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Thoroughbred racing in Australia

Thoroughbred horse racing is a spectator sport in Australia, and gambling on horse races is a very popular pastime with A$14.3 billion wagered in 2009/10[1] with bookmakers and the Totalisator Agency Board (TAB). The two forms of Thoroughbred horseracing in Australia are flat racing, and races over fences or hurdles in Victoria and South Australia. Thoroughbred racing is the third most attended spectator sport in Australia, behind Australian rules football and rugby league, with almost two million admissions to 360 registered racecourses throughout Australia in 2009/10.[1] Horseracing commenced soon after European settlement, and is now well-appointed with automatic totalizators, starting gates and photo finish cameras on nearly all Australian racecourses.

On an international scale Australia has more racecourses than any other nation. It is second to the United States in the number of horses starting in races each year. Australia is third, after the U.S. and Japan for the amount of prize money that is distributed annually.[1]

Thoroughbred racing at Doomben Racecourse.

Racing industry Edit

 
The value of Australian thoroughbred horse stocks (A$ millions) since 1989

Racing in Australia is administered by the Australian Racing Board, with each state's Principal Racing Authority agreeing to abide by, and to enforce, the Australian Rules of Racing.

Besides being a spectator sport, horseracing is also an industry, which provides full- or part-time employment for almost 250,000 people, the equivalent of 77,000 jobs. About 300,000 people have a direct interest as individual owners of, or members of syndicates which own, the 30,000 horses in training in Australia. There are bookmakers, over 3,600 registered trainers and more than 1,000 jockeys, plus farriers and veterinarians involved at race meetings alone. Race meetings are oraganised by approximately 374 race clubs that conduct about 2,694 meetings on 360 racecourses around Australia for over $427,245,000 in prize money.[1]

Important races Edit

Public interest in Thoroughbred racing, especially during the main spring and autumn racing carnivals, has been growing in recent years with over 100,000 attracted to the running of the Melbourne Cup, the Victoria Derby and the VRC Oaks race meets. The Golden Slipper Stakes, Caulfield Cup and W. S. Cox Plate are also major attractions.

History Edit

Horses Edit

 
An early importation to Australia was the Arabian stallion (Old) Hector, whose bloodlines are to be found in the pedigrees of some Australian Thoroughbreds.

The first horses that came to Australia arrived on the Lady Penrhyn with the First Fleet on 26 January 1788.[2] It is thought that they consisted of one stallion, one colt, three mares, and two fillies from Cape Town, South Africa.[3] (Young) Rockingham was one of the first bloodhorses to be imported into Australia, c. 1797.[4] In 1802, the stallion Northumberland and an English mare were imported, followed shortly thereafter by Washington, a stallion from America. (Old) Hector, was an important Arabian horse that was imported to Australia c. 1803 and whose bloodlines have survived in Australian Thoroughbred pedigrees. Northumberland and Hector were the two leading sires in Australia until 1820.[5] These sires and a number of other Arabian stallions contributed to the breeding up of the bloodhorse population prior to 1825.[6] Manto, imported in 1825, was the first General Stud Book recorded Thoroughbred mare known by name to arrive in Australia. Her family is still producing winners. In 1826 the Thoroughbred stallion Peter Fin, and mares Cutty Sark and Spaewife, were imported.[7]

The first recorded public auction of bloodstock took place in 1805. After the 1830s more English bred horses were imported for racing, as more racing clubs were formed in the country areas of New South Wales.[8]

Malua, foaled in 1879, was the most versatile Australian Thoroughbred racehorse, winning classic races on the flat and the VRC Grand National Hurdle before becoming a good sire.[7] The New Zealand bred Carbine was one of the early champions of the Australian turf,[9] and was later inducted into the Australian Racing Hall of Fame and the New Zealand Racing Hall of Fame. His descendants, the New Zealand-bred horses Phar Lap and Tulloch (the first horse to win more than £100,000 in Australia) also became champions of the Australian turf. Bernborough, Kingston Town, Heroic, Makybe Diva (bred in England) and Winx were other champions that have been inducted into the Australian Racing Hall of Fame. On 31 March 2011 Black Caviar was rated the best Thoroughbred racehorse in the world by Timeform (with a 135 rating) for the period of 1 October 2010 to 27 March 2011.[10][11]

Australian Thoroughbred breeding has long been involved in the importation of horses, especially from Europe and later the US. Initially the British importations were identified on records with (imp) or an asterisk (*) added as a suffix to indicate that they were not locally bred. With the advent of importations from other countries and the use of shuttle stallions that stand at stud in Australia during the northern hemisphere's winter, these suffixes were replaced by an abbreviated country suffix. These took the format of, e.g., (USA), (GB), (IRE) and (FR) etc.[12]

Australian-bred stallions exported to America have proved very successful at stud there. Some of these exported horses include, Bernborough, Shannon, Sailor's Guide, Noholme, Tobin Bronze and Royal Gem.[13]

Annually, about 8,500 horses are retired from racing, many of which are slaughtered for an export market in human consumption.[14]

Throughout its history, horseracing has become part of the Australian culture and has developed a rich and colourful language.

Early race meetings and clubs Edit

 
Royal Randwick Racecourse with Sydney skyline in background

Horseracing had become well established in and around Sydney by 1810. The first official race meeting was organised by officers of Governor Macquarie's visiting 73rd Regiment and held at Hyde Park, Sydney in October 1810,[15] starting on Monday 15th and continuing on the Wednesday and the Friday.[16] The Australian Jockey Club (AJC) held its meetings at Homebush from 1842 to 1859, before moving to Randwick in 1860. The AJC has its headquarters at Randwick where it plays a major role in the regulation of the sport. The Sydney Turf Club (STC) was formed in 1943 and held races on the Rosehill Gardens track and at Canterbury. This club was the initiator of the world's richest race for two-year-olds, the Golden Slipper Stakes. The Australian Jockey and Sydney Turf Clubs Merger Act 2010[17] merged the two clubs under the name of the Australian Turf Club.

In Victoria the first official races were held in March 1838 on a specially marked out course at Batman's Hill in Melbourne. The Victorian Racing Club (VRC) was formed from the amalgamation in 1864 of the Victoria Jockey Club and Victoria Turf Club.

Queensland's first recorded race meeting was held at Cooper's Plains in 1843. The major race club, the Queensland Turf Club (QTC), was formed in 1863, followed by the Brisbane Amateur Turf Club (BATC) in 1923.

South Australia's first meeting was held at Adelaide in 1843. The principal race club, the South Australian Jockey Club (SAJC), was founded in 1856.

Organised racing was first held in Tasmania in 1814 at Newtown, near Hobart. The Tasmanian Turf Club (TTC) was formed in 1871, but the major club, the Tasmanian Racing Club (TRC), was not established until 1874.

