Damien Oliver’s victory salute on Media Puzzle in 2002 provided probably the most poignant image in the history of the great race. And Makybe Diva’s third victory in 2005 was an historic occasion that we all rejoiced in seeing – because we all knew we would probably never see it again.
This one, Bart’s 12th, was different because the celebration was less about the circumstance or the moment. It was all about the man.
He was indefatigable. In his eighties he was still doing things people in their 50s find too demanding – like rising before dawn, staying on your feet all day at the track, sparring with the media, celebrating at night and doing it all over again the next day and the next.
There’s an argument to suggest that Bart’s last two Cup winners were his greatest training feats. Rogan Josh (1999), which he improved from a moderate WA galloper to a weight-for-age Mackinnon Stakes and Melbourne Cup victor, and Viewed which missed a vital lead-up run in the week before the Caulfield Cup and had been all but forgotten by the bookies.
In getting Viewed to the barrier ‘trained to the minute’, Bart reinforced his genius. He later quipped at the presentation speech that someone had noted he made a habit of having his horses primed for the first Tuesday of November. “I said it was a good habit to get into.”
The Cups King’s one-liners took on a life of their own over the years, but he didn’t have the best one at the presentations. That honour belonged – accidentally – to winning jockey Blake Shinn who was so overcome by the occasion that he jumbled his cliche. ‘I’d like to thank my friends,” he said. “They know who I am.”
Shinn’s enthusiasm for victory sometimes won him the wrath of stewards but his talent has never been in question. At 21, he already had a Scobie Breasley Medal and a Melbourne Cup and his pedigree as a horseman shone through with his heartfelt thanks to Viewed for the triumph they shared. From a line of famous harness racing reinsmen and thoroughbred jockeys, Shinn was raised by mother Carol and
stepfather Lee Hope, both of whom earned an emotional tribute from him.
"I’d like to thank my friends, they know who I am.”
Completing the recipients at the presentation ceremony was Viewed’s owner, Dato Tan Chin Nam, a long-time friend of Bart and four-time winning Cup owner.
Beginning with Think Big in 1974 and 1975, he added Cup number three with Saintly in 1996 then paid $50,000 for Viewed as a yearling after his racing adviser Duncan Ramage picked him out of a paddock. For a while, it looked like the young stayer by Scenic would be sold to Hong Kong but, after he scored two wins at Rosehill, Chin Nam decided against selling.
Bart and Chin Nam joked their way through an entertaining press conference in which the owner accused the trainer of having “long pockets and short arms”. Bart told of how they once played two-up and Chin Nam had a winning streak of 10 tosses in a row. “I thought I’d better stick with this bloke, he’s lucky,” he said.