Part of Megablast's build-up has included working on the beach under the care of Waiuku trainer Catherine Cleghorn. "He had a spell after the Livamol then went out to Catherine before Christmas and did six weeks on the beach," Tiley said.
"Since he's been back with me he's had a couple of jump-outs, going a half-mile on the course proper and carrying on down the back straight. The Easter has always been a target, but it has been weather dependant. I couldn't be happier with him going into Saturday and it looks like it'll be a heavy — loose track and he should handle it."
Megablast has registered four of his eight wins on heavy tracks and a further three on slow footing, while his other win came on a dead surface.
Megablast will be reunited on Saturday with Michael Coleman, who was aboard in Megablast's last two victories.
Tiley has yet to confirm plans for Megablast beyond Saturday, though he admits a Queensland Winter Carnival would be given consideration.
"We'll get this out of the way first, but if he wins or goes really well we'd have to seriously look at Brisbane, but I'll have to talk it over with the owners," he said. Brighton is Tiley's second-string Manco Easter Handicap hope and the five-year-old has sneaked into the field on the 52kg minimum with Sam Collett, the country's leading rider, aboard.
"He's got the ability and he'd be right up there on a decent track, but I'm just worried about him in the ground," Tiley said
"He won the Champagne Stakes on a heavy track as a two-year-old but he's never raced to his full potential on heavy ground since."
Brighton recorded the latest of his four wins over 1600m on a good surface at Pukekohe last January and his other recent runs have also been on good footing. He finished fourth in the Gr.3 Taranaki Cup (1800m) before tailing the field home in the Gr.1 New Zealand Stakes (2000m). "He looks well, but we'll just have to see what happens."
- NZ Racing Desk