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NZ Briefs for 12th June 2020

3 minute read

Tavisan well suited; Vale Battle Paint; Proposed changes to Racing Industry Bill;

TAVISAN winning the Le Pine Funerals Handicap in Caulfield, Australia.
TAVISAN winning the Le Pine Funerals Handicap in Caulfield, Australia. Picture: Racing Photos

Tavisan well suited

Caulfield trainer Mick Price, who trains in partnership with Michael Kent Jr, believes Tavistock four-year-old Tavisan  is well placed at Moonee Valley on Saturday to maintain his winning form.

The five-win gelding was back in the winner's circle when successful at Caulfield over 1100m last start and Price has high expectations for the front-running speedster when he steps up to 1200m on Saturday.

"He's going well and the race sets up beautifully for him, as long as Great Again doesn't take him on," Price said.

"He's just taken a couple of runs to get fit. He's quite a gross gelding but once he is in the zone and the track is soft, he will get his toe in. 

"I think he's an excellent chance."

Out of the Volksraad mare Evanescence, Tavisan was purchased by Grant Morgan's Ontrack Thoroughbreds out of Hallmark Stud's New Zealand Bloodstock 2017 Premier Yearling Sale draft for $135,000.

Bred by The Sunlight Trust, Tavisan commenced his racing career in New Zealand with Matamata trainer Jacob McKay before transferring across the Tasman after four starts as a juvenile.Vale Battle Paint

Chequers Stud have reported the death of their resident sire Battle Paint, with the son of Tale of the Cat humanely euthanised on Tuesday after a battle with colic.

The winner of three races in Europe, Battle Paint was runner-up to Holy Roman Emperor in the Gr.1 Grand Criterium (1400m) as a two-year-old.

He went on to become a more than useful addition to New Zealand's stallion ranks, as the sire of seven stakes performers headed by Group Two winner Battle Time and star Singapore galloper Affleck.

"He was a very good horse for the farm," Chequers Stud's Mark Fraser-Campin said.

"He sired a horse like Affleck who was Champion Two and Three-Year-Old in Singapore and a number of breeders in New Zealand did quite well out of breeding to Battle Paint, who was relatively popular as a sire of trade horses."

"Even over the lockdown period his son Strike Force, who was unbeaten in two starts for Danny Crozier, has been sold to Hong Kong."

The sire of 72 winners from 131 starters, Battle Paint's offspring have also proved popular in the equestrian sphere.

Proposed changes to Racing Industry Bill

New Zealand's Transport and Infrastructure Select Committee has put forward a number of proposed changes to the country's new Racing Industry Bill, with the legislation now expected to pass into law a month later than originally planned.

Filed in December 2019, the bill is the second part in a two-step process that saw the Racing Reform Act implemented from 1 July 2019. It had been due to come into effect from 1 July of this year, but progress stalled as lawmakers focused on responding to the COVID-19 pandemic.

However, the Racing Industry Transition Agency (RITA) said it was confident the bill could still be implemented from 1 August.

RITA, which is expected to be replaced by a new entity, Racing NZ, has updated stakeholders on proposed changes to the bill, with the committee highlighting over 30 areas for amendments.

"Our initial view of the Select Committee's recommendations is that the overall direction and structure of the Bill remains the same as it was before the Committee and is still in line with the direction of the Messara Report," RITA executive chair Dean McKenzie said.

"The TAB will be established as a pure betting, broadcasting and gaming entity, and the Codes will have greater roles and responsibilities for developing and promoting their sport."

The key aspects of change the Select Committee has recommended includes:

  • The establishment of Racing NZ as soon as the Bill becomes law. This is a formal consultative forum comprising the three Codes. It could carry out some of the functions of the Codes (if the Codes wish). 
  • Changes to the venue provisions of the Bill. The changes require the Minister for Racing to have greater consideration of the community before deciding whether to vest a Club's assets with the Code.
  • Changes to the composition of the TAB NZ Board. The TAB is proposed to have three out of seven members appointed on recommendation of the Codes. A Selection Panel is proposed and the overall required skillset of the Board remains generally in line with what was in the Bill previously. 
  • Intellectual Property. The clause that gave TAB NZ exclusive use of racing industry intellectual property is proposed to be removed. This clause was viewed by almost all submitters as being too broad and encompassing, when the intention was for the clause to apply to negotiations with offshore bookmakers.  
  • Betting Information Use Charges (Racefields). There are some changes to this aspect of the legislation which make it easier for the industry to require offshore bookmakers to pay for their use of New Zealand product.

The next stage of the process is that the Minister for Racing could also introduce any changes he wants to see included as part of the Second Reading. The Parliament then agrees to or rejects the amendments recommended by the Select Committee and the Minister. If all goes to plan, the Bill could come into effect by 1 August.


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