Await The Dawn Colt Knocked Down For R200 000 at Summerhill Ready To Run Sale

The Summerhill Ready To Run sale took place on the majestic farm in Mooi River on Tuesday 21st February. The weather never played its part but that certainly never put a dampener on the attendance and the atmosphere, with prospective buyers welcomed with hot coffee, a sherry or a glass of champagne. Summerhill owner Mick Goss whom was not at the sale last year due to illness, made a wonderful traditional South African welcome and listed a few horses that have gone on to win group races sold out of this very sales ring on the farm.

Guests whom included buyers from across the globe, Mauritius, Kenya and Zimbabwe were very active and purchased several striking lots. Nchaka Moloi, the owner of Gr2 winner Heaps Of Fun, purchased Lot 65, an outstanding colt by freshman sire Await The Dawn for R200 000.

A scrumptious lunch was served which was prepared by the staff of Hartford House whom boast being recently voted as one of the top 20 best restaurants in South Africa,

Trainers from around the country supported the sale enthusiastically. Gary Alexander and his brother Dean were very active, whilst Scott Kenny from the Highveld secured many lots and in form trainers Kevin and Alyson Wright also secured lovely horses. There is always something for everyone at these particular sales, and it was no exception for Ashburton trainers Julie Dittmer, Gary Rich and Des Egdes whom never went home empty handed.

The auction was handled by star auctioneer Graeme Hawkins and managed by Michael Holmes Bloodstock.

By Warren Lenferna

Image: A colt during the wet pre-inspection at the Summer Ready To Run Sale, Summerhill Stud. Image: Candiese Marnewick

Alec Laird

Frankel filly for Laird

Alec Laird is to train the unnamed Frankel filly that made R4 million at last month’s Cape Premier Yearling Sale.

This was the highest price paid for a filly at the sale. She is out of a half-sister to the Flying Childers and Molecomb Stakes winner Requinto, was sold by Klawervlei and was knocked down to American bloodstock agent Justin Casse.

Lammerskraal’s Dynasty colt Starship Legacy, who made R4.5 million to the bid of Coolmore Australia, is to go to Justin Snaith who trained the half-brother Solo Traveller to win the 2010 Cape Guineas as well as the KRA Guineas and the Cape Classic. Markus Jooste is a partner with Coolmore in this one.

Vaughan Marshall will train Flying Arrow, the Drakenstein-consigned Captain Al colt who was bought by Irish agent Mick Flanagan for the China Horse Club for R3.75 million. Flanagan recalls the colt’s dam Happy Archer winning the Garden Province, Thekwini and Gold Bracelet during the time he spent in South Africa as assistant to Mike de Kock.

By Michael Clower

Nooresh Juglall

Juglall back with a bang

Jockey Nooresh Juglall, a Mauritian who trained at the South African Jockeys’ Academy, quickly bounced back from a recent race fall injury with a win it his very first ride since the accident.

He took a heavy tumble from Rusty Brown in the penultimate race on 5 February after his mount appeared to clip heels at the 700m marker. At first there were some fears he might be out of action for a while, having hurt his tongue and cheeks.

Nooresh Juglall

Nooresh Juglall

A doctor’s review of his condition a few days later gave him the green light to return to race riding as early as this past weekend, meaning he missed only the previous week’s double meeting.

Booked on five rides on Friday and another seven on Sunday, Juglall did not take long to find his way to a place he had already visited nine times this year before the fall.

Partnering a horse he had steered to a creditable fourth on debut in spite of a bad draw – Southern Glory – Juglall elected for the same tactics aboard the Bruce Marsh charge in the $75,000 Restricted Maiden over 1400m, dropping back and only touching his mount for a run on straightening.

The 1100m of his debut had proven too short, but Southern Glory had 300m more to exploit this time. Favourite Redoubt (Glen Boss) looked to have the race at his mercy, but Southern Glory stormed home on the outside to deny him by a neck.

“I’m glad I was able to win on my very first ride back from injury,” said Juglall.

“You don’t want such injuries to happen, but you can’t escape them sometimes. I’d like to thank the trainer and the owner, David Goh, for putting me on such a nice horse.” – Singapore Turf Club

Aldo Domeyer (Liesl King)

Riverboat Queen to make amends

The in-form Andre Nel can strike again with yet another lightly-raced horse at Kenilworth tomorrow when Riverboat Queen bids to make amends for her odds-on flop a month ago.

