“Barring a
catastrophe, we need to make it happen in some format.” That was the determined
response from Chris Haynes, executive director of Bloodstock South Africa when
quizzed on how the National Yearling Sale will cope with the new 100-people
gathering limit.
BSA
yesterday postponed its flagship sale by four weeks to May 20-22 but the new
date is provisional and is to be reviewed on April 16 in order to mirror the
government’s target date for the evaluation of Covid-19 and its measures to
combat the pandemic.
The sales
company has also put back the Cape Mare Sale and the KZN Yearling Sale by three
weeks – the new dates are June 11 and July 23-24. The Emperors Palace National
Two Year Old Sale will now be held on September 17-18 but the Emperors Palace
Ready To Run/November Two Year Old Sale remains on November 1.
Haynes said:
“On April 16 we should get more updates from the government on whether the
gathering limit increases or whether they leave it the same – and at that point
we will have to see if we can work around it with things like limiting people
into areas.”
Railtrip has paid the price of showing early potential and
from a merit rating high of 100 drops to an 88 on the poly at Hollywoodbets
Greyville today. Not that this makes any difference as she contests a set
weights Graduation Plate that has attracted only five other opponents.
Railtrip has been battling under big weights in handicap
races mostly against males of late so Gavin van Zyl will no doubt have targeted
this set-weights race as it comes as a relief as far as Railtrip’s burden is concerned.
With ‘only’ 56.5kg to shoulder Railtrip will feel as if she
is running loose and in deed comes out well on top of the best weighted column,
especially with the scratching of Electric Surge that in theory gives her a 3kg
advantage in that regard.
In spite of her big weights, Railtrip has still managed to
be consistent and this may be her the break for her third win. But she does
take on a couple that could make things difficult.
Duncan Howells has been enduring a particularly difficult
time as his stable battles a virus – not connected to Corona. The normally
prolific yard has not had a winner for some weeks but Howells has made a few
changes and commented on Monday that his horses are looking a lot better.
He saddles Special Blend who made a smart poly debut behind
course and distance specialist High Green last time out, coming from way back
only to fail by half-a-length. The blinkers come off and Craig Zackey stays
aboard.
Land Of Mystery looks safely held by both Railtrip and
Special Blend if recent form is anything to go on but the blinkers are replaced
by cheek pieces and a slight ‘tweak’ can often produce major results.
Michael Roberts and jockey Serino Moodley has struck as a combination
to follow and they team up with Ad Altisima in the Greyville Convention Centre
Handicap, one of the more difficult races to puzzle out.
Ad Altisima has smart form over course and distance and has
not been out of the money since being gelded. He was run out of it late in
Graduation company last start but although he has drawn a little wide, he
should make a bold showing. Dennis Bosch was again tempted into sending
Mutawaary over further last run but he seems more at home of this shorter trip
and he looks a lightly threat to the selection.
But the list of possible winners is a long one and includes
Kingston Rock, Captain Cobalt and High Voltage.
Rachel is something of a family affair in the sixth as she
will be ridden by Warren Kennedy, is trained by Barbara Kennedy and her brother
Wayne and is owned by their mother.
Rachel has come to hand nicely after a break and racing in
blinkers and has her peak run. She went close last time out and can go one
better. Her biggest danger could be recent maiden winner Brunilda who was a
facile winner last time out. Garth Puller commented that she had been unlucky
at her two previous outings and was not surprised by the ease of her win.
Sheik’s Storm is always game but does appear a length or two
better over an extra furlong while Valeriana may just have needed her last run
and can improve.
Gary Rich is a vastly under rated trainer and gets the most
out of his limited stable talent. Pina Colada has been full value for her two
wins to date and can break a string of runner-up berths in the seventh.
She does not have the best of draws but goes very well over
the trip and is consistent.
Regular pilot Billy Jacobson has been signed on as stable
rider to Louis Goosen so has been obliged to jump ship to partner Goosen’s mare
Fleek with Sherman Bown taking over on Pina Colada. The mare and Rich are due a
change of fortune. Of the balance, Popova’s last run is best ignored as she
pulled up lame and coughing. She had been showing signs of winning again prior
to that and from pole position should be much improved.
