jockey april

Jockey of the Month – April 2014

SEAN CORMACK

The Gold Circle Jockey Award for the month of April has been bestowed on Sean Cormack.

Riding with the confidence and talent of an international class jockey, Sean Cormack has been in great demand and has rewarded his stables and supporters with another fine performance during the month.

With an effortless style he has driven his mounts into the winner’s enclosure on nine occasions and has made the placings on 18 other occasions from his 41 rides. With his consistency of performance Sean has become a rider that exotic bet punters are reluctant to leave out of their permutations no matter what he is riding.

It was another sparkling performance worthy of the monthly award.

Well done Sean

clairwood

Alexander continues to improve

The four-year-old Dynasty gelding took 13 runs to win his maiden, but his fortunes have changed since hold up tactics were employed over long distances and he has now won four of his last five starts.

With the Gold Cup in mind, he was deliberately not raced for eight months until his recent comeback on 20 April over 1 900m at Clairwood, where he was a bit keen, showing that he needed it.

Yesterday he switched off as beautifully as usual in his favourite role as the tail maker and then produced his customary strong finish to win at odds of 3-1 by 0,25 lengths.

He was 0,5kg under sufferance, but having carried only 52kg will need further improvement to be a Gold Cup contender. He will also need to get going a bit earlier up the shorter Greyville straight, although it must be pointed out that yesterday’s race was run in very soft going, while he has previously shown a fine turn of foot on fast ground.

The former SA Derby runner up Gothic had dropped to an attractive merit rating of 90 and finished runner up in his second start for the Vaughan Marshall yard.

The Duncan Howells-trained Beewithme goes well for S’Manga Khumalo and ran to form in third as he was 1,5kg under sufferance with the winner.

Three other notable performances on the day were by the Dennis Drier-trained Balkan, the Neil Bruss-trained Red Flame and the Brett Crawford-trained Zacharias.

Balkan by Horse Chestnut added a five length victory over 1 100m in a fillies Juvenile Plate under Sean Cormack to her five length maiden win over 1 000m and stamped herself as a serious Gr 1 Allan Robertson contender for Scottsville’s Festival Of Speed meeting on May 24.

Three-year-old Jet Master filly Red Flame put herself into the Gr 1 Woolavington 2000 picture with an impressive display in an 1 800m Graduation Plate event for fillies and mares under Anthony Delpech, cruising to a 1,75 length victory.

Zacharias, a three-year-old filly by Lundy’s Liability, was a cheap purchase, but is all heart, and won her fourth race in succession when winning a MR 89 Handicap for fillies and mares over 1 600m by a comfortable 1,5 lengths under Glen Hatt. Crawford and Hatt also won an earlier handicap over 1 200m with Gulf Storm.

The first race of the day over 1 000m saw apprentice Tristan Godden notch up his first career win aboard the Kumaran Naidoo-trained Secret Traveller.

Meanwhile, S’Manga Khumalo was kicked by a horse before the start of the tenth race at Clairwood today and was later sent for X-rays in order to diagnose whether there was any serious injury.

The current national log topping jockey was attended by medical experts at the start and had to be replaced aboard the Greg and Karen Anthony-trained Bonsai by Jarred Samuel.[/expand]

Legislate vs Louis

The pair are now set to face each other in a North versus South clash of the Titans in the Gr 1 Daily News 2000 at Greyville on May 31, a contest that could decide the Equus Champion three-year-old male title. They might also face each other in the July, although the Snaith camp have emphasised that Legislate is not a certainty to run in that race.

Legislate, who was bred by Vaughan Koster’s Cheveley Stud, was purchased for R100,000 at the 2012 National Yearling Sales, well below the R234,064 average of that year. To date he has earned R1,159,850.

Justin’s brother Jonathon, his father Chris and bloodstock agent John Freeman identified the Dynasty colt as one of their picks of the Sale. Legislate is out of a four-time winning Restructure mare and the trio didn’t feel the female line “was the greatest”. However, they quickly became excited upon viewing him.

Jonathan said, “We were looking for a Dynasty, it is just a matter of time before he becomes Champion Sire, and this one had great conformation and fantastic movement.”