Thoroughbred racing commenced in Western Australia in 1836. The Western Australian Turf Club (WATC) was established in 1852.[9]

By 1883, 192 country clubs were registered to race under Australian Jockey Club rules.[7]

In the Northern Territory, the Darwin Turf Club was established in May 1955.[18]

Breeders and stud farms Edit

The early breeders of Australian bloodstock were men of historical significance such as Robert Campbell (1769–1846), Lieutenant William Lawson (explorer), John Macarthur (wool pioneer), John Piper (military officer) and Dr D'Arcy Wentworth.[4][5]

Charles Smith established Bungarribee stud at Doonside, New South Wales, shortly after 1830, which only had pure-bred English horses.[8] It was Charles Smith who bred the great colonial stallion, Sir Hercules who was foaled in 1843.[5]

James White (1828–1890), owner of Kirkham Stud, was one of the most successful owner/breeders in Australian racing with his horses winning two Melbourne Cups, six VRC Derbies and five AJC Derbies.[4]

The three eastern mainland states supply 85% of Australian racehorses with the Hunter River valley being the favoured region for Thoroughbred horses in NSW. In Queensland the Darling Downs is the major nursery. Hurtle Fisher's Maribyrnong Stud was a famous stud in Victoria where expensive imported horses were used until it was dispersed in 1866. The St Albans Stud at Geelong was established in the 1850s and was still operating over 100 years later.[8] Tranquil Star was bred here and Briseis was bred, owned and trained by James Wilson at this stud.

 
Star Kingdom

The Widden Stud in the Hunter Valley, NSW was established by John Thompson in 1867. Since then Widden Stud has been home to some of the finest stallions and broodmares including the following who were all at various times Australia's champion sire; Lochiel (four times leading sire), Grafton (four times), Maltster (five times), Bletchingly (three times), Vain (once) and Marscay (twice). Heroic, Ajax and Todman were other famous Widden stallions. The stud has had a seven generation unbroken chain of ownership under the Thompson family.

Percy Miller (1879–1948) in 1914 established Kia Ora stud just east of Scone. Miller imported the leading sire, Magpie (GB) who ran second in the English 2,000 Guineas Stakes. This stallion sired Windbag, Amounis and Talking. Kia-Ora stud had the leading imported sires, Midstream and Delville Wood who sired champions, Shannon (exported to the United States), Delta, Hydrogen and Evening Peal etc., plus a superb band of brood mares.[19]

Stanley Wootton exerted a major influence on Australian racing when he imported the stallion Star Kingdom, now recognised as the most influential sire line in this country.[8] Wootton also bred the outstanding Biscay and Bletchingly.

Jockeys Edit

 
Jockey Edgar Britt, 22 January 1934

Australian jockeys are some of the best in the world and were among the first in the world to experiment with the crouched riding style. In the late 19th century Tot Flood and James Barden pioneered this crouch style in Australia independently of the American, Tod Sloan, after whom the style was named. Australian jockeys have successfully ridden on racecourses across the world. Some of the notable jockeys include, Scobie Breasley (four times British champion jockey), Edgar Britt, Mick Dittman, Roy Higgins, George T. D. Moore, Nash Rawiller, Neville Sellwood, Harry White and Bill Williamson.[9]

In the 1850s amateur "ladies only" events were held in Victoria, Australia but women were not permitted to ride as professional jockeys or on professional tracks. Although women jockeys were still barred from riding in the mid-20th century Wilhemena Smith rode as Bill Smith at north Queensland racecourses.[20]

In the 1920s Hilda Thomas (b 1905) is reported to have raced in Western Australia, on special race-day granted permits, as she wasn't eligible for a jockey's licence[citation needed]. There's little record of this except a 1927-28 West Australian Turf Guide, where she was named the jockey of an unplaced horse. Unofficial records suggest that her brother may have been given the placing in the records.

During 1974 the VRC permitted female jockeys to be registered for professional "ladies only" events. Pam O'Neill and Linda Jones, in 1979, were the first women jockeys that were licensed to compete in registered races against men.

Trainers Edit

Historically, the most notable trainers in Australia are Bart Cummings (trainer of 12 Melbourne Cup winners) and Tommy Smith who had won 30 successive Sydney Trainers' Premierships prior to his death. Other successful trainers include Jack Denham, Lee Freedman, Colin Hayes, David Hayes, Etienne L. de Mestre, James Scobie and Gai Waterhouse. In recent years, Chris Waller and Darren Weir have experienced success.

In the 2015/16 Season, Weir broke John Hawkes' record for most winners in a season.

In 1962 Betty Lane applied to the AJC for a metropolitan trainer's licence but was refused as "it's not our policy to license women." After the refusal she became a successful premiership winning trainer in the Western Districts of NSW, where she was permitted to train. In 1982 Betty Lane became the first woman trainer with a Number One Trainers Licence.[21]

In 2019, Victoria Police raided properties owned by Darren Weir in Warrnambool and near Ballarat, and arrested Weir, 48, and two other men relating to the corruption of betting results and animal cruelty. Police found what was believed to be cocaine and four devices known as "jiggers", which can deliver electric shocks. "In relation to the conducted energy devices, or the jiggers, clearly the allegation is that they may be used against a horse with the aim of improving their performance on a particular race day" Assistant Commissioner Neil Paterson said.[22]

Stud books and registrations Edit

The Stud Book of New South Wales by Fowler Boyd Price was published in 1859, and was the first official attempt to document the pedigrees of the colony's bloodhorses.[23] The Victorian Stud Book was then published in Volumes 1-2 which were edited by William Levey to the year 1864 and volumes 3-4 edited by William Cross Yuille to the year 1874.[7] The Australian Stud Book (ASB) began in 1878 as a private venture by A. & William C. Yuille, Melbourne bloodstock agents who published nine volumes. New Zealand horses were included in the ASB until Volume VII appeared in 1900. The copyright was sold in 1910 to the AJC and VRC who now administer matters concerning the breeding of racehorses.[12]

The outstanding ASB online database contains the records of over 860,000 horses, which includes every Australian foal born since 1972. This database includes 28,000 winners of major races in Australia and around the world. A 3,000 plus pages, printed version of volume 42 of the ASB contains the breeding records of 43,000 mares and 70,000 of their named offspring.[24]

In the 1880s it was decided that all Thoroughbreds in Australasia should have their official ages calculated from 1 August.

The Registrar of Racehorses controls the naming, registration, leasing and transfers of all horses racing in Australia. Racehorses must be registered to race, but do not have to be purebred Thoroughbreds in order to be registered and race in Australia.[7] Prior to 1980 it was not uncommon to see a racehorse registered as "by an unidentified sire out of a station mare". During 1980 it was regulated that horses without registered parents could not be officially named.

The registration of racing colours is also handled by the Registrar of Racehorses.

