Kiwi Breeder Ready to Cheer Sprint Star Ka Ying Rising

Media Release - Friday December 6

No star has shone brighter in the thoroughbred racing world this year than New Zealand-bred gelding Ka Ying Rising, and trainer David Hayes is hoping he can assume the mantle of the world’s best sprinter when he heads to Sha Tin on Sunday.

Kiwi bred Ka Ying Rising pictured at trackwork this week - image Grant Courtney

The four-year-old son of Shamexpress has been a revelation since making his debut for Hayes at Sha Tin in December last year, winning eight of his 10 starts, including the Gr.3 Sha Tin Vase (1200m), Gr.2 Premier Bowl (1200m), and broke a longstanding track record when running home in 1 minute 7.43 seconds in last month’s Gr.2 BOCJK Private Banking Jockey Club Sprint (1200m) at Sha Tin.

He will be looking to repeat the dose when he returns to the Hong Kong venue on Sunday where he will contest the Gr.1 LONGINES Hong Kong Sprint (1200m), for which he will jump a short-priced favourite despite drawing barrier 11 in the 14-horse field.

Hayes has been duly impressed with Ka Ying Rising’s trajectory, and he expects him to continue on that path this week and into the future.

“He is very exciting,” Hayes said. “He has done everything we have asked of him. This will be his biggest test by far, but I think he will be a short-priced favourite to do it.

“I think he is a horse, as his name says, that is getting a little bit better and better. When you see him on the weekend, he is not what I call a furnished big sprinter, he has still got more improvement to come physically. (Although) he can’t run much faster than 1:07.

“Barring incidents, it will be an exciting day for the stable and all of his connections.”

It will also prove to be an exciting day for his breeder Fraser Auret, who will be watching in anticipation from his home in Marton.

While he is a Group One-winning trainer, Auret would also love to add Group One-winning breeder to his name, and from the first horse he bred to boot.

Out of five-win mare Missy Moo, Ka Ying Rising was born, raised, broken-in and initially trained at Auret’s property before he attracted plenty of interest from buyers following an impressive jumpout at Levin and a deal was subsequently brokered with Lindsay Park, and he swiftly made an impression with his new handlers.

“He looked quite natural (from his jumpout video), but not the best sprinter in the world,” Hayes quipped.

Advertisement

“He then went to the boys (sons Ben, Will and JD Hayes at Lindsay Park in Victoria), and the boys identified him as a very smart horse after about eight weeks. He then came to me, and it took me about six weeks and I knew he was very good.”

Hayes is developing a similar impression with Kay Ying Rising’s half-brother, Ka Ying Glory, who has recently joined his stable, having had an identical journey to Hong Kong as his brother.

Ka Ying Glory is Ka Ying Rising’s only other sibling, with their dam having passed away, and early signs indicate that she could have left another burgeoning star.

“He (Ka Ying Glory) has just arrived in Hong Kong, he is doing three-quarter pace,” Hayes said. “He is a different style of horse, much bigger than Ka Ying Rising, but he is a stylish mover and I am looking forward to galloping him in a couple of weeks.

“I don’t know if anything is as good as Ka Ying Rising, you shouldn’t compare him, but on his (Ka Ying Glory) movement, he has got the ability to win plenty of races in Hong Kong.”

Hayes is developing a great association with New Zealand-breds, as are his sons, with their flagbearer Mr Brightside continuing to aid the start of their burgeoning training careers.

“What happened when the boys were struggling at the start of their careers, instead of buying yearlings, we decided to buy some proven horses, just to have city runners, and he was bought to be a city runner and he has certainly eclipsed that,” Hayes said.

“He has won eight Group Ones, he has run second as many times and I think with the programme they have got in the autumn, if he can get up to 11 or 12 (Group One wins), he is in rarified air. He is pretty special.

“If anyone in New Zealand has got one like him, give me a ring.” – Trackside.co.nz

Visit the profile page for Shamexpress

Shamexpress in upcoming sales:
Advertisment
More Reading...
King of Roseau Brings Full Circle Moment for Capitalist and Snowden
A decade after Peter Snowden won the Magic Millions 2YO Classic with Capitalist, the champion trainer saddled up the stallion’s son King Of Roseau to win the $2 million Magic Millions Cup (1400m) at the Gold Coast on Saturday.
Birchley Back to NZ for More Millions
Queensland trainer Liam Birchley is no stranger to success in the richest two-year-old race in New Zealand, the $1million TAB Karaka Millions 2YO (1200m), and he is hoping to replicate the winning feeling next weekend as he prepares to line-up a pair of quality fillies in the Ellerslie dash for cash.
Geese That Lay Golden Eggs – What’s in the Future?
The 2026 Magic Millions Yearling Sale was highlighted by 15 yearlings that sold for $1million or more which was two more than last year when just 13 hit the magic mark, but still considerably down on 2024 which saw 23 millionaires sold following on from 20 in 2023.
Ones to Watch – Rosehill
In years to come when racing trivia nights are held, a question will be - what was the horse champion jockey Jett Newman rode in her first metropolitan race win?  And the answer is our One to Watch.
Hawker Hall Wins Last on Magic Day
James McDonald made the most of a late pick-up ride on Hawker Hall when he let the gelding rip from a wide barrier to run his rivals ragged in the $250,000 Magic Millions Class 6 Plate (1200m) at the Gold Coast on Saturday.
Ka Ying Rising Ready to Rumble
Plenty of drama has surrounded Ka Ying Rising ahead of Saturday’s A$20 million The Everest (1200m) at Randwick, but trainer David Hayes assures everything is fine with the Kiwi-bred sprinting sensation.
Via Sistina Retired - Dubawi Her First Mating
Chris Waller has announced the retirement of Champion mare Via Sistina after returning for her autumn campaign not “her normal highly energetic self”.
Kiwi Bred Sprinter Wins G1 Everest
On a day when the Kiwi breds ran rough shod over Randwick, no star shone brighter than the world's best sprinter Ka Ying Rising.
Shamexpress and the Ka Ying Rising Effect
At Windsor Park Stud in Cambridge, pride runs deep in the paddocks where so many champions have been nurtured.
2026 NZB KARAKA YEARLING SALE PREVIEW – Sky Thoroughbred Central this Monday
Caroline Searcy’s extensive preview of the Centenary New Zealand National Sale will premiere on Sky Thoroughbred Central Monday night at 7.30pm AEDST. This is a must watch chance to see over ten percent of the Book 1 catalogue and a some select Book 2 yearlings as well, ahead of sale ground inspections this week and the Sale’s commencement on Sunday January 25.