing outside the leader, Zoomorphic went into another gear after straightening and raced away to score by just over five lengths.
'When we got him, it took a lot of time and work to get him to want to win and put horses away,' said Singleton.
'He's a very intelligent horse and would only do what he wanted to do.
'He lives out at the farm in a yard now and is much happier.'
Singleton is quite confident the four-year-old can win again when he lines up in the Benchmark 58 Handicap (1400m) with Mitchell Bell to again partner the gelding.
'I think he will be hard enough to beat on the way he won the other day and the way he seems to have come though the run,' he said.
'He is owned by a couple of big studs here at Scone – Cressfield and Robrick Lodge – and if he wins this weekend, we will run him in the Highway at Scone over the carnival.
'If he gets beat but still runs well, I will run him on the Friday meeting at the carnival in a Class 1.'
Singleton is also keen on the chances of Deemee in the opening race on the card, the Benchmark 58 Handicap (2200m) with Mitchell Bell on her as well.
Like Zoomorphic, Deemee has only been with Singleton since the start of this preparation.
After two runs in unsuitably short races, the four-year-old New Zealand-bred daughter of Preferment really appreciated getting out to a staying trip when she broke her maiden in a Class 1 set weights race over the 2200m at Dubbo on April 7.
She then backed it up with a nose second behind Wittelsbach on her home track of Scone.
'She is bred for the journey and once she got to it, she has found form,' Singleton said.
'She had a bleed in her last run at Newcastle last campaign so she went to the paddock and had quite a while off before she came to me.
'It's a slow maturing breed so naturally she has taken time and it takes a couple of runs to get them up to a suitable trip.
'She hasn't gone backwards in any way, shape or form since her last run at Scone and I expect her to be hard to beat.'
The third of Singleton's runners for the day is Wanavan in the Maiden Plate (1000m) with Bell onboard him as well.
The son of Wandjina resumed from a 10 month break with a long had second to Enniroc at Muswellbrook before a failed on a wet track second-up run at Scone.
He raced wide without cover when a 2½-length fifth at Dubbo on April 7 before a length third to Rail Trail at Scone after racing wide at Scone a week later.
'I was happy with his last run at home. Reece (Jones) got caught four-deep on him and he was working a little bit around the corner but he stuck to his task OK,' he said.
'This race is no stronger and I'd say he has to be in the mix somewhere as long as the track isn't too wet which I don't think it will be.'
â– â– â– â– â–
DUBBO TIPS
BEST BET
Was good in both Victorian starts. Drawn the pole and hard to beat.
NEXT BEST
Race 1 No.5: DEEMEE
Nice win at her first go at this trip before a close second last start. Can bounce back.
VALUE BET
Race 7 No.2: CANAMBLE
Both wins have come first-up including one this track and trip. Good chance again.
QUADDIE
RACE 5: 1, 6, 7
RACE 6: 1, 2, 6
RACE 7: 2, 4, 8, 10
RACE 8: 2, 3, 4, 10
JOCKEY TO FOLLOW
MITCHELL BELL looks a good chance the TAB Jockey Challenge.
â– â– â– â– â–
DUBBO INSIDE MAIL
DEEMEE (5) appreciated getting up to a staying trip when she closed nicely to beat Casino Diva over 2200m here on Apr 7. Almost made it two in-a-row when a nose second to Wittelsbach over the same trip at Scone. Can bounce back. D'ORO CHOICE (1) made a mid-race move to go to the front near the 600m when a big winner at Wellington. Was down the order in the Orange Cup then was wide when sixth at Mudgee over 2000m. Runner-up in both runs this track and distance. RUFUS WAINRIGHT (3) has place claims.
BET: DEEMEE to win.
PRESSNELL (3) raced keenly on debut and wasn't disgraced when runner-up to Quick Sharp at Scone then raced wide without cover when fifth at Warren. Resumes here off an impressive five-length trial win at Mudgee. WANAVAN (5) raced wide without cover when fifth at Dubbo on Apr 7 and backed up at Scone a week later and again did it tough out wide when a length third to Rail Trail. A win isn't far away. I DON'T THINK SO (8) is first-up for over two years. Nice trial here on Apr 12.
BET: PRESSNELL to win.
COLONEL LIGHT (1) was three-wide and pushed wider on the bend when sixth to Davikar on debut ta Muswellbrook on Mar 14. Then back and wide from the outside gate when second to Spenzalot at Scone a month later. PIERONIMO (3) raced inside Colonel Light and tracked him around the bend to finish third when resuming in that Scone race. Will be better for the run but has a wide gate to overcome. JEFFO (5) has placed in two of his three runs here and was fourth on the other.
BET: COLONEL LIGHT to win.
Former Victorian gelding PROPER TWELVE (7) was carried wide at the 1000m when beaten under two lengths into fifth behind Barbie'sdreamworld on debut at Terang. Raced outside the leader and tried hard when a half-length second to Harrumph Harrumph at Geelong on Mar 15. LORD VETTORI (4) boxed on well when runner-up to Imperial State when resuming from a lengthy spell at Gosford. Disappointed when second last at Wyong second-up. Worth another chance. WENDOUREE (9) has place claims on his first-up second at Coonabarabran. Made up ground from last at Armidale last start.
BET: PROPER TWELVE to win.
ZOOMORPHIC (7) ran a couple of close seconds to start his campaign then failed to handle the heavy track at Scone. Was dominant on breaking his maiden by five lengths at Mudgee on Apr 20. With that confidence-boosting win, he can go on with it. RICH STREET (6) is in terrific form with two wins and three placings from her last five starts. Came wide on the bend and was game in running down Extravagant Choice at Orange last start. MAZITA (1) has a big weight and wide gate but is more than capable.
BET: ZOOMORPHIC to win.
CROP DUSTER (2) will take improvement from his first-up seventh behind Extravagant Lad in the Cup Day Sprint over 1000m at Orange on Apr 11. Will appreciate the sting out of the track and the step up to 1200m where he has scored three of his six wins. LIFE'S A PARTY (6) closed strongly to win the Bill Aspros Cup from Outback Angel at Bathurst first-up. Is a second-up winner and drawn to get a nice run. THE DRAMATIST (1) got well back from a wide gate and closed well between horses when sixth to Annie's Rose at Muswellbrook second-up.
BET: CROP DUSTER each-way.
CANAMBLE (2) has won two of her seven and both wins have come first-up. Beat Brutal Love on the Wellington Boot Prelude on debut in March last year. Kicked off last preparation with an all-the-way win from the Mooch over this track and distance. Resumes off a nice trial second behind stablemate Bare To Witness on the Beaumont. CUMNOCK (4) battled away for fifth to Cumboogle when resuming at Orange and will take improvement. Had solid form last campaign including a fourth to Clear Thinking in a Randwick Highway. D'ARPANO (10) and KORA MAGIC (8) have claims.
BET: CANAMBLE to win.
PRESS FORWARD (4) was rewarded for his solid form with a good win over this track and distance last start. Went back to last before coming down the middle of the track to beat D'Arpano. Will gain confidence from the win and can go back-to-back. THIS ONE TIME (10) took benefit from his first-up fourth at Scone with a handy win from Maxandus at Tamworth. Good chance again. BARE TO WITNESS (2) and ROCK 'N' REIGN (3) have claims.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Singleton stable set for Lovely trip away to Narromine
Singleton stable set for Lovely trip away to Narromine