Due to the Corona virus outbreak and in line
with Government regulations, all race meetings around the country will take
place behind closed doors until further notice. The general public will not be
allowed access but all races will be shown live on Tellytrack, DSTV channel
239.
Hollywoodbets
Greyville Wednesday Tips and Race Previews by Andrew Harrison
Race 1
3 FLYING PETER 2 TREAD SWIFTLY 1 LIGHT THAT LOOSE 5 THE SNOW WAR Preview: FLYING PETER (3) made a promising debut. That run should bring him on nicely. TEAD SWIFTLY (2) caught the eye in a barrier trial behind the promising older filly Dancing Feather and is one to watch in the betting. The same goes for LIGHT THAT LOOSE (1). Andrew Harrison: 3-2-1-5).
Race 2
8 MACALLAN 9 TONIGHTSFIGHTNIGHT 11 TRANSONIC 4 TROMSO Preview: Open race. MACALLAN (8) has been costly to follow having been a beaten favourite at his last three starts but he can do better over this trip. TONIGHTSFIGHTNIGHT (9) was green on debut but was not far back. He is sure to come on from that effort. TRANSONIC (11) was touched off over course and distance last run. He has drawn wide again but must rate a strong chance. TROMSO (4) made a fair debut and is another that should come on with the experience. (Andrew Harrison: 8-9-11-4).
Race 3
1 SPANISH OASIS 5 HIGHLAND HEATHER 10 BLANCHETTA 8 LEADING LYRIC Preview: SPANISH OASIS (1) Has her third run after a break. She is seldom far back and has a big chance in this line-up. HIGHLAND HEATHER (5) has had one run back since a break. She is lightly raced and has shown ability. BLANCHETTA (10) was a well beaten second last run but meets a weak field here and has a chance of going one better. LEADING LYRIC (8) raced green in a fair debut and can finish in the money. (Andrew Harrison: 1-5-10-8).
Race 4
3 RAILTRIP 2 JOSEPH JAGGER 6 SPECIAL BLEND 5 ELECTRIC SURGE Preview: RAILTRIP (3) has been costly to follow but she may now be in the right race. She has been lumping big weights and is better off in this set weights contest. JOSEPH JAGGER (2) is unbeaten in both starts on the poly. Both were close finishes. SPECIAL BLEND (6) has consistent form in blinkers and was touched off last run. The stable is quiet at the moment but will turn eventually. ELECTRIC SURGE (5) is way better than her last run. She has a light weight and can finish in the money. (Andrew Harrison: 3-2-6-5).
Race 5
9 AD ALTISIMA 8 MUTAWAARY 6 KINGSTON ROCK 10 CAPTAIN COBALT Preview: AD ALTISIMA (9) has smart form over course and distance. He has drawn a little wide but should make a bold showing. MUTAWAARY (8) tried further last run but seems more at home of this shorter trip. KINGSTON ROCK (6) has consistent form to weaker but only has 50kg to should which should make him competitive. CAPTAIN COBALT (10) is always dangerous. He is better than his last run. (Andrew Harrison: 9-8-6-10).
Race 6
6 RACHEL 7 BRUNILDA 9 SHEIK’S STORM 3 VALERIANA Preview: RACHEL (6) has come to hand in blinkers and went close last time out. She can go one better. BRUNILDA (7) was a facile maiden winner last start. She had been a little unlucky at her two previous outings and has a strong chance of going in again. SHEIK’S STORM (9) is always game but does appear a length or two better over an extra furlong. VALERIANA (3) may just have needed her last run and can improve. (Andrew Harrison: 6-7-9-3).
