
JOHN TAPP RACING
JOHN TAPP RACING
Thanks for checking in on Tappy’s Racing Yarns.
Michael Freedman and Tommy Berry have created a buzz in Sydney racing with a flurry of wins together in recent weeks. They capped a sequence of black type wins with a Gr 1 success on Saturday courtesy of the hulking filly Apocalyptic in the prestigious Flight Stakes.
Tommy hadn’t even met Michael Freedman when he accepted the trainer’s offer to ride a horse called Tropaios in the 2013 Singapore Gold Cup. An exciting win in the famous race laid the foundation for an ongoing friendship and a winning association that has never been more productive than it is currently. Had a yarn with Tom on Sunday about his connection with the burgeoning Freedman operation at Randwick.
On the podcast is Scone trainer Cameron Crockett who boasts the third best strike rate in NSW racing after just two months of the new season. Cameron made a big splash at the recent Dubbo Cup meeting when he landed three outright winners and one dead heat on the big card.
The 39 year old learned his craft from late father Max who enjoyed great prominence as a yearling breaker and professional racehorse trainer before his death at age 74 in 2018. Cameron says his dad was a great tutor even though he didn’t offer too much praise. This is a laid back chat with a born horseman who says he’s in the game for the long haul.
Tappy
(Banner image courtesy Steve Hart Photographics.)
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JOHN TAPP RACING PODCAST
Young trainer Cameron Crockett completely dominated the recent Dubbo Cup programme with three wins and one dead heat on the ten race programme
“I’ll just wake up one day and say to myself that’ll do me,” was the reply given by Greg Ryan when quizzed about a likely retirement date on a podcast posted on October 27th 2020.
Plagued with chronic hoof issues in his early life, Carioca won only three of his first nine starts and spent long periods on the sidelines.
TAPPY'S TURF TOPICS
The Michael Freedman/ Tommy Berry partnership has been a major talking point in the early weeks of the Sydney spring carnival.
John Sargent was surprised two years ago when stable client Michael Stokes called to say he’d purchased a two year old filly on New Zealand Bloodstock’s Gavelhouse.com online sale for the princely sum of $3200.
With only ten or twelve horses in work these days, veteran trainer Clarry Conners doesn’t expect to have a glut of city runners.
“I try to keep strike rates out of my mind,” said in form trainer Rod Northam. “Trainers who worry about strike rates tend to barrier trial horses more often, waiting for the right races to come along.
“If I could find a way to bottle the feeling I got on Saturday, I’d be marketing it all over the world,” said Todd Smart after So Magnificent’s win in the TAB Highway.
Voltaire, the eighteenth century French writer and philosopher is credited with the well known quote “I disapprove of what you say, but will defend to the death your right to say it”.
Brad Widdup knew it wasn’t ideal to back Savvy Hallie up in the Silver Shadow Stakes just nine days after her Super Maiden win at Newcastle, but made the decision to do so on three counts.
Steve O’Halloran’s Irish accent was more lilting than ever as he responded to our phone call on Sunday morning.
The Newcastle Jockey Club received an unexpected boost to TAB turnover when Saturday’s Randwick meeting was called off.
Denim Wynen arrived at Rosehill on Saturday with mixed feelings about her decision to bring Monkhana and Sunshine Law to the races.
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.