‘They were expecting a rich Aussie kid — instead they got me!’
This week on The Paddock, host Oli Bell is joined by fellow racing broadcasters Rishi Persad and Tom Stanley, alongside legendary punter and larger-than-life betting personality Harry Findlay.
And while the show dives deep into betting, racing, data, and the future of the sport, one of the most unexpected stories of the entire episode had nothing to do with horses at all but instead saw Harry become twelfth man for the Australian cricket team.
Yes, really.
Oli Bell summed up the disbelief shared by everyone at the table when he asked: “How the hell did that come about?”
Harry explained that it all started with a charity auction during an Australia vs South Africa match where the winning bidder would be allowed into the Australian dressing room as honorary twelfth man.
“They were expecting some Aussie ten-year-old with a rich dad to spend fifty grand,” Harry said. “Instead they got me. An eighteen-stone Pommy punter with a mobile phone!”
When he arrived, the Australian team were stunned.
He recalled walking into the dressing room to meet team manager David Boon and immediately being told to get rid of his phone.
He said: “He took one look at me and said, ‘Get rid of that f***ing phone!’”
But despite now effectively being part of the Australian setup for the day, Harry revealed his instincts as a punter never switched off, saying: “I’d already had a bet before the game. But I knew in my heart of hearts that score was obscene. I was trying to do smoke signals to my mates in the crowd to tell them to get on.”
But what fascinated Harry most wasn’t the betting it was the mindset inside the dressing room at half-time.
With Australia having already lost two matches on the bounce, captain Ricky Ponting gathered the team and explained: “‘No team ever beats the Aussies three times on the bounce — come on lads.’ There wasn’t one stat mentioned. No analyst. No numbers. Nothing.”
Harry told the panel: “I said to myself that day — that will change. And now look at sport.”
It was, he said, the day he learned more about elite competition than on any other single day of his life.
And that clash between old-school instinct and modern data runs through this entire episode of The Paddock.
Across the show, the panel debate how betting has evolved, whether data has made finding an edge harder than ever, and how bookmakers, bet builders and regulation have reshaped the experience for everyday punters.
Tom Stanley summed it up perfectly later in the episode, explaining how modern betting culture often clashes with old-school thinking, while Rishi Persad added that today’s punter needs to ‘punt to their personality’ more than ever.
The Paddock is a show hosted by Oli Bell, with weekly episodes with the best tips, news, talking points and special guests from the world of horse racing. Catch The Paddock on YouTube, or listen on podcast – wherever you get your podcasts.
