The wheel has turned full circle for top galloper Wall Street who is after his fifth Group One win in the Futurity Stakes but his first for his original trainer Mike Moroney.Now a seven-year-old, the Montjeu gelding suffered a tendon injury before he had raced but after recuperating went to the Jeff Lynds stable."We actually bought him as a yearling and he was in my stable as a three-year-old and he won his only barrier trial and then knocked a tendon and was out for a few months," Moroney said.

The wheel has turned full circle for top galloper Wall Street who is after his fifth Group One win in the Futurity Stakes but his first for his original trainer Mike Moroney.

Now a seven-year-old, the Montjeu gelding suffered a tendon injury before he had raced but after recuperating went to the Jeff Lynds stable.

"We actually bought him as a yearling and he was in my stable as a three-year-old and he won his only barrier trial and then knocked a tendon and was out for a few months," Moroney said.

"He went down to a beach and that's when we lost him basically.

"We bought him for our clients and the same clients are still in him and we just put a few more in."

Wall Street will be having his first run since finishing sixth to Albert The Fat in the Group One Emirates Stakes (1600m) at Flemington last spring, a race he won in 2010.

He hasn't managed a victory in nine outings since but has performed well in big races with a fourth to King Mufhasa in the Toorak Hcp (1600m) at Caulfield and fourth to Pinker Pinker in the Cox Plate (2040m) at Moonee Valley last spring.

"He's a great big, powerful sort of horse. I think you'll see a bigger version of him (now)," Moroney said.

"When I saw him when he got over here he was pretty well race-hard fit.

"He's a horse who has never carried a lot (of condition) but he's got quite strong to look at now.

"He's obviously a quality horse. He's only had 28 starts and won 11 so he's got a pretty good record and is lightly raced for his age.

"The barrier draw (gate eight in a field of 10) is a bit of a trick. We'll probably ride him back off them a bit from that draw but he's well forward to do something.

"He hasn't got a huge first-up record but he usually runs well and has always run in good company."

Moroney said Wall Street would go on to the Group Two Blamey Stakes (1600m) at Flemington on March 10.

"And then we'll probably head to Sydney have a couple of runs there and on to Queensland," he said.

Moroney said Kiwi star King Mufhasa and Cox Plate heroine Pinker Pinker were obviously the two that Wall Street had to beat.

The Stephen McKee-trained King Mufhasa is $2.70 favourite to make it nine Group One wins ahead of Pinker Pinker at $3.80, Playing God at $5.50 and Wall Street at $7.50.