One man's trash is another man's treasure - just ask emerging Eagle Farm trainer Bradley Herne.Herne is part of the new brigade of Brisbane trainers rising through the ranks and readily acknowledges his career is still in its embryonic stages.In the 18 months he has held a trainer's licence, Herne has had a taste of city success and on Saturday at Eagle Farm hopes to savour some more with a cast-off formerly trained by the master Bart Cummings.Herne has spent the past 10 weeks preparing former s

One man's trash is another man's treasure - just ask emerging Eagle Farm trainer Bradley Herne.

Herne is part of the new brigade of Brisbane trainers rising through the ranks and readily acknowledges his career is still in its embryonic stages.

In the 18 months he has held a trainer's licence, Herne has had a taste of city success and on Saturday at Eagle Farm hopes to savour some more with a cast-off formerly trained by the master Bart Cummings.

Herne has spent the past 10 weeks preparing former southern states galloper God's Hand for a first-up Brisbane assignment and is confident the horse is ready to run boldly.

"He's very fit and I'm certain he will run a forward race," Herne said.

"We have given him one easy trial and he went nicely - I was happy with how he went.

"When you're starting out training you definitely need a good horse to get your name out there and I'm hoping God's Hand is the horse to do that for me."

Herne has nominated God's Hand for a Class 6 Handicap over 1400m on Saturday and the Galileo gelding's credentials have earned him topweight of 59kg.

At his last first-up run, God's Hand finished a close-up third to Ego's Dare in a Listed event over 1200m at Randwick and the previous preparation his best effort was sixth, beaten four lengths, to Rock Kingdom in the 2009 Epsom Handicap.

God's Hand's last win came over 1800m at Caulfield in February 2009.

Herne has booked former leading north Queensland jockey Dale Missen to ride God's Hand on Saturday and said the horse was a certain starter providing the track wasn't a bog.

"He's ready to run a solid race over 1400 metres and he will be hitting the line strongly," Herne said.

"His form shows he does handle a wet track but he doesn't need a gutbuster first-up.

"Dale has been riding plenty of work for me and I'm happy to have him on. He's a very good rider."

Missen won the 2008/09 north Queensland jockeys' premiership in his firstyear of riding in the region and prior to that was a champion Victorian provincial apprentice.