The team were prepared to fork out plenty to secure the colt and could not believe it when the bidding stopped at R100,000. Jonathon recalled, “I remember saying, hang on, this is a bit suspect. We hadn’t had the horse vetted or scoped and became concerned. Vaughan Koster then came over to congratulate us, although he was a bit disappointed by the price, so we asked him if the horse had any issues and he told us he was 100% sound.

I liked him so much that I immediately offered to buy half of him from Dennis Evans, who was going to put together the ownership. He said he would consider it, but on further thought it didn’t make sense as the plan was to ship the horse to Singapore.”

Evans has transported 26 South African-bred thoroughbreds to Singapore in total. The combination of good sales value in South Africa and the attractive prize money in Singapore makes good business sense. As it happened Legislate failed a piroplasmosis test and had to stay in South Africa.

The colt only won his maiden at the third time of asking, over 1 600m at Kenilworth, but then showed the signs of what was to come when finishing runner up in both the Gr 3 Cape Classic over 1 400m and in the Gr 2 Selangor Cup over 1 600m.

He disappointed in the Gr 1 Grand Parade Cape Guineas, finishing unplaced, but the yard freshened him up and he displayed a devastating turn of foot in the Gr 1 Cape Derby over 2 000m to beat the odds-on favourite Captain America by 1,25 lengths.

Evans received an offer from overseas after that win, but he kindly gave the Snaiths the chance to match the price through their own clients. Gaynor Rupert of Drakenstein Stud and Jack Micthell came to the party and are now the joint-owners together with Evans and his wife Gael.

Legislate’s beautiful action and superb turn of foot were there for all to see at Greyville last Saturday in the KRA Guineas, where he confirmed form with Captain America, trouncing him by three lengths.

His long term aim is the Dubai Carnival. However, his priorities before he leaves will be the L’Ormarin’s Queen’s Plate and the J&B Met, which is one reason for his July participation not being a certainty.

Justin said, “He has so much scope, he is still a big baby. His work leading up to the KRA Guineas was incredible. He was blowing away older horses, beating them by lengths.”

Jonathon said, “In my opinion the Johannesburg form is not as strong as the Cape’s. We are looking forward to the clash with Louis The King, but are confident that Province will get the upper hand!”

Louis The King is one of the rags to riches stories of the decade. His breeder Phillip Kahan of The Alchemy bought his mother in foal to Black Minnaloushe for R20,000 from Drakenstein Stud at a mares and weanlings sale. Kahan liked the resulting “docile” foal, but he was too immature for the Cape Premier Yearling Sales in January, so he sent him to the KZN Yearling Sale. However, the colt didn’t receive a single bid and Kahan had to buy him back for R55,000. Later in the car park, Kahan bumped into Woodruff, who was only there to drop off some July tickets. He explained to Woodruff that he had been unable to sell his best colt.

Woodruff asked him how much he wanted and Kahan replied, “A minimum of R60,000”. Woodruff said, “Send him up.” Woodruff trusted Kahan’s opinion and didn’t even want to see the horse, but the latter managed to persuade him to have a peak over the stable door. Later, before Woodruff had returned to Johannesburg, an owner of his, Tiaan Van Der Vyver, phoned while on his way to have a look at one of the yard’s youngsters at Sharon Patterson’s pre-training centre.

Woodruff asked him to have a look at the Black Minnaloushe colt too. Van Der Vyver agreed and liked what he saw. He bought him and then named the colt after his son Louis, in whose name he also races. The colt is the first racehorse that Louis has ever owned and has earned R5,342,500 to date.

Louis The King has all the credentials of a champion, a fine temperament, a good action and a superb turn of foot. He also has plenty of scope for improvement and showed in his SA Derby win that he has courage in abundance. He will never lie down without a fight.[/expand]

Capetown Noir could miss July

Dean Kannemeyer, who won the July with Dynasty 11 years ago and again with Eyeofthetiger three years later, said: “There is a big question mark about the race as we are concerned about the 2 200m and so there is a possibility that Capetown Noir may not run. We will see how things go in the Rising Sun Gold Challenge at Clairwood on June 7 and I will discuss it with the owners.”

