Kevin Moses will rely on experienced stayers No Wine No Song and Get Up Jude to try to cause an upset in the Colin Stephen Quality at Randwick.The Gai Waterhouse-trained Herculian Prince is the $1.33 favourite on the back of an all-the-way last-start win in the Group Three Kingston Town Stakes (2000m).Saturday's race is an important step for the emerging stayer as he goes up to 2400m for the first time against just four rivals."You would think Gai's horse (Herculian Prince) would go forward and

Kevin Moses will rely on experienced stayers No Wine No Song and Get Up Jude to try to cause an upset in the Colin Stephen Quality at Randwick.

The Gai Waterhouse-trained Herculian Prince is the $1.33 favourite on the back of an all-the-way last-start win in the Group Three Kingston Town Stakes (2000m).

Saturday's race is an important step for the emerging stayer as he goes up to 2400m for the first time against just four rivals.

"You would think Gai's horse (Herculian Prince) would go forward and Legsman too, but they can't all go forward," Moses said.

"By looking at Herculian Prince you would say he should get the 2400 metres but that doesn't mean he will.

"Mine will get it."

Nine-year-old No Wine No Song is a two-time Group Two Chairman's Handicap (2600m) winner at Randwick as well as a Group One Sydney Cup (3200m) winner in 2008.

During this year's autumn carnival No Wine No Song was placed in the Group One BMW (2400m) at weight-for-age and also the Group Two Chairman's (2600m) won by Jessicabeel.

Moses has set both No Wine No Song and seven-year-old Get Up Jude for Saturday week's Group One Metropolitan (2400m).

Get Up Jude won the Colin Stephen two years ago.

"I'm quite happy with both of them going into the race," Moses said.

"They are both stayers and this is where they come to their best, at 2400 metres-plus."

Waterhouse is targeting the Caulfield and Melbourne Cups with Herculian Prince and a first three finish on Saturday will pass a qualifying clause for the Melbourne Cup.

Herculian Prince is the winner of eight from 14 including five from eight since joining the Waterhouse team from New Zealand.

The five-year-old claimed back-to-back stakes wins in the Neville Sellwood Stakes (1900m) and JRA Plate (2000m) in the autumn.

After two starts over unsuitable distances this preparation the gelding stepped up to 2000m and produced a dominant frontrunning performance to win the Kingston Town.

John O'Shea will start progressive stayer Legsman who was a last-start fourth in the Group Three Newcastle Gold Cup (2300m).

"He's had the one run over 2300 metres now and I've put the blinkers back on him," O'Shea said.

"There's Gai's up-and-comer (Herculian Prince) in there but I don't think it's cut and dried."