ONCE in a while there comes a horse for which you hope everything will go right - and two-year-old Godspeed is definitely that type of racehorse, reports The Age.It says: Trainer Gerald Ryan sent the $1,875,000 Easter sales topper to the barrier trials at Rosehill yesterday as planned and the Redoute's Choice-Regrowth colt did the job as hoped, winning his first public hit-out.''That will keep a lot of people happy,'' said Ryan after the easy 2¢ -length trial win over 900 metres. ''You're always

ONCE in a while there comes a horse for which you hope everything will go right - and two-year-old Godspeed is definitely that type of racehorse, reports The Age.

It says: Trainer Gerald Ryan sent the $1,875,000 Easter sales topper to the barrier trials at Rosehill yesterday as planned and the Redoute's Choice-Regrowth colt did the job as hoped, winning his first public hit-out.

''That will keep a lot of people happy,'' said Ryan after the easy 2¢ -length trial win over 900 metres. ''You're always a bit worried when you go to a trial, especially when he had only the one real hit-out before it. What surprised me about it was the ease he did it in and, hopefully, he will improve and go forward from it.''

Godspeed will have his first race start over 1100m at Rosehill on January 15, when he will share the spotlight with Magic Millions day, and then be prepared for April's Golden Slipper. ''The thing with this bloke is everything has gone to plan - that doesn't happen too often,'' Ryan said. ''He could have gone to the early two-year-old trials but [we] picked out this day. We have got through it, next is the 15th of January, then he will have three weeks off on the water-walker and come back for two runs before the Slipper.''

Godspeed wasn't the quickest two-year-old of the morning, that title went to Chris Waller's Grift in 54.99 seconds, but his 55.64s was enough to impress Tim Clark. "He's pretty much a push-button ride,'' Clark said. "He wasn't great away but then showed good acceleration to take it up and travelled beautiful until I asked him for an effort.'' Meanwhile group1-winning colt Toorak Toff is expected to be sold for up to $10 million soon to one of the large Hunter Valley studs after his surprise retirement from the racetrack yesterday.