It had been widely assumed that the dual classic and L’Ormarins Queen’s Plate winner would be retired to cash in on his stud value after contesting the Champions Cup on July 26. But not so.

The Milnerton trainer explained: “I have been speaking to Khaya Stables [the official owners] and Jehan Malherbe about this and we are considering the possibility of sending him on an overseas campaign.

“He was going to go last year but we decided to keep him here for another season after he was narrowly beaten by Vercingetorix in the KRA Guineas and the Daily News. As things turned out that was pretty good form. We will make a decision after the Gold Challenge.”

Kannemeyer added that he was quite satisfied with the four-year-old’s third in the Independent On Saturday Drill Hall Stakes. He said: “It was not really his game because the 1 400m at Greyville is too sharp for him but he came through it well and the Gold Challenge will be his next race.”

Capetown Noir is a 20-1 chance for the July and most of the money in recent days has been for Legislate who has been cut from 9-2 to 7-2 clear favourite while Triple Crown winner Louis The King has eased from 9-2 to 5-1.

Seemingly the KRA Guineas winner’s support is matched by his improvement since winning the Investec Cape Derby.

Justin Snaith said: “He was always going to improve as he is a son of Dynasty. He took the KRA Guineas well and indeed he is doing well in Durban. He appreciates the light tracks there.”[/expand]

Van Zyl duo expected to improve

No Worries, a four-year-old Kahal gelding, stayed on steadily in the Gr 2 Drill Hall Stakes over the too sharp 1 400m at Greyville last Saturday, finishing a 5,4 length seventh. He will have benefitted from the run and will have a chance over the suitable 1 900m trip next Friday as long as the tactics employed are favourable.

His best runs last season were when the blinkers were on and he was held up. On both of those occasions, in the Gr 1 Daily News 2000 and the July respectively, he ran on powerfully.

In the Cape summer he didn’t have it his way in any of his races. He needs to be rousted out of the gates, due to a tardy starting habit he was beginning to develop early in his career, and when he had the blinkers on during that disappointing Cape campaign he took hold of the bit and ended up too handy. However, when they were finally dispensed with for the L’Ormarins Queen’s Plate he was still taken to the front in order to overcome a wide draw.

Things appeared to have gone well for him without blinkers in the running of the J&B Met, but he proved in that race that he produces his best with the blinkers on as he failed to go on with his effort in the straight.

There is no doubting his latent ability and he is due some luck, so should be a big runner in the 1900.

He is drawn nine out of the 39 entries, so looks likely to get a favourable barrier position and the early cover he will need in order to be settled near the back.

Shogunnar, a five-year-old Solskjaer gelding, hurt himself while in Cape Town after he had won his only start this season over 1 600m at Kenilworth on November 3. The yard could not pinpoint what was wrong with him, so chose to rest him.

He has “bounced back” after rehabilitation on the treadmill and has been doing “very nicely” ever since. He finished only 4,65 lengths back in last year’s July and only three lengths back in the Gold Cup. His next intended run after the 1900 will be in the Gr 2 weight for age Betting World Derby over 2 500m at Clairwood, which is now open to all ages. The Gold Cup is likely his main mission of the Champions Season.

Meanwhile, the yard’s now dual Gr 1-winning champion filly Along Came Polly is doing well at Summerveld and has become more relaxed with age, an asset which is always welcomed in horseracing. The Judpot filly was given a bit of an easier program for a few days after her Gr 1 Laurie Jaffee Empress Club Stakes (1 600m) victory, but has never been out of training and was soon back in full work. Her next race will likely be in the Gr 1 Woolavington 2000 at Greyville, where she landed her first career Gr 1 in last season’s Thekwini Stakes over 1600m.

The Gr 1 SA Oaks runner up Mohave Princess, an Australian-bred bred filly by Mount Nelson, has been doing well in Johannesburg and will be coming down for the Woolavington 2000. She was unlucky in the GR 1 SA Classic, when sent for home too soon and only finishing two lengths back in sixth, so will enjoy the Greyville 2 000m trip.

The yard’s promising two-year-old colt Trippi colt Punk Rocker will be running in the Gr 1 Tsogo Sun Medallion over 1 200m at Scottsville on May 24.

