Zammit's Sights Set On Gold Cup Boilover

TONY Zammit is confident Emmaville Star can hold her own in what promises to be a terrific final to the G1 Gold Cup at Albion Park on Friday night.

EMMAVILLE Star burst on the scene winning a heat of last year's Vince Curry Maiden, but trainer Tony Zammit always knew he had a stayer not a sprinter on his hands and after a patient nine-month spell, the two-and-a-half-year-old lines up in Friday Night's Group 1 Gold Cup Final (710m).

Given her significant time off it is a remarkable training effort from Zammit to have the bitch racing some of Australia's best stayers off such a limited preparation.

"We would have liked her to have had a lot more starts under her belt but persistent toe injuries and coming on season have held her to only nine starts; I thought she might be a few runs short before last week's heat," Zammit said.

"It was only her second 700, she was posted wide and never in the race at her first distance Start. She's taken good benefit and ran a really good third in a giant jump in grade.

"The main thing with her limited starts is taking something away from each run and we're hoping she can take another few steps forward this week."

The bitch tackles the likes of Group winners Boom Down, Bago Bye Bye and Just Terms in a stacked field and Zammit is banking on natural progression to see her keep up.

"The three is a good draw for her; she's been a railer since day dot, the closer to the fence the better," he added.

"We're very weary of the interstate dogs … they can be the big improvers after their first look at the track. We saw Boom Down second up run a big race in winning his heat and I expect a dog like True Detective, who was all over the place last week, to sharpen up.

"Win, lose or draw Friday night it's been a hell of an effort to make the final and unless she wins, she's still a fifth grader over the staying trips and I'm really excited to see where she's at in three or four-months' time."

Zammit is picking up on little signs that she is ready to mix it with her more seasoned company. A unique racing pattern and no odds-on favourite in the field gives his bitch a sneaky chance.

"Her strength over the distance is the even pace she's able to hold throughout; she can get away alright but is not lighting early and at this stage isn't too strong," Zammit said.

"What I was most pleased about last week was probably her run home. Boom Down went straight past us and Bago Bye Bye but that's his racing style, comparatively we lost no ground to Bago Bye Bye on the way home and established 700 metre dogs when we're at Start two over the trip."

Zammit had worked closely with owner, breeder turned trainer Clint Kratzmann for several years and it was a surprise to both parties to see Kratzmann's brood bitch Iona Champion produce a stayer.

"If you go back to the nineties with the line it produced a few stayers, but it's been a god while since we've seen any like her," Kratzmann said.

"The mother Iona Champion was a very good free for all dog at Albion Park, she won a Winged Runner there … we were expecting some good sprinters but to get a born stayer was great.

"She's a really genuine one pacer … what I would call a grinder. She just keeps coming and has had that trait from a very early age."

Aware of Kratzmann's breeding aspirations, Zammit is chomping at the bit to produce some big results for his owner sooner rather than later.

"The more races she wins the more value she'll have for him as a brood bitch when her career is over," Zammit said.

"We're both expecting results in the next six months and as long as we can keep her fit, I'm confident they'll come."

Kraztmann echoed Zammit's sentiments that Emmaville Star had a bright future both on and off the track, partially due to the trainer's ability to bring her back from a career threatening injury.

"They only have short careers greyhounds and you can have the tendency to want to run them back, but Tony (Zammit) has taught me sometimes giving them an extra month off can extend their career exponentially," Kratzmann said.

"In her case it ended up a ten-month layoff which knocked a bit of her brilliance off, but we're starting to see good signs again and that's down to Tony's training, he's done a masterful job."

 

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