Talented sprinter Ghetto Blaster will leave next week to join trainer Gillian Heinrich's Melbourne spring team if he redeems himself at Doomben on Saturday.Heinrich has three horses currently in Melbourne for the spring and originally planned to send Ghetto Blaster south last week for the Group Two Schweppes Stakes (1200m) at Moonee Valley on Saturday.However, Heinrich had second thoughts and decided to keep Ghetto Blaster, a seven-time winner from 13 starts, at home in Queensland until the Grou

Talented sprinter Ghetto Blaster will leave next week to join trainer Gillian Heinrich's Melbourne spring team if he redeems himself at Doomben on Saturday.

Heinrich has three horses currently in Melbourne for the spring and originally planned to send Ghetto Blaster south last week for the Group Two Schweppes Stakes (1200m) at Moonee Valley on Saturday.

However, Heinrich had second thoughts and decided to keep Ghetto Blaster, a seven-time winner from 13 starts, at home in Queensland until the Group One Patinack Farm Classic (1200m) at Flemington on November 8.

"I thought about starting him at Moonee Valley on Saturday but I didn't think the tight track would suit him," Heinrich said.

"It's too short a straight so I kept him at home to run in the $100,000 race at Doomben on Saturday.

"If he wins over 1350 metres at Doomben he'll come down for the Patinack Farm Classic. It's only 1200 metres but the Melbourne people tell me it's more like 1400 metres anywhere else so it should suit him.

"If the Patinack Farm looks too hard and we get scared off then there's a few other options including a 1300-metre race at Sandown the following week."

Jockey Glen Colless will be reunited with Ghetto Blaster in Saturday's UQ Sport Handicap replacing Ric McMahon who finished third on the five-year-old to Vocalic on a heavy track at Eagle Farm on October 11.

"I was a bit disappointed with Ghetto Blaster's run last start when he got too far back on the bog track," Heinrich said.

Colless has an outstanding record on the son of Lujain having ridden him in four of his seven victories.

Heinrich has never been afraid to campaign her horses in the tougher Melbourne company and her judgment proved spot-on when she won with Tour Guide at Geelong on Wednesday.

She also campaigned former flyer All Bar One in Melbourne and he was successful in an Open sprint at Moonee Valley in October 2005 and in the Listed JRA Stakes (1200m) at Caulfield the following year.

Despite failures from stablemates Dance The Waves and Rasmussen at Caulfield last Saturday, Heinrich is pressing ahead with Melbourne plans for the pair while Tour Guide could return home following his Geelong success.

Dance The Waves could manage only 11th to Sunburnt Lad in the Group Two International Sprint (1100m) last week while Rasmussen weakened badly to finish in the same position to Royal Discretion in the Group Three Jayco Cup (1400m).

Heinrich has overlooked their failures and will start Dance The Waves in the Listed Service Stream Sprint (1100m) at Flemington on November 6 while Rasmussen will head to an Open Handicap (1400m) at Flemington two days later.

"They were both too flat for their first runs here," Heinrich said.

"Their plane broke down when we first tried to fly down them down then the next night they were stranded on the airport tarmac for 90 minutes while a hailstorm passed through at home."