Sydney Morning Herald

time6 hours ago

  • Sydney Morning Herald

Singleton stable set for Lovely trip away to Narromine

A trip away and return to the flying short course are set to pay dividends for a tough Scone filly at today's Narromine meeting. And punters have seemingly been given a decisive leg-up from the Scott Singleton stable, with front-running Too Darn Lovely by-passing a home meeting on the same day to zero in on a weaker target in the central west. Dropping back from a higher-graded race at Muswellbrook over 1000m three weeks ago when she faded after leading, Too Darn Lovely reloads in a Benchmark 58 Handicap over the 800m scamper course on a tighter and more advantageous track for on-speed sprinters. The start before in a better BM 58 at Quirindi (1000m), Too Darn Lovely ran a quick time in beating a handy sprint field. She again draws to control the race under regular apprentice Leeshelle Small, and back on her preferred firmer ground, looks set to take her strike rate to five wins from 14 starts. A speedy daughter of fashionable sire Too Darn Hot, Too Darn Lovely could be aimed at a more challenging provincial sprint, or even a Saturday Highway if she takes care of this moderate field. While Singleton has accepted for seven runners at the Scone meeting, Thor's Lightning, second-up in a Maiden Plate over 1300m, is his only other runner at Narromine. The meeting, though, is set to be dominated by Dubbo stables. Loading The Clint Lundholm yard, among its better chances, will run exciting debutant filly Miss Rapide in a Maiden Plate over 800m, along with resuming My Boy Scout in a Maiden Handicap (1100m), and promising filly Matilda Of Tuscany shooting for back-to-back wins after a dominant Maiden breakthrough at Warren.