Race 7
12 PINA COLADA 1 POPOVA 7 SPIFFY 5 KEEP ON DANCING Preview: PINA COLADA (12) does not have the best of draws but goes very well over the trip and is consistent. She is due a change of fortune. POPOVA (1) last run is best ignored as she pulled up lame and coughing. She had been showing signs of winning again prior to that and from pole position should be much improved. SPIFFY (7) showed up nicely in her first run back from a break. The cheek pieces go on. KEEP ON DANCING (5) was a comfortable maiden winner last outing. That form has stood up but she does have a big weight. (Andrew Harrison: 12-1-7-5).
Race 8
11 FADE TO BLACK 5 TILMEETH 4 BACKPACKER 9 TEICHMAN Preview: FADE TO BLACK (11) has drawn wide but has put in two promising recent efforts and looks the part. TILMEETH (5) makes his debut for his new stable. He has shown some fair Highveld form and at best should go close. BACKPACKER (4) was a well beaten second last run but took to the poly surface and should be competitive. TEICHMAN (9) was not too far back from a wide draw. He is lightly raced and can be dangerous. (Andrew Harrison: 11-5-4-9).
Do It Again will win the Vodacom Durban July this year if one historical pointer repeats itself.
There have been six horses who have won the big race twice, but the three previous dual winners to Do It Again all ended their sequence on a year ending in zero.
Pamphlet won it in 1918 and 1920, Milesia Pride won it in 1949 and 1950 and El Picha won it in 1999 and 2000.
Can Do It Again keep up this trend by winning it in 2018, 2019 and 2020 and thus become the first in history to win it three times?
El Picha was trained by five times SA champion trainer Geoff Woodruff.
His father-in-law, the late great trainer Terrance Millard had trained a number of good horses from Argentina, including July winners Tecla Bluff and Illustrador as well as the immortal Empress Club.
After his retirement in 1991 he continued his purchasing journeys to Argentina on behalf of Woodruff and his son Tony.
One day in the mid-1990s his shipping agent phoned him to tell him there was one space left in the jet stall he had paid for and would he like to fill it.
Millard immediately thought of a small black horse who had caught his eye but had ultimately failed to make it on to his shortlist. He managed to secure this horse, El Picha, for $15,000.
Woodruff described El Picha yesterday, “He was right up there with the best I have trained, although I would not say the best. He was easy as pie to train and one of my favourites. He was laid back and a friend to everybody and I think he knew that.”
The 1994-born gelding by Tough Critic won seven races in Cape Town, including the Grade 3 Peninsula Handicap over 1800m.
However, the key to his success could have been Woodruff’s move to train in Johannesburg.
Woodruff revealed to the Racegoer a few years ago that El Picha had a naturally low “blood count” but in his first three months on the Highveld his blood count improved “out of sight.” Horses at that altitude have to be worked harder in order to get fitter because the thinner air provides less oxygen and El Picha began to thrive. In his second start on the Highveld he finished fifth in the Grade 1 Champions Stakes, beaten five lengths by Fort Defiance, and he then travelled down to Durban. After running a three-quarter length third in the Greyville 1900 from a wide draw he was set to carry just 53kg in the July. Robbie Hill rode a peach of a race from a wide draw and he denied Classic Flag a July double by 0,75 lengths.
As a five-year-old El Picha won the Summer Cup, finished second in the Met, second in the Grade 2 Colorado King Stakes, second in the Grade 1 Champions Stakes at Turffontein and then easily won the Grade 3 Jubilee before defending his July crown under Anton Marcus with a hair’s breadth victory over Young Rake despite carrying top weight of 58kg. He went on to win a Grade 1 over 2000m at Clairwood. That was the last race he won but he did well enough to continue racing until the end of his seven-year-old season.
Woodruff said he then proved to be a “useless” showjumper and thus spent the rest of his life, until the age of 22, happily eating grass in a paddock at Randjesfontein together with his pony friend “Andy.”
Racing historian Jay August wrote about Milesia Pride in his informative facebook page Notable South African Thoroughbreds.
Milesia Pride, a chestnut who stood at about 16 hands, was bought in Ireland by Mr JT Amery of KZN for £1150. The 86-year-old Amery had harboured the desire to win the “July” for near fifty years but had managed just one third place in 1918 with a horse named Draughtsman and two unplaced efforts in 1916 and 1945. Milesia Pride arrived by boat in Cape Town and was later sent to the yard of Jim Morrison.
