Australian domination continues

Kingman, winner of the NZ Trotting Cup. PHOTO: HARNESS RACING NZ
Kingman, winner of the NZ Trotting Cup. PHOTO: HARNESS RACING NZ
It turns out fortune really does favour the brave.

Well, the brave who happen to own a Victoria Cup winner and have $25,000 lying around a week or two out from the IRT New Zealand Cup, which was won in physics-defying fashion by Kingman at Addington yesterday.

The New South Wales pacer continued Australia’s recent domination of the 3200m race by sitting three wide for the last 1400m and still proving too good for favourite and fellow Aussie raider Leap To Fame.

It was the second occasion Kingman has beaten Leap To Fame in a month and the first time made the second time possible.

Before reaching a new career peak winning the Victoria Cup at Melton on October 18, Kingman was not in the New Zealand Cup conversation, or more importantly the entries.

He came off a sub-par Leap To Fame’s back that night to beat him and animated owner-breeder Mick Harvey started to dream.

For that dream to become reality he had to dig deep, like $25,000 plus GST deep, the late entry fee to get Kingman into yesterday’s race.

While it might have come out of the Victoria Cup stake it is still not small change and a huge risk to take with a 4-year-old pacer just starting his open class journey and one who had never had a standing start.

Harvey gambled and won, although it did not quite look that simple when Kingman was near last at the halfway stage of the 3200m Cup with the two favourites first and second.

Trainer-driver Luke McCarthy had no choice but to ask Kingman to do it the hard way three wide, which got even harder when the muscular stallion started to hang at the 1000m mark.

That should have been his chance extinguished, $25,000 plus the same in expenses down the drain.

Clearly, Kingman cannot count.

He covered the most ground, did the most wrong but took a deep breath at the 250 mark and went again, an equine boxer throwing his knockout punch in the championship rounds.

McCarthy had gone into the Cup full of belief in his horse but realistic about the challenges for their after-thought bonus race. Icing on a cake never tasted so good.

‘‘He is wonderful horse, but I’ll admit I didn’t think he could sit three wide and win,’’ he said.

‘‘I had to move to get closer, even though I knew I wouldn’t get the breeze off Leap To Fame because I knew if I waited much longer he’d get pushed out when I did go.

‘‘He did the rest and he is just a special horse and I’m so proud to win this for Mick.’’

This New Zealand Cup also provides a new zenith in the storied career of McCarthy, who has won Miracle Miles and Inter Dominion and drove the first two winners of the world’s richest harness race, the Eureka on his home track of Menangle.

‘‘I have been lucky enough to go all over the world, to races like the Elitlopp in Sweden and the Little Brown Jug in the [United] States, but this is the best race day in harness racing and I have always wanted to win the Cup.’’

It was the second year running a horse trained at Menangle has won the Victoria Cup, paid the late entry fee, come to New Zealand and returned home with the Cup, after Swayzee did it last season.

Leap To Fame was magnificent in second after sitting parked throughout, while Merlin ducked into a gap looking the winner for a few seconds at the 150m before finishing third.

That was just ahead of stablemate Better Knuckle Up, who came from last for fourth and had ‘‘NZ Cup 2026’’ written all over him.

That is, of course, if they ban Victoria Cup winners, or horses making late payments getting into the Cup next year.

Or maybe Australian horses altogether.

Because the way things are going, the New Zealand Cup is going to need a name change soon.

- Harness Racing NZ