She arrived at the stable with plenty of hype and trainer Anthony Mountney is confident Wolves can deliver at Kembla Grange on Thursday.
Subscribe now for unlimited access.
$0/
(min cost $0)
or signup to continue reading
The filly will contest her first race since Tory Lavalle bought her for $250,000 in March.
The purchase came after she finished third in the Group 2 Blue Diamond Prelude and ninth in the Group 1 Blue Diamond.
Mountney is eager to return to black-type racing but, for now, he's focusing on Thursday's 1200-metres maiden plate.
"This is a nice starting point for her, it's her home track and she's pleased us so far," Mountney said.
"It's a strong race with plenty of speed and some form in the race. We haven't picked a weak one, we've kicked her off in a strong race."
The connection to Lavalle is fitting, the Wollongong Wolves chairman determined to win a Group 1 in honour of his late brother.
Mountney expects Wolves to peak next autumn, but if she thrives this prep, he won't hesitate to send the filly to a stakes race.
"There's a lot of fillies' stakes races coming up in September, October. If she says 'that's where I'm at', there's where she'll go.
"I think she'll be a far better filly in autumn, she'll be a late three-year-old. Whatever she did as a two-year-old was on pure athletic ability, it won't be until the autumn that we'll see the best of her."
Meanwhile, Gwenda Markwell's Either Oar will start her preparation on Thursday, the mare looking to bounce back from a disappointing autumn in a 1000m BenchMark 64.