Singleton stable set for Lovely trip away to Narromine
Singleton stable set for Lovely trip away to Narromine

The Age

time6 hours ago

  • The Age

Singleton stable set for Lovely trip away to Narromine

A trip away and return to the flying short course are set to pay dividends for a tough Scone filly at today's Narromine meeting. And punters have seemingly been given a decisive leg-up from the Scott Singleton stable, with front-running Too Darn Lovely by-passing a home meeting on the same day to zero in on a weaker target in the central west. Dropping back from a higher-graded race at Muswellbrook over 1000m three weeks ago when she faded after leading, Too Darn Lovely reloads in a Benchmark 58 Handicap over the 800m scamper course on a tighter and more advantageous track for on-speed sprinters. The start before in a better BM 58 at Quirindi (1000m), Too Darn Lovely ran a quick time in beating a handy sprint field. She again draws to control the race under regular apprentice Leeshelle Small, and back on her preferred firmer ground, looks set to take her strike rate to five wins from 14 starts. A speedy daughter of fashionable sire Too Darn Hot, Too Darn Lovely could be aimed at a more challenging provincial sprint, or even a Saturday Highway if she takes care of this moderate field. While Singleton has accepted for seven runners at the Scone meeting, Thor's Lightning, second-up in a Maiden Plate over 1300m, is his only other runner at Narromine. The meeting, though, is set to be dominated by Dubbo stables. Loading The Clint Lundholm yard, among its better chances, will run exciting debutant filly Miss Rapide in a Maiden Plate over 800m, along with resuming My Boy Scout in a Maiden Handicap (1100m), and promising filly Matilda Of Tuscany shooting for back-to-back wins after a dominant Maiden breakthrough at Warren.

Crusaders secure another Super Rugby title with 16-12 win over Chiefs
Crusaders secure another Super Rugby title with 16-12 win over Chiefs

ABC News

time10 hours ago

  • ABC News

Crusaders secure another Super Rugby title with 16-12 win over Chiefs

The Crusaders are again the kings of Super Rugby Pacific after consigning the Chiefs to a third-straight loss in the title decider. Playing in Christchurch, the Crusaders claimed a 32nd successive play-off home match victory over three decades of Super Rugby as they downed the Chiefs 16-12 in Saturday's final. It's the Crusaders' 13th title in a combined competition while the Chiefs, who were minor premiers, become just the second team in history to lose three straight Super finals, joining the Lions from South Africa (2016-2018). The victory was all the more remarkable given the Crusaders missed the top eight play-offs in 2024, winning only four matches in their worst-ever season to end their run of seven-straight titles. "Where we were at the end of last year, the start of this year we had a mountain to climb," said Crusaders fullback Will Jordan, who won his seventh Super Rugby title. "Everyone had to dig deep and it hasn't been easy. "This title is right up there for me, I just think even at the top." The victory came in a disappointing week for Australian veteran playmaker James O'Connor, who missed selection for the Wallabies' squad to face Fiji and likely the British and Irish Lions, seemingly drawing the curtain on his Test career. Used off the bench for most of the season, O'Connor, who joined the Crusaders this season from Queensland, only came on the field to replace rising star Rivez Reihana with just over a minute remaining. Hunting their first title since 2013, the Chiefs opened the scoring through prop George Dyer, who crashed over while Crusaders skipper David Havili was sent to the sin bin in the 11th minute for a high tackle on Emoni Narawa. The lead lasted until the 26th minute when All Blacks hooker Codie Taylor scored a brilliant try after peeling off a maul on the 22 and raced down the sideline. Reihana converted and kicked two penalties in six minutes to open up a 13-7 lead before the Chiefs hit back just before half-time. Fullback Shaun Stevenson went over for a try in the corner but Damian McKenzie failed to nail the conversion from wide out and the Crusaders retained a 13-12 lead at the break. Under relentless physical pressure from the Crusaders, McKenzie then missed an opportunity to put his side ahead with a wayward penalty strike in the 55th minute. The arm wrestle continued as the Chiefs held up Christian Lio-Willie over the line to repel the Crusaders after 25 phases. A dominant scrum earned the Crusaders a penalty seven minutes from full-time, and man of the match Reihana sealed the victory, bringing his tally to 11 points. The Crusaders have now won 13 full editions of Super Rugby, including three of the last four on offer, as well as two New Zealand-only versions played in 2020 and 2021 during the COVID pandemic. The defeat was a bitter blow for the Hamilton-based Chiefs. "It was a classic final, two great teams going at it and a small margin," Chiefs captain Luke Jacobson said. "It's just down to us winning the territory battle, being clinical in our half, being efficient, and I think Crusaders did a good job of that tonight. "We were good at times, but we just weren't good all the time, and it cost us." The Crusaders' triumph came in the last match at their "temporary" stadium that has been their home ground since their former headquarters was destroyed in the 2011 Christchurch earthquake. They will defend the title from a brand new 30,000-seat stadium in 2026. AAP

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store