He has won two from two and showed tremendous resolve when beating Beckedorf in the Gr 3 Godolphin Barb Stakes over 1 100m last time out. This pair went eyeball to eyeball for 500m in that race but Punk Rocker got the upper hand late despite having to give 2kg to the runner up.

Beckedorf franked the form by winning a Maiden Juvenile Plate by 4,25 lengths next time out. Punk Rocker has the credentials to be a contender in the Medallion as he has good cruising speed together with the ability to kick and then fight on all the way to the line.

The yard’s former sprinting star Franny has been retired, having failed to recapture her excellent two-year-old and three-year-old form on her return from a fetlock injury, although she did finish a close-up third in the Gr 2 Sceptre Stakes over 1 200m at Kenilworth in January.[/expand]

Stamina doubts? Maybe Yes

Maybe Yes, a compact daughter of Tiger Ridge, showed an explosive turn of foot and won comfortably, defying her 16-1 odds. However, Crawford is not sure she will stay the 2 000m trip of the Gr 1 Woolavington 2000 on May 31, so is still thinking about her next step.

The Gr 2 Tibouchina over 1 450m at Clairwood on June 7 and the Gr 1 Jonsson Workwear Garden Province Stakes over 1 600m on Vodacom Durban July day are the obvious targets for a miler, while the Gr 2 Gold Bracelet over 1 800m on Gold Cup day could also be an option.

Captain America, a strapping colt by Captain Al, has always had the Gr 1 Daily News 2000 as his main Champions Season target and will likely be at his peak for that race.

It is often said that big horses are not suited to Greyville, but the key to the course is actually a turn of foot and he has shown before in Cape Town that he has that asset in abundance. He did battle to quicken on Saturday, but that likely had more to with needing the outing.

Furthermore, it is interesting to note that Captain America, despite finishing three lengths behind Legislate in the KRA Guineas, still had a considerably quicker time than Maybe Yes’s winning time in the KRA Fillies Guineas, 1,27 seconds quicker to be exact.

Legislate, trained by Justin Snaith, must be some horse and Richard Fourie did say afterwards that this Dynasty colt was one of the best horses he had ever ridden. It was not surprising that he shortened from 14-1 into 9-2 joint favourite for the Vodacom Durban July after his fine performance last Saturday. Captain America is currently a 16-1 shot.

The shortest priced Crawford-trained horse in the Vodacom Durban July betting at this stage is the unexposed three-year-old Dynasty colt Futura, who has won three out of four starts and been particularly impressive in his last two outings, which were both over 1 600m, at Kenilworth and Clairwood respectively. He is 10-1 in the betting.

Crawford has entered Futura for the Betting World 1900. He is currently merit rated only 85, but did beat the likes of KRA Guineas fourth-placed Top Jet at level weights in his last start in a Graduation Plate and also beat Wild One, who ran last year’s July, by 5,5 lengths at level weights in that same race.

The selection process for the big Champions Season’s races doesn’t only go on merit ratings and an exciting prospect like this stands a chance of being included above a higher rated horse.

The yard’s Gr 2 Sceptre Stakes winner Reflective Image is on track for the Gr 1 SA Fillies Sprint.

She ran 6,35 lengths back in the Gr 3 Poinsettia Stakes over 1 200m last time out at Clairwood, which was her first run since finishing tailed off in the Gr 1 Klawervlei Majorca Stakes over 1 600m on J&B Met day. She was outpaced in the Poinsettia before making up plenty of ground and might appreciate the tougher Scottsville 1 200m course.[/expand]

Connecting racing with the popular culture

Watson went on to point out that the average racehorse causes more heart ache than it causes joy. “Horses are fragile things, they drop dead, they break down, need long spells and the majority of them are just too slow. So why do we persist? “ Yet there has to be a reason why so many people own racehorses and keep on acquiring them.

According to Watson the answer lies in the horse and in the age old relationship that has existed between man and horse. “We are wired to the beasts”, he explained . They have exercised and inspired our imagination for centuries. An animal that just happens to have a gap between its molars where a bit would fit and with a finely tuned flight instinct honed in age when they were easy prey for sabre tooth tigers. “Of course”, Watson added with a twinkle in his eye, “that’s probably why we have to put blinkers on them, as there is bound to be a sabre tooth tiger lurking in that car park adjacent to the home straight.”

