News
7 December, 2024
Sparked by The Flame, Tzouvelis now chases ‘the impossible’
Original article written by Pat McLeod
Miracle trainer Tom Tzouvelis achieved the improbable on Thursday night at Albion Park when he successfully guided Daysea’s Rory to victory in the Queensland Flame.
On Friday, he started work on realizing the impossible – getting 90-year-old owner, and close family friend, Claude Dacey to The Meadows for the $1 million-to-the-winner The Phoenix on December 21.
“I would love to see Claude in Melbourne,” Tzouvelis said.
Daysea’s Rory won The Flame and Racing Queensland’s selection race for entry into the unique slot event, The Phoenix.
“Anyone who makes a race like this should be there,” Tzouvelis said.
“You rarely get a chance to be part of a $1 million race. Hopefully he is elated enough to travel down. We will have a conversation on Friday and see how he is feeling.
“What The Meadows has done in putting this race on, it will be an iconic race and you will look back in years to come and know how great it was to be a part of it.”
The first three episodes of The Flame and The Phoenix have been amazing, however the Daysea’s Rory story line could top them all.
Just a few weeks ago veteran greyhound owner, trainer, breeder Claude Dacey handed ‘Rory’ over to trusted friend Tzouvelis because he believed his dog had something special that he couldn’t extract.
In three weeks Tzouvelis found the issue, a deep groin injury, and has transformed Rory into a potential million-dollar dog.
On Thursday night at ‘The Creek’ he showcased that, claiming victory over the state’s best sprinters.
Daysea’s Rory won in 29.88 seconds, finishing over the top of quality sprinters Kia Kaha (trained by Warren Nicholls), second, and third-placed Magistrate (Greg Stella).
“I was worried with the draw (box four),” Tzouvelis said
“Kia Kaha and Magistrate are such faultless beginners and I just didn’t know if we could hold them early. It is one thing beating young dogs, it is another thing beating dogs that are seasoned, tough Group performers.
“You are never confident in a race like that, but I was confident that we had the right dogs to be competitive. In running, when he got to second I was pretty confident.
“We learnt that he can come from behind and not just lead. We haven’t had him very long and so we are learning a lot about him each race.”
Tzouvelis said he believed Daysea’s Rory was up to the challenge of The Phoenix.
“We are setting the bar higher and higher I hope he can reach it in a couple of weeks,” Tzouvelis said.
“One thing we learn about greyhound racing is that you have to have luck on the night.
“It will probably be as hot a field as I have seen for The Phoenix. For example, a dog like Explicit will go down as one of the top dogs of the past decade – an unbelievable dog and not the only quality dog in this race.
“So, you go into the race hoping. A lot of it will come down to the box draw. All we can do is put our best foot forward and hope that is good enough.”