Brilliance and a lot of it will spill on to the Melton straight tonight, when the all-trotting card’s headliner will give a glimpse into talent that is generations in the making.

The Woodlands Stud Great Southern Star has lured Australasia’s best trotters to battle for the nation’s richest squaregaiting prize in a one night heats-into-final series that was introduced in 2013.

But while the format’s the same much has changed, with the heats now flush with European bloodlines, the passion project of the likes of Yabby Dam Farm’s Pat Driscoll and Aldebaran Park’s Duncan McPherson.

“It’s been about globalisation for years,” McPherson said. “And there is no better example of that than the stellar line up we have in 2023.

“Improved genetics have changed the face of trotting in Victoria and the southern hemisphere. The stallions and dams are better that they have ever been. It is why we are getting better race fields. This is what we’ve been striving for.”

It will be seen throughout the Aurora Australis, Victoria’s $750,000 eight-race series that runs across January and February and is expected to lure international trotters down under in future.

For now, the focus is on bloodlines akin to Europe’s champions, a far cry from 2013, when Vulcan won the first Great Southern Star. Back then, all 20 heat entrants had US sires, but tonight that number is 12, with seven others by French stallions and On Advice by Swedish-born Sebastian K.

“We now have the genetic lines that place us in an internationally globally competitive position with our horses,” McPherson said. “The French-Australian-American mixed lines is giving us athletic, improving horses. It’s the American speed into the form of a European horse.”

An example is Hopeful Beauty, from a French broodmare (Beauty Life) and stallion (Brillantissime), talent that “in 2013 wouldn’t even be on the radar”, and McPherson’s own runner, Aldebaran Zeus – who hails from a Swedish broodmare (Zoia Boko) with Italian lineage and a US stallion (Muscle Hill).

All going well, a stud career awaits him, but it’s nights like tonight that can dictate how great a post-racing career he may have.

“He’s stronger than he’s ever been,” McPherson said. “To go 54.8 (seconds) at Bendigo is globally competitive on a 1000-metre track. I’m hoping he can make the field of the final, and then we’ll worry about the draw after that.”

Booking a final berth is getting harder than ever such is the improving depth of the field. While in 2013 a collective 32 metres separated first from fourth across the Great Southern Star’s heats and final, last year that was only 12 metres.

It’s something well known to Anthony Butt, who steered Vulcan to that 2013 victory and tonight drives up and comer Dont Care.

“The trotting fields have just gotten better,” Butt said. “Duncan and Pat Golino and Jim Connelly have imported so many well-bred mares. It has lifted the sport to a whole new level.

“They are faster, the times shows that, and beautifully gaited. We’d always trailed the US and Europe, and probably still do, but this has brought us up a cog or two and we’re closing the gap.”

Of Dont Care, Butt said he was “a lovely horse, going to top-line in 12 months, and this is his first dip of the toe in with the big boys and girls and he will acquit himself well”.

TUNE IN at MELTON on Friday 

First Race: 5.55pm Last Race: 10.35pm
Racecaller: Dan Mielicki with Rob Auber, Kirsten Graham and Shannon O'Sullivan part of the TrotsVision coverage.
TrotsVision: WATCH LIVE
SEN Track: LISTEN LIVE 
RSN 927: LISTEN LIVE

Winner of the Week

CATALPA RESCUE, by American Ideal out of Soho Siren, a winner of the VHRC Caduceus Classic on January 28.
 Breed your next winner with Woodlands Stud, supporter of Trots Centre
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The good oil from the Vic trials circuit

BLACKBOOKER: Melton, R1 N1, Gotfeelingsyouknow 
At Bendigo on January 23, GOTFEELINGSYOUKNOW produced another stunning trial performance to win by a large margin. He trailed the leader, came to the outside at the 600m and quickly pounced on the leader ITSALLANDOVER before tearing away to win easily. REPORT & REPLAY
BLACKBOOKER: Melton, R1 N7, Keayang Chucky
KEAYANG CHUCKY was very competitive at feature race level last preparation and was able sprint home in a slick final quarter of 28.1 seconds to win his trial. At Ballarat on January 17, he trailed the leader, moved to the outside at the 700m and was strong at the finish. REPORT & REPLAY