Jokes aside, Watson has probably owned thirty odd horses during his lifetime and he has certainly heard every excuse in the book as to why a particular horse could not win a particular race. “Besides the physical limitations of the horse, you have the added influences of the state of the track, the vigor of the jockey or lack thereof and the trainer, farrier or vet’s ability to keep it fit, sound and healthy. Then there is a gene that kicks in to remind the horse that it is a leader and should fight to the end or that it belongs back in the herd.”

Yet people still want to own horses. Watson points out much of his childhood was spent dreaming of an ordinary horse belonging to his father’s friend, before he switched the focus of his attention to a magnificent chestnut sprinter called Vain. Vain was a champion, but as Watson pointed out, you need to own ordinary horses to understand how freakish the champions are. So are we any closer to figuring out why people would even want to own a horse or follow horseracing?

According to Watson, the one thing that connects racing to the popular culture is a charismatic horse, a champion that is the face of racing. The ones that write themselves into the history books and fire the imagination of ordinary people. Yet racing does very little with is champions, treating them almost as an accessory, he adds and therein lies the cause of some of the disconnect between racing and popular culture.

To conclude, Watson ends with another question, one he came across in a questionnaire once: “What would make owning a racehorse more attractive to you?” The simple answer, according to Watson? Owning a better horse of course!

Bill Barich, lead writer for the TV series Luck agreed, pointing out that when he spent ten weeks on the backstretch of a racetrack, the stories people told him always involved a horse. Racing may be a confined universe, where people’s lives are completely enmeshed, but it is a great leveller, a great democracy and at its centre is the horse. The horse provides that spark of life, the excitement and the noise as it thunders down the home straight. For Barich, who seldom speaks in public, the answer is simple. Make racing more about the horse and you will reconnect with the popular culture.

In closing, Chris Luoni and Gerald Fell, explained why they set up a NZ Hall Of Fame. For Luoni it was very straightforward. “I loved the stories. We had the opportunity to use the digital media to tell the stories of the heroes and their histories to the young people. Phar Lap’s skeleton is on display, but it is a bare sterile bunch of bones. So we put his story on film and it was an instant success .”

These DVD’s have certainly gone some way towards making the horse the centre of the story of racing again as Gerald explains. “We have gone back and made DVD’s of our great horses such as Carbine, Phar Lap and Sunline, and these are regularly used as fillers by our local racing channel.” And enabling people to reconnect with the stars of the past, will hopefully fire their imagination to follow the stars of the future.
– Hong Kong Jockey Club[/expand]

Vodacom Durban July log

Log as at May 6, 2014

# Horse Trainer MR
1 YORKER Geoff Woodruff 118
2 HILL FIFTY FOUR Vaughan Marshall 112
3 LOUIS THE KING Geoff Woodruff 109
4 LEGISLATE Justin Snaith 109
5 CAPETOWN NOIR Dean Kannemeyer 112
6 ATHINA Joe Soma 101
7 BEACH BEAUTY Dennis Drier 112
8 TELLINA Geoff Woodruff 110
9 POMODORO Sean Tarry 109
10 WYLIE HALL Weiho Marwing 109
11 PUNTA ARENAS Stan Elley 108
12 JET EXPLORER Justin Snaith 109
13 AS YOU LIKE Alec Laird 100
14 CAPTAIN AMERICA Brett Crawford 106
15 WHITELINE FEVER Sean Tarry 110
16 IN THE FAST LANE Justin Snaith 105

17 HALVE THE DEFICIT Sean Tarry 104
18 ROYAL ZULU WARRIOR Kumaran Naidoo 110
19 ESPUMANTI Mike de Kock 105
20 NO WORRIES Gavin van Zyl 107

NEXT 10 IN ALPHABETICAL ORDER
ASTRO NEWS Charles Laird 109
BEZANOVA Alec Laird 102
CAGIVA Sean Tarry 103
HOT TICKET Dean Kannemeyer 108
ICE MACHINE Dean Kannemeyer 108
JET BELLE Glen Kotzen 103
RIO CARNIVAL Charles Laird 112
RUN FOR IT Justin Snaith 109
SHOGUNNAR Gavin van Zyl 104
TRIBAL DANCE Vaughan Marshall 107

