The fairytale continued for knockabout trainer Michael Tubman when Chance Bye made it two wins from as many starts with an explosive performance in the Inglis Classic at Rosehill.An emotional Tubman, who trains a small team at Kembla Grange, was visibly shaken following his filly's victory in the $250,000 race and said he'd needed help to handle his nerves."I had to have two valiums so I was all right," Tubman said.But Chance Bye ($1.85 fav) gave Tubman little cause for concern, jumping straight

The fairytale continued for knockabout trainer Michael Tubman when Chance Bye made it two wins from as many starts with an explosive performance in the Inglis Classic at Rosehill.

An emotional Tubman, who trains a small team at Kembla Grange, was visibly shaken following his filly's victory in the $250,000 race and said he'd needed help to handle his nerves.

"I had to have two valiums so I was all right," Tubman said.

But Chance Bye ($1.85 fav) gave Tubman little cause for concern, jumping straight to the front for Kathy O'Hara and increasing her margin on straightening to cruise to the post 3-1/2 lengths ahead of Ilovethiscity ($9) with Spot The Rock ($14) a similar margin away third.

Chance Bye will be given a short break and brought back for the Silver Slipper ahead of the $3.5 million Golden Slipper on Easter Saturday.

O'Hara, who was the regular rider of 2006 Group One Sires' Produce Stakes placegetter My Middi, said Chance Bye was potentially the best two-year-old she has been aboard.

"I'd say she is just about the best two-year-old I've ridden," O'Hara said.

"I rode My Middi who missed the Slipper because he was an emergency but he ran third in the Sires' Produce.

"But this filly is precocious and she could be better than him."

O'Hara sees no reason Chance Bye won't measure up to the pressure of the Golden Slipper.

"I don't see why not. She's only beaten B-graders but she's done it in the fashion you want and running time," she said.

"She was pretty impressive today. She travelled really nicely, there was a very strong head wind down the back after the southerly blew up and she did all the work in front."

Tubman bought Chance Bye for just $15,000 at the Classic sale but he didn't have the money to pay for her so he asked his long-time stable client Jack Knight to come on board as an owner.

The filly has now won more than $300,000 from her two starts and her victory in the 1200 metre Classic gave O'Hara a race-to-race double after she survived a protest from Brenton Avdulla aboard Money Rocks to score aboard the Guy Walter-trained Al Dhafra.

Begg was pleased with the effort by Ilovethiscity who was trapped wide in the run and said he was beaten by a smart filly.

"The horse went very well, he had to sit three-wide," Begg said.

"She is pretty special (Chance Bye) but she was able to get away with cheap sectionals."

The race was also a special one for John Cornish whose Torryburn Stud bred the winner.

Cornish has raced the likes of Crimson Reign who was runner-up to Alinghi in the 2004 Reisling Stakes.

He bought Crimson Reign and Chance Bye's dam Rouge Femme at the same time and thought the latter would be the better of the two but her career was cut short by a throat injury.