Having gone to war when sitting leader (School Captain) and breeze (The Lost Storm) last month, the pair are poised for a tantalising rematch in the IRT Australia two-year-old colts and geldings final.
Owner-breeder Bill Anderson plucked gate two for School Captain and then Clayton Tonkin, co-owner of The Lost Storm, pulled number four, with Louie Lou I separating the pair.
āItās going to be an interesting race, itās going to be competitive,ā Tonkin told TrotsVision. āIām happy.ā
Asked if The Lost StormĀ was still the pick for this race, Tonkin responded āI think he isā.
Anderson was similarly looking forward to the bout, with the combatants having produced a stunning 54.8-second last half at Melton when they went head-to-head in the Home Grown Classic. On that occasion School Captain led and scored by 2.4 metres, but The Lost Storm maintains an overall 2-1 head-to-head advantage.
ā(School Captain’s) had (four) starts and heās learning all the time,ā Anderson said. āHeās getting stronger, heās a very nice horse.
āMy opinion is itās The Lost Stom and obviously School Captain. I think … they are the two nicest horses in it, it will just get down to whoās the toughest.ā
Emma Stewartās stable hasnāt hidden their praise for The Lost Storm and that reputation was in tact tonight after his brutal semi-final win.
The $1.20 chance had to rip a 41.6-second lead time before reinsman Mark Pitt could establish control of the race, extraordinarily a Tabcorp Park Melton record.
āThe first burn probably took a little bit of edge off him, but I thought Captains Knock was probably one of my main dangers, so I had to be in front of it,ā Pitt said. āIn the end we were going that hard that he relented, which was good for us.ā
The Lost Storm had some respite over the quarters to follow (29.3, 31 and 29.6) while Captains Knock breathed down his neck, and while plenty loomed at the line the leader had enough in the tank to hold on in a brisk 27.1-second final quarter.
āHe was super brave,ā Pitt said. āHe was starting to feel it a little bit but he held them off strong. That lead time can take it out of them and heās only a baby, so he was a little bit out on the line but he still had enough to fight them off.ā
Dougs Platter and Don Hugo filled out the placings, beaten a head and a neck, while Captains Knock was also within a metre of the winner. Perfect Class and Little Louie were next best to also advance to the finals.
Pitt and Stewart then followed up with a victory in the second semi-final, part of a staggering six wins the pair shared on the card.
The second semi-final for two-year-old boys was a much more regulation affair with Techys Watching (Hes Watching) strolling to the top unchallenged in a 45.5-second lead time, almost four seconds slower than the previous race.
Nathan Jack quickly advanced lead challenger School Captain to his outside and Chris Svanosio hustled early on Louie Lou I to grab leaderās back and they would soon separate themselves from the pack.
A 27.5-second third quarter blew the race open and Techys Watching crashed the line in a 26.6-second final quarter, which secured a 2.1-metre win from Louie Lou I with School Captain just a further metre back after sitting parked throughout.
āHe was super,ā Pitt said of the winner. āHe was still travelling good on the line.Ā I think he will improve off that run big time. He is three runs back now from a spell, I think he will be at peak fitness next week.ā
My Ultimate Jacko, Keayang Santiago and Heathbern Bruce were more than 20 metres back but connections would have been satisfied with them booking finalĀ tickets.
Unfortunately for Techys Watching and his owner-breeder Mario Cirillo his hopes of building on his unbeaten record of four wins in the final was made difficult at the draw, having plucked gate 13.
Here’s the field for next Saturday’s final:
For complete results and replays of the semi-finals, click here.
byĀ Michael Howard, for HRV