EI outbreak Edit

Equine influenza (EI) was initially discovered in a metropolitan Sydney horse complex in late August 2007, and spread to many areas of New South Wales and southern Queensland. This immediately stopped all equine pursuits nationwide, but soon racing in those states without EI cases resumed. The entire racing industry was put under great pressure because of a lack of racing for Standardbreds and Thoroughbreds.[25]

Administration of racing in Australia Edit

Australia Edit

Racing in the Australian continent is governed by the Australian Racing Board. This body supersedes the power of the principal clubs, which were once the sovereign body of racing in every state until government reforms introduced separate governing bodies for the industry. The board is constituted of the various principal racing bodies in each state. The board is directly responsible for establishing the rules of racing (subject to additional local rules), the establishment and maintenance of the pattern racing committees, responsible for grading races and allocating black type status, as well as establishing a number of advisory groups to attempt to maintain uniformity in procedures between states and establish an accepted national racing calendar.

 
The setting for the VRC Derby

Victoria Edit

Victoria is considered to be the home of racing in Australia, with international races like the Melbourne Cup and Cox Plate. The governing body is Racing Victoria Limited. The principal club is the Victoria Racing Club, which races at Flemington; the two other metropolitan clubs are the Melbourne Racing Club, which races at Caulfield and Sandown, and the Moonee Valley Racing Club, home of the Weight for Age championship of Australasia, the Cox Plate. The state boasts many top-class provincial and country racecourses including Pakenham, Cranbourne, Mornington, Geelong, Ballarat, Bendigo, Mildura, Stony Creek, Wangaratta, Warrnambool, Moe and Tatura.

New South Wales Edit

Racing in New South Wales is governed by Racing NSW. The principal club is the Australian Turf Club, which races at Randwick, Warwick Farm, Rosehill Gardens and Canterbury Park. The state's major provincial tracks are Newcastle and Kembla Grange, which alternate their meetings every second Saturday. Other notable tracks include Hawkesbury, Gosford and Grafton which hosts the largest race carnival in Australia outside of a capital city.[26]

South Australia Edit

Racing in South Australia is governed by Thoroughbred Racing S.A. Limited. The principal club is the South Australian Jockey Club, which races at Morphettville (and previously Cheltenham until its closure in 2009, and Victoria Park until 2008). Additionally, the Oakbank Racing Club holds the highly popular Oakbank Easter Racing Carnival with its two meetings on Easter Saturday and Easter Monday.

Queensland Edit

Racing in Queensland is governed by the Racing Queensland, with the principal club being the Brisbane Racing Club, formed out of a merger between the Queensland Turf Club (Eagle Farm) and the Brisbane Turf Club (Doomben). The most significant Queensland race is the Stradbroke Handicap, held at Eagle Farm over 1,400 metres. The BRC hosts the vast majority of metropolitan meetings in Queensland. Outside of Brisbane, meetings are held each Saturday at the Gold Coast and Toowoomba racecourses. The Sunshine Coast Turf Club operates a considerable facility at Caloundra, Queensland. Country racing is also popular in Queensland, with several country cups attracting large crowds throughout the year - the most notable being the Roma Cup in November.

Western Australia Edit

 
Belmont Park Race course, Perth's winter track

Racing in Western Australia is governed by Racing and Wagering Western Australia, which is a government-owned body. The main racing club, Western Australian Turf Club now known as Perth Racing, holds racing at Belmont Park and Ascot Racecourse. Other popular courses with feature races in Western Australia are Bunbury, Pinjarra, York, Geraldton, Albany, Kalgoorlie and Northam.

The most popular race is the Perth Cup, held each New Year's Day at Ascot. There are three Group One (G1) races contended, being the Railway Stakes, the Kingston Town Classic, and the Winterbottom Stakes.

Tasmania Edit

Racing in Tasmania is governed by the Tasmanian Thoroughbred Racing Council and the principal club is the Tasmanian Turf Club. There are Tasmanian meetings every Sunday usually alternating between Elwick Racecourse near Hobart, Tasman Park near Launceston and Spreyton, Devonport. Race meetings also occur at the King Island Racing Club

Northern Territory Edit

Racing in the Northern Territory is now governed by Thoroughbred Racing NT (formerly the Darwin Turf Club, which races at Fannie Bay.)

Australian Capital Territory Edit

Racing in the Australian Capital Territory is governed by the principal club, the Canberra Racing Club.

Betting Edit

There are four main avenues for race betting in Australia. Licensed on-track bookmakers offer fixed-odds betting, mostly on wins and places. Off-track betting was traditionally controlled by the various state government through organisation called "Totalisator Agency Boards" (TAB), which offered mainly parimutuel betting - that is, the odds were not fixed but involved "the house" taking a fixed cut and distributing the remainder amongst people who made a winning bet. Many of these "TABs" have now been privatised, and many pubs now offer betting services linked to the privatised offshoots of the companies. In some parts of Australia there was a tradition of illegal off-course bookmaking, known as SP bookmaking. This became a large area of vice, intimately associated with police corruption and racetrack rigging. Several Royal Commissions investigated the practice, and there were many attempts to eradicate it. Once a common sight in suburban pubs and bars, the introduction of telephone and internet betting at fixed prices by licensed on-course bookmakers has made it largely redundant. Finally, there is online person to person exchange betting, where members set their own prices and pay a percentage of their winnings in commission.

In 1913 one of the major developments in race wagering, the automatic totalisator, which allowed the automatic calculation of race odds given betting patterns, was invented in Australia by George Julius (later Sir).[8]

In recent years, corporate bookmakers operating online and through mobile apps have become increasingly popular through various specials, promotion and ease of use.

Facts and figures for season 2008-09 Edit

Group races Edit

  • Group 1 races: 67
  • Group 2 races: 83
  • Group 3 races: 110
  • Listed races: 282
  • Total of Black Type races: 542

Breeding Edit

  • Stallions: 840
  • Mares: 28,134
  • Live Foals: 16,113
  • Gross Yearling Sales: A$245 million
  • Median sale price: A$19,000
  • Champion Sire: Encosta De Lago

Prize money and earnings Edit

  • Total Prize money: A$421 million
  • Leading Prize money Earner: Viewed
  • Total number of racehorses: 31,659
  • Number of horses which earned over $100,000: 674
  • Number of horses which earned less than $2,000: 22,300
  • Number of horses with 4 or more wins: 634
  • Number of horses with 0 wins: 19,579

Wagering Edit

  • Totalisator: $9,897 million
    • Win: 47.4%
    • Place: 15.7%
    • Trifecta: 16.3%
    • Quinella: 5.2%
    • Exacta: 2.6%
    • Doubles: 2.2%
    • Quadrella: 4.0%
    • Other: 6.5%
  • Bookmakers: A$4,536 million

The season's winners Edit

Elite and black type racing in Australia Edit

The Australian Pattern Racing Committee is responsible for grading races under the auspices of the Australian Racing Board. Traditionally, until the late 1970s, a series of stakes races were recognised as black type but there was no grading of races within this grouping. Historically, handicaps have been extremely popular among Australian punters, owners and industry participants. As a result, a large number of handicap races still exist within the list of group and listed races. Small efforts have been made to downgrade handicaps and promote set weights and weight for age races however the strength of fields that most handicaps attract make them better punting races than possible under even conditions.

