They might be nearing the twilight of their respective careers but Rangirangdoo and Danleigh will be back to anchor Chris Waller's carnival team this autumn.Two-time Group One winner Rangirangdoo is due to step out in a Randwick barrier trial on Friday in preparation for a possible return in the Expressway Stakes (1200m) on February 11.The seven-year-old is mounting another comeback from injury which has limited his career to just 21 starts.He has not raced since his courageous Group One George

They might be nearing the twilight of their respective careers but Rangirangdoo and Danleigh will be back to anchor Chris Waller's carnival team this autumn.

Two-time Group One winner Rangirangdoo is due to step out in a Randwick barrier trial on Friday in preparation for a possible return in the Expressway Stakes (1200m) on February 11.

The seven-year-old is mounting another comeback from injury which has limited his career to just 21 starts.

He has not raced since his courageous Group One George Ryder Stakes win last April and Waller has brought him along slowly.

"He trialled a fortnight ago and had a week of swimming after that," Waller said.

"He will trial on Friday and we will work out where he heads from there but he's not far away from racing."

Rangirangdoo is a favourite with Waller and it is little wonder.

Despite his problems, he has won 10 races and notched a further nine placings.

The only times he has missed a place were in last year's Canterbury Stakes when he finished fourth at his first run for almost a year, and in the 2009 Mackinnon Stakes when he was seventh.

Stablemate Danleigh has also been a stalwart since entering Waller's care with his four Group One triumphs highlighted by a brilliant Manikato Stakes victory in 2009.

He too, is back for a shot at autumn riches.

The eight-year-old didn't fire during a light spring campaign and Waller said retirement was discussed.

But he believes the veteran still has something to offer.

"We contemplated retiring him at the end of his last preparation," Waller said.

"He is still a young horse in the way he moves around the stable. His legs are as good as they've ever been.

"It was only eleven months ago he won a Group One, the Chipping Norton.

"He can still match it with the best of them."

Danleigh, who will resume in the Expressway, tuned up with a 900m trial at Rosehill on Thursday in which recent stable acquisition Shoot Out was runner-up.

Shoot Out is scheduled to make his debut for Waller in the Expressway after being transferred from the John Wallace yard late last year.