Freakish pacer’s spectacular 40-metre win

The hype machine has reached fever pitch after speed demon Petracca blitzed his rivals with a spectacular 40-metre win at harness racing’s Melton track on Saturday night, positioning himself as a leading player in this lucrative two-year-old season.

Emma Stewartā€™s colt by Captaintreacherous out of Lovelist has been closely watched since a stunning first trial and only enhanced his reputation tonight with a powerful win for reinsman Nathan Jack and owners Danny and Jo Zavitsanos.

ā€œHe looks a superstar,ā€ was TrotsVision co-host and leading reinsman Anthony Butt’s assessment.Ā ā€œThatā€™s freakish that performance.ā€

The hit-out was Petraccaā€™s third, having previously won his Bathurst Gold Crown heat and then overcame a difficult draw to power into third in the final.

The IRT Australia Shakamaker Classic always looked a case of how far would he win by, having been backed into a $1.04 favourite and when Jack slid quickly to the front it became a race against the clock.

A 27.1sec final quarter closed out a 55.7sec last half and a 1:54.1 mile race for the short distance, just 0.9 seconds outside of Act Nowā€™s age track record over 1720 metres.

ā€œIā€™m sure heā€™s got the potential to be the best (two-year-old Iā€™ve driven), but (I am) not (declaring that) just yet,ā€ Jack told TrotsVision.

ā€œHe was just a gem to drive. Heā€™s got great manners. He went to Bathurst and just stood there in front of the whole crowd, nothing worried him. Heā€™s just a natural.ā€

Jack said Stewart initially planned to spell him after the Bathurst campaign but instead elected to give him a run on home soil, a decision he made good in the $24,000 Classic, which he won by 40 metres ahead of Captain Foxtrot and Mister Hunter.

ā€œ(Emmaā€™s stable) has done a great job with him like they do every year,ā€ Jack said. ā€œI take my hat off to them, year after year they get the best early one, they get the best late one. They just have the best juveniles.

ā€œHe just does everything right. You just click him up, heā€™s lazy, but you can chase him off the gate and heā€™ll come back to you.ā€

Jack walked away with a double having also steered Boots Electric to an impressive win in The Big Screen Company Pace, finding the front from the widest gate and then keeping his foot on the pedal throughout.

Boots Electric separated himself from the chasing pack and while Major Roll and Bulletproof Boy battled on well to place, the win was always in the leaderā€™s keeping.

There was also plenty of pride in the Larajay Farm camp after Copacabana rewarded her big group of Cranbourne Club 21 owners, trainer Jess Tubbs and reinsman Greg Sugars.

The four-year-old mare had to do it tough in the Colin Redwood Memorial Victorian Square Trotters Association Handicap Final but fought brilliantly to the line for a third win in five outings and the fifth of her 20-start career.

ā€œThis is one weā€™re actually quite proud of, what we have been able to achieve with this girl,ā€ Greg Sugars told TrotsVision.

ā€œShe came to us with a real rogue nature and a couple of trainers had gone through her and she was banished and looked like she was never going to make a racehorse.

ā€œWe got her to the races in one prep, which was a bit of a surprise and she performed quite well throughout the prep.

ā€œWe were always quietly confident that once she got that education out of the way and had a good spell and matured a little bit she had the chance to turn into a handy mare.

ā€œHer attitudeā€™s got a lot better, sheā€™s actually a really lovely mare to have around the place. Her attitudeā€™s done a complete 180 and weā€™re starting to get results on the track because of it.ā€

That was how it played out tonight, with Copacabana sitting outside Fling It Rainbow throughout even quarters and fighting on when favourite Love Gun attacked off the final bend.

The latter found the front but hung-in in the final 200 metres, threatening to encroach on Copacabana, which prompted his reinsman Chris Alford to correct him and Love Gun broke gait.

That opened the door for Copacabana to power to the finish, a win Sugars said was well deserved.

ā€œ(Love Gun) came very quick and poked his head in front, but no sooner that he hit the front it looked like his horse was under pressure and wanting to lay in, and my girl was still going strong at the one speed,ā€ he said. ā€œEven prior to him breaking I still had the thought Iā€™m going to kick back and beat this one.ā€

It was one of two Sugars wins on the night, with the leading reinsman going two from two when guiding Sweet Louise to victory in the Nutrien Pace.

The mare was a handful pre-race and settled at the rear of the field but, after a frenetic early pace, she was able to make ground off the last bend and run past all in front of her to score by a half-neck from Eva Mateo.

The great feats continued in the TAB Uncle Petrika Trotters Free For All, with Matt Craven’s chances appearing to go up in smoke when his hope, Credit Master, galloped off the line.

The trotter gave his talented rivals a significant head start but recovered to tag on and then blaze a trail through the field in the final 200 metres to pinch the win by a half-neck from leader Always Ready.

ā€œWhen the gate left all the plans went out the window, it wasnā€™t looking so good, but it just opened up nicely and he was good enough to run through it,” Craven told TrotsVision.

The win was celebrated with a big group of owners, many of whom Craven said had long been in the game and tonight were celebrating their first Group-level success.


HRV Chairman of Stewards Brett Day joined Rob Auber on TrotsVision to review the night.


By Michael Howard for HRV

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