As the largest racing country in the world, Australia has 66 of the world's 193 Group One races, recognised by the International Federation of Horseracing Authorities.

By tradition many state races have maintained higher gradings than they would otherwise be entitled to because of the poor quality of horses participating in them. The rapid growth in the Victorian and to a lesser extent, New South Wales racing carnivals has made the leading races of the other states less competitive in prize money and as a result prestige.

Given the self-interest of each state forming the Australian Racing Board, progress in properly grading races has been slow and controversy is often found in the decisions taken by the Pattern Racing Committee. In recent years, change has been occurring as the Pattern Racing Committee has taken a more scientific approach.

Criticism is also often made of a trend towards the promotion of sprint races over staying races. Many traditional staying races have been reduced in distance significantly over the last 30–40 years. Many parties have called for staying races to be given special dispensation in on-going reviews of race classifications to allow for a current lack of depth to encourage breeding and thus further depth in future.

The group 1 races (and selected other races) in Australia can generally be split into 3 groups, Australian races, state/city/track races and historically significant races.

National races Edit

Australian Derby - AJC Easter Carnival - 2,400m - 3yo
Australian Oaks - AJC Easter Carnival - 2,400m - 3yo
Australian Cup - VRC Autumn Carnival - 2,000m - Open WFA
Australian Guineas - VRC Autumn Carnival - 1,600m - 3yo
Australia Stakes - Moonee Valley - 1,200m - Open
Australian Sires Produce Stakes - AJC Easter Carnival - 1,400 - 2yo

State/City/Track Races Edit

Victorian races Edit

Victoria Derby, Victoria Oaks, Victoria Sires Produce Stakes, Melbourne Cup, Caulfield Cup, Caulfield Guineas, 1000 Guineas, Caulfield Stakes, Moonee Valley Cup, Zipping Classic

New South Wales Races Edit

Sydney Cup, Randwick Guineas, Rosehill Guineas, Storm Queen Stakes

Queensland Races Edit

Queensland Derby, Queensland Oaks, Queensland Cup, QTC Sires Produce Stakes, Queensland Guineas, Brisbane Cup, Doomben Cup

South Australian Races Edit

South Australian Derby, South Australian Oaks, SAJC Sires' Produce Stakes, Adelaide Cup, Port Adelaide Cup, Port Adelaide Guineas

Western Australian Races Edit

WATC Derby, Perth Cup

Historically significant races Edit

Victoria Edit

W. S. Cox Plate, Newmarket Handicap, Blue Diamond Stakes, MRC Futurity Stakes C F Orr Stakes, Black Caviar Lightning, Manikato Stakes, Oakleigh Plate, Mackinnon Stakes, Sir Rupert Clarke Stakes, Underwood Stakes, Turnbull Stakes, VRC Classic, Myer Classic

New South Wales Edit

Golden Slipper, Doncaster Handicap, Epsom Handicap, George Main Stakes, Metropolitan Handicap, Spring Champion Stakes, Flight Stakes, Chipping Norton Stakes, Coolmore Classic, Ranvet Stakes, Queen of the Turf Stakes, George Ryder Stakes, The BMW, All Aged Stakes, The Galaxy, TJ Smith Stakes, Queen Elizabeth Stakes, Champagne Stakes

Queensland Edit

The T J Smith, BTC Cup, Doomben 10,000, Stradbroke Handicap, Winter Stakes

South Australia Edit

Robert Sangster Stakes, Goodwood Handicap, Australasian Oaks

Western Australia Edit

Railway Stakes, Kingston Town Classic

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ a b c d Australian Racing Fact Book 2009/10
  2. ^ "The Origins of Australia's Wild Horses" (PDF). australianbrumbyalliance.org.au.
  3. ^ Bain Ike, (chief exec.) "The Australian Encyclopaedia", Vol. 4, p. 538, "Horses", Australian Geographic Pty. Ltd., 1996
  4. ^ a b c Binney, Keith R., Horsemen of the First Frontier (1788–1900) and the Serpents Legacy, Volcanic Productions, Sydney, 2005, ISBN 0-646-44865-X
  5. ^ a b c Barrie, Douglas M., The Australian Bloodhorse, Angus & Robertson, Sydney, 1956
  6. ^ Montgomery, E.S, "The Thoroughbred", Arco, New York, 1973 ISBN 0-668-02824-6
  7. ^ a b c d e Barrie, Douglas M., Turf Cavalcade, Halstead Press, Sydney, 1960
  8. ^ a b c d e Chisholm, Alec H. (ed.), The Australian Encyclopaedia, Vol. 4, p. 538, "Horse Racing", Halstead Press, Sydney, 1963
  9. ^ a b c Shaw, John H., "Collins Australian Encyclopedia", William Collins Pty Ltd., Sydney, 1984, ISBN 0-00-217315-8
  10. ^ Habel, Tim (31 March 2011). "Experts confirm Black Caviar as world's best". Herald Sun. Retrieved 2 April 2011.
  11. ^ "Timeform Global Rankings for 2011". Timeform. Retrieved 3 April 2011.
  12. ^ a b Wicks, B.M., "The Australian Racehorse", Libra Books, Canberra, 1973 ISBN 0-909619-00-X
  13. ^ du Bourg, Ross, The Australian and New Zealand Thoroughbred, Thomas Nelson, Melbourne, 1980, ISBN 0-17-005860-3
  14. ^ Meldrum-Hanna, Caro (17 Oct 2019). "The dark side of the horse racing industry". 7.30. ABC News (Australia). Retrieved 12 February 2020.
  15. ^ "Sydney's first official race meeting". tbheritage.com.
  16. ^ Barrett, Norman, ed. (1995). The Daily Telegraph Chronicle of Horse Racing. Enfield, Middlesex: Guinness Publishing. p. 10.
  17. ^ "AUSTRALIAN JOCKEY AND SYDNEY TURF CLUBS MERGER ACT 2010". AustLII. Australasian Legal Information Institute. 2010. Retrieved 14 September 2015.
  18. ^ Darwin Turf Club Retrieved on 5 June 2009
  19. ^ Kia-Ora Retrieved on 2009-4-29
  20. ^ Just Racing 2009-11-08 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved on 5 May 2009
  21. ^ The Track Retrieved on 6 June 2009
  22. ^ "Darren Weir's horse racing stables raided by police". ABC News. 30 January 2019. Retrieved 31 January 2019.
  23. ^ The Stud book of New South Wales Retrieved on 23 May 2009
  24. ^ Racetrack Magazine, June/August 2009, Michael Ford, Keeper of the ASB, Australian Stud Book's Database, p. 48
  25. ^ News Limited: Search for source of EI outbreak Retrieved 2010-9-6
  26. ^ "Grafton July Racing Carnival". Retrieved 21 April 2013. The Clarence River Jockey Club, located in the picturesque jacaranda tree lined city of Grafton, situated on the NSW North Coast is home of the richest non-metropolitan carnival in Australia, the famous Grafton July Racing Carnival.

