And that emotion is understandable. Jewels days at Ashburton have produced some magical moments on the best mile racing track in the country.
But off the track, the day had started to feel stale, with few new innovations in recent seasons to suggest the day was moving forward.
However, it has emerged that is not the reason the Jewels will move to Addington next season, rather it is a glaring hole in the Ashburton club.
The area is a New Zealand harness racing stronghold but the club currently has no full-time administrator. The club's long-time boss Fiona Stuart stood down last season because of ill health, while her assistant Gareth Murfitt has taken a job at Riccarton.
So there is nobody working in the office at Ashburton and while next season's Jewels are 13 months away, it would have been foolish, bordering on a dereliction of duty, had HRNZ voted to retain the Jewels at a club effectively with no employees apart from a track manager.
Ashburton's proposal indicated they would employ a project manager to oversee the Jewels for four or five months but most major race clubs in New Zealand start their planning and build-up to their major carnival the day after the last one finished.
To put nearly $1.3 million of the industry's money and its second biggest day after New Zealand Cup day in the hands of a club without a paid employee to start immediate planning would be unprofessional.
HRNZ boss Edward Rennell realises the move will be unpopular is some quarters of the industry, although that is nothing new, as barely any decision in harness racing these days meets with universal approval.
But he says the door is far from closed on Ashburton hosting Jewels day again in the future.
"The Ashburton club have been through some changes and will obviously go through some more but they have a lot to be proud of over the last decade of holding the Jewels and I hope they come back with a bid for the series in 2021," said Rennell.
"But we are also lucky as an industry we have Addington coming on board because we know they can run a big event. They don't come any bigger than New Zealand Cup day."
The move to Addington will see the first Jewels races run not over the mile distance, with the nine group one races to be staged over 1950m next season as Addington's mile start point is ridiculous.