3 minute read
Martin Cruz is hoping Packing Eagle can prove his worth to be on the international stage in Dubai next month when he competes at Group One level at Te Rapa on Saturday.
Packing Eagle will be part of a two-pronged attack by Cruz on the BCD Group Sprint (1400m), being joined by his Gr.3 Concorde Handicap-placed stablemate Elusive Treasure, and the Cambridge trainer believes the former smart Hong Kong galloper can justify his nomination for the Gr.1 Al Quoz Sprint (1200m) on turf at Meydan on March 31.
“We nominated him for the Al Quoz Sprint, but it’s by invitation only so he has to be selected,” Cruz said. “He had an international rating back in Hong Kong and we tried to go back for the Hong Kong Sprint in December, but he was reserve one.”Since then Packing Eagle has finished second to Volpe Veloce in the Gr.1 Sistema Railway (1200m) at Ellerslie on New Year’s Day and he had an excuse for his unplaced run last start in the Gr.1 Telegraph (1200m) at Trentham.
“It was our fault,” Cruz said. “Instead of going down a day earlier we left at 3.30am on the morning of the races and got there at 12. I was knackered so I can imagine how he felt. It was just too much, he was tired before he raced. I won’t be doing that again.”Cruz’s desire to get to Dubai with Packing Eagle stems from a series of trips there for four consecutive years from 2010 for his father, Hong Kong trainer Derek Cruz.
“I was working for my father and I went over with Good Ba Ba and Joy And Fun in 2010 then went back for the next three years with Joy And Fun,” he said. “I know it well and would love to get Packing Eagle there to represent New Zealand.”Good Ba Ba ran eighth in the Dubai Duty Free in 2010, while Joy And Fun, a son of New Zealand sire Cullen, won the Al Quoz Sprint that year, then returned to finish third to Ortensia in it the following year, second to Shea Shea in 2012 and ninth in 2013 as a 10-year-old.
Joy And Fun is now enjoying retirement on the Cruz farm in Cambridge, while Packing Eagle attempts to gain a start in the Al Quoz Sprint.“If he doesn’t get to Dubai I’d look at the Chairman’s Trophy in Hong Kong with him,” Cruz said. “I think he is good enough.”
The Gr.2 Hong Kong Chairman’s Trophy (1600m) is on April 8 at Sha Tin, the track on which Packing Eagle won his six Hong Kong races, including five straight in 2015 over 1400 metres, the distance of Saturday’s BCD Group Sprint.After winning each of his three trials for Matamata trainers Bev and Ken Kelso, he headed to Hong Kong and, racing as Packing Pins, he was successful on debut over 1200 metres and went on to compete at top level, finishing third in the Gr.1 Champions Mile to Maurice in May 2016.
He was also placed when second in the Gr.3 Challenge Cup (1400m) and third in the Gr.2 Sprint Cup (1200m).“He had a few issues and was retired in Hong Kong before we got him,” Cruz said. “He came off a knee problem, arthritis in both front joints and surgery on his left eye.”
Packing Eagle has had five starts since being trained at Cambridge, initially in the partnership of Cruz and his brother, Trevor.The Pins seven-year-old provided the brothers with their second black-type win when taking the Gr.3 Sweynesse Stakes (1215m) at Rotorua last October. Their first stakes highlight was in November 2014 with another former Hong Kong galloper, Fay Fay, in the Gr.2 Stella Artois Tauranga Classic (1600m).
Martin Cruz is in his fourth season as a trainer and has been training on his own account since mid-December. Each of his two wins on his own have been at Te Rapa (Elusive Meteor on December 16 and Winmotion a week later) and he is hoping his Te Rapa luck continues this weekend.Winmotion will be the first of his Te Rapa runners on Saturday in the Distinction Hamilton Hotel 1400m, then a race later all attention will be on Packing Eagle and Elusive Treasure, who are also raced by his mother, Angel.
Trudy Thornton has been the regular rider of both horses and has elected to stick with the up-and-comer Elusive Treasure, while her premiership-leading daughter, Sam, will be on Packing Eagle.