External links Edit

  • A day at the races: the horse in Australia: Discover Collections, State Library of NSW
  • 2012 Australian Racing Fact Book
  • Thoroughbred Horse Racing in Australia

thoroughbred, racing, australia, thoroughbred, horse, racing, spectator, sport, australia, gambling, horse, races, very, popular, pastime, with, billion, wagered, 2009, with, bookmakers, totalisator, agency, board, forms, thoroughbred, horseracing, australia, . Thoroughbred horse racing is a spectator sport in Australia and gambling on horse races is a very popular pastime with A 14 3 billion wagered in 2009 10 1 with bookmakers and the Totalisator Agency Board TAB The two forms of Thoroughbred horseracing in Australia are flat racing and races over fences or hurdles in Victoria and South Australia Thoroughbred racing is the third most attended spectator sport in Australia behind Australian rules football and rugby league with almost two million admissions to 360 registered racecourses throughout Australia in 2009 10 1 Horseracing commenced soon after European settlement and is now well appointed with automatic totalizators starting gates and photo finish cameras on nearly all Australian racecourses On an international scale Australia has more racecourses than any other nation It is second to the United States in the number of horses starting in races each year Australia is third after the U S and Japan for the amount of prize money that is distributed annually 1 Thoroughbred racing at Doomben Racecourse Contents 1 Racing industry 2 Important races 3 History 3 1 Horses 3 2 Early race meetings and clubs 3 3 Breeders and stud farms 3 4 Jockeys 3 5 Trainers 3 6 Stud books and registrations 3 7 EI outbreak 4 Administration of racing in Australia 4 1 Australia 4 2 Victoria 4 3 New South Wales 4 4 South Australia 4 5 Queensland 4 6 Western Australia 4 7 Tasmania 4 8 Northern Territory 4 9 Australian Capital Territory 5 Betting 6 Facts and figures for season 2008 09 6 1 Group races 6 2 Breeding 6 3 Prize money and earnings 6 4 Wagering 6 5 The season s winners 7 Elite and black type racing in Australia 7 1 National races 7 2 State City Track Races 7 2 1 Victorian races 7 2 2 New South Wales Races 7 2 3 Queensland Races 7 2 4 South Australian Races 7 2 5 Western Australian Races 7 3 Historically significant races 7 3 1 Victoria 7 3 2 New South Wales 7 3 3 Queensland 7 3 4 South Australia 7 3 5 Western Australia 8 See also 9 References 10 External linksRacing industry Edit nbsp The value of Australian thoroughbred horse stocks A millions since 1989Racing in Australia is administered by the Australian Racing Board with each state s Principal Racing Authority agreeing to abide by and to enforce the Australian Rules of Racing Besides being a spectator sport horseracing is also an industry which provides full or part time employment for almost 250 000 people the equivalent of 77 000 jobs About 300 000 people have a direct interest as individual owners of or members of syndicates which own the 30 000 horses in training in Australia There are bookmakers over 3 600 registered trainers and more than 1 000 jockeys plus farriers and veterinarians involved at race meetings alone Race meetings are oraganised by approximately 374 race clubs that conduct about 2 694 meetings on 360 racecourses around Australia for over 427 245 000 in prize money 1 Important races EditPublic interest in Thoroughbred racing especially during the main spring and autumn racing carnivals has been growing in recent years with over 100 000 attracted to the running of the Melbourne Cup the Victoria Derby and the VRC Oaks race meets The Golden Slipper Stakes Caulfield Cup and W S Cox Plate are also major attractions History EditHorses Edit nbsp An early importation to Australia was the Arabian stallion Old Hector whose bloodlines are to be found in the pedigrees of some Australian Thoroughbreds The first horses that came to Australia arrived on the Lady Penrhyn with the First Fleet on 26 January 1788 2 It is thought that they consisted of one stallion one colt three mares and two fillies from Cape Town South Africa 3 Young Rockingham was one of the first bloodhorses to be imported into Australia c 1797 4 In 1802 the stallion Northumberland and an English mare were imported followed shortly thereafter by Washington a stallion from America Old Hector was an important Arabian horse that was imported to Australia c 1803 and whose bloodlines have survived in Australian Thoroughbred pedigrees Northumberland and Hector were the two leading sires in Australia until 1820 5 These sires and a number of other Arabian stallions contributed to the breeding up of the bloodhorse population prior to 1825 6 Manto imported in 1825 was the first General Stud Book recorded Thoroughbred mare known by name to arrive in Australia Her family is still producing winners In 1826 the Thoroughbred stallion Peter Fin and mares Cutty Sark and Spaewife were imported 7 The first recorded public auction of bloodstock took place in 1805 After the 1830s more English bred horses were imported for racing as more racing clubs were formed in the country areas of New South Wales 8 Malua foaled in 1879 was the most versatile Australian Thoroughbred racehorse winning classic races on the flat and the VRC Grand National Hurdle before becoming a good sire 7 The New Zealand bred Carbine was one of the early champions of the Australian turf 9 and was later inducted into the Australian Racing Hall of Fame and the New Zealand Racing Hall of Fame His descendants the New Zealand bred horses Phar Lap and Tulloch the first horse to win more than 100 000 in Australia also became champions of the Australian turf Bernborough Kingston Town Heroic Makybe Diva bred in England and Winx were other champions that have been inducted into the Australian Racing Hall of Fame On 31 March 2011 Black Caviar was rated the best Thoroughbred racehorse in the world by Timeform with a 135 rating for the period of 1 October 2010 to 27 March 2011 10 11 Australian Thoroughbred breeding has long been involved in the importation of horses especially from Europe and later the US Initially the British importations were identified on records with imp or an asterisk added as a suffix to indicate that they were not locally bred With the advent of importations from other countries and the use of shuttle stallions that stand at stud in Australia during the northern hemisphere s winter these suffixes were replaced by an abbreviated country suffix These took the format of e g USA GB IRE and FR etc 12 Australian bred stallions exported to America have proved very successful at stud there Some of these exported horses include Bernborough Shannon Sailor s Guide Noholme Tobin Bronze and Royal Gem 13 Annually about 8 500 horses are retired from racing many of which are slaughtered for an export market in human consumption 14 Throughout its history horseracing has become part of the Australian culture and has developed a rich and colourful language Early race meetings and clubs Edit nbsp Royal Randwick Racecourse with Sydney skyline in backgroundHorseracing had become well established in and around Sydney by 1810 The first official race meeting was organised by officers of Governor Macquarie s visiting 73rd Regiment and held at Hyde Park Sydney in October 1810 15 starting on Monday 15th and continuing on the Wednesday and the Friday 16 The Australian Jockey Club AJC held its meetings at Homebush from 1842 to 1859 before moving to Randwick in 1860 The AJC has its headquarters at Randwick where it plays a major role in the regulation of the sport The Sydney Turf Club STC was