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Capalaba track specialist aiming for 2021 Cup

30 September 2021

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DSE-5062.jpgBy Andrew Adermann

Five children, a booming building business on the Sunshine Coast and the hottest dog down the straight at Capalaba – Narangba trainer Ryan Ayre is certainly a busy man.

Ayre’s Bogie Fury, unbeaten in his last five trips to Capalaba, shapes as one of the main contenders for the upcoming Cup at the straight track, with heats to be run this Sunday ahead of the Final seven days later.

In a boost for the club, the Capalaba Cup has been lifted to Group 3 status, with $37,500 in prize money on the line in October, with $25,000 to the winner.

From an Aston Dee Bee and Bogie Lilly litter, Bogie Fury is 12 triumphs from 14 efforts at the southern Brisbane-based track, with his trainer describing him as a professional, hard chaser who does everything right.

“What has made him is that he has just settled down,” Ayre said.

“He broke his toe at Albion Park and he had four months off, between the last Capalaba Cup and when he came back six weeks ago, and he has just settled down.

“He is not spending as much energy away from the race track, not getting worked up in the kennels any more.

“That is where the improvement has come from. He is a smart dog and knows what he is doing. It has really helped him improve; he has always had the ability.”

October’s running of the Capalaba Cup will be the second edition of the race in 2021, claimed in March by track specialist Columbian King – as Bogie Fury ran second – with the race shifted to October going forward as the club usually battles flooding around March every year.  

The builder by trade, Ayre, had seven years off from training dogs, with the Capalaba track specialist just his second greyhound back since he resumed.

It is a busy life for the hobby trainer, juggling five kids – including a son who loves his greyhounds – a flat out building business on the Sunshine Coast as well as returning to the Queensland training ranks.

Bogie Fury

Ayre thinks his $32,380 career earner is an improved dog on his effort in the most recent Capalaba Cup, where he was beaten over three lengths by Jamie Hosking’s Columbian King.

“With what he has been doing, he is probably still the one to beat I reckon,” Ayre says of his Cup hopeful.

“I gave him a big chance the last time they ran it, he was just drawn poorly and Columbian King beat him on his merits that day, he was just too good.

“I think we are going better now so it’ll be good to have another crack at Columbian King.

“Bogie Fury has certainly been the best dog there for six weeks or so, it is a specialist track.”

Bogie Fury was bred and is raced by Albion Park Chairman and distinguished owner and breeder Les Bein, who the Ayre kennel have had a long association with, as the pair combined with dual-Group winner Bogie King in Ayre’s first training stint.

Meanwhile, Beachmere-based trainer Paul Mcilveen has Capalaba Cup Final hopes with I'm The Bill.

I'm The Bill has won five from eight efforts at the track and Mcilveen, who has been training for around 25 years, understands his dog faces a tough ask in the heats this Sunday.

“It looks to be an open field to me and should be an interesting race,” Mcilveen said.

“I am sure he can run 19.60 seconds, which may not be quick enough to make the final but you never know your luck.

“I'm The Bill is a nice dog but he has been plagued by injuries of late, he is coming good and will now be in the Capalaba Cup heats on Sunday.”

I'm The Bill