For the second time in a week Anthony Cummings has pulled off an upset Group One win, this time with Road To Rock in the George Main Stakes at Randwick.Last Saturday the Cummings-trained Turffontein took out the Sir Rupert Clarke Stakes in Melbourne as a $15 chance while Road To Rock was sent out at $41.Favourite Racing To Win ($1.90) was a spent force early in the 1600m race he won in 2006 with the strong wind blamed for contributing to his downfall.Road To Rock's price was no reflection of his

For the second time in a week Anthony Cummings has pulled off an upset Group One win, this time with Road To Rock in the George Main Stakes at Randwick.

Last Saturday the Cummings-trained Turffontein took out the Sir Rupert Clarke Stakes in Melbourne as a $15 chance while Road To Rock was sent out at $41.

Favourite Racing To Win ($1.90) was a spent force early in the 1600m race he won in 2006 with the strong wind blamed for contributing to his downfall.

Road To Rock's price was no reflection of his trainer's opinion of his ability with Cummings describing the win as a bonus ahead of next week's Epsom Handicap.

"He's always had the motor and the mentality, now he's got the body to go with it," Cummings said.

"All through his last preparation he had niggling issues, nothing serious, but he was a length off being a Group One winner.

"This time it's all there and this race is a bonus along the way.

"He goes to the Epsom and then to the Cox Plate and has plenty of improvement left."

Court Command ($21) went out hard and had the field chasing early.

At the top of the straight, three-year-old Onemorenomore ($5) hit the front but Road To Rock was full of running and came down the outside with Black Piranha ($7).

Once headed, Black Piranha came back but was still half a length away on the line with Onemorenomore another three-quarters of a length third and Vision And Power fourth.

Racing To Win struggled to the line in front of only one other runner, Court Command who weakened badly after his early effort.

Stewards questioned jockey Hugh Bowman about Racing To Win with chief stipe Ray Murrihy describing the effort as "disgraceful".

Bowman said the strong wind played a part with the big grey overracing.

"I knew he was out of contention at the 1000 metres," Bowman said.

Trainer John O'Shea said it was a disappointment all round.

"Everything that could have gone wrong went wrong," O'Shea said.

Things went almost perfectly for Black Piranha and, short of a win, trainer Con Karakatsanis was happy with the Stradbroke Handicap winner who racked up his fourth Group One second.

"He ran super," Karakatsanis said.

"The winner had him cold at the 150 (metres) and he had the guts to fight back and was coming back at him on the line.

"He's right on target for the Toorak Handicap and the Cox Plate."

Jim Cassidy, who rode dual Group One winner Vision And Power, said the gelding was feeling the hard tracks in Sydney this spring.