formed in 1943 and held races on the Rosehill Gardens track and at Canterbury This club was the initiator of the world s richest race for two year olds the Golden Slipper Stakes The Australian Jockey and Sydney Turf Clubs Merger Act 2010 17 merged the two clubs under the name of the Australian Turf Club In Victoria the first official races were held in March 1838 on a specially marked out course at Batman s Hill in Melbourne The Victorian Racing Club VRC was formed from the amalgamation in 1864 of the Victoria Jockey Club and Victoria Turf Club Queensland s first recorded race meeting was held at Cooper s Plains in 1843 The major race club the Queensland Turf Club QTC was formed in 1863 followed by the Brisbane Amateur Turf Club BATC in 1923 South Australia s first meeting was held at Adelaide in 1843 The principal race club the South Australian Jockey Club SAJC was founded in 1856 Organised racing was first held in Tasmania in 1814 at Newtown near Hobart The Tasmanian Turf Club TTC was formed in 1871 but the major club the Tasmanian Racing Club TRC was not established until 1874 Thoroughbred racing commenced in Western Australia in 1836 The Western Australian Turf Club WATC was established in 1852 9 By 1883 192 country clubs were registered to race under Australian Jockey Club rules 7 In the Northern Territory the Darwin Turf Club was established in May 1955 18 Breeders and stud farms Edit The early breeders of Australian bloodstock were men of historical significance such as Robert Campbell 1769 1846 Lieutenant William Lawson explorer John Macarthur wool pioneer John Piper military officer and Dr D Arcy Wentworth 4 5 Charles Smith established Bungarribee stud at Doonside New South Wales shortly after 1830 which only had pure bred English horses 8 It was Charles Smith who bred the great colonial stallion Sir Hercules who was foaled in 1843 5 James White 1828 1890 owner of Kirkham Stud was one of the most successful owner breeders in Australian racing with his horses winning two Melbourne Cups six VRC Derbies and five AJC Derbies 4 The three eastern mainland states supply 85 of Australian racehorses with the Hunter River valley being the favoured region for Thoroughbred horses in NSW In Queensland the Darling Downs is the major nursery Hurtle Fisher s Maribyrnong Stud was a famous stud in Victoria where expensive imported horses were used until it was dispersed in 1866 The St Albans Stud at Geelong was established in the 1850s and was still operating over 100 years later 8 Tranquil Star was bred here and Briseis was bred owned and trained by James Wilson at this stud nbsp Star KingdomThe Widden Stud in the Hunter Valley NSW was established by John Thompson in 1867 Since then Widden Stud has been home to some of the finest stallions and broodmares including the following who were all at various times Australia s champion sire Lochiel four times leading sire Grafton four times Maltster five times Bletchingly three times Vain once and Marscay twice Heroic Ajax and Todman were other famous Widden stallions The stud has had a seven generation unbroken chain of ownership under the Thompson family Percy Miller 1879 1948 in 1914 established Kia Ora stud just east of Scone Miller imported the leading sire Magpie GB who ran second in the English 2 000 Guineas Stakes This stallion sired Windbag Amounis and Talking Kia Ora stud had the leading imported sires Midstream and Delville Wood who sired champions Shannon exported to the United States Delta Hydrogen and Evening Peal etc plus a superb band of brood mares 19 Stanley Wootton exerted a major influence on Australian racing when he imported the stallion Star Kingdom now recognised as the most influential sire line in this country 8 Wootton also bred the outstanding Biscay and Bletchingly Jockeys Edit nbsp Jockey Edgar Britt 22 January 1934Australian jockeys are some of the best in the world and were among the first in the world to experiment with the crouched riding style In the late 19th century Tot Flood and James Barden pioneered this crouch style in Australia independently of the American Tod Sloan after whom the style was named Australian jockeys have successfully ridden on racecourses across the world Some of the notable jockeys include Scobie Breasley four times British champion jockey Edgar Britt Mick Dittman Roy Higgins George T D Moore Nash Rawiller Neville Sellwood Harry White and Bill Williamson 9 In the 1850s amateur ladies only events were held in Victoria Australia but women were not permitted to ride as professional jockeys or on professional tracks Although women jockeys were still barred from riding in the mid 20th century Wilhemena Smith rode as Bill Smith at north Queensland racecourses 20 In the 1920s Hilda Thomas b 1905 is reported to have raced in Western Australia on special race day granted permits as she wasn t eligible for a jockey s licence citation needed There s little record of this except a 1927 28 West Australian Turf Guide where she was named the jockey of an unplaced horse Unofficial records suggest that her brother may have been given the placing in the records During 1974 the VRC permitted female jockeys to be registered for professional ladies only events Pam O Neill and Linda Jones in 1979 were the first women jockeys that were licensed to compete in registered races against men Trainers Edit Historically the most notable trainers in Australia are Bart Cummings trainer of 12 Melbourne Cup winners and Tommy Smith who had won 30 successive Sydney Trainers Premierships prior to his death Other successful trainers include Jack Denham Lee Freedman Colin Hayes David Hayes Etienne L de Mestre James Scobie and Gai Waterhouse In recent years Chris Waller and Darren Weir have experienced success In the 2015 16 Season Weir broke John Hawkes record for most winners in a season In 1962 Betty Lane applied to the AJC for a metropolitan trainer s licence but was refused as it s not our policy to license women After the refusal she became a successful premiership winning trainer in the Western Districts of NSW where she was permitted to train In 1982 Betty Lane became the first woman trainer with a Number One Trainers Licence 21 In 2019 Victoria Police raided properties owned by Darren Weir in Warrnambool and near Ballarat and arrested Weir 48 and two other men relating to the corruption of betting results and animal cruelty Police found what was believed to be cocaine and four devices known as jiggers which can deliver electric shocks In relation to the conducted energy devices or the jiggers clearly the allegation is that they may be used against a horse with the aim of improving their performance on a particular race day Assistant Commissioner Neil Paterson said 22 Stud books and registrations Edit The Stud Book of New South Wales by Fowler Boyd Price was published in 1859 and was the first official attempt to document the pedigrees of the colony s bloodhorses 23 The Victorian Stud Book was then published in Volumes 1 2 which were edited by William Levey to the year 1864 and volumes 3 4 edited by William Cross Yuille to the year 1874 7 The Australian Stud Book ASB began in 1878 as a private venture by A amp William C Yuille Melbourne bloodstock agents who published nine volumes New Zealand horses were included in the ASB until Volume VII appeared in 1900 The copyright was sold in 1910 to the AJC and VRC who now administer matters concerning the breeding of racehorses 12 The outstanding ASB online database contains the records of over 860 000 horses which includes every Australian foal born since 1972 This database includes 28 000 winners of major races in