Aldo Domeyer’s mount was only beaten half a length in an admittedly modest-looking maiden early last month but she was ominously reluctant to load when heavily backed a fortnight later and she beat only one home.

Aldo Domeyer (Liesl King)

Aldo Domeyer (Liesl King)

Although nothing showed up at the racecourse Nel found her to be slightly sore on her left-fore the next morning and that evening she was running a temperature. The following morning she was lame on both front legs and still had a temperature. The vet recommended no exercise for ten days.

She opened at a tempting 9-2 for the Itsarush.co.za Maiden yesterday with World Sports Betting who had obvious form choice Golden Wine favourite at 22-10 with I Lived (13 lengths in front of Riverboat Queen) on 7-2 and Seattle Silva the same price.

The Brett Crawford runner is interesting as she also flopped last time although it was her first race for nearly three months and she lost ground at the start. “I think the 1 400m was too far for her,” says her trainer. “She is back to 1 200m, is working well and should run much better.”

Nanna Anna may just be good enough to warrant 2-1 favouritism in the first – she was unlucky not to win first time and was then fifth when Anthony Delpech rode her in the Met day Listed race. “I think she will be hard to beat,” says a back-to-form Paul Reeves.

However watch out for Casual Diamond and, in particular, fellow 22-10 chance Believethisbeauty. The R525 000 Captain Al newcomer is the first foal of the Winter Oaks winner Cause To Believe. “This 1 000m may be a bit short for her but she shows a lot of speed and she is talented,” says Vaughan Marshall.

Apollo Star is very short at 7-10 in the other two-year-old race half an hour later. The Joey Ramsden runner was fourth to Bold Respect in the R1 million Kuda Sprint so is hard to oppose.

Richard Fourie’s mount Royal Marine (11-2) is a son of What A Winter and apparently could make the frame at the first time of asking. “”I brought him to Kenilworth to gallop and he worked very well,” says Greg Ennion who, however, cautions: “He might just need it.”

Ennion, incidentally, expects Meaningful Look to go well against Riverboat Queen – “she has improved a lot from her first run.” But stable companion Mangrove, as short as 15-10 for race five, has an outside draw to contend with and so Redeemer is preferred despite not being much of a price.

By Michael Clower

Anton Marcus (Nkosi Hlophe)

Marcus to partner Cuvee Brut

Anton Marcus brings his extraordinary 27% strike rate – 33% in Cape Town – to Kenilworth for the Prawn Festival meeting on Saturday when the four-time champion has four rides for Joey Ramsden.

Marcus, who won last year’s Vasco Taverna Prix Du Cap on the Brett Crawford-trained Cuvee Brut, this time renews his partnership with Cape Fillies Guineas winner Just Sensual.

Anton Marcus (Nkosi Hlophe)

Anton Marcus (Nkosi Hlophe)

He brought her incredibly late in the classic whereas in last month’s $500 000 CTS Mile Frankie Dettori led early – he had to overcome a 15 draw – and the filly weakened well before the end to finish with only four behind her.

She is the highest-rated horse in the race, is drawn on the rails and probably has most to fear from last season’s Cape Fillies Guineas winner Silver Mountain who is drawn (8) far better than she was when fifth in the Klawervlei Majorca.

In the Vasco Food Trucks Pinnacle Stakes Marcus is re-united with last season’s Cape Flying Championship runner-up Brutal Force on whom he won the 2015 Merchants at Turffontein.

There is a R30 admission fee for the Festival this time but that includes a ticket in the draws for R50 000 worth of household appliances. Saturday’s Kenilworth racemeeting also features a carryover Pick 6 pool (Race 4 @ 14h45) estimated to top R1,8million.

By Michael Clower

Sensible Lover (Nkosi Hlophe)

Logic points to Sensible Lover

The Australian-bred mare Sensible Lover has always been up there with the best of her generation but has only managed a single victory since winning the Gr3 Three Troika Stakes at just her third outing. 26 starts later she lines up in a Progress Plate over a mile at the Vaal this afternoon where she should be good enough to finally add a fourth victory to her record.

Weiho Marwing, now back permanently at his Turffontein yard after a spell at Ashburton, has always held Sensible Lover in high regard and she has contested her fair share of feature events with varying success.

Sensible Lover (Nkosi Hlophe)

Sensible Lover (Nkosi Hlophe)

Her last win came back in March last year in a set weights race on the Greyville poly where she beat the Gr1 winning filly Real Princess.

More recently she finished second in the Gr3 Sycamore Sprint behind Tiger’s Touch in her warm-up for the Gr1 L Jaffee Empress Club Stakes where she ran the top class Inara to a length in second place in a hotly contested race.

