480 episodes

John Tapp interviews the people who make racing tick.

John Tapp Racing The Supernova Tribe

    • Sport

John Tapp interviews the people who make racing tick.

    Episode 479: Jarrod Austin

    Episode 479: Jarrod Austin

    In the late 1990’s Jarrod Austin walked away from racing to investigate what other career options were available in the world. He tried the hotel industry and dabbled in the building trade, but soon realised there was one key component missing. He’d been around horses all his life, and found he simply couldn’t break the bond. The story of his path back into the racing industry makes for a good podcast. We pinned Jarrod down recently and got him reminiscing about a horsey life that began on his father’s little Tamworth stud farm.
    The Warwick Farm trainer gives his assurance he won’t be leaving the industry again.
    Jarrod explains his team currently numbers 22 horses but says  two or three more would  be more than welcome in his Bull St stables at Warwick Farm.
    He pays tribute to his dedicated stable staff of seven.
    Jarrod explains why he recently made the decision to quit riding trackwork.
    The trainer talks at length about his stable star Terra Mater, one of the Inglis Digital “finds” of the past year. Purchased by stable client Gary Carden from a Widden Stud weanling dispersal for a mere $1750, Terra Mater has already banked $366,000 from six wins and six placings. The story is a fascinating one.
    Jarrod takes us through her racing career from her very first start at Wyong when she ran into a maiden who’s currently sitting on $640,000 in prize  money. She ran into some hot opposition before she finally cracked it for a win.
    The trainer looks back on his decision to walk away from racing in the mid 1990’s. He soon regretted that call.
    He was working as a concreter near Camden when he heard that a manager’s job was coming up at a nearby spelling and pre-training farm. He got the job and it was the perfect transition back into training.
    Jarrod talks of his happy six years at the property owned by trainer Denise McGrath. He helped in the preparation of several McGrath horses including the talented Keen Commander, who missed out narrowly in the 2008 Galaxy.
    He looks back on Denise McGrath’s decision to leave the training ranks giving him the opportunity to take over the Warwick Farm stables.
    Jarrod says he was able to get away to a flying start with three horses entrusted to his care by the retiring trainer. He actually won with his very first starter on the comeback trail.
    He acknowledges the talents of four time city winner Territory.
    Jarrod talks about a couple of veteran geldings he was able to keep going seemingly past their “use by” date. They just kept winning.
    Jarrod talks about his discovery of Rachel King in the days when the English girl was apprenticed to Gai Waterhouse. He was keen  to provide her first city winner but was beaten to the punch by another trainer.
    Austin looks back on Inanup who was a work in progress from the day he walked into the stable. He finished up winning eight races including five in town, largely due to the patience and skill of his trainer.
    You can hear the admiration in Jarrod’s voice as he pays tribute to recently retired Looks Like Elvis. He slipped the gelding to Victoria on two occasions and got the money both times.
    Jarrod pays tribute to a couple of his favourite “go-to” jockeys.
    The trainer gives encouraging pointers to a couple of promising horses currently coming through the grades.
    Jarrod Austin is one of many talented trainers who simply does his best with what he’s got. His best is of a very high level. Great to have him on our podcast.

