Injury will prevent a New Zealand stallion prospect from chasing a Group One victory in Queensland.
The Darren Weir-trained Rageese was being aimed at the $A1.5 million Stradbroke Handicap at Eagle Farm before his unplaced run in the Gr.3 Fred Best Classic at Doomben.
"He got badly galloped on so he's out until the spring," said Rodney Schick, principal of Windsor Park Stud who race the Street Cry colt with Sheikh Mohammed Bin Khalifa Al Maktoum. "It's a shame, but he'll keep."
Rageese is the stakes winner of three races and was Group One placed in the Sires' Produce Stakes at Randwick last season.
The Darren Weir-trained Rageese was being aimed at the $A1.5 million Stradbroke Handicap at Eagle Farm before his unplaced run in the Gr.3 Fred Best Classic at Doomben.
"He got badly galloped on so he's out until the spring," said Rodney Schick, principal of Windsor Park Stud who race the Street Cry colt with Sheikh Mohammed Bin Khalifa Al Maktoum. "It's a shame, but he'll keep."
Rageese is the stakes winner of three races and was Group One placed in the Sires' Produce Stakes at Randwick last season.