JOHN TAPP RACING
JOHN TAPP RACING
Thanks for checking in on Tappy’s Racing Yarns.
Talented Warwick Farm trainer Jason Coyle was in two minds about starting Catch The Glory in The Warra, right up until his arrival at Kembla Grange. The weather report was ominous, and he was doubtful that his mare could beat the Peter Snowden trained Zealously.
He was pleasantly surprised to learn that the track was holding up, and that Snowden had scratched Zealously. Suddenly everything had changed. Catch The Glory went out and scored an emphatic win in the $300,000 Gr 3 defeating favourite The Black Cloud. Had a chat with Jason on Sunday morning.
Good judges were tipping a bright future for Braith Nock long before he rode in races, and they were spot on. The gifted youngster has transitioned from bull riding to the race riding craft in brilliant fashion.
He won at his first race ride and hasn’t looked back. Braith stamped his potential with a dominant win in last season’s Sydney apprentice’s premiership. It’s all systems go for the quietly spoken moustachioed young jockey. He joined us on the podcast after a busy three days of race riding.
Tappy
(Banner image courtesy Steve Hart Photographics.)
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JOHN TAPP RACING PODCAST
Racing’s best judges were predicting a big future for Braith Nock long before he ever rode in a race. How right they were!
It’s a great pleasure to welcome to the podcast former jockey Alan Cowie, currently one of Australia’s best known jockey managers.
Many young people born into racing families develop an affinity with horses from a very early age. Not the case with Craig Widdison.
TAPPY'S TURF TOPICS
As Jason Coyle travelled to the Kembla Grange meeting on Saturday he was at sixes and sevens regarding a start for Catch The Glory in The Warra, the $300,000 Gr 3 co-feature to the The Gong.
It was just another day at the office for jockey Dylan Gibbons as he left the mounting enclosure on a maidener called Whatever It Takes for the opening race at Port Macquarie on October 11th last year.
“I was waiting for the horse transport when it returned to my Hawkesbury stables after the Rosehill barrier trials one day in July of last year,” recalled Brad Widdup.
It’s unlikely Sydney racing has ever known a more media friendly jockey than Tommy Berry.
Tash Burleigh doesn’t usually get emotional when one of her horses goes past the post in front, but it all got the better of the Goulburn trainer in the moments after Pokerjack’s emphatic win in the 1100m BM78 at Randwick.
One of my favourite podcasts this year was the one we presented in June with the extraordinarily versatile Queensland racing identity Tony McMahon.
“I was both surprised and delighted when asked to be part of an interview process when Godolphin changed direction a few months ago,” said in form trainer Joe Pride.
When it comes to a pre-race parade horses are much like people. Most of them go through the motions like a lunchtime throng in a city street.
Very few race meetings go by when at least one win on the programme isn’t a direct result of an improved barrier draw. Saturday’s Midway win by Modella is a perfect example.
The Michael Freedman/ Tommy Berry partnership has been a major talking point in the early weeks of the Sydney spring carnival.
TAPPY'S TROTS TOPICS
There was one heart stopping incident in the mid seventies which could have halted Dean Chapple’s love affair with harness racing before it got off the ground.
There’s nothing I’ve enjoyed more over the years than the many conversations I’ve had with veteran horsemen - especially harness horsemen who were around in the days when the sport was drawing big crowds all around Australia.
You’ll be hard pressed to find a horseman who isn’t enamoured of the sight of a talented trotter in full flight. Power Productions have kindly allowed me access to a video production highlighting the poetry of the trotting horse and the devotion of those who train them.
Wayne Dimech was in his mid-teens when Hondo Grattan was dominating the harness racing headlines in the early 1970’s. He had obviously inherited the harness racing genes from his Maltese forebears.
Ian Verning doesn’t mind his life long nickname of “Spud” although he is frustrated by the fact that he has no idea of its origins.
Australian harness racing currently boasts a plethora of talented drivers in the 20-25 age bracket. Those who appear regularly on metropolitan tracks enjoy the bulk of available media attention.
Trainers lucky enough to have a runner at a major trots meeting are conscious of the atmosphere only big time racing can generate. Miracle Mile night is something else again.
There’s no better pointer for punters than a Darren Hancock trained horse turning up at Penrith. The leading horseman has been an unabashed fan of the 1400m Menangle circuit since its inception in 2008
The 2022 Penrith racing year concluded on December 29th with what looked to be a run of the mill programme on paper. It took a rare training double by father and daughter duo David and Katie McGill, to inject a little “buzz” into the night.
Sean Grayling is emerging as a pretty serious race driver, and he appears to have a good handle on the art of training a harness horse.

