But he was already established as the best pacer in Australia before his second NZ Cup win, having already won the Cup the previous season by 10 lengths, the Victoria Cup in record time, two Flying Stakes and an NZ Free-For-All.
Remarkably, Vincent is approaching Lazarus-type odds for Sunday at what will be only his second open class start.
He bolted away with the first in the Franklin Cup at Alexandra Park two weeks ago and showed he had taken no harm from that when he jogged to victory in the $50,000 Four and Five-Year-Old Futurity at Cambridge on Sunday.
With Mark Purdon losing his appeal against a 26-day suspension in Perth, co-trainer Natalie Rasmussen has been confirmed to partner Vincent while Tim Williams, who drove Vincent to win at Cambridge, will be behind Heaven Rocks. Dexter Dunn will drive the third All Stars runner Titan Banner.
While Vincent's odds seem ridiculously short considering his lack of experience against top class older rivals, bookmakers probably don't have much percentage to pay as they took a staggering $20,000 each way bet on him at $1.60 on Sunday and it is hard to make a case for any of his rivals to down the budding superstar.
While the Auckland Cup contains New Zealand Cup runner-up Jacks Legend and the mad mammoth Heaven Rocks, it does lack Tiger Tara and Dream About Me from the NZ Cup, so Vincent's rivals are not as strong as those Lazarus beat on November 14.
While Vincent has an awfully long way to go to be compared with the open class version of Lazarus, their records are almost identical at the same stage of their careers: after 18 starts both had 15 wins with some luckless placed efforts. Vincent's record should be even better because the only time he has finished out of the money was when his sulky tyre was flattened by a rival in the Victoria Derby, a race he was a $1.10 favourite for.
The two imposing stallions could be on the pathway to a thrilling clash in the Miracle Mile in two months after Vincent's win at Cambridge on Sunday.
That earned him an invite to the A$200,000 Chariots Of Fire at Menangle on February 10 and if he won that, or even placed, he should be invited to the Miracle Mile two weeks later, a race that at this stage is Lazarus's final major target for the season.
With barrier four on Sunday the Auckland Cup may look Vincent's to lose but Titan Banner's closing sectionals were similar to his stablemate in the Franklin Cup and as a good standing start horse drawn barrier two he looms as the logical danger. Another big winner in the draws for Sunday is Speeding Spur, who has drawn barrier two in the $100,000 National Trot.
Auckland Trotting Cup
Sunday, 7.35pm
$250,000, 3200m
• Brydon Ideal (1)
• Titan Banner (2)
• Jack's Legend (3)
• Vincent (4)
• Maxim (5)
• Northview Hustler (6)
• Max Phactor (7)
• Star Galleria (8)
• A G's White Socks (9)
• Imajollywolly (10)
• Heaven Rocks (ur1)
• Lusty Max (ur2)
He was surprisingly beaten on his merits by Kyvalley Blur at Cambridge on Sunday but should appreciate the 2700m mobile while Kyvalley Blur (5) and Temporale (6) have drawn wider.
The National Trot lost a key player yesterday when bold chestnut Bordeaux was withdrawn with his summer campaign over.
"He has banged a hind leg and I was battling to get him right and I'd rather do the right thing by the horse and take him home," says trainer Philip Iggo.
"So he will have a break and be set for the Rowe Cup."
But the draws for the Sires' Stakes Fillies Championship and the Sales Series Pace have added intrigue with big names like Chase Auckland, Bettor Joy and Dizzy Miss Lizzy drawing poorly.