BART Cummings will send the Cox Plate's overwhelming favourite, So You Think, back to Moonee Valley tomorrow morning for yet another gallop at the track to finalise his preparation for Saturday's $3 million race, reports The Age.Its report adds: Cummings, who is leaving no stone unturned in pursuit of a fifth Cox Plate win, has not raced So You Think at Moonee Valley since his Cox Plate win last year but has taken advantage of access to the course proper at the track at least five times this spr

BART Cummings will send the Cox Plate's overwhelming favourite, So You Think, back to Moonee Valley tomorrow morning for yet another gallop at the track to finalise his preparation for Saturday's $3 million race, reports The Age.

Its report adds: Cummings, who is leaving no stone unturned in pursuit of a fifth Cox Plate win, has not raced So You Think at Moonee Valley since his Cox Plate win last year but has taken advantage of access to the course proper at the track at least five times this spring.

Uncertain at first whether he would return to gallop the horse in front of the expectant crowd, Cummings said yesterday that he wanted to keep things ''normal'' in the lead-up to the event. Cummings said that while the horse was ''100 per cent within himself'' he still needed one more solid hit-out before his tilt at becoming the only three-year-old winner to return 12 months later and win it again.

''He hasn't done enough and he has to work as normal,'' Cummings said. ''It's not a bad spot to go, on the outside of the course proper.''

So You Think's presence at the club's breakfast with the best is likely to drag big numbers through the gate tomorrow morning, and a large crowd is likely on Saturday to watch the magnificent entire, who some consider to be the best racehorse in the world.

Final Cox Plate acceptances will be taken tomorrow morning and, as of last night, it appears So You Think will have no more than 10 rivals. Heading that list is Gai Waterhouse's mare More Joyous, who the trainer hopes can go one better than her runner-up of last year, Manhattan Rain.