Smashing Time vying for Group 1 glory in JJ Atkins

Brave Smash’s talented juvenile gelding will bid to become the Yarraman Park-based sire’s first elite-level winner


Trainer Rob Price has a growing confidence that bolt-from-the-blue gelding Smashing Time (Brave Smash) can provide his sire’s first Group 1 and launch his stable’s union with Australian Bloodstock in stellar style in Saturday’s JJ Atkins (Gr 1, 1600m).


Bookmakers have tightened Smashing Time to around the $15 mark for the last juvenile major of the season after he leapt from running third in a modest Kensington two-year-old handicap (1400m) to come fifth of 18 in Queensland’s Sires’ Produce Stakes (Gr 2, 1400m) on June 1.


The latter run changed Price’s mind about spelling the gelding, a decision backed by his further improvement under the Queensland sun.


Price knows Godolphin colt Broadsiding (Too Darn Hot) deserves his dominant odds-on position after storming home in the Sires’ for a third straight win, one start after taking Randwick’s ATC Champagne Stakes (Gr 1, 1600m).


But if the Brisbane weather stays fine, as is forecast, Price believes a good track will bring his runner firmly into calculations.


If he can succeed, it could kick off a huge race-to-race double for Yarraman Park – which would stunningly have nothing to do with their flagbearer I Am Invincible (Invincible Spirit), just a few weeks short of him claiming a third general sires’ title.


Aside from Smashing Time running in the Atkins for Brave Smash, who joined Yarraman’s roster last year, the other stallion among the stud’s trio – Hellbent (I Am Invincible) – has two strong chances in the Stradbroke Handicap (Gr 1, 1400m) in $11 shot Benedetta and Magic Time, at $13.


Yarraman would also no doubt welcome an all-Hellbent double, with his filly Aemelius currently second-favourite in the JJ Atkins at around $8.


And they wouldn’t say no to I Am Invincible, runner-less in the JJ Atkins, prevailing in the Stradbroke, though that was looking unlikely on Monday. Vinnie still had Zarastro and Nettuno among nominations for Queensland’s $3 million feature, but they were 26th and 30th in the entry order for the 18-horse capacity event.


Aemelius (Hellbent) finished second in Saturday’s The Phoenix (Listed, 1500m) when run down late by Chris Waller’s Imperialist (Churchill), who has noticeably continued to firm for the JJ Atkins since that third-start win to share third-favouritism at around $9, with Kelly Schweida’s El Morzillo (Star Witness).


Amelia’s Jewel’s (Siyouni) half-brother Bosustow (Blue Point) also shares the $15 slot with Smashing Time. Having run third in the VRC Sires’ Produce (Gr 2, 1400m) in March, that colt reverted to a 1350 metres Doomben midweeker to break his maiden last Wednesday – by an emphatic 2.87 lengths – and will likely appreciate the 1600 metres this Saturday.


But still, Price says the once-wayward Smashing Time stands an undeniable chance to supply Brave Smash’s first Group 1, after the three top-tier placings this season of the star performer of his three stakes winners, Kimochi.


Smashing Time – gelded after throwing his rider behind the gates before a Warwick Farm barrier trial that left without him – later debuted with a third over 1100 metres at Kensington on a good 4 on March 27. He won his next start in a 1400 metre 2YO “Super” maiden on a soft 5 at his home track of Kembla Grange, before that Kensington third on a heavy 9.


His fifth in Eagle Farm’s Sires’ came on a deteriorating soft 6 track, with Smashing Time settling near the rear for jockey Tommy Berry and being tightened for room around the home turn as Jamie Kah and Broadsiding made their run wider out. Once in clearer running inside the last 200 metres, Smashing Time finished on solidly to be beaten 2.92 lengths.


Price believes a firmer surface this Saturday will suit his charge perhaps more than Broadsiding, who ran two thirds and a fourth on good 4s before unfurling his current winning hat-trick on a soft 5, a heavy 10 and a soft 6.


“Our run in the Sires’ was super,” Price, who trains with his son Luke, told ANZ Bloodstock News. “He got back and made good ground, then Jamie had us a bit tight on the corner. The track that day was a bit loose, and it was all new for our boy to navigate that. Plus it raced in lanes, and I don’t think we were in the best lane.


“When you get a dry track, they’re not racing in lanes, and the firmer surface will suit our bloke better. Broadsiding is the one to beat, but at the same time he’s there to be beaten. He comes back to a dry track, whereas his best form has been on the wet.