    • 42 min
    Episode 478: Brian York

    Episode 478: Brian York

    Brian York hasn’t wasted a single minute from the day he became aware that his riding days were over. He tried everything known to medical science to overcome a knee injury sustained in a freakish fall at Rosehill in November 2002, but to no avail.The former star jockey joins us on the podcast this week to talk about his very busy and rewarding life after racing. Brian begins  by talking about a five year association with the Waterhouse/Bott stable producing videos of trackwork and jump outs for stable clients. He says border closures during the pandemic brought his business to an end.
    He talks about the challenge of learning a brand new craft.
    Brian looks back on his family’s emigration from Scotland to New Zealand. He was just ten years of age.
    The budding champion jockey was elated to gain an apprenticeship with respected Takanini trainer Cliff Fenwick.
    He recalls the thrilling occasion of his first win in March 1979 on a handy mare trained by his master.
    Brian looks back on the first of his 35 Gr 1 victories.
    He talks about successful stints in Singapore and Malaysia before accepting an offer to move permanently to Australia.
     Brian clearly recalls the offer made by the late Bruce McLachlan who was looking for the right jockey to join the team at his lavish Caboolture training property.
    He describes the unique lay out of Thornhill Park.
    The former champion jockey pays a heartfelt tribute to the man who won 16 Brisbane training premierships. He believes no trainer/jockey partnership has ever been more harmonious.
    Brian acknowledges the talents of the special horses he rode during his time with the former Mt. Isa policeman.
    He reflects on six consecutive wins on the brilliant New Zealander Our Maizcay.
    When connections decided to run Our Maizcay in the Cox Plate with only 48.5 kgs Brian’s initial reaction was to relinquish the ride. He decided to give it a crack and turned up at the right weight on the day. His enormous sacrifice was to be all in vain.
    He looks back on a happy association with the powerhouse sprinter General Nediym. 
    Brian has fond memories of his very first ride on Filante- a stunning four lengths victory in the 1996 Epsom.
    He looks back on a very successful association with the Gai Waterhouse stable.
    Brian pays tribute to the well documented talents of trainer John Size.
    He regrets never having won a Golden Slipper. Circumstances kept him off three winners of the iconic two year old race.
    Brian won seven races on champion Might And Power including three memorable Gr 1’s. He looks back on a thrilling association with a unique horse.
    Might And Power’s trainer Jack Denham also prepared another of Brian’s favourites. The jockey looks back on a nine win streak with the talented Fairway.
    Brian talks about his association with the enigmatic Jack Denham. 
    He reflects on the irony of his final day at the races in 2002- a winner for the late Max Lees and a career ending accident just 90 minutes apart.
    Brian pays a touching tribute to Karen, his wife of 41 years. 
    It’s a nostalgic chat with one of the best riders of his generation.

    • 1 hr 1 min
    Episode 477: Peter Graham

    Episode 477: Peter Graham

    Great to catch up with northern NSW riding legend Peter Graham who’s still going strong at 55 years of age and closing in on 2500 career wins. Peter was born and reared at Wauchope and virtually taught himself to ride at the local racecourse. When it was time to launch his professional riding career he chose Port Macquarie as his home base and he’s still there today. Peter begins by talking about younger daughter Rori who’s getting over a nasty trackwork injury.
    He pays tribute to daughter Cejay, currently one of Brisbane’s in form jockeys.
    Peter talks of son Jesse who rode a few winners before opting for a change of career direction.
    He acknowledges the help given by wife Karen at his Port Macquarie training property.
    He talks of his role as the holder of a dual training and riding licence.
    Peter looks back on the Wauchope trackwork accident that left him with a condition known as “frozen shoulder”.
    The veteran says he thought about retirement but decided on a return to race riding when his shoulder injury improved.
    Peter looks back on early days at Wauchope and his initial apprenticeship to Bob Graham. He says he had no real tutelage in those early days. Eventually he moved to Muswellbrook.
    The respected horseman reflects on his first win as a 36kg apprentice.
    He talks of an affinity with the Kempsey track where he’s won 6 local Cups.
    Peter looks back on an imposing list of feature wins on northern tracks with special mention of his Grafton Cup win on Rednav as recently as 2016. He pays tribute to Rednav’s trainer Sally Taylor.
    He looks back on several rewarding seasons on NSW tracks.
    Peter says country commitments have kept him away from city tracks, but recalls one day at Randwick that turned out to be an unpleasant experience.
    He talks of the ten acre farm at Port Macquarie from which he prepares his small string of horses.
    The versatile horseman talks about recent track improvements at Port Macquarie racecourse.
    Peter talks of the immense thrill he received when daughter Cejay rode her first winner for the stable.
    He discusses the prospects of members of his small team going forward.
    Peter pays tribute to some of the talented country jockeys with whom he’s ridden over the years.
    It’s a long overdue tribute to one of the kings of northern NSW racing.

