By Pat McLeod
Several days after victory in the $75,000-to-the-winner TAB Group 3 Rockhampton Cup, Ned Snow is still grappling with the bittersweet events of the night.
His kennel star Shipwreck showed his class, experience and race nous by grabbing a rails run in the straight to edge out It’s A Roo (trained by Tony Zammit) by three-quarters of a length in 29.64 seconds with Bundaberg’s Bro’s Girl (John White) third.
However, as the Cup presentation was held on Friday night, Snow wasn’t in that spotlight. He was in a separate part of the Rockhampton Greyhound Racing Club’s complex caring for another of his dogs, Come On Aussie, who was injured in the Final.
“It was definitely a bittersweet occasion for me,” Snow reflected. “It was difficult to totally enjoy the win when something like that happens to another of your dogs.
“Whether he will race again, I don’t know. The scans should tell more of the story.”
On Shipwreck’s win, Snow said he was ‘delighted’, ‘very happy’, but ‘not totally surprised’.
“If you look at Shipwreck’s heat win, it was much the same,” he said. “He stuck to the fence and then darted through.
“The win didn't really surprise me. Shipwreck is a top grader and, without being disrespectful, he was against dogs that haven't had the experience or the quality of opposition that he has been racing against.
“So, I was quietly confident and I also thought that Come On Aussie would definitely run a hole.
“It was just disappointing that I wasn't able to enjoy the win because I spent the rest of the night with Come On Aussie and the vet.
“But, it was a great to win with Shipwreck. There is definitely a lot of significance in that Rockhampton win. Being a country person, it certainly means a lot to me.”
The focus now turns to an upcoming busy program at Albion Park, with the early shots in the winter carnival being fired late this month leading through to the state’s first $1 million race, the Group 1 Brisbane Cup on Friday, July 7.
Snow is in no doubt Shipwreck can be a major contender at his come carnival and in a planned Melbourne campaign soon after. And, there is a second agenda to the chaser’s performances through the remainder of 2023.
“That (Rockhampton) win was very good because if he goes on through and performs as well during the winter carnival then that just adds to his value as a stud dog,” he said.