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Farmor Beach feeling his way back to the top

8 July 2020

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By Isaac Murphy

Vince-Curry-Memorial-farmor-beach-vc-hr-2020.jpgFarmor Beach was on the fast track to stardom for Wayne Scott after winning the Group 3 Vince Curry at nineteen months.

He was then aimed at the Launching Pad in Victoria as his next target, but when COVID-19 hit, the race was no more.

The virus then the dog himself, but now four months later he’s back in the winner’s circle at Albion Park and will aim up against Queensland’s best young dogs in Thursday’s Emerging Origin Stars Sprint.

Scott said he always knew there were going to be growing pains bringing Farmor Beach back from a forty-three-day layoff from his last race in Victoria but the signs were there in start one at Albion Park that he was on the right track.

“Last Thursday night from the jump he just never had a chance, he got swamped early and still managed to work his way into fourth before bumping into the rail around the six hundred boxes - despite all of that he still showed us enough he’d be better next time out,” Scott said

“We were really pleased with his last section, 12.75 home for a dog that’s still a little bit underdone and coming off a nasty virus, it was a promising result.”

Scott said it was essential to get the dog accustomed to Albion Park and at the second time of asking he delivered his first win at the track on Monday and still has plenty of scope.

“He missed the kick terribly, he’s not lightning away but should be a bit better than that early, but the big takeaway was he found a way to win and we want to get him back in that mindset,” Scott said.

“He hadn’t seen Albion under race conditions until last Thursday and even before then we’ve done hardly any education with him around the track so he’s travelling pretty well.

“Hopefully with a few more runs he’ll start pinging the lids again and staying away from the rail at the six hundred boxes where he’s bumped both times he’s gone around.”

Farmor Beach has just eight starts to his name and with the stop-start nature to his career, Scott is determined to get some routine into the dog who’s handling his workload well ahead of Thursday night’s Emerging Origin Stars test.

“He needs to get those runs under his belt to regain that hard race fitness,” Scott said.

“He backed up really well from Thursday to Monday last week and we’re going to go Monday to Thursday this week when he’ll go around in the Emerging Origin Stars race.

“We’re throwing him in the deep end a bit, people get excited about what he did in the Vince Curry Series and he was brilliant but in the end he only beat other maidens and he needs to be toughened up a bit against some of these other good young dogs.

“He’ll need to draw low seeing he’s not the quickest away at the moment and we just want to see that little bit of improvement each time in.

“He’s fearless the way he goes into that first turn you just hope to see him come out of it in the first few.”

Ipswich

Vince Curry Memorial (G3) F 520m

After the dog won the Vince Curry Series in devastating fashion, Scott sent the star down to the care of Robbie Britton ahead of the Launching Pad series, when on the eve of the race COVID-19 first hit turning everything upside down.

“We thought we had a great plan getting him down to Robbie for the Launching Pad off the back of his Vince Curry win, but first the race was cancelled and then he got the virus in the kennels himself which really knocked him around,” Scott said.

“He got him back fit and had a few runs down there, but still wasn’t quite himself and ended up getting crook again.

“Robbie had him on all the tablets to get him better again and we thought the best place for him to recoup would be at home.

“Even going into last night he’s still feeling the effects of it, he’s 0.6 kilos down on his ideal weight and we’ve done everything to try to get him back there but it’s just not happening yet.”

Scott said he’s seen things with the young dog that others simply don’t have in their armoury and while he’s being critical of him at the moment it’s only because of his sky-high potential.

“I probably sound like I’m being very hard on him but overall he’s been very good, second run ever at Albion 30.06 is good going I’ve just seen some of the things he can do at home and through the Vince Curry series and know he can go much quicker,” he said.

“His brother Fernando Beach ran 29.97 finishing second in his race last night, if Farmor Beach is one 100% he puts lengths on that dog, so there’s still plenty of work to be done.”

Races

8
8

Albion Park | Brisbane Greyhound Racing Club | 9:13 PM

SKY RACING Qld Emerging Origin Stars F