Kiwis back chasing Inter Dominion crown

22 June 2025 | Adam Hamilton
Logo
Bet N Win

Bet N Win

YOUNG Kiwi trotting star Bet N Win is leading the charge to wind back the clock.

For a long time the Kiwis “owned” the Inter Dominion trotting series, winning 18 of the 23 finals from Yankee Loch in 1989 to I Can Doosit in 2012.

Champions like Lyell Creek (2000), Pride Of Petite (1996 & ’97), Take A Moment (2001 & ’03) and I Can Doosit (2011 & ’11) led the New Zealand dominance.

But the ride has turned in recent years with Aussies winning five of the past six finals.

It’s been due to pandemic and a date change causing less Kiwi interest in the great race, but also by the dominance of Australia’s champion Just Believe, who won the crown in 2022 and ’23.

But the Kiwis are back in force for this revamped and enriched Brisbane series, which starts on Saturday week and culminates with a $500,000 final at Albion Park on July 19.

While there are only two Kiwis in the trotting series, they are two of the biggest players in Bet N Win and Oscar Bonavena.

And both have already snared wins in Australia in the build-up.

Oscar Bonavena won brilliantly at Albion Park last Saturday week, then ran some sparkling closing times to finish a close second at the same track last night.

Bet N Win, who only arrived in Australia last Tuesday, opened his campaign when he hardly raised to a sweat to cruise to victory at Menangle last night.

They are trying to become the first Kiwi to win the Inter Dominion trotting crown since Winterfell did with the home ground advantage in the 2019 Auckland series.

The last Kiwi to win the final in Australia was I Can Doosit at the now defunct Moonee Valley track way back in 2012.

Bet N Win and Oscar Bonavena make for a fascinating contrast, but little separates their chances in Brisbane.

Bet N Win is the young buck, a five-year-old who has raced just 23 times for 13 wins.

Oscar Bonavena is most likely in his last year of racing as a nine-year-old, who boasts 34 wins and almost $1.15 million in earnings.

They are the new and the old of NZ trotting.

The latest markets have Oscar Bonavena rated slightly higher at $3.50 and Bet N Win at $4.50 to win the final.

Both of them will have turn the tables on Australia’s new trotting star Arcee Phoenix, who beat the pair on their patch in the $NZ500,000 TAB Trot at Cambridge on April 4.

Arcee Phoenix has long looked the next big thing in Aussie trotting and he’s delivering on that this year.

Chris Svanosio’s six-year-old followed a sparkling Melton trial win with an arrogant first-up win at the same track last night.

There was a touch of Just Believe about the way he made a midrace move to sit outside the leader and toyed with his rivals last night.

His odds were slashed from $3.50 to $2.80 for the trotting finals straight after it.

 

 

PHOTO: Race Images NZ

 

Related News

18 January 2026
GOODFORM - Ryan's look at Cranbourne harness Sunday night
Cranbourne – Sunday, 18 January 2026 Race 1: OVERVIEW: WINSUM BELLA (5) gets a positive stable change to Mitch Frost, who has been striking at a strong rate over the past 12 months. She stepped out in a Shepparton trial last week and showed a much-improved turn of speed compared to what had previously...
18 January 2026
Mark targets second 7BU Burnie Cup
Harness racing driver Mark Yole will be chasing his second 7BU Burnie Cup (2789m) at the Wivenhoe Paceway in Burnie on Sunday afternoon. Mark previously won Burnie’s feature race in 2018 with Hez The One (pictured), and he will take the drive on My Way for his father, Wayne, in this year’s...
18 January 2026
Spotlight On: Gus
The heroics of Gus during New Zealand Cup week late last year at Addington were truly historic, and in so many ways. The brilliant square gaiter Gus scored a unique Group 1 double by winning both the $400,000 Renwick Farms Dominion before backing up a few days later to claim the New Zealand Trotting...
17 January 2026
First training win secured as Chibnall eyes driving return
Harness racing driver Jordan Chibnall recorded her first win as a trainer in Hobart on Friday night. Chibnall, 23, prepared Sinister ($6.50) to victory at her tenth starter in the Lather Up at Woodlands Stud Pace (1609m). Driving responsibilities were given to five-point concession claim driver Malcom...
17 January 2026
The rise of Tassie star Triedtotellya
AN unfashionably bred gelding who has broken down three times has united the hopes of a once proud Australian harness racing state. The tiny state of Tasmania, an island off the south-west of mainland Australia, punched above its weight for so long in Down Under harness racing. Triedtotellya, a six-year-old...
Click for more