[close]

With contacts from around the world, Racing and Sports provides something no other website can - information and form prior to a race with news and views after a race. This is both written, audio and visual. As a result, our appeal is unmatched.

As the most sought after tool for your international racing and punting needs, Racing and Sports has dedicated coverage in various sections to help you navigate the global sport.

We have Singapore/Malaysia, UK/Ireland/Europe, Hong Kong/Macau, South Africa, Japan, USA plus other international jurisdictions.

Stick with Racing and Sports for everything you need to know in the racing game.

Racing

Maher juvenile Without Peer in Rosehill win

Juvenile Without Peer has stamped himself as a horse to watch with a promising performance to kick off his career.

WITHOUT PEER winning the Traffic Warden @ Darley Handicap at Rosehill in Australia.
WITHOUT PEER winning the Traffic Warden @ Darley Handicap at Rosehill in Australia. Picture: Bradley Photos

Chad Schofield is an unabashed fan of debut winner Without Peer after the youngster overcame his inexperience to outclass his Rosehill rivals.

Despite racing greenly in the straight, the Ciaron Maher-trained two-year-old unleashed a strong finishing sprint from near the tail to down Spicy Prawn ($5) by a short neck in Saturday's Traffic Warden @ Darley Handicap (1200m).

Schofield said the juvenile had plenty of scope and the fact he managed to win while still doing things wrong was testament to his talent.

"He just won today on pure, raw ability so that's very exciting going forward because I think he's got a stack of improvement," Schofield said.

"My instructions were to let him balance up, travel, and I was told he'd be very strong late.

"When he quickened as well as he did with me early in the straight, I was very confident."

Without Peer was sent out an $11 chance and Maher's Sydney helmsman Johann Gerard-Dubord admitted they hadn't expected him to win.

But he echoed Schofield's sentiment that Without Peer had a bright future and expected to press on with him into the early season races.

"It's that time of the year where you have to. He is still furnishing so we'll give him a bit of time between runs and he will just keep improving," Johann-Dubord said.

"I didn't think he was going to win today. I thought he'd be strong late and improve a lot off the back of that.

"He's got a lot of maturing to do physically and mentally so that's a bonus today."

So You Think filly Reflect ($14) was doing her best work late to grab third, 1-3/4 lengths behind the runner up in an encouraging return.


Racing and Sports

Check out the latest Singapore News