“I do think we need to draw a good gate. Either we draw the middle, or Tommy’s got to ride the race of his life. But our boy is a talented horse, with a lovely long stride, and it’s also a good sign when someone like Tommy Berry sticks with him for three races in a row.”


Smashing Time is raced by a large group of owners, many from the NSW south coast, who’ll be making the trip to Brisbane.


He’s the first horse Jamie Lovett and Luke Murrell’s Australian Bloodstock have raced with Price and his co-trainer son Luke.


Australian Bloodstock in fact bred Smashing Time, having imported Brave Smash from Japan for a racing career which included Group 1 victories in Caulfield’s Futurity Stakes (Gr 1, 1400m) and Moonee Valley’s Manikato Stakes (Gr 1, 1200m) in 2018.


Smashing Time is the fourth foal of former Woodlands Stud maiden winner Trick (Street Cry). The 13-year-old has history with Japanese-bred stallions, having thrown Singapore stakes-placed gelding Super Impact (Real Impact), and having gone to another Australian Bloodstock Japanese import Tosen Stardom (Deep Impact) to throw the yet-to-race filly Stosen.


The Prices bought the yearling Smashing Time for $180,000 through last year’s Magic Millions Gold Coast Yearling Sale, though the purchase wasn’t finalised until a couple of weeks afterward.


Price recalled Smashing Time failed a scope at the sale due to a bout of chondritis, which he was happy to let settle.


“After he failed the scope, he had to go back to the farm and later get re-scoped before the sale was confirmed,” he said.


“I wasn’t overly concerned. Chondritis is pretty common, a bit of swelling in the upper airway, and you can often see it at the sales because the horses are kept in tiny boxes and there’s a lot of dust around.


“So we waited till it got better, then found some owners. Then after we broke him in, Jamie Lovett contacted us and said, ‘Is there any of the horse left?’”


Australian Bloodstock bought back in for 25 per cent, hence Smashing Time bears their famous colours of blue with a white horseshoe and black and white checked sleeves.


Price’s initial interest was piqued as he’s a devoted fan of Japanese stallions. This is the third Brave Smash he’s trained, while perhaps his finest performer was the ill-fated Count De Rupee (Real Impact), a Group 2 winner of seven races and $2.6 million in prize-money, and his former Arrowfield shuttling sire’s second-best performer worldwide.


“I do love that Japan’s breeding scene is very regulated, whereby they can’t breed from anything that’s too unruly or has bad airways,” Price said. “I’ve always said the two main things are feet and airways: they need something to land on, and if they can’t breathe, they’re in all sorts.”


While Luke Price usually does the stable’s travelling, his young family – with four small children – has led to his father wintering in Brisbane.


It’s been a lucrative few weeks, though also frustrating. Our Gold Hope (Lope De Vega) was only going to have one run in Brisbane, but the strength of her fourth in the ANZ Bloodstock News The Roses (Gr 2, 2000m) made the Prices push on to last Saturday’s Queensland Oaks (Gr 1, 2200m).


The grey looked the winner of that $700,000 feature at the 100-metre mark, only to have to settle for second to $101 bolter Socks Nation (Sioux Nation). A long neck the other way would have made quite a difference, though the $126,000 second prize helped salve the wounds.


Now Smashing Time – who’d similarly been intended for just one Brisbane run – has the chance to go one better, or at least pay some more travel bills in the $1 million JJ Atkins.


“We had a nomination in for the Atkins, but we were actually going to take him home after the Sires’,” Price said. “But the way he came through the run, and he’s done so well while in Queensland, we decided to keep going.


“It’s true what they say about the Queensland sun. The horses have done very well up here. Plus, it’s great getting away with them, where it’s just me looking after two horses. You get lots of one-on-one time, and the horses like that. You’re hand-walking them everywhere, rather than them just going on the treadmill. They get a bit spoiled, and there’s no doubt they grow in confidence.”


