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From nightmare scenario to fairytale Derby win for Dark Dream

Owner-breeder Mary Jane Basson had felt sick for two weeks after turning down $2 million for Dark Dream but with 100 metres to go in the group 1 Queensland Derby she was feeling on top of the world.

This wasn't a nightmare, it was the sweetest of dreams.

My baby: Mary Jane Basson gives Derby winner Dark Dream a kiss.

Photo: AAP

Her ''baby'', a three-year-old by All American out of Buchanan Girl, a mare she bought for $500 to save her from the glue factory, was winning a Derby and running himself into the biggest races in the country.

“I was sick for two weeks after saying no,” Basson said. “I couldnt sell him. When are you going to get a Derby runner? He is my baby and you don't sell family.

“Now we have a Derby winner and we can look to the spring.

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“No money could match that feeling when he was going to win.”

Dark Dream gave Kembla Grange trainer Kerry Parker his first group 1 after a lifetime of battling in racing. He knew he had something special in Dark Dream and targeted the Queensland Derby at the start of the year.

“He is just a real stayer and I knew I had him right, but this is a Derby – they dont give them away,” Parker said.

Parker watched the Derby unfold and at the 800m mark he was getting itchy fingers. Tim Clark seemed to be on the same wave length.

“I wanted him to go because I know how strong he is,” Parker said. “When he took over at the 600m I thought 'it's up to you now boy', and he was the strongest stayer.

“He is going better when the races get longer, and a race like the Melbourne Cup is there for him in the spring.”

Clark made a long sweeping run but had to run down the Darren Weir-trained Heavenly Thought, which had cut the corner and put a length on Dark Dream halfway down the straight. But Dark Dream ($4.20 fav) just kept finding to win by a short neck from Heavenly Thoght ($8), with Queensland Oaks winner Youngstar ($6.50) 2-3/4 lengths back in third.

“He is just so strong and it is credit to Kerry the way he got him here,” Clark said. “I rode him here four weeks ago [to win the Rough Habit] and he was ultra-impressive.

"He had a bit of a hiccup the other day, but Kerry was always confident he would have the horse right on the day, and to his credit he had him spot on.

“Kerry held his nerve. He could have overworked the horse and not had a horse for the Derby. He trusted himself to back off him a bit, and he had him cherry ripe.

“Weirys horses arent easy to get past, and he was able to outstay him.”

It gave Clark a winning double after he took the Brisbane Cup on the Sedanzer earlier in the afternoon.

Chris Roots

Racing writer for The Sydney Morning Herald

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