Norman Waymouth, famous for his association with former brilliant juvenile Rancher, landed his first winner as a trainer when Summer Dream scored on her home track at Mornington.The former jockey, who has been training for 18 months and has four horses in work, was forced to give riding away after a bad trackwork fall 10 years ago."The horse I was riding dropped dead. I broke my neck in two places and my back in two," he said."The doctors said I wouldn't walk again, wouldn't play golf again and

Norman Waymouth, famous for his association with former brilliant juvenile Rancher, landed his first winner as a trainer when Summer Dream scored on her home track at Mornington.

The former jockey, who has been training for 18 months and has four horses in work, was forced to give riding away after a bad trackwork fall 10 years ago.

"The horse I was riding dropped dead. I broke my neck in two places and my back in two," he said.

"The doctors said I wouldn't walk again, wouldn't play golf again and wouldn't ride again."

Waymouth was in a wheelchair but he credits his late father Charlie Waymouth, who trained Rancher, for encouraging him to make the effort to do what was needed to walk again.

"He said to me it didn't look good but I had to and I did," he said.

"There are plenty of people worse off than me."

Waymouth rode Rancher who was unbeaten in eight starts as a two-year-old, winning the 1982 Blue Diamond Stakes.

He was also aboard the chestnut when he came back as a three-year-old and made it nine straight in the Ascot Vale Stakes.

Summer Dream, formerly prepared by Frankie Stockdale, was having her second start for Waymouth and, after failing first-up at Sandown, broke though for her first metropolitan win in the Rossdale Golf Club Mares Handicap (1213m) on Monday.

The Lago Delight five-year-old mare, sent out at $21 and ridden by Ibrahim Gundogdu, got up in the last stride to beat Princess Maggie ($4.60) by a nose with Tottenham Girl ($5) a half-length away third.

Meanwhile, New Zealand apprentice Rosie Myers landed her first winner in Australia when she guided Marotta home to win the IASbet.com Mares Handicap (1512m).

The 24-year-old, apprenticed to Mike Breslin at Palmerston North, won a scholarship to make the trip and she is on loan to the Patrick Payne stable for two months.

Her sister Kelly, 28, is also based with the Payne stable and has ridden a handful of country winners including one for Payne at Swan Hill on Sunday.

They are nieces of well-known New Zealand horseman Kevin Myers.

"It was always going to be special," Myers said of her first Australian win aboard the Clive Balfour-trained mare.

"I've just come over for a couple of months on loan to Patrick Payne to see what it's all about over here," she said.

Myers followed instructions to keep one off the rail and Marotta ($5.50 equal favourite) was too strong scoring by 2-1/4 lengths from Hindsight ($11) with Regimental Dance three-quarters of a length away third.