Fernie 'Burst" Will Keep The Clan Happy At Grafton

By Julieanne Horsman

When Ferniehirst last stepped out in the Country Championships Preview at Port Macquarie she blew the field away. After pinging out the gates she set the pace, then let down to win by more than five lengths. While her Coffs Harbour trainer Paul Smith isn’t expecting a repeat in this Sunday’s Country Championships Qualifier at Grafton, he believes at $18 she’s over the odds.

“She’s fit and well, she looks the best she has ever looked and her work has been great during the week,” he said.

Ferniehirst is enjoying her most successful preparation yet with two wins from three starts. Her seventh at Gosford in January was far better than it looks on paper. Four of the horses who beat her have since won a race and the winner, Star Of Monsoon, has been placed at metropolitan level three times.

Smith opted not run Ferniehirst again after her Port Macquarie victory five weeks ago, instead giving her a jumpout on 26th February.

“We had a choice of Doomben or Coffs Harbour on a Sunday,” he said. “If she had won at Coffs she would have gone up a kilo for The Country Championships. She’s better when we space her runs anyway.”
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Above: Ferniehirst returns to scale after a huge win at Port Macquarie. 

Ferniehirst has drawn barrier 12 and while Smith would have preferred 6 or 7 he’s not too concerned. Jockey Ben Looker has had a couple of sits on her for a second and a fourth. She’s won on all surfaces but anything in the soft range suits her best.

 “She raced on a lot of firmer tracks last prep and never really stretched out,” he said. “It was too hard for her. She prefers a bit of sting out of the ground.”

“There’ll be a fair bit of pace on. I’d like to see a tearaway leader but Ferniehirst can lead if she has to. She’ll need to relax for at least two furlongs because once she is at her cruising speed she doesn’t come back. If she can do that she will run very well.”

“She’s not the biggest horse but she has the biggest heart.”

Matthew Dunn’s flashy gelding Snitz is the odds on favourite for the race having won his last three starts at Doomben. It sets the scene for a potential repeat of last year’s NRRA Country Championships heat where Dunn’s Perfect Dare saluted ahead of $31 chance Free Standing who pulled off an upset win in the $500k final.

“Snitz is definitely the horse to beat but everyone has a chance,” Smith said. “That’s the beauty of the Country Championships.”

Smith is no stranger to the excitement of the Country Championships. In its inaugural year Kareem’s Edge came third by a flared nostril in the NRRA qualifier but in a stroke of luck for Smith he scraped into the final when Voltaire was scratched due to injury. He lined up at odds of $61 and managed to finish an impressive fourth in the sixteen-horse field.

“That was a great experience and I’m keen to be involved again now that it’s been running for a few years,” Smith said.

Ferniehirst is owned by the Kerr family who have had horses with Paul Smith for more than a decade and they’ve rustled up a big contingent of supporters for Sunday. Ferniehirst Castle in Scotland and was built by the Kerr clan in the 1400s.

The Country Championships at Grafton are held in conjunction with the Blues, Brews and Barbecues festival with gourmet food and craft beer available for purchase on the day. There’ll be live entertainment and free activities for children starting at midday.