Her form since has been a touch disappointing but she comes into today’s event nicely weighted and with a pipe-opener under her girth she looks set for a big showing.

The lightly raced Noor appears to have her problems and Mike de Kock’s filly will need to improve on her recent showings when down the field in both. However, her last outing was in a Pinnacle Stakes where, although never a threat to winner Fort Ember, she jumped from a difficult gate. This will be her third outing after a five-month spell and with only seven runners in opposition she can be competitive.

Top weight My Friend Lee is in mustard form but has it all to do at these weights. She won well enough over 1400m last time out but that was in a lowly MR68 Handicap and here she gives weight to a mare who has been placed at the highest level.

Victory is not beyond the realms of possibility for Lucky Houdalakis’s charge but she will be up against a smart mare in Sensible Lover.

Houdalakis may have a better chance of finding the winner’s enclosure when he saddles Joan Ranger in the Conditions Plate over 1000m. The race has attracted a small but smart field but Joan Ranger should be up to the task.

Coming off a convincing win in a Progress Plate, Joan Ranger most recently took on the smart Green Pepper at level weights and was beaten less than a length. Joan Ranger was good enough to finish fourth behind Trip To Heaven in the Merchants and given that she is well in at these weights and Piere Strydom in the irons she rates the one to beat.

Hardly a meeting passes without Sean Tarry leading in a winner and he has two chances in Swift Sarah and Old Em, both in the race off some decent recent form. Swift Sarah is back over what looks to be a more suitable trip after finishing down the field in a 1450m event at Turffontein but Old Em only has 49.5kg to shoulder with much improved apprentice Phumi Mjoka keeping the ride. Old Em is likely to be out and gone from the jump and if given too much leeway, could be difficult to peg back.

Fort Ember will be warming up for the Highveld autumn season after her recent victory in the Gr3 Flamboyant Stakes at Greyville. Today’s race will be on the sharp side but she has enough class to make her presence felt.

The Aussie import Dame Eleanor looks to be on a similar course. She won her first two convincingly but came unstuck for the first time when sent over a mile. Mike de Kock’s charge looks to have some scope and it will be interesting to see how she goes here.

However, Joan Ranger has a lot in her favour and is taken to get home ahead of Old Em and stable companion Swift Sarah with Fort Ember and Dame Eleanor running at them late.

By Andrew Harrison

Horizon (Liesl King)

Ambitions for Horizon

Candice Bass-Robinson still harbours Grade 1 ambitions for Horizon despite the record-priced colt managing only fifth when starting odds-on for the Investec Cape Derby.

Horizon (Liesl King)

Horizon (Liesl King)

She said: “Horizon is going to Durban and he will be aimed at the Daily News (May 27). In the Derby they went too slowly for him and they turned it into a sprint.”

Elevated, second in the Cape Classic and fourth in the Guineas, fared even worse in the Derby and finished last.

Riaan van Reenen said: “His lungs were full of mucus. I shouldn’t have run him but you only get one shot at that race and I took a chance.

“He has been having a rest ever since and he is fine again now. I am going to prepare him for the Winter Series at Kenilworth.”

By Michael Clower

Richard Fourie (Liesl King)

Kampala to strike

Andre Nel has a 20% strike rate at Kenilworth this season  – only Shane Humby, with six winners from just 30 runners, can match that – and Sabine Plattner’s private trainer can strike with Kampala Campari in the Racing.Its A Rush Handicap tomorrow.

This colt won first time out on New Year’s Eve and was beaten only half a length when pitched into handicap company three weeks later.  True, the assessors hit him with a 2kg rise for that but the extra two furlongs here may swing the balance.

Richard Fourie (Liesl King)

Richard Fourie (Liesl King)

Punters are beginning to take a jaundiced view of Kapteinspandiseile after two successive defeats, both times starting hot favourite, but the Mike Robinson runner should be a better price in the mile maiden (race four).

On the day after last time’s disappointing fifth at 6-10 the trainer reported to the stipes that the horse returned with a distended off-fore fetlock.

“He was trotting sound but his joint was slightly swollen,” the trainer explains. “But he is a big-striding horse and he fought for his head in the race. I feel he would have done better had he been allowed to stride on. You will see a different horse on Saturday.”

Richard Fourie, who had the mount on the last two occasions, has preferred to partner what he hopes is the aptly-named Perfect Choice who finished a fifth of a length the better last time but the Kaptein is taken to score for Donovan Dillon.