Australia and around the world A 3 000 plus pages printed version of volume 42 of the ASB contains the breeding records of 43 000 mares and 70 000 of their named offspring 24 In the 1880s it was decided that all Thoroughbreds in Australasia should have their official ages calculated from 1 August The Registrar of Racehorses controls the naming registration leasing and transfers of all horses racing in Australia Racehorses must be registered to race but do not have to be purebred Thoroughbreds in order to be registered and race in Australia 7 Prior to 1980 it was not uncommon to see a racehorse registered as by an unidentified sire out of a station mare During 1980 it was regulated that horses without registered parents could not be officially named The registration of racing colours is also handled by the Registrar of Racehorses EI outbreak Edit Equine influenza EI was initially discovered in a metropolitan Sydney horse complex in late August 2007 and spread to many areas of New South Wales and southern Queensland This immediately stopped all equine pursuits nationwide but soon racing in those states without EI cases resumed The entire racing industry was put under great pressure because of a lack of racing for Standardbreds and Thoroughbreds 25 Administration of racing in Australia EditAustralia Edit Racing in the Australian continent is governed by the Australian Racing Board This body supersedes the power of the principal clubs which were once the sovereign body of racing in every state until government reforms introduced separate governing bodies for the industry The board is constituted of the various principal racing bodies in each state The board is directly responsible for establishing the rules of racing subject to additional local rules the establishment and maintenance of the pattern racing committees responsible for grading races and allocating black type status as well as establishing a number of advisory groups to attempt to maintain uniformity in procedures between states and establish an accepted national racing calendar nbsp The setting for the VRC DerbyVictoria Edit Victoria is considered to be the home of racing in Australia with international races like the Melbourne Cup and Cox Plate The governing body is Racing Victoria Limited The principal club is the Victoria Racing Club which races at Flemington the two other metropolitan clubs are the Melbourne Racing Club which races at Caulfield and Sandown and the Moonee Valley Racing Club home of the Weight for Age championship of Australasia the Cox Plate The state boasts many top class provincial and country racecourses including Pakenham Cranbourne Mornington Geelong Ballarat Bendigo Mildura Stony Creek Wangaratta Warrnambool Moe and Tatura New South Wales Edit Racing in New South Wales is governed by Racing NSW The principal club is the Australian Turf Club which races at Randwick Warwick Farm Rosehill Gardens and Canterbury Park The state s major provincial tracks are Newcastle and Kembla Grange which alternate their meetings every second Saturday Other notable tracks include Hawkesbury Gosford and Grafton which hosts the largest race carnival in Australia outside of a capital city 26 South Australia Edit Racing in South Australia is governed by Thoroughbred Racing S A Limited The principal club is the South Australian Jockey Club which races at Morphettville and previously Cheltenham until its closure in 2009 and Victoria Park until 2008 Additionally the Oakbank Racing Club holds the highly popular Oakbank Easter Racing Carnival with its two meetings on Easter Saturday and Easter Monday Queensland Edit Racing in Queensland is governed by the Racing Queensland with the principal club being the Brisbane Racing Club formed out of a merger between the Queensland Turf Club Eagle Farm and the Brisbane Turf Club Doomben The most significant Queensland race is the Stradbroke Handicap held at Eagle Farm over 1 400 metres The BRC hosts the vast majority of metropolitan meetings in Queensland Outside of Brisbane meetings are held each Saturday at the Gold Coast and Toowoomba racecourses The Sunshine Coast Turf Club operates a considerable facility at Caloundra Queensland Country racing is also popular in Queensland with several country cups attracting large crowds throughout the year the most notable being the Roma Cup in November Western Australia Edit nbsp Belmont Park Race course Perth s winter trackRacing in Western Australia is governed by Racing and Wagering Western Australia which is a government owned body The main racing club Western Australian Turf Club now known as Perth Racing holds racing at Belmont Park and Ascot Racecourse Other popular courses with feature races in Western Australia are Bunbury Pinjarra York Geraldton Albany Kalgoorlie and Northam The most popular race is the Perth Cup held each New Year s Day at Ascot There are three Group One G1 races contended being the Railway Stakes the Kingston Town Classic and the Winterbottom Stakes Tasmania Edit Racing in Tasmania is governed by the Tasmanian Thoroughbred Racing Council and the principal club is the Tasmanian Turf Club There are Tasmanian meetings every Sunday usually alternating between Elwick Racecourse near Hobart Tasman Park near Launceston and Spreyton Devonport Race meetings also occur at the King Island Racing Club Northern Territory Edit Racing in the Northern Territory is now governed by Thoroughbred Racing NT formerly the Darwin Turf Club which races at Fannie Bay Australian Capital Territory Edit Racing in the Australian Capital Territory is governed by the principal club the Canberra Racing Club Betting EditThere are four main avenues for race betting in Australia Licensed on track bookmakers offer fixed odds betting mostly on wins and places Off track betting was traditionally controlled by the various state government through organisation called Totalisator Agency Boards TAB which offered mainly parimutuel betting that is the odds were not fixed but involved the house taking a fixed cut and distributing the remainder amongst people who made a winning bet Many of these TABs have now been privatised and many pubs now offer betting services linked to the privatised offshoots of the companies In some parts of Australia there was a tradition of illegal off course bookmaking known as SP bookmaking This became a large area of vice intimately associated with police corruption and racetrack rigging Several Royal Commissions investigated the practice and there were many attempts to eradicate it Once a common sight in suburban pubs and bars the introduction of telephone and internet betting at fixed prices by licensed on course bookmakers has made it largely redundant Finally there is online person to person exchange betting where members set their own prices and pay a percentage of their winnings in commission In 1913 one of the major developments in race wagering the automatic totalisator which allowed the automatic calculation of race odds given betting patterns was invented in Australia by George Julius later Sir 8 In recent years corporate bookmakers operating online and through mobile apps have become increasingly popular through various specials promotion and ease of use Facts and figures for season 2008 09 EditGroup races Edit Group 1 races 67 Group 2 races 83 Group 3 races 110 Listed races 282 Total of Black Type races 542Breeding Edit Stallions 840 Mares 28 134 Live Foals 16 113 Gross Yearling Sales A 245 million Median sale price A 19 000 Champion Sire Encosta De LagoPrize money and earnings Edit Total Prize money A 421 million Leading Prize money Earner Viewed Total number of