Imported unraced horses were only allowed to run in Top Division events in those days, so Milesia Pride, having to start his career as a two-year-old running against top older horses, finished unplaced in his first five starts. He then claimed a fourth place and then ran second in the Kings Cup. He then won a top division race to secure his July place. After two sharpeners he won the 1949 July comfortably under Tiger Wright carrying 49kg. He thus became the second youngest horse to win the July Handicap, at 39 months of age, the only younger one being two-year-old Nobleman in 1911.
Milesia Pride won the July narrowly in 1950 under Basil Lewis carrying 57kg. He was unlucky in 1951, finishing seventh carrying 62kg. He had one more attempt at the big race in 1953 and was later retired to stud.
He only produced one foal to race and was put back into training in Bloemfontein where he was to pass away of what racing writer Mordaunt Milner suspected might have been a “broken heart.”
Milesia Pride’s sire Montrose was the first horse to sire the winner of four “July’s” and the first to sire three individual winners
According to Jean Jaffee’s book, They Raced To Win, Pamphlet was imported by Mr A. Britton (the racing nom-de-plume of Albert Lavenstein) from Britain at the same time as Trocko, who won the Johannesburg Summer Handicap in 1916.
Pamphlet won that race in 1917 before going on two win his two Durban Julys.
Pamphlet was reportedly a huge horse who according to renowned industry an Alex Robertson would have done justice to a team of “vanners” (Gypsy Cob horse).
Although, he looked like a stallion while in training he proved “useless” at stud, the best of his progeny being the filly Pavlova who finished second in the 1929 Summer Handicap.
Brett Crawford will send between ten and 12 of his best
horses to Summerveld on Friday but Southern Cross winner Run Fox Run will not
be among them.
The Philippi trainer explained: “She has a lot of aches and pains so she is going to raid from here when she runs in the SA Fillies Sprint at Hollywoodbets Scottsville (May 30).”
The Ridgemont four-year-old was unbeaten in five starts
until finishing just over a length-fourth to Russet Air in the Cape Flying
Championship. She would have been a leading fancy for the Khaya Stables Diadem
Stakes three weeks later but for showing an abnormal blood count and having to
be scratched.
Candice Bass-Robinson will prep some of her stars at home –
including dual Bidvest Majorca winner Clouds Unfold and Gold Cup candidate
Mercurana – but the first of the remainder will depart at the end of the month
“and I will stagger them after that.”
Yesterday’s declarations for Saturday’s meeting at
Durbanville were not kind to the Crawford stable. Charles (Corne Orffer) and
Hudoo Magic (Anton Marcus) were the only ones declared for the 1 400m
Progress Plate and so this useful stepping stone was cancelled.
Two 1 250m juvenile races were hastily put together to
make an eight-race card, and eight trainers responded to the National Racing
Bureau’s call by putting ten horses in the first and 11 in the fillies
equivalent. Justin Snaith came up with seven runners and Mrs Bass-Robinson with
five.
MEDIA RELEASE SUBJECT: Racing and the coronavirus DATE: Monday 16 March 2020 RELEASED ON BEHALF OF: Phumelela Gaming and Leisure, Kenilworth Racing, Gold Circle, the Racing Association, the National Horseracing Authority and the Thoroughbred Horseracing Trust
In light of the guidelines and restrictions regarding public
gatherings as announced by President Cyril Ramaphosa on Sunday 15 March to
limit the spread of the coronavirus, Phumelela Gaming and Leisure, Kenilworth
Racing, Gold Circle, the Racing Association, the National Horseracing Authority
and The Thoroughbred Horseracing Trust have unanimously agreed to implement the
following Protocols and Procedures with immediate effect:
1. Racing to continue, but with no public attendance on course
From Tuesday 17 March, all race meetings will be closed to
the public until further notice. Consequently, the Jo’burg Prawn Festival at
Turffontein scheduled for 4 April and the Klawervlei raceday scheduled for
Durbanville on Saturday 28 March are cancelled, although the race meetings at
which they were scheduled will take place.
