JOHN TAPP RACING
JOHN TAPP RACING
Thanks for checking in on Tappy’s Racing Yarns.
The McDonald/Waller show at Rosehill on Saturday inevitably took a little gloss off some other very good riding and training performances. Jason Coyle’s win with Catch the Glory in the Birthday Card Stakes was the culmination of a cleverly executed long term plan.
The astute Warwick Farm trainer has now won two Gr 3 races with the $50,000 yearling purchase with more to come. Had a chat with Jason on Sunday morning about the flashy chestnut filly who caught his eye on the Gold Coast in 2023. With her prize money tally at $626,000 Catch The Glory has repaid her purchase price many times over.
On the podcast is one of Australia’s winningest horse trainers. Kris Lees has posted some extraordinary figures on the NSW and national trainer’s premierships over the last twenty years. One stat still annoys him.
In the 2018/2019 season he won 221 races and still had to contend with second place to Chris Waller. He got square the following season. Kris Lees is currently sitting on the amazing total of 2882 career wins. He hasn’t been on the podcast for seven years. It’s time we caught up with a man who was always going to be a horse trainer.
We’ve included in the Trots Topics section a highlights reel from a thrilling Miracle Mile night at Menangle on March 14th. The package comes courtesy of the NSW Harness Racing Club and Sky Thoroughbred Central and was compiled from footage provided by Power Productions. Relive the colour and excitement of another edition of the famous race, and a mind boggling performance by the freakish Leap To Fame.
Tappy
(Banner image courtesy Steve Hart Photographics.)
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JOHN TAPP RACING PODCAST
Kris Lees was thirty three years old when his father Max passed away in 2003. He’d been training a handful of horses in his own right while working as stable foreman for his very respected trainer/dad.
With another edition of the historic Sydney Cup coming up on April 11th, it seems an appropriate time to catch up with a man who won it twice as a jockey in 1959 and 1961.
It’s just over six years since Scott Darby last appeared on our podcast. At the time his popular racehorse syndication company was gathering momentum.
TAPPY'S TURF TOPICS
With due respect to the McDonald mania and Waller wizardry that made the Slipper meeting so special, perhaps a handful of other fine achievements didn’t get the accolades they deserved.
Kim Waugh really doesn’t know why the Provincial Midway Championship has become such a bucket list project, but the series dominates her thoughts from Christmas time each year.
By the time I spoke to Craig Newitt on Sunday morning he’d pushed the elation of a Newmarket win into the background and was on his way to the Stoney Creek Cup meeting
One of the most striking sets of colours doing the rounds on Australian racetracks are those registered in the name of respected syndication company Darby Racing.
With the exception of Chris Waller who had seven of nine runners in Saturday’s Gr 1 Verry Elleegant Stakes at Randwick, Donna Scott may have saddled more horses for one race than any other NSW trainer.
There was a smattering of deja vu attached to Sam Clipperton’s win on Signor Tortoni in Saturday’s Queen Bee Project Sprint at Rosehill Gardens.
It’s unlikely there was anyone more excited after Saturday’s Light Fingers Stakes than Ben Vassallo.
Shane closely followed Brian York’s early career in NZ and continued to monitor his progress after the jockey moved to Queensland to link up with high profile trainer Bruce McLachlan.
To cheer home a winner owned, trained or ridden by deserving participants is one of racing’s greatest joys. I got that feeling on Saturday when it was obvious Zenmaster had the opposition well covered at the 200m in the Midway.
A very good initiative by the Wyong Race Club was thwarted by extreme heat on Sunday January 25th.
TAPPY'S TROTS TOPICS
Delighted to include some special footage from an amazing Miracle Mile night at Menangle featuring the horse many believe is the greatest of all time.
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.