racehorses 31 659 Number of horses which earned over 100 000 674 Number of horses which earned less than 2 000 22 300 Number of horses with 4 or more wins 634 Number of horses with 0 wins 19 579Wagering Edit Totalisator 9 897 million Win 47 4 Place 15 7 Trifecta 16 3 Quinella 5 2 Exacta 2 6 Doubles 2 2 Quadrella 4 0 Other 6 5 Bookmakers A 4 536 millionThe season s winners Edit Racehorse of the year Scenic Blast Leading Trainer by Group wins Gai Waterhouse Leading Trainer by wins David A Hayes Leading Jockey by Group wins Nash Rawiller Leading Jockey by wins Hugh BowmanElite and black type racing in Australia EditThe Australian Pattern Racing Committee is responsible for grading races under the auspices of the Australian Racing Board Traditionally until the late 1970s a series of stakes races were recognised as black type but there was no grading of races within this grouping Historically handicaps have been extremely popular among Australian punters owners and industry participants As a result a large number of handicap races still exist within the list of group and listed races Small efforts have been made to downgrade handicaps and promote set weights and weight for age races however the strength of fields that most handicaps attract make them better punting races than possible under even conditions As the largest racing country in the world Australia has 66 of the world s 193 Group One races recognised by the International Federation of Horseracing Authorities By tradition many state races have maintained higher gradings than they would otherwise be entitled to because of the poor quality of horses participating in them The rapid growth in the Victorian and to a lesser extent New South Wales racing carnivals has made the leading races of the other states less competitive in prize money and as a result prestige Given the self interest of each state forming the Australian Racing Board progress in properly grading races has been slow and controversy is often found in the decisions taken by the Pattern Racing Committee In recent years change has been occurring as the Pattern Racing Committee has taken a more scientific approach Criticism is also often made of a trend towards the promotion of sprint races over staying races Many traditional staying races have been reduced in distance significantly over the last 30 40 years Many parties have called for staying races to be given special dispensation in on going reviews of race classifications to allow for a current lack of depth to encourage breeding and thus further depth in future The group 1 races and selected other races in Australia can generally be split into 3 groups Australian races state city track races and historically significant races National races Edit Australian Derby AJC Easter Carnival 2 400m 3yoAustralian Oaks AJC Easter Carnival 2 400m 3yoAustralian Cup VRC Autumn Carnival 2 000m Open WFAAustralian Guineas VRC Autumn Carnival 1 600m 3yoAustralia Stakes Moonee Valley 1 200m OpenAustralian Sires Produce Stakes AJC Easter Carnival 1 400 2yo State City Track Races Edit Victorian races Edit Victoria Derby Victoria Oaks Victoria Sires Produce Stakes Melbourne Cup Caulfield Cup Caulfield Guineas 1000 Guineas Caulfield Stakes Moonee Valley Cup Zipping Classic New South Wales Races Edit Sydney Cup Randwick Guineas Rosehill Guineas Storm Queen Stakes Queensland Races Edit Queensland Derby Queensland Oaks Queensland Cup QTC Sires Produce Stakes Queensland Guineas Brisbane Cup Doomben Cup South Australian Races Edit South Australian Derby South Australian Oaks SAJC Sires Produce Stakes Adelaide Cup Port Adelaide Cup Port Adelaide Guineas Western Australian Races Edit WATC Derby Perth Cup Historically significant races Edit Victoria Edit W S Cox Plate Newmarket Handicap Blue Diamond Stakes MRC Futurity Stakes C F Orr Stakes Black Caviar Lightning Manikato Stakes Oakleigh Plate Mackinnon Stakes Sir Rupert Clarke Stakes Underwood Stakes Turnbull Stakes VRC Classic Myer Classic New South Wales Edit Golden Slipper Doncaster Handicap Epsom Handicap George Main Stakes Metropolitan Handicap Spring Champion Stakes Flight Stakes Chipping Norton Stakes Coolmore Classic Ranvet Stakes Queen of the Turf Stakes George Ryder Stakes The BMW All Aged Stakes The Galaxy TJ Smith Stakes Queen Elizabeth Stakes Champagne Stakes Queensland Edit The T J Smith BTC Cup Doomben 10 000 Stradbroke Handicap Winter Stakes South Australia Edit Robert Sangster Stakes Goodwood Handicap Australasian Oaks Western Australia Edit Railway Stakes Kingston Town ClassicSee also EditAustralian and New Zealand punting glossary Australian Champion Racehorse of the Year Australian Racing Hall of Fame List of Australian Group races List of millionaire racehorses in Australia Spring Grand Slam Thoroughbred racing in New Zealand Triple Crown of Thoroughbred RacingReferences Edit a b c d Australian Racing Fact Book 2009 10 The Origins of Australia s Wild Horses PDF australianbrumbyalliance org au Bain Ike chief exec The Australian Encyclopaedia Vol 4 p 538 Horses Australian Geographic Pty Ltd 1996 a b c Binney Keith R Horsemen of the First Frontier 1788 1900 and the Serpents Legacy Volcanic Productions Sydney 2005 ISBN 0 646 44865 X a b c Barrie Douglas M The Australian Bloodhorse Angus amp Robertson Sydney 1956 Montgomery E S The Thoroughbred Arco New York 1973 ISBN 0 668 02824 6 a b c d e Barrie Douglas M Turf Cavalcade Halstead Press Sydney 1960 a b c d e Chisholm Alec H ed The Australian Encyclopaedia Vol 4 p 538 Horse Racing Halstead Press Sydney 1963 a b c Shaw John H Collins Australian Encyclopedia William Collins Pty Ltd Sydney 1984 ISBN 0 00 217315 8 Habel Tim 31 March 2011 Experts confirm Black Caviar as world s best Herald Sun Retrieved 2 April 2011 Timeform Global Rankings for 2011 Timeform Retrieved 3 April 2011 a b Wicks B M The Australian Racehorse Libra Books Canberra 1973 ISBN 0 909619 00 X du Bourg Ross The Australian and New Zealand Thoroughbred Thomas Nelson Melbourne 1980 ISBN 0 17 005860 3 Meldrum Hanna Caro 17 Oct 2019 The dark side of the horse racing industry 7 30 ABC News Australia Retrieved 12 February 2020 Sydney s first official race meeting tbheritage com Barrett Norman ed 1995 The Daily Telegraph Chronicle of Horse Racing Enfield Middlesex Guinness Publishing p 10 AUSTRALIAN JOCKEY AND SYDNEY TURF CLUBS MERGER ACT 2010 AustLII Australasian Legal Information Institute 2010 Retrieved 14 September 2015 Darwin Turf Club Retrieved on 5 June 2009 Kia Ora Retrieved on 2009 4 29 Just Racing Archived 2009 11 08 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved on 5 May 2009 The Track Retrieved on 6 June 2009 Darren Weir s horse racing stables raided by police ABC News 30 January 2019 Retrieved 31 January 2019 The Stud book of New South Wales Retrieved on 23 May 2009 Racetrack Magazine June August 2009 Michael Ford Keeper of the ASB Australian Stud Book s Database p 48 News Limited Search for source of EI outbreak Retrieved 2010 9 6 Grafton July Racing Carnival Retrieved 21 April 2013 The Clarence River Jockey Club located in the picturesque jacaranda tree lined city of Grafton situated on the NSW North Coast is home of the richest non metropolitan carnival in Australia the famous Grafton July Racing Carnival External links EditA day at the races the horse in Australia Discover Collections State Library of NSW 2012 Australian Racing Fact Book Thoroughbred Horse Racing in Australia Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Thoroughbred racing in Australia amp oldid 1176352122, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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