Rogerson held the Melbourne Cup aloft, to go with previous wins in
the Cox Plate (Savabeel) and Golden Slipper (Polar Success), after
Efficient stormed home to win the $A5.1 million ($NZ6.17 million) epic
at Flemington today.
Ridden by Michael Rodd, Efficient came
with a huge late run to down British raider Purple Moon by half a
length, with Irish-trained lightweight Mahler third after racing on the
pace.
It was a disappointing day for the other New
Zealand-trained runners, with Sculptor the best of them finishing
ninth, collecting $A110,000 ($NZ133,000) for Levin owner-trainer Peter
McKenzie.
Of the other Kiwis, Princess Coup was 13th and
Railings 19th. Trans-Tasman trainer Mike Moroney\'s pair of Eskimo Queen
and Sarrera were 15th and 18th respectively in the 21-horse field.
#para There was a big New Zealand connection with the winner.
Efficient
was sired by Sir Patrick Hogan\'s champion sire Zabeel, his third
Melbourne Cup winner after Might And Power (1997) and Jezabeel (1998).
Efficient\'s
breeder, Cambridge accountant Scott Williams, and Wellington trio
Graeme Hunt and brothers Tony and Mike Sellars shared the spoils with a
25 percent share of the $A3 million ($NZ3.6 million) first prize
between them.
Scott Williams said after the presentation: \"Unbelievable, you just can\'t describe it. I almost broke down.\"
Melbourne
multi-millionaire Lloyd Williams, who took a 75 percent share in
Efficient after Rogerson purchased him for $220,000 at the National
Yearling Sales at Karaka, south Auckland, wasn\'t on course, preferring
to watch the race at home on television.
Rogerson, who operates
stables in Hamilton, Sydney and Melbourne, said: \"When you\'re in the
Williams team it\'s easy. I\'m lucky to be part of the team.
\"We\'ve done it all now, maybe next year or the year after I\'ll stand up there with Lloyd and we\'ll own one.\"
Hogan
earlier estimated Lloyd Williams had spent about $20 million buying
just over 100 Zabeels in recent years in his bid to win a third
Melbourne Cup, and first since What A Nuisance in 1985. His first cup
winner was Just A Dash in 1981.
Efficient is out of the Defensive Play mare Refused The Dance, who was raced by the Sellars brothers.
Scott Williams and Hunt bred Efficient then included the Sellars brothers in the ownership.
Said Scott Williams: \"This rates the best it ever can be. It\'s pretty hard to beat this feeling.\"
It
was a major form turnaround for Efficient who hadn\'t recaptured the
form which won him a Victoria Derby a year ago. Efficient paid $22.40
on the New Zealand and Victorian\'s tote.
His lead-up form included 11th in the Turnbull Stakes and ninth in the Cox Plate, both at weight-for-age.
Lloyd
Williams and assistant trainer John Sadler poured the work into
Efficient in the past week and even tried him over hurdles at training.
Said Rogerson: \"His runs have been all right - he just likes to
get out in the clear. He (Williams) jumped him the other day and tried
all the things to turn him around.
\"Lloyd would have sat there for hours and hours, we had to turn him around. His work Tuesday morning was very good.\"
Rogerson and Lloyd Williams also saddled fourth-placed Zipping.
\"Turning
for home I thought Zipping was home to be honest. A Danehill (sire), he
probably didn\'t quite get the two miles (3200m),\" Rogerson said.
Second favourite Purple Moon was gallant in defeat after hitting the front early in the run home.
\"I saw (Efficient) coming inside the 200m mark,\" Rogerson said.
\"It\'s the feeling you never want to feel when you think you\'ve got it won.\"
Purple
Moon\'s English trainer Luca Cumani said he would \"keep coming back
until we win it\", while owner Craig Bennett, who originally purchased
Purple Moon as a hurdler, was downcast.
\"Nearly\'s a long way isn\'t it?\" Bennett said.
\"A great run, a great thrill to be second but we came to win and I\'m not the best of losers.\"
The
favourite Master O\'Reilly finished a well beaten eighth, jockey Vlad
Duric saying he was \"running on empty\" from the 1100m mark.
There
was drama on race morning when Rogerson\'s third runner Gallic was
scratched, along with Maybe Better and New Zealand-bred stayer The
Fuzz. All were found to have injuries