Herodus, third to subsequent Kuda Sprint winner Bold Respect, is the only raced runner in the opening Juvenile Maiden. That form should be good enough despite Victorious Captain (fifth) failing to frank it last Saturday. However R500 000 buy Valedictorian gets the vote.

The Fillies Maiden 35 minutes later looks wide open and it could be worth taking a chance with newcomer Straat-Kind to give Nel his 38th winner of the campaign.

By Michael Clower

Raymond Danielson

Silver Stripe to defy rating

The Allez France Stakes over 2000m for fillies and mares heads a nine race meeting on the Turffontein Inside track tomorrow. Silver Stripe is selected to win the race, despite being 4kg under sufferance with Patchit Up Baby on official merit ratings.

She is a four-year-old by Silvano, so will be coming into her own. In her penultimate start over 2450m Silver Stripe was relaxed in the running and cruised in to win easing up by 4,75 lengths. She was duly given the maximum eight point raise.

Raymond Danielson

Raymond Danielson

Her next race over 2000m, in which Allez France contender Cidada beat her comfortably, can be ignored as she was caught wide the whole way. She now has pole position. Raymond Danielson has a fine pair of hands, so should be able to settle her quickly and find the necessary cover. If all goes according to plan she should quicken off the elbow and stay on resolutely.

Patchit Up Baby is officially the best weighted horse. She settles well in the running, usually at the back, and under Gavin Lerena will almost certainly produce her usual resolute finish. On this tight track she might run out of time to catch Silver Stripe.

However, she will likely go close and has to be included in all the exotics. Cidada is also officially 4kg under sufferance, but this Galileo filly has always struck as one who would improve as she matured. She won well over 2000m last time and should love this trip, so can earn from a good draw of two.

Tiger Flame is 3kg under sufferance with Patchit Up Baby on official merit ratings and can earn, although her best run recently has been on the Standside track, and she has a tricky draw of seven. Inaninstant is the second best in at the weights and is officially only 1,5kg under sufferance with Patchit Up Baby. However, she has lacked lustre in her last couple of starts and will have to bounce back. They are selected in the order mentioned.

The best bet on the card is given to the Weiho Marwing-trained Geosphere in the third race over 2200m. Last time she was drawn wide over 2000m in a workrider’s maiden and over raced until finding cover, but she still managed to stay on well. This time she has a better draw and the experienced Weichong Marwing is aboard. The pace will be on in this race which will also suit. The Marwing yard are renowned for their expertise with stayers and the A. P. Arrow filly does not have a lot to beat.

By David Thiselton

Goodtime Gal (Liesl King)

Blinkers on for Goodtime Gal

Klawervlei Majorca third Goodtime Gal will wear blinkers for the first time when she runs in the Vasco Prix Du Cap at Kenilworth on Saturday week.

Mike Robinson said: “I thought she was going to win the Majorca when she hit the front but she got lazy with nothing to pull her through to the line. That was the second time that she has done this so I am going to try her with a pair of blinkers.”

Goodtime Gal (Liesl King)

Goodtime Gal (Liesl King)

Silver Mountain, a length and a half further back fifth when starting favourite, will renew rivalry on Saturday week despite being 2kg worse. She had a terrible draw in the Majorca but will start from midfield this time. Goodtime Gal, though, is drawn 23 out of 30.

Nightingale, who won the Majorca, is again Durban-bound. “She is having a break at the moment and has been in a paddock for the past fortnight,” reported Candice Bass-Robinson.

Captain’s Flame, who failed to run up to her best when only seventh in the Majorca, will try again in the 1 400m Grade 3. “I think she is coming back to herself now,” said Andre Nel.

Bela-Bela, although beaten less than four and a half lengths when seventh in the Sun Met, apparently also did not give all that she is capable of.

Justin Snaith said: “Things didn’t go her way. She hung badly and we still don’t know why but Anthony Delpech couldn’t ride her out in the last 200m. It might have been the pressure because it was a hard race for a filly at almost level weights with the winner. Nothing has been confirmed yet but I suppose she will go to Durban again.”

Quick Brown Fox, who hasn’t been seen since her rough passage in the Cape Fillies Guineas, is on the easy list. She started second favourite but met with serious interference and finished with only one behind her.

Ridgemont manager Craig Carey said: “She was lame after the race and she has had a muscle problem in her wither ever since. We are in no hurry with her because she will be special and we believe she will win something big in the next Cape season.”

By Michael Clower