Oaks heroine gives Ormsby a different kind of Group 1
Almost two decades after riding Creil (Frenchpark) to victory in the Avondale Cup (Gr 1, 2200m) as an apprentice, the multi-talented Chad Ormsby climbed the same mountain in a different way when Pulchritudinous (Wrote) won the New Zealand Oaks (Gr 1, 2400m) at Trentham on Saturday.
Ormsby now trains a small team at Cambridge, saddling eight winners so far this season including Pulchritudinous in the Oaks and Lowland Stakes (Gr 2, 2000m), along with Master Fay (Deep Field) in the Concorde Handicap (Gr 3, 1200m).
“Things like a Group 1 win are what we strive for,” Ormsby said. “I really can’t thank my team enough. The people on the ground make it all possible.
“We’re only a small team, around five racehorses, but we bat above our weight and I’m so grateful to the people around us. My mother-in-law has a share in this filly, along with her partner, and they do so much for us with all the days and nights that they look after our kids. It’s a great thrill.”
Training is just one of a number of pursuits for Ormsby, who remarkably won a bull-riding competition at a rodeo on Saturday morning – mere hours before his Oaks triumph.
Ormsby also prepares Ready to Run Sale drafts under his Riverrock Farm banner, and Oaks heroine Pulchritudinous was originally intended to be a pinhook for that two-year-old sale at Karaka. Ormsby bought the Wrote (High Chaparral) filly for $32,500 as a yearling at Karaka 2022, but she was passed in when he offered her with a $50,000 reserve at the Ready to Run Sale later that year.
“A lot of pride and joy goes into a filly like this, who we bought cheaply and ended up not being able to sell,” Ormsby said. “She’s managed to go on and prove herself.”
Pulchritudinous showed promise with a 1400-metre maiden win in her second start back in October, but it has only been in the last eight days that she has really made her mark. She stepped up beyond 1600 metres for the first time and scored an impressive win in the rescheduled Lowland Stakes at Taupo on March 8, then stepped into the Group 1 spotlight for the Oaks barely a week later.
Ridden by Warren Kennedy, Pulchritudinous settled in ninth place alongside the rail as Harlow Rocks (Roc De Cambes) set a solid pace out in front and turned the fillies’ Classic into a true staying test.
Kennedy got her off the fence at the 700-metre mark and began to creep closer, moving up behind the leading pack and poised to pounce.
Pulchritudinous swooped around the home turn and quickly loomed large on the outside of Harlow Rocks, Positivity (Almanzor), Qali Al Farrasha (Almanzor) and Race Ace (Swiss Ace). Kennedy sent Pulchritudinous into full flight at the 300-metre mark and she surged to the lead, pulling away from Positivity and Qali Al Farrasha to win by 1.8 lengths in an impressive display of stamina and class.
Pulchritudinous has now had seven starts for three wins and a placing, earning $389,205 in prize-money.
“We nominated her for the Oaks very early and always had hope,” Ormsby said. We thought there might be some concerns around whether we might get there or if it might come up a bit too soon for her, but the ability was always there. I’m really, really rapt.”
Last year’s Oaks was the first leg of a Classic double for Pennyweka (Satono Aladdin), who added the Australian Oaks (Gr 1, 2400m) at Randwick in her next start. Ormsby is unsure whether he will attempt to follow the same path.
“I don’t know about that, and I think maybe the paddock might be beckoning,” he said. “But having said that, she hasn’t batted an eyelid with anything that we’ve chucked at her so far, and that’s a great attribute to have.”
Kennedy took special satisfaction from Saturday’s Oaks victory, having previously been cruelly denied a win in the South African equivalent.
“I’ve always wanted to win an Oaks,” he said. “Covid hit when I had a really good chance in South Africa, so I couldn’t travel to ride her. I missed out on what turned out to be a winning ride. So to win one here in my new home is fantastic.
“We found a dream spot in the running and she travelled sweetly all the way. She really worked away at them down the straight and won with a bit in hand in the end.
“She’s very progressive. She’s only tried this sort of trip twice now and won both times. She’s done the job today and done it really well.”
Pulchritudinous was bred by Tony Rider, who offered her under his Milan Park banner as a yearling at Karaka. She is the first Group 1 winner for Highview Stud stallion Wrote.
Victories in the Lowland Stakes and Oaks have rapidly lifted Pulchritudinous to 20 points in the New Zealand Bloodstock Filly of the Year Series, finishing in second place on the table. The runaway winner was Molly Bloom (Ace High) with 28 points.