Maori Miss Award Announced

29 January 2021 | Jonny Turner
Logo

Harness Racing Australia (HRA) is delighted to announce the establishment of the Maori Miss Award to recognise excellence in trotting breeding.

Previously trotting broodmares were eligible to win the Australian Broodmare of the Year Award title through the “Winona Award”, but now there is a stand-alone Australian Trotting Broodmare Of The Year Award title to celebrate square-gaiting’s super producers – The “Maori Miss Award”.

Square-gaiting dams have competed against their pacing counterparts since the Winona Award was established in 1976.

The HRA Executive has now moved to celebrate the success of broodmares in each gait individually.

From this year the Winona Award will be awarded to Australia’s Pacing Broodmare Of The Year.

The establishment of the Maori Miss Award will allow Australia’s standardbred breeding industry to shine a spotlight on magnificent achievements in the trotting gait.

“Australia has a rich history of producing outstanding trotters that have completed spectacular feats on racetracks around the country and further abroad,” HRA Chief Executive Andrew Kelly said.

“The strength and proud history of the trotting gait and its outstanding contribution to our breeding industry will now be further recognised through the Maori Miss Award.

“The award is deserved celebration for trotting breeding and the mares that produce our star racehorses”, he said.

When the HRA Executive established its new award for trotting broodmares one name stood out, the champion broodmare Maori Miss, who has not only left one of Australia’s greatest ever trotters, but is also responsible for an incredible square-gaiting legacy spanning six decades.

The dam of arguably Australia’s greatest ever trotter Maori’s Idol, Maori Miss completed the outstanding feat of winning the Winona Award on three consecutive occasions from 1977-79.  Remarkably, she is one of just two trotting mares to win Australia’s previous Broodmare Of The Year title and both are from her famed ‘Maori’ breed.

Maori Miss’s daughter, Maori Trump, the dam of former Australian Horse Of The Year Noopy Kiosk, took out the title in 1996.

Maori Miss’s legacy is responsible for a host of star trotters including Blitzthemcalder, Sumthingaboutmaori and Maori Time.

Maori Miss continues to have an impact on Australia’s top-level trotting races today through the deeds of Pink Galahs.

“Maori Miss has left an indelible mark on Australia’s standardbred breeding industry and the trotting gait,” Kelly said.

“She is responsible for arguably the most influential trotting family in our country’s history, so it is only fitting that excellence in the breeding of trotters can be celebrated and recognised through this wonderful mare”.

The Maori Miss Award will be decided by votes from Australia’s six state breeding bodies.

The inaugural winner will be announced in early February.

 

Related News

18 April 2024
Reagan wants top honours in the Clarke household
Young Ballarat harness racing junior Reagan Clarke has got her “first winner out of the way”, and now has her sights set on beating her older brother. The 16-year-old steered Foregone Conclusion to a tough victory at the Geelong meeting on April 3 in the VHRC Crop Plus Pace.
17 April 2024
Stewart has an army of five primed for Nutrien final
Premier trainer Emma Stewart is confident she has the quality not just the quantity to win Saturday night's stellar $250,000 Nutrien 2YO colts and geldings final at Melton. Stewart and co-trainer Clayton Tonkin have long been the dominant training force, especially with juveniles, in Australia and flex...
17 April 2024
Huge night of Nutrien finals
PREMIER trainer Emma Stewart is confident she has the quality, not just the quantity, to win Saturday night's stellar $250,000 Nutrien 2YO colts and geldings final at Melton. Stewart and co-trainer Clayton Tonkin have long been the dominant training force in Australia, especially with juveniles,...
17 April 2024
Vale Francis Murray Pay
Friends and family are mourning Francis Murray Pay, who passed away on Tuesday, April 9 aged 94. Pay loved harness racing and drove many horses over the years at tracks such as Boort, Charlton, Wedderburn, Horsham, Nyah, Ouyen and Mildura.
17 April 2024
TAB punter celebrates five-figure bet as Chogi charges to another win
One punter capitalised on the rise of Chogi with a five-figure bet on the pacer before his victory at Charlton last Wednesday. The TAB customer plonked $10,000 on the John Tormey-trained son of Betterthancheddar at $2.10 and was cheering when he went all the way to score in the Girrkitj (Ruby Saltbush)...
Click for more