Garry Frazer and Josh Adams combined successfully at last year's stand-alone Hawkesbury meeting and will again be out to chalk one up for the locals in the opening race on Saturday.Apprentice Adams rode the Frazer-trained Flaxmill Road to a 60-1 upset victory at last year's corresponding meeting and they'll combine on Saturday with last-start winner Misshiraz in the Reavill Farm-Inglis Series 2YO Handicap (1200m).Frazer trains at Hawkesbury and expects the filly to run well but was disappointed

Garry Frazer and Josh Adams combined successfully at last year's stand-alone Hawkesbury meeting and will again be out to chalk one up for the locals in the opening race on Saturday.

Apprentice Adams rode the Frazer-trained Flaxmill Road to a 60-1 upset victory at last year's corresponding meeting and they'll combine on Saturday with last-start winner Misshiraz in the Reavill Farm-Inglis Series 2YO Handicap (1200m).

Frazer trains at Hawkesbury and expects the filly to run well but was disappointed she was allotted 58kg.

"It was a good, tough win by her at Canterbury last start but I think she's pretty poorly weighted," Frazer said.

Adams' 3kg claim will see the filly carry 55kg.

"That will help for sure, but I just thought five kilos above the minimum was a bit harsh," Frazer said.

"There's quite a few first starters and I don't think it's an easy race but this filly makes her own luck, she's on her own track and she's fit and well."

Misshiraz has won two of her seven starts including her long neck win in a 1200m 2YO restricted race at Canterbury on April 14.

Frazer had considered throwing Misshiraz in at the deep end in races like the Sires' Produce Stakes (1400m) and Champagne Stakes (1600m) at Randwick during the autumn carnival but "thought better of it" and decided to keep her to 1200m.

One of the unraced youngsters up against Misshiraz will be the Peter Snowden-trained Technicolour.

Snowden has trained the winner of the two-year-old race at Hawkesbury's metropolitan Saturday meeting the past two years with Fravashi winning in 2008 and Kanzan scoring last year.

Meanwhile, Snowden has declared last-start Sapphire Stakes winner Renaissance is in great order ahead of Saturday's $100,000 Darley Crown (1300m).

The mare is one of two Darley-owned runners, along with Serenissima, in the race they sponsor.

Renaissance came with a brilliant finish to grab stablemate Beaded on the line in the Group Two Sapphire Stakes (1200m) at Randwick last start.

Beaded confirmed that form by running third to Hot Danish and Melito in last Saturday's Group One All-Aged Stakes (1400m).

"Renaissance has come through her last run really well," Snowden said.

"She goes up a bit in weight (to 58kg) but she's in great order."

He also said Serenissima would be better suited back on a firm track.