By Trevor Marshallsea

https://www.anzbloodstocknews.com/smashing-time-vying-for-group-1-glory-in-jj-atkins/


Contact Us

Kellie Lovett
June 11, 2024

Latest News

By Laurence Schuberth November 3, 2025
Australian Bloodstock director Jamie Lovett is hoping the cream rises to the top when Al Riffa (Wootton Bassett) takes his chance in the upcoming Melbourne Cup. Australian Bloodstock has shares in three Melbourne Cup runners in Al Riffa, Vauban (Galiway) and Royal Supremacy (Make Believe), but Al Riffa was always going to take much of the attention in the lead-up due to his recent form in the Curragh Cup (Gr 2, 1m 6f) and Irish St Leger (Gr 1, 1m 6f) which sees him shoulder a whopping 59 kilograms in the $10 million race. But despite barrier 19 seemingly adding another complication for Al Riffa, Lovett told Racing.com the horse’s immense class made it difficult to discount him. “Essentially, you always like to draw in but if the rain comes, I’m probably not that disappointed,” Lovett said of the horse Australian Bloodstock part-purchased mid-year. “I know there will be plenty of speed from outside. Changingoftheguard has drawn 24 and I assume the intention will be to go forward so hoping Mark [Zahra] can get on the back of that and get in somewhere. “They tell me the horse is great. He never lost any weight on the trip over, and his work has been good, and we’re really excited for Tuesday. I think he’s in a good spot. He obviously has got to overcome topweight, which history would suggest is very hard to win with, but I think he’s a very good horse. “I’m very confident he will run very well whether or not weight is a factor but he’s one of the better horses to come down in recent times and he just might be able to carry that weight. “Don’t forget that Joseph [O’Brien] has won two of these [Melbourne Cups] so that experience has got to help as well.” Lovett said the 21 barrier for Royal Supremacy came as a blow. “I was a bit disappointed with the draw for Royal Supremacy, so we’re just going to have to go back and ride for luck, but Vauban from barrier two is interesting,” he said. “Obviously, he [Vauban] was disappointing in the Caulfield Cup and if you’re looking for an excuse, Blake Shinn said he was on the wrong leg the whole way around, but he was probably a little bit close [to the speed]. “We’re hoping on Tuesday, drawn barrier two, he takes no part early. Hoping there’s plenty of speed. Some of his best races in Europe has been when he was left alone. “If you remember his win in the Sky High in Sydney, he came from right behind them and I suspect they are going to run this at a fairly good clip and it just might suit him. “All his best form in Europe is on forgiving or yielding ground, as they call it. “He’s a different horse to the first two times here, he went to pieces in the yard and Gai (Waterhouse) and Adrian (Bott) have done an amazing job to get this horse to be relaxed so if he parades well, I can’t have him not running well.” By The ANZ Bloodstock News Team
By Laurence Schuberth October 6, 2025
HUNTER syndicator Australian Bloodstock has already won the Melbourne Cup twice – and now is looking to have a three-strong representation in a bid to win the great race again. Yesterday’s Royal Randwick Group 1 The Metropolitan winner Royal Supremacy appears certain to join Al Riffa (59kg) and Vauban (56.5kg) in the first ever $10m Cup (3200m) at Flemington on November 4. Al Riffa, who won the Group 1 Irish St Leger at The Curragh on September 14 in Australian Bloodstock colours for the first time, is currently $5 second favorite for the Cup behind yesterday’s Flemington Group 1 Turnbull Stakes winner Sir Delius ($3.50). Vauban, an unlucky The Metropolitan fifth yesterday, is at $18 and Royal Supremacy was a dramatic shortener from $101 to $26. The Australian Bloodstock trio has different trainers. Like the syndicator (which won the two-miler in 2014 with Protectionist and Gold Trip in 2022), Al Riffa’s Irish trainer Joseph O’Brien also is a dual winner, having scored with Rekindling in 2017 and Twilight Payment three years later. Gold Trip’s trainer Ciaron Maher prepares Royal Supremacy, and Gai Waterhouse and Adrian Bott have Vauban, which ran in the last two Melbourne Cups for his previous Irish trainer Willie Mullins. The Metropolitan quinella result (Royal Supremacy turned the tables on runner-up Soul Of Spain) not only was a great result for Australian Bloodstock, but also Newcastle Jockey Club as Soul Of Spain defeated Royal Supremacy in the Newcastle Gold Cup (2300m) on September 19. Many “experts” queried the validity of the Newcastle Cup form; the Group 3 race not having produced The Metropolitan winner since Glencadam Gold in 2012. “Ciaron (Maher) was confident Royal Supremacy would win the Newcastle