/ Aug 09, 2025
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Who Ever Thought has had only 16 starts, for six wins and three placings, and Gask hopes his patient approach will pay off again.
“He’s probably got to step up in this grade, but has to. He has nowhere else to go now,” he said.
‘There were a couple of times that the vet suggested we might have to put him down.’
Trainer Jermey Gask on Who Ever Thought
“He just keeps taking a little step every time we serve it up to him, so I don’t know where the ceiling is with him.
“He’ll roll forward. I’m not certain he has to lead, but he likes a bit of space, so I’d rather draw wide with him. He can travel across, and he’s a big-striding horse and not one that will quicken off a slow speed. He needs to work into it.”
Gask trains a small team, predominantly for owner Michael Abdallah. That combination has another chance on Saturday with Red Rags To Bulls, which will strive for back-to-back Highway Handicap wins.
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Red Rags To Bulls took out a 1500m class 3 at Rosehill two weeks ago and was an $8 hope to repeat the result over 1600m, again with apprentice Ben Osmond aboard.
Gask believed the four-year-old, a granddaughter of his South Australian Oaks runner-up Tingirana, would be better over the increased distance.
Meanwhile, Godolphin on Friday announced new stables for many of their top gallopers as they switch to a public training model next season, following James Cummings’ move to Hong Kong in 2026.
Tom Kitten will go to Anthony and Sam Freedman, Tempted and Zardozi move to Ciaron Maher, Beiwacht and Commemorative switch to Chris Waller, Golden Mile links with Joe Pride and Pericles joins Bjorn Baker. Lindsay Park, Gary Portelli, Michael Freedman and the Tony and Calvin McEvoy stable were listed as others to gain Godolphin stock.
Who Ever Thought has had only 16 starts, for six wins and three placings, and Gask hopes his patient approach will pay off again.
“He’s probably got to step up in this grade, but has to. He has nowhere else to go now,” he said.
‘There were a couple of times that the vet suggested we might have to put him down.’
Trainer Jermey Gask on Who Ever Thought
“He just keeps taking a little step every time we serve it up to him, so I don’t know where the ceiling is with him.
“He’ll roll forward. I’m not certain he has to lead, but he likes a bit of space, so I’d rather draw wide with him. He can travel across, and he’s a big-striding horse and not one that will quicken off a slow speed. He needs to work into it.”
Gask trains a small team, predominantly for owner Michael Abdallah. That combination has another chance on Saturday with Red Rags To Bulls, which will strive for back-to-back Highway Handicap wins.
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Red Rags To Bulls took out a 1500m class 3 at Rosehill two weeks ago and was an $8 hope to repeat the result over 1600m, again with apprentice Ben Osmond aboard.
Gask believed the four-year-old, a granddaughter of his South Australian Oaks runner-up Tingirana, would be better over the increased distance.
Meanwhile, Godolphin on Friday announced new stables for many of their top gallopers as they switch to a public training model next season, following James Cummings’ move to Hong Kong in 2026.
Tom Kitten will go to Anthony and Sam Freedman, Tempted and Zardozi move to Ciaron Maher, Beiwacht and Commemorative switch to Chris Waller, Golden Mile links with Joe Pride and Pericles joins Bjorn Baker. Lindsay Park, Gary Portelli, Michael Freedman and the Tony and Calvin McEvoy stable were listed as others to gain Godolphin stock.
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