Apprentice Taylor Lovelock-Wiggins produced the ride of his young career to cause an upset aboard New Edge over Doncaster hopeful Faulconbridge in the Kembla Grange Cup on Sunday.The Canberra based Lovelock-Wiggins is the younger brother of jockey Ryan Wiggins and the son of former jockey Peter Wiggins.Lovelock-Wiggins, 16, parked New Edge, who started at $31, behind the $1.40 favourite Faulconbridge for the best part of the 1600 metre race while Arlington showed the way in front.The youngster s

Apprentice Taylor Lovelock-Wiggins produced the ride of his young career to cause an upset aboard New Edge over Doncaster hopeful Faulconbridge in the Kembla Grange Cup on Sunday.

The Canberra based Lovelock-Wiggins is the younger brother of jockey Ryan Wiggins and the son of former jockey Peter Wiggins.

Lovelock-Wiggins, 16, parked New Edge, who started at $31, behind the $1.40 favourite Faulconbridge for the best part of the 1600 metre race while Arlington showed the way in front.

The youngster showed maturity beyond his years when he got the split between the leaders and lifted New Edge to a dramatic half head win over the Gai Waterhouse-trained Faulconbridge with Arlington third.

"This is unbelievable I was happy just to ride here let alone win the Cup. I've only been riding for four months and this is by far the biggest win of my career," Lovelock-Wiggins said.

"I gave this horse a chance today but to actually have him lift like that was pretty special."

Faulconbridge's rider Nash Rawiller was disappointed with his mount.

"It was a genuinely-run race but I still thought he would find something but he didn't deliver," Rawiller said.

Waterhouse's racing manager Robyn Hartney said the stable hadn't given up hope of getting the horse into the $2 million Doncaster on April 18.

"We came thinking he would be very, very hard to beat but we didn't expect the race to be run at that sort of pace and it proved his downfall," Hartney said.

"He had to win to get up in the Doncaster order and that makes it even more disappointing, but it's not over yet, we just need some luck now."