Important Dates:
– Tuesday, 13 May 2014: First Supplementary Entries
– Tuesday, 13 May 2014: First Declarations
– Monday, 2 June 2014: Second Declarations
– Monday, 9 June 2014: Final Supplementary Entries
– Tuesday, 10 June 2014: Weights Published
– Monday, 23 June 2014: Declarations close
– Tuesday, 24 June 2014: Final Field and Barrier Draw
– Thursday, 26 June 2014: Gallops at Greyville

Betting: 5-1 Legislate, Louis The King, 9-1 Yorker, 10-1 Beach Beauty, Futura, 16-1 Captain America, 20-1 As You Like, Capetown Noir, Hill Fifty Four, 25-1 Rio Carnival, Tellina, 33-1 Jet Explorer, King Of Pain, Pomodoro, Readytogorightnow, Run For It, Whistle Stop, Whiteline Fever, 40-1 Cagiva, Punta Arenas, 50-1 Athina, Halve The Deficit, Hot Ticket, Jet Belle, Rake`s Chestnut, Silvano`s Jet, Wylie Hall, 66-1 upwards others.[/expand]

Spotlight firmly on SA quarantine restrictions

Yet London News travelled to Hong Kong directly from Cape Town, after 40 days of quarantine, while Variety Club had to complete five months of quarantine in three countries, highlighting the fact that South Africa now faces greater constraints than it did seventeen years ago.

Hence, Variety Club’s victory could not have come at a better moment as it took place in front of the 800 delegates of the 35th Asian Racing Conference, firmly placing the spotlight on the difficult quarantine demands placed on South African racehorses.

“I think if there is not already an incentive for the Asian Racing Conference to facilitate a better travel situation for South African horses to the great races of the world, then we saw one today,” said Hong Kong Jockey Club CEO Winfried Engelbrecht-Bresges at the conclusion of the Champions Mile.

Engelbrecht-Bresges has taken it upon himself to pursue an improvement to the current restrictions. “One of the tasks that is in my area as Deputy Vice-Chairman of the International Horse Racing Federation is the issue of horses travelling and we will definitely have a look at putting it on the agenda to take forward.”

Already on the agenda of the current Asian Racing Conference, currently underway in Hong Kong,was the Plenary Session ‘Movement of Horses’, with Racing South Africa’s Peter Gibson as one of the speakers.

The main topic under discussion was the development of a ‘high health, high performance’ (HHP) concept in order to address the challenges of irregular and excessive health requirements forhorses travelling internationally.

The World Organisation for Animal Health(OIE) project leader, Dr Susanne Münstermann, explained how the OIE is working towards developing international standards for the movement of competition horses, travellingfor the sole purpose of participating in racing or FEI competitions.

Dr Münstermann pointed out that competition horses are closely scrutinised, highly identifiable and traceable and as such pose a low health risk.

Consequently they are a unique subgroup of the global population, which the project has labelled the ‘High Health, High Performance’ subgroup.

Gibson followed on from this, pointing out that not only do the South African racehorses fall in this high performance, high health subgroup, but that African horse sickness is a seasonal disease and hence competition horses can be safely exported during the winter months, from what is arguably the best vector protected quarantine station in the world.

“If the importing countries are willing to consider the true risk of African Horse Sickness, within the current shortcomings of our current system, there is a means of exporting horses from South Africa in a completely safe and professional manner during the winter months,” Gibson explained.

“What is required is a reliable, safe and regular delivery system of South African horses, in order to compete on the International stage.”

Gibson pointed out that possible export solutions could include the upgrading of the current quarantine facilities to provide continuous vector protection, enhanced surveillance of the AHS control area and significant advances in diagnostic testing.[/expand]

Rising Sun next for Beauty

The Gold Challenge is one of the championship events of the year as it is run on weight for age terms and attracts the best milers from all corners of the country.

Beach Beauty is probably the best female miler in the country at present and will face the likely best male racehorse in the land, the Geoff Woodruff-trained Yorker, a giant of a horse, who was awesome when winning the Gr 1 President’s Champion Challenge over 2 000m at Turffontein last time out.

