Outlaw Man loving Australia

Outlaw Man, driven by Jordan Leedham. (Stuart McCormick)

Master trainer Andy Gath has built a reputation on identifying and succeeding with tried New Zealand horses, and a recent buy from across the Tasman might be one of his best yet.

Five-year-old gelding Outlaw Man continued a sparkling start to life in Australia when he strung together a seventh-straight victory for new connections at Tabcorp Park Melton on Saturday night.

And this triumph was arguably the most impressive of his career.

The son of Sweet Lou speared straight to the lead from barrier two and never looked like being caught, with dual 27.2sec closing quarters capping a dominant 7.8m victory in a mile rate of 1:52.5 (1720m).

It was a second successive win with Outlaw Man for young reinsman Jordan Leedham, who drove a similar front-running race seven days prior.

“Hopefully after tonight a few more people think he’s a lot better than what they probably think he is because he’s just been going through the grades,” Leedham said after the Prydes EasiFeed Pace.

“Tonight showed what he can really do, and the whole way he was up wanting to roll so I was happy to just go with him and let him do his thing.

“He just showed what he can really do.”

Leedham works for Gath Racing and knows all about the success the stable has enjoyed with pacers and trotters from overseas.

“All the horses that Andy has purchased and brought over from New Zealand have all done terrific jobs and have all gone on to win a metro or two, but I reckon he’d be up there with one of the better ones that we’ve had come through lately,” Leedham said.

“And he’s one of my favourites too, so I’m happy with that.”

Outlaw Man won his first start for Gath and new owners in December last year, and after being beaten into third a day later at Ballarat, has prevailed in his subsequent seven runs. The blitz here in Australia has raked in more than $60,000 for connections and taken his career record to 12 wins from 36 career starts.

“He’s bred to have a lot of high speed, and he can sustain it for that 600-800 metres and just look like he’s doing it effortlessly,” Leedham said.

“He was super tonight.”

Tim O’Connor