The Queensland Derby is now a realistic target for Let Them Have It with trainer Kevin Moses excited about his prospects following victory at Randwick.Having just his fifth start and his first on a heavy track, the three-year-old showed tenacity to take out Saturday's E Deas Thomson Handicap (2000m).Let Them Have It is raced by Joe O'Gara who has his mares served by his own stallion Song Of Tara, the sire of the Moses-trained Group One-winning stayer No Wine No Song."We might go to Queensland no

The Queensland Derby is now a realistic target for Let Them Have It with trainer Kevin Moses excited about his prospects following victory at Randwick.

Having just his fifth start and his first on a heavy track, the three-year-old showed tenacity to take out Saturday's E Deas Thomson Handicap (2000m).

Let Them Have It is raced by Joe O'Gara who has his mares served by his own stallion Song Of Tara, the sire of the Moses-trained Group One-winning stayer No Wine No Song.

"We might go to Queensland now, he has to be a chance now that it's started raining up there," Moses said.

"The Song Of Taras love the wet and they are very tough horses.

"They take a long time to get to the races, they are slow-maturing horses, but I can't understand why they aren't more fashionable."

The breed is now almost exclusive to O'Gara with three more recent arrivals at Moses' Randwick stable.

"I've got another three, and I'm happy to have them," he said.

"They are horses who can stay which is another reason to think about the Derby with this fellow.

"I'll talk it over with Joe but I'm pretty sure he'll want to go."

Let Them Have It was ridden by Jim Cassidy who said he just needed to learn to relax a bit more but had no doubt it was worth a trip north.

Brisbane is only a maybe for Love Conquers All, an impressive winner of the Randwick's 150th Anniversary Handicap (1100m).

Co-trainer Michael Hawkes said the colt had a setback early in his preparation, putting paid to Stradbroke Handicap aspirations.

"He had a slight temperature which put him back so we have missed the major winter races," Hawkes said.

"He might go up for one run or he might go to Melbourne or he might just go to the paddock to get ready for spring.

"In six months time he is going to be a serious horse."

Hawkes admitted there were concerns running Love Conquers All on the heavy track but punters stuck with him, backing him from $4.80 to $3.90 second favourite.

With apprentice Josh Adams' three-kilo claim bringing him into the race with 50kg, Love Conquers All erased all doubts about his wet track ability when he skipped to a 5-1/2 length win over Pinwheel ($3.30 fav).

"It was a big effort because it was his first go in open company," Hawkes said.

The win brought up a winning double for up-and-coming apprentice Adams and Love Conquers All was his first ride for high-profile owner Nick Moraitis whose most famous horse, Might And Power, paraded as part of the 150th anniversary celebrations of the first race meeting at Randwick.