The Dean Kannemeyer-trained Capetown Noir was unlucky to be beaten by Yorker in the Gr 1 HF Oppenheimer Horse Chestnut Stakes over 1 600m at Turffontein on March 29 and should also be a big player.

He was beaten 2,5 lengths by Beach Beauty in the Drill Hall Stakes over 1 400m on Saturday at weight for age terms, but was cleverly kept in a pocket by Sean Cormack, which forced him to run through traffic down the inside in the straight. He would never have beaten the little “pocket rocket”, but might have got a bit closer and he will also relish the return to a course with a left-hand turn and a longer straight.

Drier was intending to run his leading two-year-olds, the colt Guiness and the filly Balkan, over 1 100m at Clairwood on Sunday and decide from there whether they would run at the Festival Of Speed meeting. However, only three runners stood their ground in the race that Guiness was entered for and it has been scrapped.

Drier has won two out of the last three runnings of the Gr 1 Tsogo Sun Medallion over 1 200m. Guiness will give him a chance of repeating his Medallion win last year with Captain Of All, as he was impressive when winning his debut over 1 000m at Clairwood by a comfortable two lengths with the rest of the field strung out like the washing.

Guiness’ sire Seventh Rock won the Medallion in 2007, beating the subsequent two-time Gr 1 winner Argonaut, who was also accepted into the breeding shed. Guiness’ dam, Tinder Box, by Strike Smartly has also produced the useful Justin Snaith-trained eight-time winning sprinter November Rain.

Drier’s Horse Chestnut filly Balkan was beaten 0,75 lengths by the promising Glen Kotzen-trained Garden Treasure on debut over 1 000m at Scottsville, before winning second time out over 1 200m at Clairwood by six lengths. The runner up in the latter race, Tapaway, franked the form to some extent by finishing a narrow second to the well-bred and well-backed Mike de Kock-trained first timer Alborean Sea next time out. Balkan faces six other promising sorts in a Maiden Juvenile Plate for Fillies over 1 100m on Sunday, including Garden Treasure.

Captain Of All has also been doing well and will be heading for the Gr 1 Golden Horse Casino Sprint over 1 200m at the Festival Of Speed meeting. His last run was a win in a Graduation Plate over 1 200m at Kenilworth on November 6 last year, but he was subsequently laid off with a joint sprain.

The consistent sprinter Barbosa will also be heading for the Golden Horse Casino Sprint. He finished second over 1 100m last time out in the Listed In Full Flight Handicap, beaten only 0,75 lengths by the Clairwood specialist Normanz.

Barbosa was raised four points to 102 for that race, which should allow him to qualify for the Golden Horse and he should come in with a nice galloping weight. Chave De Oura, who was last seen in the Gr 1 L’Ormarins Queen’s Plate, will not be ready in time for the Golden Horse.

The yard’s smart Var filly Schiffer is on track for the Gr 1 SA Fillies Sprint. She played up behind the pens in the Computaform Sprint and was also squeezed in the running. She is better than her unplaced run there and will be a threat if she bounces back. Drier won the SA Fillies Sprint in 2011 with the brilliant Val De Ra.

The yard’s four-year-old Jet Master filly Jet Aglow, who was a touch unlucky when tie third in the Gr 1 Laurie Jaffe Empress Club Stakes after being forced into going for home a bit early, will likely go for the Gr 2 Tibouchina Stakes over 1450 on June 7, a course and distance that will suit her well.

Captain On The Run will attempt to make it a hat-trick at Scottsville next Wednesday, but there are no big plans for him yet.

Neither are their big plans for the yard’s promising three-year-old sprinter Darkness, who has won three out of four.

Two to watch from the yard are the quick three-year-old Argonaut filly Clear Sailing, for whom they are looking for a suitable 1 000m event, and the promising three-year-old Act One gelding Crescendo, who should be just about ideally suited to the 1 300m trip of the Graduation Plate he is entered in at Greyville next Friday.

Meanwhile, Eventual Angel, who had to be scratched from the KRA Fillies Guineas last week after injuring herself in her box, will “be okay”, but is unlikely to run again in the Champions Season.[/expand]