Savabeel’s son makes immediate Victorian impact

Savabeel

Relocating the well-related 4-year-old Black Bolt from their Sydney stable to Melbourne reaped an
instant reward for trainers Ciaron Maher and David Eustace at Sandown on Wednesday afternoon.

The Waikato Stud-bred and sold son of Savabeel moved camp in search of improved footing and
showed tenacity to down a competitive Benchmark 64 line-up.

Black Bolt was caught wide from his outside gate before he settled outside the leader for apprentice
Teo Nugent and fought tooth and nail for a third career success.

“He came here for the better surfaces and we wanted Teo to slot in and he didn’t panic and gave the
horse a very good ride,” stable representative Leigh Allen said.

Black Bolt had finished runner-up when resuming at Newcastle and natural improvement saw him go
one better this afternoon.

“He drew wide and jumped well and got on the speed. He got a breather when we got outside the
leader and was able to give a good kick into the straight,” Nugent said.

Black Bolt was a $150,000 Karaka purchase with Darby Racing and de Burgh Equine signing the
ticket.

A brother to the dual Group 2 winner and Group 1 performer Forgot You, he is a son of the O’Reilly
mare Simply You, who made a return visit to Savabeel last season.

She is a daughter of the two-time Group 1 winner Glamour Puss, whose half-brother Vision And
Power also triumphed twice at the top level while another family member Steps In Time won the G1
Coolmore Classic.

Recent News
3 May 2024

Gottabesavvy’s Staying Power Rewarded

Nash Rawiller praised Gottabesavvy’s depths of stamina after they successfully combined at Warrnambool this afternoon. The leading jockey produced a flawless ride aboard the Trent Busuttin and Natalie Young- prepared son of Savabeel to triumph …

Read More
27 April 2024

Australia calling in-form Wewillrock

Another trip across the Tasman beckons for Wewillrock, who returned to winning ways indominant fashion at Wanganui on Saturday afternoon. The son of El Roca made light of his 60kg impost over 1200 metres with …

Read More