By Brad Gray Crowd On Point For Peter Snowden In excess of 33,000 patrons piled into Royal Randwick for the inaugural running of The Everest, and in all my years of attending races in Sydney have never quite felt anything like the buzz around the track. Yes, I am close to The Everest concept but inevitably I wasn’t alone with champion trainer Peter Snowden echoing the sentiment after Redzel won the $10 million sprint feature. “It’s so good. You don’t hear a roar when they jump in Sydney. They never have. It’s the first time I’ve ever heard it here. This race means a lot to a lot of people,” he said. It’s been well publicised that Snowden rated the win the highlight of his illustrious career but it wasn’t just because of the cash carrot. “The money is great but for me it was all about the race with the best sprinters in the land. It’s been a tremendous ride,” he said.
Slot holder @jmeharron and Redzel’s connections cheer him home in The Everest @atc_races. Redzel was an Inglis weanling in 2012. Congrats!! pic.twitter.com/vPuZs80YOq
— Inglis (@inglis_sales) October 14, 2017
Harron On A High After Everest Climb James Harron was one of the first slot holders to commit to The Everest. Originally he had Pariah pencilled in but after the colt didn’t assert dominance over his own age, Harron turned his attention to Triple Crown’s Redzel. “Thanks to Peter and Paul Snowden. We put a lot of faith in them with a lot of business and this was just another endorsement of the belief we have in them as well as Kerrin McEvoy,” Harron said. “We went into this concept treating it as a business decision and if we didn’t have a horse suitable we wanted the next best thing. Redzel was that and has a great team around him. “What a day. What a thrill. Hats off to Peter V’landys, ATC, Racing NSW. This is like nothing I’ve ever seen on a racecourse before. Ever. It’s absolutely unbelievable. So will James Harron Bloodstock be locking in Redzel for the 2018 running of The Everest? “Hopefully they give us first dibs!” Not Her Time What could have been for the bonny In Her Time. The Ben Smith-trained mare could count herself a touch unlucky not to have been a contender in the TAB Everest after taking out the Premiere Stakes a fortnight ago. However, she picked up the lion’s share of the $500,000 Everest consolation, the Sydney Stakes (1200m). “She is a lovely horse. It is strange she didn’t end up in The Everest but she’s got the consolation anyway,” said jockey Corey Brown. The five-year-old, who is rated the second best mare in the country behind only Winx, looks a Group One winner in waiting. Perhaps it’ll come as soon as next start when she tackles the Manikato Stakes. “It was good. I was a bit worried the way she put on weight during the week I thought she might have been a bit big but it was great, she’s come out and got the job done today and ran good time,” Smith said after the win. Happy Clapper Doesn’t Stay I wrote an article earlier in the week putting forward Happy Clapper as the second best horse in the country. When I queried Blake Shinn, he agreed but was quick to point out only over the mile. How right he was.