"She is a very, very good mare and over 2760m this week she should be even better."
Alford became the first Australasian harness racing driver to record 6000 career wins at Melton on Monday night, capping a remarkable last 18 months in which he has won the Inter Dominion, Victoria Cup and Miracle Mile, all with Lennytheshark.
That last win, over a Kiwi trio of Smolda, Lazarus and Waikiki Beach, had many Australians suggesting Lennytheshark is the actual king of Australasian pacing, even though Lazarus's body of work this season is clearly stronger.
But his recent drives on The Orange Agent put Alford in a unique position to judge the mare against Lenny and he said a potential clash in the Len Smith Mile in Sydney next month would be interesting.
"Lenny is a champion and I'd have to say the best horse I have driven now," said Alford, who turns 50 this week.
"But this mare is flying and if she sat on Lenny's back she would run him close. I am not saying she would run past him because not many horses can do that."
Managing owner John Green said the Len Smith Mile clash was definitely on should The Orange Agent come through this Saturday well.
"That is the plan. A $30,000 mares lead-up race at Menangle then the Len Smith Mile, with Tony [Herlihy] being offered the drive since Chris will be driving Lenny," Green said.
And The Orange Agent has already proven she can beat pacing's big boys, having downed Smolda and Have Faith In Me at Alexandra Park in March as part of a stellar comeback after 14 months on the sidelines with injury.
While The Orange Agent appears to have the triple crown at her mercy, the Australian campaign for fellow Kiwi mare Golden Goddess has proved a disaster.
Not only did she drop out behind The Orange Agent last Friday but she was found to be off-colour after the race and will now miss this Saturday as well as the Harness Jewels for which she was second favourite for the four-year-old Diamond.
Also missing from the Jewels will be northern group one winner Mach Shard, who trainer Barry Purdon has put aside for the season after a dull performance at Addington last Friday.
"I think a spell is the best thing for him so he will come back an be aimed at the Sires' Stakes," Purdon said.
Many Jewels contenders will have their final warm-ups at Addington on Friday.
Bonnie Joan has been the big winner in the draw for the NZ Oaks, looking the likely leader while Spanish Armada faces a second line marble and Partyon the outside of the front line.
Alta Maestro and Spankem draw alongside each other in the Sires' Stakes two-year-old final while many of the country's best young trotters meet in two and three-year-old features and the Winter Cup gives Jewels favourite Piccadilly Princess her last chance to qualify for the June 3 extravaganza.
And the main trot sees Marcoola return against fellow 4-year-olds Lemond, Wilma's Mate and Rowe Cup winner Temporale.
The Orange Agent
Breeding: American Ideal-Lady Fingers.
Career: 32 starts, 22 wins, six placings.
Stakes: $668,542.
Trainer: Brian Hughes, South Auckland.
Group one wins: Northern Oaks, Nevele R Final, Breeders Crown, Harness Jewels, NZ Breeders Stakes.