Cornish Pomodoro, Rivarine and Hewitson star at the Vaal

PUBLISHED: 09 October 2020

CORNISH POMODORO, with Lyle Hewitson up, wins the Interbet.co.za 0861 150 160 Graduation Plate for trainer Sean Tarry at the Vaal yesterday. Picture; JC Photos

David Thiselton

THE Sean Tarry-trained Cornish Pomodoro stamped himself as a Summer Cup contender after a good win over 1600m at the Vaal Classic track yesterday in his first  run as a gelding and his rider Lyle Hewitson’s four-timer on the day took him seven winners clear at the top of the national jockeys log. 

Pack Leader also ran well in defeat in his first start for new trainer Alec Laird having had his winning chances ruined by a wayward Date Palm. 

Cornish Pomodoro, who carried 57kg as a one-time winner in the Graduation Plate event, did not have cover throughout the race in a one out and one back position. He loped along in the straight at one pace which was enough to haul in the leader Hellofaride and take the lead at the 300m mark. However, at that stage he looked to be under threat from Imperial Master and Pack Leader who had closed in to be about a length back. However, then came the impressive part. Hewitson gave him a right-handed slap and he immediately changed legs and lengthened his stride superbly. He surged away from the challengers to win by four lengths from Imperial Master, who beat Pack Leader by a short-head.

The rangy four-year-old gave the impression he would enjoy the 2000m of the Summer Cup and he should also come on a ton from this race. On pedigree he should easily get the Summer Cup trip as he is by Vodacom Durban July winner Pomodoro out of a Casey Tibbs mare called Splinter who won over 1800m and finished second in the Grade 3 Final Fling Stakes over 1800m.  

Pack Leader’s run was just as impressive.

In a bizarre incident at the beginning of the race Date Palm refused to take the turn and carried Pack Leader right out to the outside rail. 

Pack Leader had to be eased virtually to a standstill so he could be switched inward to be free of the badly behaved horse. 

This cost him at least ten lengths and on top of that he had to give the winner 3kg so to finish just 4,05 lengths back was a fine effort.

The other aspect that gives the winner merit is that the fourth-placed horse Hellofaride was beaten nine lengths and the fifth-placed horse, the 97 rated Indy Go, was beaten 10,75 lengths.

Cornish Pomodoro is 50/1 for the Summer Cup with Track And Ball and Pack Leader is 36-1. Hellofaride drifted out to 100/1.

Date Palm has been suspended indefinitely by the stipendiary stewards.

A race earlier Tarry, Hewitson and Pomodoro had combined to win a Graduation Plate for fillies and mares over 1600m with the grey four-year-old Invisible. She was also caught one wide and back but that did not stop her pulling away from them in the straight. However, in the end she only hung on by 0,30 lengths from a fast-finishing Louis Gem, who put in a fine performance considering she is a three-year-old who was receiving just 1,5kg from Invisible and it was also just her second career start. 

The only Summer Cup entry involved in this race, Keep Smiling, was a 4,75 length fourth and Track And Ball have her at 50/1.   

Hewitson also rode a double for St. John Gray on the day and at close of play had ridden 38 winners for the season, seven clear of the joint-second placed Greg Cheyne and S’Manga Khumalo.  

Earlier, the Mike Azzie-trained seven-year-old Var gelding Rivarine proved his Grade 1 Computaform Sprint victory was no fluke when pulling clear to win a Pinnacle Stakes event over 1000m by 1,50 lengths despite shouldering 62kg. His previous two runs, over 1160m and 1450m, saw him overreaching in the first of them and over-racing in both behind a pace which was too slow for his liking. Yesterday, with his Computaform Sprint rider Devin Habib aboard he relished the step back to 1000m, meaning he could stride out towards the back behind a fast enough pace and he then simply sauntered past them in the closing stages to win in the commanding style one would expect of a Grade 1 winner. He still has a lot of racing in him.