Only essential racing participants will be allowed access to
racecourses on race days. These include owners, trainers, jockeys, grooms,
officials and staff deemed necessary to host a race meeting safely and
successfully.
2. Access control to be strictly adhered to and facilities for participants to be limited
Access points to racecourses will be limited, as will
hospitality venues for participants allowed at racecourses on raceday in order
to strictly comply with the guidelines and restrictions imposed.
3. Sanitization measures to be put in place
Hand sanitizer, accompanied with the necessary signage and
instructions, will be made available to all racing participants allowed on
course.
The same sanitization measures will be applied at training
centres which will include all grooms. In addition, various restrictive
measures to be implemented as a cautionary, as well as potential lockdown
procedures, are being put into place in the eventuality of an outbreak at any
of the grooms’ accommodation.
4. All non-racing events cancelled
All non-racing events, such as conferences, hosted at the
various racecourses across the country will be cancelled with immediate effect.
5. Off Course Betting Outlets
In line with the published restrictions, attendance at all
Off-Course Betting Shops will be limited to under 100 persons as required. In
addition, sanitization measures will be put in place at all outlets.
Racing fans are encouraged to open online betting accounts
instead of placing bets at Off-Course Betting Shops.
6. Government Hotline
Attention is drawn to the government hotline – 0800 029 999
– which provides easy access to important information on the subject.
The Racing Operators reserve the right to deny access to any
of their venues to any person displaying Covid-19 symptoms.
The Vaal straight course has an eight race
meeting tomorrow and with three staying races, a handicap sprint and two
fillies and mares 1 600m handicaps making up the Pick 6 there should be a big
dividend.
In
the first race over 1400m the long-striding Duke Of Marmalade gelding Lord
Melbourne has been backed in but on the downside the in-form Marco van Rensburg
is out for up to six weeks with a fractured collarbone and this is one of the
first good rides he misses out on. He has been replaced by Mathew Thackeray.
Lord Melbourne lost a length on debut over 1200m and ran on well for third and
he should appreciate this step up in trip.
In the second race over 2 000m Ideal Wolff will
relish the step up in trip and is progressive.
Magic Duke caught the eye staying on well over 1
600m on debut and although out of a National Emblem Grade 3 Poinsettia Stakes
winner this Duke Of Marmalade gelding looks likely to enjoy the trip. Ideal Man
disappointed last time but was found to have a nasal discharge.
If he finds the form of his debut when second
over this trip to Imperial Ruby, he should be right there.
In the third race over 2 400m Heliocentric is n
interesting runner as she looks to be crying out for this trip having plugged
on over 1 600m last time.
She is by Visionaire out of Windrush mare Zodwa,
who won over 2 600m. Wishonaire placed second over this course and distance in
her penultimate start, albeit in a slow time.
Stratplan Dora has stayed on over 2 000m on the
Hollywoodbets Greyville poly before despite being a bit headstrong, so has a
chance here if settling.
Lightoftheunicorn was staying on over 2 000m
last time after a slow start although was still five lengths back at the line
and being by Gimmethegreenlight out of a Count Dubois mare who won from 1 000m
to 1 450m she is not a certainty to stay. Grey Flyer tried 2 600m last time and
did not have a smooth passage so can be given another chance.
Artscape has to be considered for the Pick 6 in
this uninspiring field.
in the next race over 2 400m Emerald Bay has
just failed in her last two starts over this trip and runs off the same mark as
last time, although she does have a wide draw.
The Sash moved up before finding no extra last
time and is now 2,5kg better off with Alicante for a two length beating.
Alicante is 2kg worse of with Emerald Bay despite beating her by only a head,
although she is a three-year-old so will be improving.
However, she comes out here three days after
finishing ten lengths back in the Listed Ormond Ferraris Oaks Trial on Saturday
which was run in testing going. Pink could be involved if using more
conservative tactics than last time when leading in her first try at this trip
and being beaten just four lengths by Alicante.
