Trainer Danny OâBrien will not hear of the lack of race experience counting against Closer To Free when he lines up in Victoriaâs premier two-year-old race at Caulfield.
Closer To Free won his way into Saturdayâs Group 1 Blue Diamond Stakes (1200m) at Caulfield off the back of a debut victory in a Blue Diamond Prelude (1100m) on February 7.
That victory came after OâBrien purchased the colt following a Caulfield Heath barrier trial win nine days prior when in the care of Adrian Corboy.
OâBrien has seen improvement from Closer To Free post his debut win and is not concerned with the colt racing for just the second time on Saturday.
Last yearâs Blue Diamond winner Devil Night was successful at his second start after finishing second in the Prelude two weeks prior.
âThe narrative around his trial was that he was wound up, but Adrian told me he was three or four weeks behind with him because he got cast in his box over Christmas and he missed a couple of weeks work,â OâBrien said.
âWhen he came to the trials here, he said there was a lot of improvement in the horse and when I saw him in the yard before the Prelude I thought âheâs right, you might need another gallopâ, but he came out of it really well and will be finding a couple of lengths on Saturday on top of what heâs already shown.â
OâBrien said he was unconcerned by the lack of race experience Closer To Free has had ahead of Saturdayâs outing.
âThe profile of these two-year-old races has changed over the last 15 or 20 years,â OâBrien said.
âThe two-year-olds are not having as many starts as they used to before Christmas and ultimately, they get one or two post-Christmas before running in the Blue Diamond and even the Golden Slipper.
âI donât think that is a disadvantage. I know when Star Witness won it, it was only his third race start, one start in December, one start in January, and then into to the Diamond.â
OâBrien pointed to the changing nature of breed in Australia, adding there was not the same aggression in trying to get horses to the races as quickly as before.
âWhen I first started in racing, there probably wasnât the number of shuttle stallions standing,â OâBrien said.
âIt was more the colonials, they were a bit hardier, a bit more get up get going early, whereas nearly every stallion in Australia now has some form of shuttle blood.
âThere has been a gradual shift, so I donât think there is any disadvantage and he has been very well educated and we can thank Adrian for that.
âHeâs got a very natural brain and there will be no horse that will handle the parade better than him.
âHeâs so relaxed.â

