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Rex Lipp still the "captain" after taking on co-trainer

14 March 2022

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By Jordan Gerrans

Rex Lipp makes sure to mention he is still the captain of his team.  

The Group 1-winning Darling Downs trainer has prepared gallopers in his own right for decades and now edging closer to the date when he will call time on his days in the racing game, Lipp has added a co-trainer to his operation.

While the co-trainer title for young Toowoomba horseman Nicholas Hahn suggests a split in responsibilities around the barn, Lipp still runs the show, as he cheekily points out.

“For a start, I am still the captain,” Lipp says.

“Nick has worked for other stables and I have got my clients and Nick has to do it the way I want it done. 

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“I believe I can always improve but I like to see things done my way.

“For a partnership to go on and be successful, that is how it needs to go.”

Hahn has worked for the Lipp operation on the outskirts of Toowoomba for just over a year and has been in a formal training partnership for around six months.

Hahn has grown up around the industry - his father and siblings also involved with the gallopers - and the opportunity to officially join forces with Lipp came about by chance more than anything.

“Out of the blue one morning at the track, Rex offered it,” Hahn said.

“We have gone from there.”

Not yet 30 years of age, Hahn leant the tricks of the trade from trainers such as Peter Moody, Michael Nolan and Kevin Kemp in his early days before ending up with the Lipp barn.

He spent four years with Moody and travelled away to big carnivals around Australia with his band of star gallopers, declaring he came back a better horseman after his time with the legend Queensland-bred trainer.

As a person who aims to eventually establish a big training operation of his own in the future, Hahn believes Lipp is the perfect experienced industry participant to learn from.

“He is harsh but fair,” Hahn says of Lipp.

“He is the type of person that he always has the time to stop and teach you something.

“Not just me, but anyone, heaps of young people at the track every morning ask Rex things and he will offer them advice and guidance.

“You learn something every time you speak to Rex.”

At 73 years of age, Lipp isn’t ready to ease into retirement just yet but thinks he may have a couple more years left in him, which played a role in taking on the youthful Hahn to help run the yard.

Toba
Baristasista

“I am not getting any younger and I have considered giving it away but I had too many horses here that I have shares in myself,” Lipp said.

“We have to do things together.

“We all have our own ideas about how things should work and I feel I have been very successful in what I have done here from my base in Toowoomba, with the quality of cheaper horses I have got over the years.”

Lipp has won multiple Group 1 events during his life in racing – including the Queensland Oaks with Tinto in 2014 - with the 2021 QTIS Jewel for 3YO’s one of the more recent feature events he has claimed.

It was gelding Simply Fly who caused an upset on Jewel day last year and the stable heads to Aquis Park this weekend with a trio of runners aiming for the juvenile races.

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Headlined by the Aquis 2YO QTIS Jewel and TAB 3YO QTIS Jewel, the best of the best from the Sunshine State line up for two $500,000 races over 1200 metres.

Widely regarded as the best in the nation, QTIS provides bonuses for Queensland-bred horses who can prevail in the Sunshine State.

The QTIS scheme is a valuable one for local trainers, Lipp thinks.

“Most of my horses now are QTIS, I have got to the stage where I will not buy horses that are not QTIS,” Lipp said.

“I believe with QTIS, you cannot afford to race in Queensland unless it involves QTIS.

“You do not need the most expensive horses to win these sort of races, if you have something with natural ability, they can go a long way in Queensland.”

After running top three in the QTIS Jewel Prelude 2YO Plates at Clifford Park earlier this month, Lipp thinks Toba and Burnish Gold will be more than competitive this Saturday.

“Toba is a still a very immature horse with a long way to go, he will be better as a three-year-old,” Lipp said.

“Given the right run in the race, he will be competitive.

“Burnish Gold is a different horse at track work and on race day, she is so laid back in the morning, quiet and friendly.”

Lipp is buoyed by leading hoop Jim Byrne, who rode Burnish Gold at Toowoomba, sticking with the young filly this week.

After winning the race with Simply Fly 12 months ago, the team pin their hopes on Baristasista in the 3YO event this time.

“She will be competitive,” Lipp said.

“She is a filly that is always improving. She is a slow maturing filly and we have not seen the best of her yet.”

Simply Fly RETIRED 2023
Burnish Gold