Ever Fair won her maiden easily over 2000m and
must carry topweight in her first attempt at this trip.
Glamarous Scandal is four points higher than her
mark when winning over this trip but could earn.
Wings Of Light could earn if reproducing her
best.
The Joceleyn Tree won her maiden easily over
this course and distance, albeit in a slow time.
In the next race, a Middle Stakes event over 2
800m, Fife will have to be bankered considering the difficulty of the rest of
the card.
She won a Middle Stakes event easily over
2400m last time and now carries only 52,5kg and has a 2,5kg claimer aboard too.
She is officially best in at the weights and has a classy pedigree being by
Silvano out of Grade 1 Empress Club Stakes winner Stratos. Master And Man looks
to be the back up for the risk averse.
In the sixth race over 1 000m Palace Assembly
might find this a touch sharp but will be finishing strongly and with the
recent rains the likely testing going could be in his favour.
Galactic Warrior will enjoy the step back down
to the minimum trip.
Ring Of Fire is ultra consistent over this trip
and is a must include.
Aqua Delta overraced over 1 200m in his first
run as a gelding and is interesting dropped in trip.
Greasepaint is nine-years-old but goes for a
hattrick under Piere Strydom.
Big Blue Marble is full of ability but tends to
ruin it by being headstrong so he is interesting returning from a layoff. Touch
Of Fate, Isphan, Battle Creek, Topmast and Mr Whatson are hard to ignore.
In the seventh race over 1 600m Ex’s ‘N Ohs has
a 2,5kg claimer up and will enjoy the step back to this trip.
Circle Of Latitude has some class and will enjoy
the step back down in trip. Elusive Force won easily from the front in the
maidens last time and starts off
handicapping off a reasonable 82 merit rating.
Soul Of Wit has been right there in her last two
starts including with the saddle slipping last time.
Afrostar has come down to a competitive merit
rating. Loaralei is the favourite and represents the lethal Peter/Kennedy
combination.
In the last race over 1 600m Fly North won going
away over 1 400m last time so can overcome a four point raise if enjoying this
trip.
Charlie’s Jet overraced over 2 000m last time
and is interesting dropped in trip. Tigermil was plugging on over 1 200 last
time and might be looking for this trip. Westwing Belter has been disappointing
but has plummeted down the merit ratings and can start threatening a win.
Paul Reeves is to send a team of horses to Durban for the
first time – and Skidoo will be among them after making pretty much all the
running under Liam Tarentaal to record his third success off the reel in the
Betting World Handicap at Durbanville on Saturday.
Reeves, who rode nearly 300 winners and started training in
2009, said: “I went to Durban with Sea Cat early in my training career but I
haven’t been since. However I am taking ten horses in a week’s time. They will
include some juveniles that we think a lot of and nice speed horses like
Pippielangkous and Photocopy as well as Skidoo who could be a poly candidate.
Basically I am looking for more options as there is so little racing for them
in Cape Town at the moment.”
Brett Crawford is a deliberately slow starter with his
two-year-olds and Remus, who made all under Greg Cheyne in the opener, was only
the fourth of his current 50 at Philippi to run and the first to win. “I like
to give them a bit of time,” explained the trainer who had drawn an
uncharacteristic blank at the previous three Cape Town meetings. He went some
way towards making up for this when the Corne Orffer-ridden Indi Anna sprang a
12-1 surprise in the TAB Telebet Handicap.
The second juvenile race was also Greg Cheyne-ridden with
19-4 newcomer Zarina proving too strong for the favourite Soft Day. Both first
and second carried Marsh Shirtliff’s distinctive colours but were from
different stables; he backed the favourite but covered the winner.
Asked if the filly’s win was a surprise to her, Candice
Bass-Robinson said: “Ability-wise no but she worked poorly when Greg rode her
on Thursday. I took her blood and scoped her but nothing showed up.”
