Andrew Harrison
APPRENTICE RACHEL VENNIKER had an afternoon to remember as she booted home a treble for Michael Roberts at Hollywoodbets Greyville yesterday. Hardly more than three months into her professional career and she has tongues wagging and barring misfortune could well emulate the likes of Hollie Doyle and other outstanding internationally proven female riders that are easily holding their own in what used to be a male dominated profession.
Venniker still has to add polish and punch to her riding and her left hand but she does all the basics, placing her mounts and keeping her balance in the finish. It has worked for her so far and she hardly had to revert to the stick on the Roberts-trained Hatta, the first of her winners yesterday, as she went to the line basically hands-and-heels.
The combination was back in front of the microphone a race latter as Venniker produced another mature ride on the Roberts-trained Tupelo Honey. It was Venniker’s third win in succession on the grey but instead of making all the running as in her two previous races, she was content to sit in off the pace as Philisande Mxoli set a good pace on Paul Peter’s runner Sacred Lotus.
The Highveld visitor looked to hang tough in the straight but Venniker always had the pacemaker in her sights as she moved off the inside rail on the turn, picked her spot and fired home.
Any doubts that Venniker was a one-trick pony where firmly put to bed two races later as she turned in another pearler for Roberts as she got Patronage to respond positively to her encouragement. No flailing whip needed even in the heat of the moment. Seemingly in trouble with challengers on all sides, Venniker kept her mount balanced and a few gentle right-handed reminders saw the gelding give of his best.
In stark contrast to Venniker, Thabiso Gumede, soon out of his time, is equally talented but is all hustle, bustle and muscle and rarely gets beaten in a tight finish. He rammed it home on Not No Pussycat for Gary Rich as the filly looked to run in under pressure, winning in commanding fashion.
There is a hard truth in racing that a horse does not know its pedigree or its price. Tales Of Us has a blue-blood pedigree and cost a pretty penny at the sales but it took him four years to win his maiden and the prospects of another success seem limited going on the post-race comments of his connections.
Often a handful at home, the most damning indictment came from Keagan de Melo; “He doesn’t try too hard.”
That said, Byron Forster does a sterling job as Andre Nel’s KZN assistant for Sabine Plattner and does not often get the cream of the crop.
Ask any jockey who has been laid off for a length of time and they will tell you that it’s not easy getting back to full race-riding fitness.
Anton Marcus has still managed eight winners from just 45 rides this season and he showed that he was back in the groove on Bend The Rules in the second. In a ding-dong battle over the final furlong, Serino Moodley appeared to have got his measure as Royal Monarch edged ahead, but in one final desperate lunge, Marcus got Bend The Rules to respond one last time to get his nose in front.
Soft and still all leg according to Lorenzo Kariem who does a lot of the work for owner Mario Ferreira although Gareth van Zyl is carded as the trainer.
I’m not aufait with the rules regarding equipment changes but surely trainers should have it all in hand at declarations, well before the morning of the race. Rain Wear was carded to race in blinkers but yesterday at 8.16 am to be exact, race control was informed that the blinkers were coming off.
In the same race, although notified the day before, Roy’s Rocker was declared in blinkers. Roy’s Rocker improved to run third while Rain Wear was hesitant to go through a tight gap and finished out of the money. One cannot blame a trainer for playing by the rules, but surely the rules regarding late equipment changes should be tightened. It’s just not fair on the punter who does not have access to the late changes.