Location | Morshead Park, Sutton Street and Rubicon Street, Ballarat Central Victoria |
---|---|
Coordinates | 37°34′47″S 143°49′49″E / 37.57972°S 143.83028°E |
Operator | Ballarat Greyhound Racing Club |
Surface | Burrumbeet Sand |
Opened | 23 December 1978 |
The Ballarat Greyhounds, also known as Morshead Park is a greyhound racing track located at Morshead Park, Sutton Street and Rubicon Street, Ballarat Central Victoria, Australia.[1] Managed by the Ballarat Greyhound Racing Club (BGRC) and overseen by Greyhound Racing Victoria (GRV). This track hosts events like the Ballarat Cup and offers races covering distances of 390, 450, 545 and 660 metres.[1] Racing is conducted Monday and Wednesday and occasional Saturdays and includes Tabcorp betting facilities and video replays broadcast on and off course.[2]
The Ballarat Greyhound Racing Club was formed in 1935 and the original track was located at Broadway Park (the North Ballarat Sports Club today) in Creswick Road, adjoining the Ballarat Showgrounds.[3][4] The track was opened on 11 March 1938 by councillor H J Wheeler.[5]
Over a three-year period during the late 1970s a new racing complex was constructed at the present site at Morshead Park. The opening meeting was held on Saturday 23 December 1978 with the first race winner being Eddy Tornado trained by W R Dalton. The meeting included a match race (a two-runner race only, where two greyhounds are matched against each other) between Melbourne Cup winner Tangaloa and Sandown Park track record holder Darville's Flyer, won by the latter.[3]
In 2012, Morshead Park underwent a significant facility upgrade costing $3.2 million. The upgrade was split between GRV ($1.7 million), the Coalition Government ($1.35 million) and the BGRC ($150,000) and included a major transformation of the grandstand and race track. The first meeting after the upgrade was held on Wednesday 3 October 2012.[6][7]
Distance (m) | Distance (ft) |
---|---|
390 | 1,280 |
450 | 1,480 |
545 | 1,788 |
660 | 2,170 |
The Cup was first held in 1960 at Broadway Park over 496 yards. In 2020 the winner received $47,000 although prizes have been higher in the past.[8]
Year | Winner |
---|---|
1960 | Rebby Boy |
1961 | Dalemee |
1962 | Eerie Town |
1963 | Alrarniv |
1964 | |
1965 | |
1966 | |
1967 | |
1968 | Baytown's Son |
1969 | My Gina |
1970 | |
1971 | Fawn Metal |
1972 | Master Caleb |
1973 | She's My Girl |
1974 | Fawn Capri |
1975 | Ben Boro |
1976 | Ernie Diro |
1977 | not held |
1978 | not held |
1979 | Nelson's Mate |
1980 | Swift As Light |
1981 | Johnny's Monaro |
1982 | Satan's Shroud |
1983 | Total Claim |
1984 | Lady Lilly |
1985 | Trisun |
1986 | not held |
1987 | Shining Chariot |
1988 | Kepler |
1989 | Hay Dinney |
1990 | Welcome Stranger |
1991 | Malawi's Prince |
1992 | Wild Pirate |
1993 | Dallas Duo |
1994 | Tivoli Man |
1995 | Malawi Law |
1996 | King Of Talent |
1997 | Young Darren |
1998 | Lansley Bale |
1999 | Tom's Legacy |
2000 | Puff Daddy |
2001 | Carlisle Jack |
2002 | Knockabout Wok |
2003 | Puzzle Prize |
2004 | Whisky Assassin |
2005 | Magic Trance |
2006 | Witch Magic |
2007 | Go Wild Jack |
2008 | Vee Man Vane |
2009 | Dyna Lachlan |
2010 | Greta Bale |
2011 | Up and Away |
2012 | Maverick Tiger |
2013 | Ronin Izmir |
2014 | Luca Neveelk |
2015 | Shared Equity |
2016 | Zambora Brockie |
2017 | Aston Dee Bee |
2018 | Aston Kimetto |
2019 | Western Envoy |
2020 | Yozo Bale |
2021 | Ferdinand Boy |
2022 | Compliance |
2023 | Kelsey Bale |
2024 | Explicit |