Flemington elite-level targets await Atishu following the weekend, and Allnutt is looking forward to returning to the Melbourne track where she has had so much success.
Her Flemington victories include the Group 1 Champions Stakes (2000m), Group 1 Empire Rose Stakes (1600m), Group 2 Matriarch Stakes (2000m) and Group 2 Blamey Stakes (1600m), while she has also placed in the Champions Stakes, Empire Rose Stakes and Group 1 Australian Cup (2000m).
“She will go to the All-Star Mile (Group 1, 1600m) and then the Australian Cup, that’s the plan at this stage,” Allnutt said.
“This is more than likely going to be her last season of racing, so it is all about maximising her value and winning as many Group 1s as we can.”
Purchased by Go Racing out of Waikato Stud’s 2019 New Zealand Bloodstock Book 1 Yearling Sale for $260,000, Atishu has gone on to win 11 races, three at Group 1 level, and earned more than A$5.5 million in prize money.
“She has just been a marvel for us all the way through,” Allnutt said. “She is now a triple Group 1 winner, she has been a great horse for us and the syndicate love her.”
Meanwhile, the Go Racing team were pleased to see their Group 1-winning filly Velocious carry their silks to victory in her 800m trial at Ellerslie on Tuesday.
The winner of last season’s Group 1 Sistema Stakes (1200m) and Karaka Millions 2YO (1200m) underwent a wind operation late last year and has been making a pleasing return for trainer Stephen Marsh.
“We are really happy. We have taken her along slowly after the wind operation,” Allnutt said. “Today was a step in the right direction. She probably knocked up a bit late today, but Rory [Hutchings, jockey] said she felt great, her breathing was good and she felt nice and strong under [the] saddle. We are very encouraged with what we saw today.”
No set plans have yet been made for the daughter of Written Tycoon, who will have one more trial before making her race-day return.
“She will have one more trial now in a fortnight’s time and she will be more forward for that, and then safely through that, we will start thinking about where she is going to go and what we are going to do,” Allnutt said.
“If she can come back to somewhere near what she was as a 2-year-old, she will be more than competitive in black-type racing again.”
– LOVERACING.NZ News Desk