IN Racing
Brazilian jockey helps Hastings mare return to winning form
John Jenkins | June 07, 2025
Delighted Brazilian-born jockey Bruno Queiroz gives a fist pump as he brings La Dulcin’ee back at the head of the field following their success in a Rating 65 race at Wanganui last Saturday

The silky hands of international jockey Bruno Queiroz were instrumental in the return to winning form by Hastings-trained La Dulcin’ee in a $35,000 Rating 65 race over 1340m at Wanganui last Saturday.

The Patrick Campbell-trained La Dulcin’ee had been ruining her chances by over-racing in recent starts, leaving her without a sprint at the finish. She was coming off a sixth over 1100m at Trentham on May 17, where she was caught wide in the running and went too keenly. That followed a ninth on the same track in April where she also over-raced in the running.

La Dulcin’ee began quickly in last Saturday’s race and was keen to get on with things again in the early stages. But Queiroz managed to get the mare to settle perfectly third in the middle stages and she clearly had something in reserve approaching the home turn.

Queiroz let La Dulcin’ee slide forward to join the leader Maryrose rounding the bend before kicking her clear in the home straight for a half-length win over Ext Left, with a length back to third placed Gum Basher.

The 24-year-old Queiroz, winner of over 1100 races internationally, has taken no time to make his mark in New Zealand.

La Dulcin’ee completed a winning double for him at last Saturday’s Wanganui meeting and took his tally to six wins from 35 rides since he arrived in New Zealand at the beginning of last month.

Brazilian-born Queiroz commenced his riding career in his homeland five years ago and recorded his first Group 1 win there 12 months later, aboard Dynamic Spirit.

The son of jockey Antonio Queiroz, Bruno Queiroz was always destined for a career in the saddle and collected a pair of Rio de Janeiro champion jockey titles before he decided to ply his trade internationally, on the advice of World renowned jockey Joao Moreira.

After discussions with Moreira, Queiroz decided upon Singapore as his first port of call and began riding there in 2023 until it ceased racing in October last year, securing the jockeys' premiership in Singapore’s final season.

“I rode in Singapore for one-and-a-half years,” Queiroz said. “It was very good, I had a nice experience there.”

While his Singapore stint was cut short, Queiroz was intent on furthering his international experience, and once again called on the advice of Moreira. He then contacted former Singapore trainer Stephen Gray, who is now training in partnership with his father Kevin in Manawatu.

“He’s (Queiroz) a huge talent,” Gray said. “He’s Joao Moreira’s godson, and Joao and I have been good friends since his days riding in Singapore. Joao wanted to get Bruno to Singapore for some international experience and asked me to help him get started.

“After being unable to speak a word of English when he arrived, his progress was incredible – to the point where he rode four winners on the very last day of racing in Singapore, clinching the premiership.

“He’s a huge talent, young, light and a very humble hard-working person.

“Joao wants him to learn his trade a bit more over here in New Zealand with us. It’ll give him a great grounding for his future career.

“His record is incredible. I expect him to be a real asset to New Zealand racing, and he could well prove to be as good as any rider in the country.”

Queiroz was quick to reward the Grays, placing in his first ride in the country aboard Albarossa at Trentham on May 10 before guiding stablemate Tycoon Boss to a comfortable 4-1/4 length victory one race later.

La Dulcin’ee was recording her second win from 21 starts when successful at Wanganui last weekend, her first coming in a 1200m maiden race at Ashburton in February. She has also chalked up six seconds and five thirds.

The Per Incanto mare was originally trained at Cambridge by Stephen Marsh, who gave her 11 starts for four seconds and three thirds.

Campbell then took out a lease on the mare from her Wailkato breeder Bob Emery and races her with fellow Hastings-based Dean Smith and the estate of the late Norm Stewart, a close friend of Campbell’s who died of cancer just over three months ago.

Campbell said this week La Dulcin’ee is now likely to be turned out for a winter spell and return in the spring.

 

Dennis Choux defying the odds

There probably wouldn’t be any galloper racing at the moment earning the description “warhorse” better than Hawke’s Bay-bred Dennis Choux.

