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You
Can’t
Knock a Man Who Dares To Dream
A man has got to dream, boy.
It comes with the territory. Willy Loman said that in “Death of a Salesman” and
though he wasn’t talking about the racing game, he
easily could have been. Willy Loman understood that humanity’s
most important commodity is hope. Without it, we have nothing.
Nothing to strive for, nothing to work towards, nothing to
get us out of bed in the morning. Hope is the difference
between living and existing.
Ross McDonald dared to dream. He dared to believe that his
champion galloper Weekend Hussler was the next Kingston Town,
the equivalent of Tulloch, a modern day Carbine. He had the
faith that his horse could do anything asked of it and dreamt
than when The Great and Complete History of the Australian
Turf was written, he would be the trainer of the greatest
galloper Australia has ever known.
That dream was dashed on Saturday
and although Weekend Hussler’s
Caulfield Cup defeat left many, McDonald included, with a
heavy heart, his tale was no tragedy. The tragedy would have
been if McDonald hadn’t dared to lay it all on the
line and chase the pot of gold.
A number of seasons back a
Lloyd Williams horse called Reset raced five times for
five wins including group one victories
in the Cadbury Guineas and the Futurity. He was dually retired,
a potential champion sent off to stud for reasons of money
and business. Ross McDonald wasn’t going to go down
the same gutless path.
Weekend Hussler has certainly bought out the optimistic
best in the hardened trainer. The racing game is a tough
one and when you have been in it as long as McDonald, you
know the road is littered with bones. He has seen plenty
of false dawns.
The brilliance of Weekend Hussler, however, broke down the
protective layers that often insulate a modern day racehorse
trainer and bought to McDonald the shining brilliance of
possibility.
As a three year old, Weekend Hussler had the world at his
hooves in winning nine of his eleven starts. He looked like
a true champion in the making. His Caulfield Guineas victory
was as dominant as any ever recorded. His ability to drop
back two furlongs and claim the Ascot Vale Stakes three weeks
later stamped him as a galloper of great versatility. His
efforts in claiming the Oakleigh and Newmarket against the
older gallopers fixed him as a star. Group one wins in the
Randwick Guineas and the George Ryder further enhanced his
reputation, proving he could win the reverse way of going
and on wet ground. In his first season of racing he had claimed
six group one races, winning them in both Melbourne and Sydney,
on the wet and dry, from 1100 metres to 1600 metres, against
his own age and the older horses. He was a virtual unanimous
decision for horse of the year with his race ratings suggesting
he was the best horse of his age in the world.
Anything seemed possible for Ross McDonald and Weekend Hussler.
Even the most unsentimental of souls who inhabit the Australian
turf were starting to buy into the prospect that Weekend
Hussler was something special and that they had better pay
close heed because perhaps the next champion had arrived.
The cynics had opened their minds to the buoyancy of possibility.
After such an incredible year it was not surprising that
McDonald set the bar high for the spring, opting to make
a run at historical greatness. Weekend Hussler, despite not
racing beyond a mile and despite being bred to race no longer,
was set for the Cox Plate, the Caulfield Cup and the Melbourne
Cup. He was set on a path not completed since the mighty
Rain Lover had run the gauntlet back in 1954 when the world
was consumed by the threat of communism, television was in
its infancy and The Don had only just retired.
Ross McDonald cast logic, sense
and the odds to one side. Dreams aren’t about the tangible and they aren’t
about reason and they aren’t about playing the percentages.
Dreams are about letting go, allowing yourself to chase something
grand, something magnificent, something beautiful, something
historic. Ross McDonald wanted it all and who could blame
him. He had an exciting galloper and wanted to see how far
it could go just like a fighter wants to see how hard he
can hit and just like a pilot wants to see how fast he can
fly. It is about breaking barriers and pushing forward, the
essence that drove Chuck Yeager and Magellan and Tim Leary
and Napolean and Andy Green and all men with ambition and
hope and self-belief.
