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Ad Sprint racing at Flemington is normally associated with the straight six but in 1975, some sprint races had to be run around the home turn because of track works.

Aurie's Star Handicap - Around the bend?

31 July 2025 Written by Andrew Lemon

The VRC Aurie’s Star Handicap has been part of Flemington’s history since its first running in August 1974. A 1200 metre sprint down the famous Straight Six course, it has been a Group 3 race since Elusive Touch won in 2010, having been a Listed Race from 2005 onwards. Among the stars to have won the Aurie’s Star are Fields of Omagh (2002), Sports (2003), Niconero (2005), Hey Doc (2017) and last year’s winner, the mare Right To Party.

The Aurie’s Star honours one of the most popular racehorses of the late 1930s. Little Aurie’s Star won 28 of his 89 starts, including the VRC Newmarket Handicap, Caulfield’s Oakleigh Plate twice, and Adelaide’s Goodwood Handicap.

Most importantly, in 1940, at the age of eight, he set a track record for the six furlongs at Flemington that was never bettered before racing shifted to metric measures in 1972. For years, people marvelled at the longevity of that record. Aurie’s Star became synonymous with the Straight Six. So, a race in his name just had to be a 1200 metre Straight Six sprint.  

But every rule of racing has its exceptions. Twice in its half-century history, the Aurie’s Star Handicap has been run not down the straight, but around the bend. The most recent occasion was in 2007, when Monet Rules defeated All American and El Segundo. That race was run over 1200 metres at Moonee Valley, shortly before the Flemington track reopened after its ten-month reconstruction.  

The earlier exception was in August 1975, exactly fifty years ago. On that occasion, and on that occasion only, the Aurie’s Star was held over 1000 metres. The simple explanation was another track reconstruction at Flemington, but at that time, it affected only the first half of the Straight Six distance.  

Aurie's Star

The earlier exception was in August 1975, exactly fifty years ago. On that occasion, the Aurie’s Star was held over 1000 metres around the turn. The simple explanation was another track reconstruction at Flemington, but at that time, it affected only the first half of the Straight Six distance.  

Jockeys and trainers had long been complaining, reasonably or otherwise, that there was a bias on the Straight Six track, favouring the horses racing on the grandstand side. When Coolalinga, Tauto and Prize Lad on the outside defeated Toltrice and Tontonan on the inside rail in the 1974 Newmarket, champion jockey Roy Higgins asserted that the inside running was five lengths slower than the outside section.  

The VRC subsequently agreed to regrade, redrain and returf the first half of the Straight Six. This section became unavailable for racing after the 1975 Newmarket (won by filly Cap d’Antibes) until the start of spring racing in September. No 1200 metre races were run at Flemington during that period; the ‘six furlong’ start on the course proper being on a continuing turn. But 1000 metre races were deemed possible. So, for that portion of the racing year, several races over this distance were run. The last of them was the Aurie’s Star Handicap of 1975.  

VIDEO: 1975 Aurie's Star Stakes (1000m). (Archival footage courtesy of Racing Victoria)

 

Archival stewards’ footage shows a distinctly heavy track that day. The winner, the four-year-old Dark Ruler (by Royal Artist, a son of Star Kingdom), ridden by Pat Trotter, had drawn well in barrier three, while Softy Lad, a known wet-tracker in good form, was out at barrier ten. Perhaps it made a difference. Phar Ace, the Adelaide Cup winner, was in the field, but resuming after a spell. Dark Ruler got home by a neck from the lightly raced Kingston Key. Lloyd Williams’s good horse Nearest, ridden by Pat Hyland and race favourite, was a mere short half head away third. 

People later forgot that Dark Ruler’s win in the Aurie’s Star was ‘around the bend’. He soon gained a reputation as a Straight Six specialist after going on a few weeks later to win the Bobbie Lewis Quality Handicap of 1200 metres. This was a highly meritorious win down the newly renovated straight course. Among the horses he defeated that day were Scamanda, Cap d’Antibes and Plush, champions all. There was a later 1200 metre Flemington win, the Matapan Handicap on Anzac Day 1976, and a subsequent win down the now-extinct 1000 metres straight at Victoria Park, Adelaide.  

Former Geelong footballer Neil ‘Nipper’ Trezise, later the Minister for Youth, Sport and Recreation in the Cain and Kirner governments, raced Dark Ruler. Ballarat-born himself, he entrusted the horse to Ballarat trainer Rob Keirl. After Dark Ruler lost his city form, he continued racing for many years on country tracks—always a sprinter. In the twilight of his career, the gelding was trained by Ron Gravett at Camperdown, still winning a race or two at Colac and Warrnambool. Dark Ruler’s final run was at Hamilton in April 1983. He retired not long before his twelfth birthday.  

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