Golden Slipper Winner Lady Of Camelot Attacked By Stingray, Ruled Out Of Royal Ascot
Golden Slipper Winner Lady Of Camelot Attacked By Stingray

Champion trainer Gai Waterhouse's Golden Slipper winner Lady Of Camelot is under specialist veterinary treatment after a stingray attack while swimming at a Brisbane beach on Tuesday. The four-year-old mare, who has earned $5.9 million in stakes, sustained near foreleg injuries and has been ruled out of a race against the world's best sprinters at England's Royal Ascot next month.

Lady Of Camelot was rushed to a Brisbane veterinary clinic for specialist care and is being kept under close observation. Connections have indicated that the powerful bay is likely to be retired from racing. The mare, who regularly enjoyed ocean wading and swimming, was being prepared for Brisbane's $1.5 million Doomben 10,000 (1200m) on Saturday when the stingray struck.

"Our mare's recovery and well-being are absolute priorities," owner Sir Owen Glenn said. "She has been scratched from the Doomben Ten Thousand and her Royal Ascot trip booking is cancelled. There'll be an early decision on her racing future."

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Adrian Bott, Waterhouse's co-trainer, said Lady Of Camelot was exercising in the shallows at Brisbane's Nudgee Beach when a stingray attacked. "She sustained wounds near joints and was immediately treated by our stable vet," Bott said. "We then swiftly took her to a specialist clinic where she remains under thorough attention, as vets watch for after-effects and guard against infection."

Lady Of Camelot ran a close second in Melbourne's 2024 Group 1 Blue Diamond Stakes before finishing fast at Sydney's Rosehill track to win Australia's best two-year-old race, the Golden Slipper. She is a highly valued breeding prospect.

Overpass to Take on Royal Ascot

Meanwhile, Perth carnival star Overpass's connections have confirmed he will tackle the King Charles III Stakes at Royal Ascot next month. Trained by Sydney-based Bjorn Baker, the sprinter has won two Quokkas and two Winterbottom Stakes on Western Australian raids. "His travelling experience should be an asset when he is flown to England," Baker said on Tuesday.

Other Racing News

In contrast, another WA carnival winner, Rey Magnerio, needs a spell. Melbourne trainer Robbie Griffiths said the gelding, a Gold Rush winner and Quokka runner-up on Perth visits this season, had developed leg trouble.

Class gallopers Smooth Chino and Western Empire have drawn barriers two and three, respectively, in the $200,000 Belmont Sprint at Saturday's Belmont Park re-opening. Austin Galati retains the mount on Smooth Chino, a winner at seven of nine starts. Western Empire, to race first-up on Saturday, has earned $3.4 million.

Top WA provincial jockey Tash Faithfull received a nine-day suspension for causing interference in race three at Kalgoorlie on Sunday. Rosie Mahony (10 days) and Rocky Cheung (14 days) were also hit with careless riding suspensions at WA country meetings over the weekend.

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