Plymouth looking for better draw at Flemington

A good barrier draw is an important commodity, especially on a tight turning track.
So, for Lindsay Park it was a no-brainer to scratch Plymouth from the Listed Mornington Cup (2400m) last Saturday, even though the race offered the winner a ballot exemption into the Group 1 Caulfield Cup (2400m) in October.
The Ben, Will and J D Hayes-trained Plymouth came up with barrier 17 in the Mornington Cup while the winner, Kings Valley had barrier 6 and ultimately won the ‘Golden Ticket’ for the Caulfield Cup.
Having missed a start in the Mornington Cup, Plymouth will instead head to the Benchmark 100 race over 2000m at Flemington on Saturday.
Ben Hayes said while it was disappointing to miss a start at Mornington, the barrier would have made the gelding’s task very tough.
“Unfortunately, 17 over 2400 metres at Mornington, we didn’t feel it was right,” he said.
“He needed a nice barrier. Last start he drew well and we ended up too far back, so we decided to scratch from Mornington, and we will head towards the 2000-metre race at Flemington on Saturday.
“After that, and depending on his performance, he could then head towards the Warrnambool Cup.”
The Listed Warrnambool Cup (2350m) will be run on May 7 and is a race that Lindsay Park won in 2019 with Furrion when David and Ben Hayes and Tom Dabernig were on the training ticket.
Plymouth had been racing well prior to his most recent performance.
He finished second in the Albury Cup on March 20 before finishing a last start 12th of the 14 starters behind Ambassadorial in the Group 3 Easter Cup (2000m) at Caulfield on April 3.
“He’s fine and it was just the barrier why we didn’t run,” Hayes said.
“It’s very hard from out there, especially at Mornington.”


Comments

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *