As Coffey and Maher celebrated a hard-fought victory, an owner stormed off in disgust

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Danny Russell

Updated ,first published

In today’s racing briefing, your wrap of racing news

  • Light Infantry Man edged out brave front-running mare and crowd favourite Pride Of Jenni by the narrowest of margins to win the Australian Cup.
  • J.D. Hayes tells the tale of how the racing industry came together to help his family in its our of need.

Two of racing’s great fairytales collided at Flemington on Saturday and almost finished in a dead heat.

In the end, it took a judge’s magnifying glass to separate the winner.

After a long pause, an enlarged photo finish showed popular jockey Harry Coffey, the poster boy for cystic fibrosis sufferers, had won the group 1 Australian Cup on Light Infantry Man by a whisker.

Harry Coffey on Light Infantry Man just pips Declan Bates and Pride Of Jenni at the post.Getty Images
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They had edged out brave front-running mare and crowd favourite Pride Of Jenni by the narrowest of margins. She had led the 2000m race to the very shadows of the post.

As the decision was announced, Coffey broke into a broad smile. It was his second big race victory in less than two years after winning the 2024 Caulfield Cup.

But as he beamed with joy, Pride Of Jenni’s owner Tony Ottobre was seemingly overcome by a dark cloud.

Seconds earlier he had been jumping around on the lawn in celebration. He thought his mare had held on and won.

Harry Coffey talks with his dad, Austy, at the Echuca races in 2024.Racing Photos
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Instead, he stormed from the mounting yard with a look of disgust on his face. He came across as a man who had been robbed.

Ottobre asked stewards if he could have a look at the photo finish. Once he viewed the image, he agreed with the judge’s decision to award the race to Light Infantry Man. Ottobre was contacted for comment.

It was the second time in three years that Pride Of Jenni had been pipped on the line in the Australian Cup – a race that Ottobre so desperately wants to win. She finished a narrow second to Cascadian in 2024.

Ottobre is not a man who takes losing lightly.

But there was no one to blame on Saturday except for technology and the finish line.

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The true winner of the photo finish was Ciaron Maher. As the crowd waited anxiously for the result to be announced, Maher couldn’t lose – he trained both Light Infantry Man and Pride Of Jenni.

Tony Ottobre and Pride Of Jenni.Wayne Taylor

“I don’t know who I’m more proud of, the winner or the second horse,” he said after the race.

“It’s such a shame for Jenni to run second again. I know for Tony [Ottobre], it’s a race he holds very dear to his heart. He strapped back in the day a horse for [Colin] Hayes.

“It still eludes her, but she’s racing in great heart, and you never know, we may be back here with her next year. She was phenomenal.

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“I thought it was going to be a spectacular race and to be fighting it out with two of your own, it’s pretty cool.”

Maher said the key to Light Infantry Man winning the race was Coffey taking advice from the seven-year-old gelding’s regular rider, Ethan Brown, who is currently serving a suspension.

“He’s a unique horse, in the way he has to be ridden,” Maher said. “Browny understands him well, and I asked him to pass on some of that information last start and Harry didn’t really get it until he had finished the race [finishing fourth of seven].

“He rode him perfect today. The start is very important for him. He blasted him straight out of the gates.”

Coffey agreed with the trainer. He said Brown’s advice had proved a winning break.

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“He sent me a text this morning saying, ‘I see it is going to be pretty wet, make sure you give him a nice warm-up to the gates to let him know how open that track is because he’s a smart horse, and he’ll come to the conditions, but you just have to let him know’,” Coffey said.

“So, thank you, Browny.”

Coffey continues to defy the odds. Diagnosed with cystic fibrosis as a baby, his Swan Hill-based parents, Austy and Maree, feared he would never make it past his teenage years.

“We were getting told we wouldn’t have him for long,” his father told this masthead in 2024.

But thanks to advances in medication, the 30-year-old jockey continues to compete and excel at the highest level. He is a married father of one who has now won four group 1 races.

