Harness racing: Top NSW driver Luke McCarthy to partner Victorian pair in dual Oaks bid at Menangle
Champion NSW driver Luke McCarthy is playing for 'Team Victoria' at Menangle on Saturday night.
McCarthy will take the reins on two of Victoria's major chances – Soho Americano (NSW Oaks) and Gatesys Gem (NSW Trotters' Oaks) – on the stellar Group 1 card.
'They're both terrific drives and strong winning chances,' he said.
'Just as importantly, they're both drawn well, too.'
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McCarthy was particularly impressed with the Michael Stanley-trained Soho Americano's win in her heat of the NSW (pacing) Oaks last week.
'She was super. I asked a lot of her early and wondered what she'd have left, but gee she hit the line well,' he said.
'She's got the gate speed to really use the good draw (gate three). I think she's one of the best chances in what looks like a really even Oaks.'
Remarkably, McCarthy has only won the NSW Oaks once, when he partnered the Dean Braun-trained Its Nosurprisesthere in 2013.
The Victorian flavour in this Oaks runs deep with six of 10 finalists trained down south.
They include Emma Stewart and Clayton Tonkin's quartet – Luv The Nitelife (gate four), Iveseenheavenslight (eight), Ill Be Gone (10) and Beach Diamond (11) – and Miss Ari, who brilliantly won her heat last week for Gary and Deb Quinlan.
McCarthy is thrilled to snare the drive on the Glenn Hunter-trained Gatesys Gem for the first time in the Trotters' Oaks.
She was a star last season with six wins and two seconds from just nine starts and returned with a good second at Geelong last Friday night.
'A bit like the pacing Oaks, it looks like an open race and there's a few different formlines coming together,' McCarthy said.
'I've seen a bit of this filly and her best is right up with anything in the race, especially given she has the early speed to take advantage of the good draw (gate one). She'll be as hard to beat as any.'
McCarthy's other marquee drive of the night is his only stable star, Eye Keep Smiling, in the Australasia's premier mares' pacing race, the $200,000 Group 1 Queen Elizabeth II Mile (formerly Ladyship Mile).
'I couldn't be happier with her and she's certainly the class runner of the race,' he said.
'She's right at the top of her game and she is just so versatile. When she's against the mares like this, you've got so many options because you can do some work if you have to and she'll still be hard to hold out.
'Sure I'd have liked to have drawn in a bit closer (than gate 10), but I just know she'll run a mighty race.'
McCarthy will have four Victorian rivals in the Queen Elizabeth, headed by Jess Tubbs' proven Group 1 performer Rakero Rebel, who is drawn better in gate five.
The headline Victorian at the meeting is unbeaten young trotting mare Keayang Zahara, who is chasing her 16th win and eighth at Group 1 level in the $100,000 Macarthur Mile.
She clashes for the first time with Emma Stewart's untapped Susan Is Her Name, while another Victorian, Im Ready Jet, looks the other of the big three players in the feature.
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- The Advertiser
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Suns superstar hasn't re-signed just yet, Hardwick says
Matt Rowell has yet to officially re-sign with Gold Coast despite strong speculation the in-demand midfielder will stay, coach Damien Hardwick says. Off-contract Rowell is expected to turn his back on offers from Victorian clubs to re-commit to the Suns following a report that emerged during their seven-point loss to GWS on Sunday. The star midfielder had been linked with a possible interstate move after he met with Collingwood, Essendon, Geelong and the Western Bulldogs in the off-season. But Rowell is now tipped to re-commit to the Suns on a two-year contract that will take him to free agency, reported. Hardwick, however, brushed aside the mid-game report when asked about the matter post-match. "As far as I'm concerned, there's no news at the moment," Hardwick said. "All we can continue to do is play our part and provide a good environment for Matt that allows him to play his very best footy "Once we find out or get some information, we'll be the first to pass it on, trust me. We love good players and we love Matt. "Players, fans, coaches alike just think he's a superstar, so we'll keep working our way through that." Rowell was drafted to the Suns in 2019 with the prized first overall pick and is averaging 25.2 disposals, 8.2 tackles and 7.7 clearances this season. The 21-year-old's quality shone again against the Giants, the 23-year-old finishing with 34 disposals, 12 clearances, eight tackles and 19 contested possessions. All cylinders of the Gold Coast engine were firing, with captain Noah Anderson (42 disposals, seven clearances) and Touk Miller (37, seven, two goals) just as red-hot. But the Suns couldn't capitalise on their early dominance and fumbled a game-high 29-point lead at Engie Stadium. Rowell's midfield rival Tom Greene monstered the midfield battle with 31 disposals, 16 clearances, nine tackles and 22 contested possessions. "You've got to heed those lessons and move forward," Hardwick said. "High contest, high pressure is how we want it because that's what finals are like and it was probably a finals-type game. "When they upped the ante, we were probably found a little bit wanting. "I just didn't think we played our moments anywhere near well enough." Hardwick was left lamenting a costly 50-metre penalty that gifted GWS star Jesse Hogan his first of two goals. Suns defender Mac Andrew had mistaken a "play on" call from a teammate and moved off his mark. "He heard a play on call," Hardwick said. "I'm not quite sure, probably clarification might be needed at some stage. "It's costly play. Those moments that we speak about, that effectively just handed them a goal."