    • 41 min
    Episode 476: Jim Cassidy

    Episode 476: Jim Cassidy

     
    Jim Cassidy was just 18 years old when he first made his mark in Australian racing with a Brisbane Cup win on Four Crowns. He was back eighteen months later to win the Melbourne Cup with a barnstorming run on Kiwi. Some say the gelding produced the fastest finish in Cup history. In 1984 he was offered a plumb job in Sydney and so began an adventure destined to take the Wellington born jockey to 104 Gr 1 wins. In between times there were some thrilling highs and some gut wrenching lows. In this lengthy chat Jim talks with customary candour about his life in racing- from his first win at Wairoa in 1978 to his swansong on Victorian Oaks day 2015. 
    He begins by explaining the origins of his legendary nickname “The Pumper”.
    The former jockey says the nickname came from his unique style in the saddle.
    Jim looks back on the publication of his widely read 2016 autobiography “The Pumper”. 
    He goes back to the closing weeks of his riding career. A winner at his last Sydney ride, and his final Melbourne Cup carnival.
    Jim agrees the Victorian Oaks was numerically his most significant Gr 1 race.
    He looks back on his rides over the first three days of that Melbourne Cup carnival.
    Jim takes us back to childhood days in Wellington when his ambition to be an All Black far outweighed any riding aspirations.
    He reminisces about an uninspiring education.
    The legendary jockey takes us back to work experience with two trainers and finally an apprenticeship with Patrick Campbell. He says he thought his first winner would never come. Once it happened there was no stopping the little dynamo.
    Jim reminisces about his wins in the 1981 O’Shea Stakes and Brisbane Cup on Four Crowns after which he tells the riveting Kiwi story.
    He’s never forgotten the phone call from Bob Lapointe and the offer to be a part of a powerful Sydney conglomerate. At first he thought the phone call was a ruse.
    Jim remembers the early days of his new job and the arrival of an English horse destined for a brief but brilliant campaign in Sydney. 
    The great jockey experienced several low points including the horror of a home invasion which came as a massive fright for himself and wife Helen. In typical fashion he turned up at the races and rode multiple winners.
    He looks back on his all time most satisfying day at the races- six winners at a Rosehill Saturday meeting in 1987.
    Jim looks back on a low key midweek meeting and a horse called Cruising. His ride incurred the wrath of the stewards who hit him with a 12 month ban. He says nobody would have been seen to advantage on the horse in question.
    He’s very proud of his three win record in the AJC Australian Derby. He takes us through his trio of victories in the historic race.
    Cassidy still rues the fact that he never won a Melbourne Cup for Bart Cummings. It still pains him that he could have ridden Kingston Rule in 1990, but stuck solid to another stable.
    He talks of his association with another Cummings top liner, the ill fated Shaftesbury Avenue.
    Jim pays tribute to Malcolm Ayoub an old fashioned masseur who got him through many aches and pains. “The Boss” also became his greatest friend and inspiration.
    A fitting tribute is on the agenda for the Kiwi wonder horse Rough Habit, one of Jim’s all time favourites.
    The former legendary jockey is happy to take us through the infamous “Jockey Tape” scandal. The story broke on the day he was to ride Flying Spur in the Golden Slipper. It cost him a win in the great two year old race and resulted in a five year disqualification later reduced to three. He was back in 21 months with a resolve that had never been stronger. The best of Jim Cassidy was yet to come.
    On resuming he needed a top horse to regenerate his career. He found Might And Power and his comeback was complete.
    Six years after being robbed of Slipper victory on Flying Spur, he finally won the great race on Gai’s filly Ha Ha. 
    Jim was pretty chuffed to win the Coolmore Stud Stakes on Zoustar

    • 1 hr 12 min
    Episode 475: Max Presnell

    Episode 475: Max Presnell

    I’m delighted to introduce a man I’ve known for six decades. Max Presnell had just returned from England to regenerate his career with Fairfax newspapers, as I kicked off with Sydney station 2GB.
    Max recently called time on an association with Fairfax which embraced a total of 67 years- perhaps a world record in the newspaper game. I don’t know how we can cover 67 years in an hour or so, but let’s give it a crack. Max explains the reasons for his recent departure from the Sydney Morning Herald.
    He talks about the evolvement of his popular 2017 autobiography “Good Losers Die Broke”- a rollicking review of his life in racing.
    Max, son of a publican talks about the unusual  experience of spending his early years in a famous Sydney Hotel.
    He tells a funny story about a lady who happened to be the sister of Stanley Wootton, owner of the hotel in question.
    Max talks of many well known visiting trainers who stayed at the pub when in Sydney.
    I’ll let Max tell you about a chirpy little regular who earned the dubious nickname of “two bob Tommy”.
    The legendary writer talks of his father Roy who ran the pub for 25 years.
    Max talks of the white cockatoo Roy brought back from a duck shooting excursion. That cocky became a legend in his own right.
    He talks of his feelings whenever he walks into the Doncaster Hotel today.
    Max takes us back to his employment as a copy boy with the old Sydney Sun. He remembers his cadetship and the thrill of becoming a graded journalist in 1961.
    He talks of his lifelong penchant for a punt and recalls a massive win on the Doncaster-Sydney Cup double in 1961.
    Max was on steward’s room duties the day Mel Schumacher was outed for life after the infamous “leg pull incident in the AJC Derby. His memories of the steward’s inquiry remain vivid.  
    He looks back on a sabbatical from the Sun and a long sea voyage to England where he freelanced for three years. Things got so bad at one stage that he had to “hock” his binoculars.
    The veteran racing scribe talks of several freelance jobs he was able to secure in England.
    He reminisces about a proposed plunge on a horse in the Ascot Gold Cup. The horse in question was a noted mudlark. Max was delighted when rain continued to fall but was in for a rude shock. For the first time in twenty five years, the Gold Cup meeting was called off. You won’t believe what happened to his punting bank.
    Max looks back on his return to Sydney in 1964 and the start of phase two of his amazing association with Fairfax.
    He talks of his admiration for the works of Banjo Paterson.
    Max remembers his very successful  transition into radio and television. A disagreement with Channel 7 Sports Director Rex Mossop saw him stand down from the popular “Punter’s Post Mortem” programme. Some time later he returned to Channel 7 in a different format.
    He pays tribute to some of the great journalists with whom he got to work over a long period of years.
    Max acknowledges some of the great horse trainers of his era with special mention of Jack Denham.
    He fondly remembers the days when many racecourse figures carried curious nicknames.
    Max was unable to recall the name of his new website, but hopes his old fans will visit from time to time.
    It’s my great pleasure to pay tribute to a true giant of racing journalism.