Prior to Saturday’s Caulfield Cup, there were two
schools of thought regarding Weekend Hussler and Ross McDonald.
The first relied on the notion of the champion, that a horse
good as The Hussler will have no problem with the mile-and-a-half
and even if he is not a true stayer, class alone will get
him home. This was the popular way of thinking, the belief
of the people. They pointed to his three wins this preparation
that culminated in a solid Underwood win over nine furlongs,
rejecting his Turnbull effort as a true reflection of his
staying ability by claiming the wide run and the jockey’s
kindness rendered the test null and void. The second school
pointed to his breeding and his Turnbull run and declared
that despite his brilliance he could not see out a Caulfield
Cup run or any run over a mile-and-a-half. He should have
been saved for one effort in the Cox Plate. McDonald is a
fool for aiming so high.
When they hit the turn in the Cup, two furlongs to race,
Weekend Hussler pulled out and was asked to give. Cheers
rang out, fingers were crossed, silent prayers were made
to any number of deities. He was willed on by nearly every
man and woman on course and nearly every race fan in the
country. We all yearn for a champion and we all need a hero.
Even those who declared him no chance stood hoping they were
wrong.
When Weekend Hussler could find nothing and a Godolphin
roughie who few knew and even less cared about, a collective
groan rang out around Caulfield and around Australia. At
that moment the dream died. Weekend Hussler was to be no
more than a super horse. He would never attain the mantle
of undisputed champion. To reach that level in this country,
the minimum requirement is a Melbourne Cup or a Cox Plate
or a Caulfield Cup. His legacy will always be tarnished by
the caveat that he could not stay and could not win a Big
One. We all knew it as we saw the mighty son of Hussonet
whacking away up the straight.
The Hussler will now spend
the remainder of the spring in a paddock. He will not run
in a Cox Plate that he has been
favoured in since markets opened. He will not be at Flemington
on the first Tuesday in November. He will return to the track
sometime in 2009 and will become one of Australia’s
great sprinter-milers. International traverses await and
he has the quality to match it with the best in the world
up to a mile. He will not be found wanting in terms of class,
brilliance or wins.
He will, however, never claim one of the Big Three.
Ross McDonald may have made
some mistakes. He may have overestimated the capabilities
of his horse. He may have pushed on in the
face of evidence that suggested he shouldn’t. He perhaps
should have gone straight to the Cox Plate and not pursued
the Caulfield Cup. There are many things, with hindsight,
McDonald should of or would have done differently. Hindsight,
however, is a rather dull way to determine what is right
and what is wrong.
The way we should look at Weekend
Hussler’s spring
campaign of 2008 is through the prism of hope. He attempted
something glorious and fell short. It was a noble ambition
and we should always recall the tale in its entirety rather
than allow the conclusion to rest alone because it was the
grandiosity of The Hussler’s journey that was more
important than how the story ended. It was a tale of unfettered
hope, optimism and one hell of a horse and the fact he couldn’t
climb Everest does not mean he is a loser. Context is crucial
and we must always remember that the tracks throughout the
spring of 2008 were filled because we all started to believe
in The Hussler.
The turf is a cruel mistress.
Many dreams are found to be nothing more than delusions,
hopes of grandeur dashed by
the brutal realities of the game. The beauty, however, is
that racing remains a place to dream despite the collapse
of so many romantic visions, where a man may just strike
it rich and win big and find glory and fame and riches and
satisfaction. This is how the turf has always been and this
is how it will always be. Big dreams lead to big deeds and
it is the big deeds that we all remember. Ross McDonald dreamt
big. He may have failed to grab those distant stars he so
desperately craved but in no way can he or his grand galloper
be considered a failure. He is a dreamer, just like the rest
of us, the personification of the turf spirit that gets trainers
up before each dawn and owners opening their wallets at each
sale and punters studying the form each morning. Ross McDonald
had the courage to dream big and that makes him a winner.
Without him or his like, racing would not capture the hearts
and minds of a nation like it does.
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© 2008 PuntingAce.Com
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