Cup, and he had a 2kg turnaround in the weights yesterday on Soul Of Spain,” Australian Bloodstock director Jamie Lovett said this morning. “I am yet to speak with Ciaron, but there is every possibility Royal Supremacy could go straight to the Melbourne Cup without another start. “He has 51kg in the Cup, and is eligible for a penalty for his The Metropolitan victory.” Lovett got ahead of the game securing last year’s Melbourne Cup winning jockey Robbie Dolan to ride the Irish-bred five-year-old yesterday. “When we became aware Royal Supremacy had 50kg, there weren’t many options to get someone to ride him at his correct weight,” Lovett said. “I got in touch with Robbie, and he was happy to get the chance to win another Group 1.” It will be some story if Royal Supremacy, who ran last to leading Newcastle trainer Kris Lees’ Tavi Time in the Listed Scone Cup (1600m) in May at his first Australian start, wins the Melbourne Cup. “It was the best last you will ever see,” Lovett said of the gelding’s run at Scone. “He drew near the outside, got back to last and couldn’t get clear running in the straight.” Royal Supremacy, who has won five of his 13 starts, was placed in three Group races (including the Group 2 Italian Derby, 2200m last year) was purchased privately from UK trainer Andrew Balding’s stables, and his owner remained in him. Al Riffa will arrive in Melbourne next weekend with the second shipment of overseas horses, and won’t run again before the Cup. Vauban, who boosted his Melbourne Cup claims with an excellent performance in The Metropolitan after being cramped for room in the straight, is likely to go next to the Caulfield Cup (2400m) on Saturday week. Kembla Grange trainers Mitch Beer and George Carpenter along with Anthony Mountney were successful at different tracks yesterday. The Beer-Carpenter continued on a winning run by scoring with King Nic ($8), ridden by Lee Magorrian, in a Midway Benchmark 64 Handicap (1400m) at home. It was the Nicconi four-year-old’s second victory at only his fifth start. Mountney travelled to Wagga where he landed the Maiden Plate (1065m) with first starter Eternal Ember ($5.50). Ridden by apprentice Teagan Martin, the Exceedance filly defeated Victorian visitor Longreach Drover ($4.20) and $2.60 favorite Braj. Eternal Ember was an $8000 buy for Anthony Mountney Racing at last year’s Inglis HTBA yearling sale in Sydney. Written by John Curtis from At the Track-
By Laurence Schuberth September 14, 2025
Australian Bloodstock have a knack of buying high-class European imports and they look to have another brilliant one on their hands in the shape of the Joseph O’Brien-trained Al Riffa (Wootton Bassett), who advertised his Melbourne Cup (Gr 1, 3200m) potential with an ultra-dominant performance in the Irish St Leger (Gr 1, 1m 6f) at the Curragh on Sunday. Australian Bloodstock purchased the dual Group 1-winning son of Coolmore’s star shuttler Wootton Bassett (Iffraaj) at the end of last month with the Flemington showpiece on the first Tuesday in November in mind and he more than justified their faith with an imperious display in the final Classic of the European season. Winning rider Dylan Browne McMonagle was recording his first Classic win with this success, and his mount moved powerfully through the pack from off the pace before sprinting four lengths clear of King Edward VII Stakes (Gr 2, 1m 4f) winner Amiloc (Postponed) to end the three-year-old’s unbeaten run. Al Qareem (Awtaad) was third, another four and a quarter lengths off the pace. Bookmakers in Europe responded by slashing Al Riffa’s price for the Melbourne Cup to 6-1 favourite ($7) from 12-1 ($13). O’Brien said: “We knew the guys that were guaranteed stayers were going to try to expose the stamina of those that weren’t, and the pace was really strong. “Dylan was cool on the horse and confident. He’s been a great horse for us, he always turns up and runs his race and I’m delighted for the ownership group. “It was a gruelling race, but we’ll freshen him up and hopefully get him to the Melbourne Cup. “He’s two for two now since he’s gone up in trip and he has the right attributes. He settles well, he has a turn of foot, and he stays. Hopefully we have a smooth preparation.” Lovett added: “He was perfectly prepared by Joseph and his team, and we’re delighted to be a part of it. “He wasn’t a hard horse to identify when he went out to 2800 metres last time. That convinced us that he might be the horse to try to win the Melbourne Cup. “He’ll need to carry weight because they won’t miss him, but I feel sure he’s the right horse to do that. “Joseph knows how to win the race, and we have four Melbourne Cups between us.” Australian Bloodstock have a proven track record with northern hemisphere imports, highlighted by their 2022 