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“I’ve been fortunate to ride some bloody nice horses in my career and winning races like this is extremely special, especially when you’re from a race family,” he said.

“Tradition, history, and to put your name next to it and be a part of it, it is everything that people want in racing and we are lucky to have it.”

The Lindsay Park-trained Apulia finished third behind Light Infantry Man and Pride Of Jenni for the Hayes brothers – Ben, J.D. and Will – while race favourites Birdman and Tom Kitten struggled in the soft ground to finish fifth and seventh.

Irish jockey Bates, who was forgiven by Ottobre and re-united with Pride Of Jenni in September last year, said the eight-year-old mare was a warrior.

“I don’t think I have ever asked of a horse what I asked of her today,” he said.

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“I really asked her to extend quite early, and she responded so gallantly. Frustrating not to win, obviously, but I am delighted for Harry. I’m really happy with my horse.”

Earlier, the Glen Thompson-trained stayer Whiskey On The Hill won the 2600m Roy Higgins to qualify for this year’s Melbourne Cup.

‘You’re about to be burnt’: How this farm was nearly wiped from the map

The smell of charred wood and scorched earth still hovers over Lindsay Park.

A blackened gum tree, clinging on to its brown, dead leaves, sits just 30 metres from the property’s trainers’ hut, serving as a daily reminder of the firestorm that almost wiped the Hayes family’s Euroa farm from the map.

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J.D. Hayes with track rider Patrick Didham and galloper Matchless at a regenerating Lindsay Park.Justin McManus

Not that J.D. Hayes needs reminding.

As he and his brothers, Ben and Will, prepare their horses for Saturday’s Australian Cup meeting at Flemington, he can recall in vivid detail the trauma of the January bushfires.

Almost three months on, he tells of an unstoppable blaze that killed seven horses, destroyed Ben’s house, and wiped out a smaller stable complex and hay shed. Incredibly, he says it could have been worse.

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“We were lucky,” J.D. said. “It hit 95 per cent of our farm, but the irrigation saved our main stables and our tracks. We had 350 horses on the property… only seven didn’t make it.”

His first encounter with the fire came on Thursday, January 8.

He and twin brother Will returned to Lindsay Park, 17 kilometres south of Euroa, from training duties in Melbourne because the property was under threat. Ben, their older brother, was on the Gold Coast for the Magic Millions sales.

By that stage, the fires had taken hold. The Hume Freeway had been closed, and properties were being evacuated.

“We got to the turn off, literally when you come into the farm, and we got the call from the CFA saying you’re about to be burnt,” J.D. said.

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The remains of Ben and Grace Hayes’ house that was lost in the January bushfires.Justin McManus

“There was just smoke. Like, I’ve never seen smoke like it. It was unbelievable.

“You can’t explain it. It’s horrendous … like a war zone. The wind and the sound, like, you can hear it burning. And that’s when we had to evacuate.”

It was the beginning of 48 hours of hell.

Luck, and bravery, helped the Hayes family on that first day. Fifteen CFA trucks fought the blaze at their boundary before a sudden wind change sent it in a different direction. Lindsay Park had been spared.

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But the sense of relief barely lasted through the night. On the Friday, the firestorm would return to finish what it had started.

“Friday was that horrific day. There were 90km/h winds and it was 45 degrees. It was just a perfect storm,” J.D. explained.

As fires raged across the district, spitting thousands of threatening embers into the air, the Hayes family, including parents David and Prue, who had returned to Australia from Hong Kong for a wedding, moved frantically around the farm, putting out spot fires. They were helped by a number of staff.

“But because of the forecast and the amount of smoke, and the fire front that you could see, we had to leave,” J.D. said.

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“So we fuelled up all the generators, turned the sprinklers on, and that was the worst feeling of all, leaving on Friday afternoon, just thinking that this could be it. It was just terrible.”