The seven-year-old gelding chalked up his sixth victory when taking out a A$60,000 race over 2200m on the West Australian Pinjara track last Saturday yet he is lucky to be racing at all.

Dennis Choux was bred by Richard and Liz Wood who owned and raced his sire, the outstanding galloper and five-time Group 1 winner Jimmy Choux, and he is out of the Flying Spur mare Nimbletoes.

Hastings-based John Bary has trained a number of horses for the Woods over the years, with Jimmy Choux undoubtedly being the star.

Richard Wood recalled this week how he and Bary thought Dennis Choux had the makings of being their next racetrack star when he first went into training.

But the horse suffered a severe tendon injury before he even got to the races and his career looked to be finished before it even got started.

Wood had taken Havelock North physiotherapist Andrew Scott in as a 50 per cent shareholder in Dennis Choux at that stage and they were both resigned to the fact that their horse would never get to race.

“I rang a mate in West Australia one day and was telling him about the horse and his injury and he put me on to a guy called Lee Everson in Victoria, who was renowned worldwide for rehabilitating horses with tendon injuries,” Wood said.

“I contacted him and he said he was prepared to work on the horse if I sent him over.”

Wood said he is a great believer in stem-cell therapy and how it can help repair tendon and joint problems and even takes a daily dose of the tablets himself.

“I sent 30 bottles of stem-cell tablets with the horse when he went across to Lee Iverson and I told him I want you to give him 12 of these tablets every day,” Wood said.

Iverson worked on the horse for more than 12 months and Wood said he is sure the stem-cell tablets helped in the horse’s recovery.

Iverson is also a successful trainer of harness horses and he gave Dennis Choux thousands of kilometres of work pulling a trotting sulky before ringing Wood to say he thought he had the horse ready to be tried as a racehorse again.

“He said the tendon was like a piece of steel and there was no chance of him breaking down with it again,” Wood said.

Dennis Choux was then put into work with Victorian trainer Simon Morrish and was just starting to get up to race fitness when he went in the wind and needed a wind operation that was going to cost A$10,000.

“I said to my partner Andrew Scott that I wanted out of the horse and he thought the same so we decided to give him to my mate in West Australia, who said he would get the wind operation done and set up a syndicate to race him.”

That is what has since transpired, with the horse going on to record six wins and eight minor placings from 25 starts for West Australian trainer David Harrison.

Dennis Choux has now won his last two starts, with last Saturday’s success following a 1600m victory at Belmont on May 24. He was overlooked by the punters in both races, returning odds of 19 to one in the first win and 14 to one last Saturday.

“He’s now lining up again in 10 days’ time, over 2100 metres at Pinjara, and his trainer thinks he’ll win again,” Wood said

The winning run by Dennis Choux could not have come at a better time for the Woods as they have a weanling half-sister to the horse, by US Navy Flag, entered for the National weanling sale at Karaka on June 26.

“The guys over in West Australia want me to send her over to them but I told them she is going through the sale ring,” Wood added.

 

Velocious making Aussie debut

Velocious will bid to add Australian black type to her impressive domestic record when she steps out at Eagle Farm this Saturday.

The Stephen Marsh-trained daughter of Written Tycoon will run in the Listed Queensland Day Stakes (1200m) with Australian jockey Ethan Brown to don the Go Racing silks aboard the three-year-old.

Velocious earned her passage across the Tasman with her most recent success over 1100m at Te Rapa a fortnight ago.

“We’ve always had Australia in the back of our minds for her and she had a couple of unlucky runs before her last start at Te Rapa,” Go Racing General Manager Matt Allnutt said.

“That was the race that was going to decide whether she went over or not.

“She duly went out and won that and there’s not much left for her in New Zealand, especially with the way the tracks are, so we’re trying our luck in Queensland.”

Velocious has six victories from her 12 starts, including the Group 1 Systema Stakes (1200m) and Listed Karaka Millions (1200m) to earn champion juvenile honours before she underwent a wind operation earlier this season.

She has returned to win twice, both noteworthy efforts against older open grade opposition.