Melbourne Cup triumph with fellow French-bred Gold Trip (Outstrip), while they tasted success in the Flemington showpiece for the first time in 2014 with Protectionist (Monsun), who was bred in Germany. This year Australian Bloodstock will likely also be represented in the race by last year’s favourite Vauban (Galiway), who they purchased last year and relocated him from Willie Mullins to Gai Waterhouse and Adrian Bott. Jamie Lovett, director of Australian Bloodstock, confirmed to ANZ News last month that the horse will stay in training with O’Brien and, while the Melbourne Cup is the entire’s main aim, he could also venture on an international campaign which could include both Dubai and Hong Kong. Before Sunday, Al Riffa had tasted elite-level success on two previous occasions, his first coming in the National Stakes (Gr 1, 7f) as a two-year-old, while he also took out last year’s Grosser Preis von Berlin (Gr 1, 2400m) in Germany. Bred by Sarl De Chambure Haras D’Etreham Et Al in France, Al Riffa is the third foal out of the unraced Galileo (Sadler’s Wells) mare Love On My Mind, herself a sister to Group 3 winner and Ascot Gold Cup (Gr 1, 2m 4f) second Mizzou. Like the owners, O’Brien will be aiming to win the Melbourne Cup for a third time, having won it first with Rekindling (High Chaparral) in 2017, before Twilight Payment (Teofilo) handed the trainer a second victory in the Group 1 in 2020. Al Riffa is still entire so could follow in the footsteps of Gold Trip who now stands at Lovatsville in Victoria for a fee of $8,800 (inc GST).
By Laurence Schuberth August 28, 2025
Melbourne Cup (G1)-winning syndicators Australian Bloodstock have purchased dual group 1 winner Al Riffa . The talented son of Wootton Bassett , who dominantly scored a five-length romp in the Curragh Cup (G2) July 19, will remain in training in Ireland with Joseph O'Brien and be aimed at the Melbourne Cup, a race the trainer has won twice before with Twilight Payment in 2020 and Rekindling in 2017. While Australian Bloodstock director Jamie Lovett stressed the group 1 on the first Tuesday in November is the main target for the 5-year-old, the horse could also venture on an international campaign, which could include both Dubai and Hong Kong. "We wanted a horse that could come down and not just be competitive, but be good enough to win a Melbourne Cup," Lovett told ANZ News. "So the fact that (his last start win) was his first time beyond a mile and a half at the Curragh last start, so he has clearly ticked that box, he couldn't have been more impressive. He's staying with Joseph and will likely head to Hong Kong and hopefully on to World Cup night in Dubai. That was a big tick for our owners because that was the brief—to find us a horse that we could travel abroad with." Lovett confirmed Al Riffa—whose two group 1 wins have come in the 2022 National Stakes (G1) as a 2-year-old and the 2024 Grosser Preis von Berlin (G1)—will be given one final European run before his journey south for the Cup Nov. 4. "It's my understanding talking to Joseph, he'll run in the Irish St Leger mid-September, and that'll be his last run and then he'll quarantine at Ballydoyle before coming down into Victoria." Australian Bloodstock has a proven track record with Northern Hemisphere imports, highlighted by their 2022 Melbourne Cup triumph with French-bred Gold Trip , while they tasted success in the Flemington showpiece for the first time in 2014 with Protectionist, another bred in Europe. This year, they will also be represented in the race by last year's favorite Vauban , who they purchased last year, and Lovett believes Al Riffa fits their criteria. "There's obviously plenty of filters, and historically buying horses at the top of the weights for a big handicap can be flawed. But I think Gold Trip taught me that class carries you a long way and this horse is obviously a very, very good horse. "He is a group 1 winner in Germany, but more importantly, he has form behind Rebel's Romance. In my mind, I don't think we've found the ceiling with this horse. I think Joseph made a similar comment that he's still a horse on the up; he's not heavily taxed. "He's only had 14 starts, and I just feel he was the right horse for the brief that we had to go and purchase. There's a few local owners coming into the horse, but the majority of the horse was purchased by European clients and some clients in Dubai." Al Riffa is the third foal out of the unraced Galileo mare Love On My Mind, herself a sister to group 3 winner and 2016 Ascot Gold Cup (G1) second Mizzou. 
By Luke Murrell August 6, 2025
Australian Bloodstock Secures Promising German Import for 2025 Melbourne Cup Tilt
By Luke Murrell July 17, 2025
The NExt Kensei ??? Don Diego De Vega Wins and Books His Trip To Melbourne
More Posts