Gai lauds Vauban return

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Gai Waterhouse admits her hopes of a triumphant return to the track for former Irish star Vauban were thinning moments before Saturday’s Group 3 Sky High Stakes (2000m) at Rosehill

“There he was in a muck lather, as it was very hot and humid here yesterday and that’s why a lot of horses sweated up,” she explained. “Then, it took five people to push him into the gates.”

All campaign, Waterhouse and training partner Adrian Bott have worked hard on settling a somewhat fizzy Vauban before he races. After twice melting in the mounting yard before the past two Melbourne Cups, the trainers decided it was his pre-race jitters that were mostly affecting his performances.


Little was Waterhouse to know, but Vauban immediately lost his edginess after he was loaded into the gates.

“Tim (Clark) later said the moment he got in there, he was a different horse,” she said. “He immediately felt relaxed and he took that into the race.

“I think the crucial part for him was when he lost his position and ended up last about mid-race. That allowed him to drop his head and get him into that rhythm and it allowed him to breathe and then accelerate.


“For a while, I thought he was going to run stone motherless last, but then you could see him switch on and put in the work.


“Glen Boss messaged me last night and he said you could see he wanted to win that race. He saw the determination in his eyes and Glen is one person who would know that look.

“Adrian should get a lot of credit for this horse as he’s worked tirelessly on getting him to settle and I hope that performance is an indication of what is to come.”

Waterhouse said the next step was set in stone for Vauban before a decision is to be made on whether he races on or has a break with a view to the spring’s Melbourne Cup.

“He now goes to the Tancred,” Waterhouse said. “That’s his forte (staying), while yesterday was an added bonus.



“Horses really don’t do what he did. He started favourite in the last two Cups and run nowhere, and to think Adrian could prepare him to win first-up over 10 furlongs.

“That’s not his trip, so it was nothing short of remarkable.”

Bookmakers agreed and immediately firmed Vauban into the $3.80 favourite for the Tancred.


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Laurence Schuberth
March 16, 2025

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