A career-best treble at Randwick on Saturday has fuelled Josh Adams' desire to be crowned Sydney's champion apprentice next season.The talented 18-year-old, who notched victories on Love Conquers All, Delago Star and With Ice at Randwick, said he and master Garry Frazer had been targeting next season's apprentices' crown for a long time.Frazer also nurtured the riding talents of a young Tye Angland who was champion apprentice in 2006/07 with 60 wins - the most since Wayne Harris rode 89 winners

A career-best treble at Randwick on Saturday has fuelled Josh Adams' desire to be crowned Sydney's champion apprentice next season.

The talented 18-year-old, who notched victories on Love Conquers All, Delago Star and With Ice at Randwick, said he and master Garry Frazer had been targeting next season's apprentices' crown for a long time.

Frazer also nurtured the riding talents of a young Tye Angland who was champion apprentice in 2006/07 with 60 wins - the most since Wayne Harris rode 89 winners in 1980/81.

Angland is now a dual Group One winning rider who will compete on the international stage at Royal Ascot when he partners Alverta in the Golden Jubilee (1200m) on June 19.

"Next year's the target," Adams, who has only been race riding for the past two years, said.

"We've always said my first couple of years would be too early but Garry mapped out a plan for me.

"I could have come to Sydney six months ago but we didn't think it was worth it because I wasn't ready yet - wasn't ready mentally.

"I came down a few times and did some good things and some wrong things but it's been a great learning curve."

His treble at Randwick took his season tally in the city to 14, but the youngster is hungry for more success and said he had been in the right hands at Hawkesbury to develop as a jockey.

"Garry certainly knows what he's doing, he got me going and has taught me everything from the start up.

"Tye also helped me a lot because he was still there at Garry's when I first started out. And Grant Buckley has been a big help to me too.

"Next season it's certainly my goal to win it (apprentices' title). This year I've come in at the end of the season but hopefully next season is the one."

Adams first metropolitan winner came at last year's stand-alone Hawkesbury meeting when he guided long shot Flaxmill Road to victory.

It was a special moment considering it was on his home track and the horse was trained by Frazer.

However, his win on Love Conquers All on Saturday was also a career highlight.

He rated the three-year-old the best horse he's ridden in a race so far.

"That horse is all class," he said after the colt raced to a 5-1/2-length first-up win.

"I haven't sat on a horse that's such a gentleman, even just walking around and doing his preliminaries. He feels like a good horse underneath you."