SAHorseracing.com
SAHorseracing.com
Rothfire delivers stunning Doomben 10,000 upset at $61

Eight-year-old Rothfire produced one of the most emotional victories in recent Queensland racing history when surging to victory in the Group 1 Doomben 10,000 as a $61 outsider, delivering scenes not witnessed at the track since Black Caviar's BTC Cup triumph 15 years prior.

The win marked Rothfire's second Group 1 success, six years after his 2020 JJ Atkins victory as a two-year-old during the Covid pandemic. That day the grandstands at Eagle Farm sat empty - Covid saw to that such was the time difference between his two G1 wibs. On Saturday, Doomben was packed as the gelding turned back time in front of a roaring crowd.

Late jockey change completes fairytale script

Trainer Rob Heathcote's search for a rider extended until Tuesday morning before interstate jockey Brad Rawiller accepted the call-up and flew to Brisbane for the single mount. The connections were rewarded with a performance that left Rawiller's brother Nash, a multiple Group 1-winning Sydney jockey, in tears trackside.

The victory carried deeper significance for Heathcote, who recently lost his older brother Wayne — the man who introduced him to racing after Rob's earlier career as a Contiki tour guide. Among the emotional scenes, owner Lou Yates, a former actress who has been wheelchair-bound since severing her spine in a car accident at age 15, watched overcome as the gelding she'd supported through years of injury battles delivered his crowning achievement.

Career of resilience rewarded

Rothfire's path has been anything but straightforward. Originally purchased for $10,000 before a Nigerian phishing scheme forced Heathcote to pay twice, the gelding has survived multiple major injuries that would have ended lesser horses' careers. His most recent outing — a second-last finish in the $1 million Archer slot race at Rockhampton — served as the tightener for Saturday's breakthrough, though Heathcote noted the gelding was knocked down in that race.

The triumph was Queensland's first Doomben 10,000 win since Spirit Of Boom in 2014, when that horse defeated brother Temple Of Boom and Heathcote's former stable star Buffering. Spirit Of Boom has since passed away, adding another layer to Saturday's significance.

Heathcote, wiping away tears, described the win as the culmination of his career. The trainer acknowledged the quality field Rothfire had overcome and the wonderful crowd present for what he termed an extraordinary achievement for a horse who has been a trooper for Queensland across seven years. With his family trackside and the gelding few wanted to ride delivering against the odds, the trainer declared it meant the world to him.

© 2009 SAHorseracing.com. All rights reserved.