It was the harness racing night Gary Hall Sr went one better than the late great Bart Cummings.
While the legendary Cummings won a remarkable 12 Melbourne Cups, Hall Sr made it 13 wins in his equivalent ā the Group 1 WA Pacing Cup ā when Diego (Bettor’s Delight) dominated from the front at Gloucester Park last Friday night (Jan 27).
āReally? Thatās pretty amazing, but Iād still rather the 12 Melbourne Cups,ā Hall Sr laughed.
While there was oodles of drama in the week leading up to the Cup, the race itself was ho-hum and completely dictated from the front by Hall Srās son, Gary Hall Jr.
It was a real contrast from recent epic WA Cups, including last year when Hall Srās outsider Wildwest flashed home from nowhere with Callan Suvaljko aboard to snatch victory at the end of a frantically run race.
DIEGO REPLAY
Diego, a seven-year-old son of Bettors Delight, gave Hall Jr his ninth WA Cup driving success.
For Hall Sr, the result was even sweeter with stablemate Jumpingjackmac producing the run of the race to rocketed home for a close second and making it a stable quinella.
Hall Srās other 12 WA Cups wins have been with: Wildwest (2022), Chicago Bull (2017), My Hard Copy (2016 and ā17), Hokonui Ben (2014), Ā Im Themightyquinn (2011, ā12 and ā13), Tealsby Karita (2007) and The Falcon Strike (2002, ā04 and ā05).
Eight of Hall Jrās wins have been for his father, the exception being the Justin Prentice-trained Rocknroll Lincoln in 2019.
Landing quinella ended a stress week for Hall Sr, who wasnāt able to finalise drivers for all three of his Cup runners ā defending champion Wildwest being the other ā until hours before the Cup.
And Hall Jr didnāt know if he would be driving in the race until lunchtime Thursday as sweated on the result of his appeal against a suspension.
Stewie McDonald drove Jumpingjackmac and Kyle Harper was replaced by Mitchell Mitchell aboard Wildwest not long before the meeting started.
As thrilling as Diegoās win was, it came with mixed emotions given Hall Jrās partner, Maddison Brown, would have taken the reins were it not for the impact of concussion from a nasty race fall the previous week.
Brown had driven Diego at his previous 21 starts and played an instrumental role in his rise from a fringe player to arguably WAās best
āIt was cruel really,ā Hall Sr said. āThereās an automatic 12-day stand-down rule with concussion.
āItās a shame because Maddison has been with him all season and been such a big part of his continued improvement. She deserved to win it and didnāt get the chance.ā
Hall Sr has now set his sights with two major players towards WAās richest and newest race, the $1 million Nullarbor slot race at Gloucester Park on April 14.
āIāll just have the two for it ā Diego and Jumpingjackmac ā but I wouldnāt swap either of them for anything else,ā he said.ā
āDiego has been getting the draws and leading, but heās more versatile than people give him credit for. Heās come from last and beaten good horses.
āJumpingjackmacās run was amazing. The best of his career. Heās getting better and better all the time and will be a great chance in the Nullarbor.
āItās exciting to have another big race like that to look forward to.ā
The WA Pacing Cup was the second leg of the Grand Circuit with Mighty Ronaldo having won the first, the Fremantle Cup, two weeks earlier.
We don’t have to wait long for the third leg with the $500,000 Hunter Cup, which shapes as an epic, at Melton next Saturday night.
For complete race results, click here.
byĀ Adam Hamilton,Ā for Harness Racing Australia