Te Akau continue winning trend in Trentham feature
Te Akau Racing’s dominance of the Levin Classic (Gr 1, 1600m) continued at Trentham yesterday with Quintessa (Shamus Award) clinging on in an unforgettable finish.
Those familiar tangerine colours have towered over the $500,000 three-year-old feature in recent times, collecting five wins since 2017, including the last three in a row.
Former Te Akau trainer Jamie Richards provided the first three of those victories with Hall Of Fame (Savabeel) in 2017, Age Of Fire (Fastnet Rock) in 2018 and Imperatriz (I Am Invincible) in 2022. Imperatriz headed an extraordinary first four for Richards that year, with On The Bubbles (Brazen Beau), I Wish I Win (Savabeel) and Mohawk Brave (Extreme Choice) filling the minor placings.
Mark Walker has since picked up where Richards left off, saddling Romancing The Moon (El Roca) and Skew Wiff (Savabeel) for a stable quinella in 2023 and striking again with Quintessa yesterday.
Quintessa started as a $2.70 favourite and brought impeccable form into the race. She won all of her first three starts including the Gold Trail Stakes (Gr 3, 1200m) at Hastings in September, then returned from a spring freshen-up with strong-finishing seconds behind Pendragon (U S Navy Flag) in the Wentwood Grange 3YO (1200m) and the Auckland Guineas (Gr 2, 1400m).
The Shamus Award (Snitzel) filly stepped up to 1600 metres for the first time yesterday and produced another exceptional performance to prevail in one of the Levin Classic’s tightest finishes.
Quintessa took up a perfect position in sixth spot, with her rider Opie Bosson keeping a close eye on the second favourite Mary Shan (Almanzor) and third favourite Impendabelle (Impending).
Michael McNab pushed the button on Impendabelle and pounced at the top of the straight, with Bosson and Quintessa following them every step of the way. Quintessa quickened smartly and thrust her head in front with more than 200 metres remaining, but her job was far from over.
Mary Shan, Impendabelle and Leroy Brown (Ace High) kept fighting for all they were worth on her inside, while Zabmanzor (Almanzor), Sinhaman (Tivaci) and Certainly (Savabeel) charged home wider out on the track. In a blanket finish with only three-quarters of a length separating the first six, it was Quintessa who dug deepest of all and snatched a thrilling win.
Her margin was a long head over the fast-finishing Zabmanzor, with a half-head back to third-placed Impendabelle and Mary Shan another neck away in fourth. Sinhaman was a nose behind in fifth, with a short head back to Certainly.
“As soon as I got on the back of Impendabelle, I knew that she’d take me right into the race,” Bosson said. “I was giggling turning for home. Michael thought he was going alright on Impendabelle, but I just snuck up behind him.
“My filly did start easing up a little bit once she hit the front, but she’s tough. I could see them coming out wide, I didn’t even know who they were, but I was just hoping she’d put her head down at the right time.
“She doesn’t show much at home – the lead pony could probably beat her on the training track. But she really shows up on raceday.”
Quintessa brought Bosson closer to a major career milestone, giving him his 96th win at Group 1 level.
“I’m just blessed to have this job that I’ve got with Te Akau,” he said. “David Ellis [Te Akau principal] buys amazing horses for me to ride.”
Quintessa (3 f Shamus Award – Chaquinta by High Chaparral) certainly fits that description. Ellis paid $170,000 to buy her from the draft of Wentwood Grange at Karaka in 2022. Her six-race career has now produced four wins, two second placings and $444,650 in prize-money for the Te Akau Awarded Racing Partnership.
“It was another gun ride by Opie, who just gets it right so many times,” said Walker, who trains in partnership with Sam Bergerson. “So does David, going and buying these lovely fillies that can win races like this.
“We had a team talk and decided to prioritise this race over the Karaka Millions 3YO. That race was an attractive option, but we just felt a Group 1 beside her name would be great.
“We never make decisions on raceday, so we’ll let the dust settle and see how she comes through this before deciding what we do next.”