The blackened aftermath of the January bushfire at Lindsay Park.The Hayes family

The Hayes family waited in Shepparton, desperate for updates.

“The CFA were saying that our Criterion stables were gone, Ben and Grace’s house was gone, and we’re just hoping that they weren’t saying that the main stables were gone,” J.D. said.

“The CFA were amazing. They were defending right to the last minute, but if they thought the main stable complex was going to catch fire, they were going to let all those horses go. That would have been chaos.”

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As it was, more than 100 horses were still in paddocks on a more sheltered side of the farm when the family evacuated.

“When we arrived back on Friday night, about 9pm after the fire front had passed through, Mum, Dad, me and Will came in and there were just loose horses everywhere,” J.D. said. “The fire had burned all the fences.”

What struck him, even as the fires lit up surrounding hills, was the calm demeanour of their horses.

“When the fire had come into the paddocks, the horses had jumped the fire front to the burnt ground. It was incredible,” he said.

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“Then, in the pitch black, we had to catch as many as we could. You would walk into a paddock, and you’d only have one head collar and there would be 15 horses, and they would all just follow you out. It was surreal.”

What happened the following day still makes J.D. shake his head. With no fences on the farm, they had to relocate 130 horses to a more secure property. By 7am on the Saturday, the trucks started rolling in.

Horses work at Lindsay Park 11 weeks after the January bushfires.Justin McManus

Troy Corstens, the head of the Australian Trainers’ Association, had helped organise a convoy of floats – trucks from the likes of Ciaron Maher and Chris Waller down to smaller country trainers such as Craig Weeding – to pick up the Hayes’ stock. Even suspended jockey Ben Allen drove a vehicle to help.

Inglis then opened up their sales complex at Oaklands Junction to stable the horses.

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“The racing industry is an incredible industry,” J.D. said. “When the chips are down, people come and help.

“We had every horse that we needed to get off the property gone by about 10am. In three hours, we were able to evacuate the farm, which was incredible.”

After running on adrenaline for 48 hours, J.D. said he fell into a deep sleep. But outside of that, there was little time for rest. Business, he said, continued as usual. The racing did not stop.

“The clean-up is just as stressful because you’re dealing with insurance, we had all the fencing gone, we had 130 horses that need to be relocated from Inglis to another farm, and then we had runners on the Saturday,” Hayes said.

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There was personal loss, too. Ben and his wife, Grace, who had a baby girl in October, had to cope with losing their house.

Green shoots have returned to Lindsay Park but fire-damaged fencing still needs to be repaired.Justin McManus

“They’d freshly renovated,” J.D. said. “They got two nights in it. They had a lot of their personal items in there – all gone.

“We had all the Better Loosen [Up] memorabilia in there as well, and all the C.S. Hayes memorabilia. So all Pa’s stuff is gone. Like photos of him training 10 winners in a day.”

But as green shoots continue to spring up across Lindsay Park, the Hayes family have emerged from the ashes.

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They are rebuilding fences, have plans for a new Criterion stable and are preparing to build a new home for Ben and Grace.

“You always think, ‘Oh, it won’t happen to us’,” J.D. said. “But we’ve lost that mentality now because it’s happened twice in 10 years. We just get prepared now.

“It could have been much worse, but our system stood up to save as many horses as we did, and save the property as well.”

This week, the brothers have been busy preparing their runners for Saturday’s Flemington meeting, including smart two-year-old Gin Twist, Godolphin sprinter Pisanello and Australian Cup fancy Apulia.

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“He [Apulia] won the Perth Cup on the first of January, and then we burnt down seven days later,” Hayes said. “Winning on Saturday is not beyond him.

“We’ve put the blinkers on. He’s a very good Flemington horse, and he put the writing on the wall that he’s looking for 2000 metres. We’re quietly confident that he’s not going to let us down.”

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Disclaimer : This story is auto aggregated by a computer programme and has not been created or edited by DOWNTHENEWS. Publisher: www.smh.com.au