    • 1 hr 7 min
    Episode 474: Terry Evans

    Episode 474: Terry Evans

    It’s a pleasure to welcome Terry Evans to the podcast- the trainer who happens to be the sole occupant of on course stabling at the Tuncurry-Forster racecourse on the NSW north coast. Terry was there when the new track was granted a licence by Racing NSW in 2009. This podcast was recorded two days before Sir Ravanelli scored an impressive win on a rain sodden Newcastle track. Terry rates the grey gelding as the best horse he’s trained to date. He begins by reflecting on the enthusiasm and commitment of the new Tuncurry-Forster Jockey Club when he arrived fifteen years ago. 
    Terry pays tribute to the Jockey Club’s dedicated President Gary McQuillan.
    He remembers a conversation with a friend at a Port Macquarie meeting in 2009. At that time he was unaware a new track was under construction at nearby Tuncurry-Forster. 
    Terry talks about the purchase of the racecourse a few years ago by Racing NSW.
    The trainer talks about the facilities available to him.
    He explains the benefits of his 20 acre property at nearby Rainbow Flat.
    Terry and wife Julie had a frightening experience a few years ago when the property was threatened by the raging NSW north coast bushfires. He says the fires also got dangerously close to the racecourse stables.
    He was in total disbelief just twelve months later when floodwaters looked likely to inundate the stables.
    Terry expresses his appreciation of the talents and work ethic of Gonzalo Aguila, an Argentinian horseman who walked into the stables looking for a job.
    He looks back on early days in Balmain when he realised a dream by landing a sand boy’s role with the famous Balmain Tiger’s RL team.
    Terry pays tribute to two former Balmain legends who were his inspiration at the time.
    He reflects on his playing days in the Balmain Juniors and his transition to the Under 23 ranks. Memories of his very first game at the higher level remain vivid for all the wrong reasons.
    Terry reminisces about his entry into the thoroughbred world at a Southern Highlands stud farm. This is where he gained valuable experience working with mares and foals. A regular visitor to the property was a young lady who worked for the Horse Power Feed Company. Julie was destined to become his wife.
    He looks back on a move to Julie’s horse property at Dural and his appointment as a yearling handler at nearby Shillington Park.
    In the early 1990’s Terry and Julie established their own spelling and pre-training business near Wyong. They were delighted when the business grew rapidly but in the end it became too much for them. He says this was the catalyst for his transition to horse training. He talks of a low key start at Gosford, and the help he received from the resident CEO.
    Terry looks back on the magical occasion of his first training win.
    He reminisces about a win with Verrekeen at Gosford in 2009. It was the very last race called by the retiring Ian Craig. It was a costly exercise for winning jockey Hugh Bowman.
    Terry acknowledges other horses who’ve helped him along the way.
    This podcast was taped a couple of days before Sir Ravanelli’s impressive win at Newcastle on May 11th. Terry recalls his acquisition of the gelding on the recommendation of a NZ bloodstock agent.
    He talks of the care and attention necessary to keep on top of the horse’s foot problems. 
    The trainer looks back on Sir Ravanelli’s achievements so far.
    He talks of the grey’s ownership group, one of whom is ace race photographer Steve Hart.
    He talks of the current progress of his old football team and the emotional attachment that persists to this day.
    Terry talks of Julie’s return to the nursing profession and son Troy’s love of a punt.
    It’s a laid back chat with yet another member of that exclusive club known as the “Balmain Boys”.

    • 45 min

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