Keagan de Melo is enjoying a tremendous season – he is third
on the Western Cape log as well as one the national one -and he followed up
success on the Dean Kannemeyer-trained Meet At The George (named after a pub in
Durban) with a comfortable success on Eva Eileen in the Racing Association
Handicap.
De Melo had ridden the Paddy Kruyer-trained 8-1 shot on her
previous three starts but he only got the mount after M.J. Byleveld was unable
to make the weight.
He said: “I was very fortunate to get back on her. I had
been waiting for another filly in the race but she ended up being scratched.”
De Melo’s enterprising riding is beginning to change the
accepted wisdom of riding Durbanville. Before he came along few jockeys were
bold enough to attempt to challenge on the inside for fear of the gap being
slammed shut in their faces but he often finds a way through on the rails –
Meet At The George was a typical example – and Anthony Andrews did the same on
10-1 shot Six Degrees in the Interbet.co.za Handicap.
That winner is going to Mauritius after being purchased by
fish magnate Bahim Taher in what Glen Kotzen described as “a risk buy.” The
Woodhill trainer explained: “The horse wouldn’t pass any vetting. He had a
problem with his breathing and we had to cut a growth from the back of his
throat.”
Radiant Love got up close home under Orffer in the last and Mike Robinson reckoned the decision to geld the horse earlier in the season had paid the expected dividend. “I hadn’t wanted to geld him as he wasn’t really coltish but he was haemoconcentrating badly.”
Dual Vodacom Durban July hero Do It Again has made an
amazing recovery from the ulcers that were believed to be the cause of his
disappointing performances in the L’Ormarins Queen’s Plate and the Sun Met.
“It took a month but we have scoped him again and he is now
100% clear,” said Justin Snaith at Durbanville on Saturday, getting out his
phone to illustrate his point with a series of pictures.
The first, taken by the trainer’s vets using a camera
inserted into the horse’s stomach, was real x-rated material showing a mass of
ulcers – appearing as white spots with many of them having blood coming out of
them. The second was the same picture taken the same way a month later with not
a white spot to be seen.
The third picture was a video of Do It Again being led away
down a track at Summerveld, immediately after coming off the float from Cape
Town. He was bucking, and kicking out with his hind legs, in obvious delight
and seemingly in a picture of health.
“We took him to Durban early this time so that he could get
his stressing over with,” said Snaith who is at this stage treading warily with
the horse’s programme – “I haven’t yet decided where and when he will run
because I want to see how he gets on before I decide anything.”
But a crack at a record-breaking third July is high on the
wish list: “If all goes well with him Do It Again, Bunker Hunt and Belgarion
(Peninsula Handicap) will give us a very strong hand in the July – and I need a
strong Durban season to make up for the summer in Cape Town.”
The highest rated race at the Hollywoodbets Greyville
polytrack meeting yesterday was the seventh, a MR 98 Handicap over 1 400m, and
the useful Padre Pio clinched a double on the day for the Dennis Bosch and
Craig Zackey combination.
The three-year-old Vercingetorix gelding has always
been well regarded and after a disappointing Cape Town campaign got back on
track here when showing a fine turn of foot from near the back and winning
easing up by 1,30 lengths from Georgina Rose and the favourite Mount Anderson.
The first race, a qualified Maiden over 1900m, saw Ashton Arries producing the Alyson Wright-trained three-year-old Wylie Hall gelding Bhakka from midfield with a strong run to beat the 25-1 longshot Command Respect by 1,30 lengths. The widely drawn Belshazzar ran on from the back for third and is one to watch out for when better drawn in a similar event.
Highveld trainer Weiho Marwing targeted the second
race, a Maiden over 2 000m, a few weeks ago for his three-year-old Flower Alley
filly Adorable Alley.
Muzi Yeni said Marwing had told him three weeks ago at
track at Turffontein she would “definitely win”.
She duly obliged to give Yeni his first win after his
long layoff.
The pace was good and Yeni was able to slot in easily
before going on to convert favoritism by 3,80 lengths from Alabama Slide with
Brave Lass a further 2,70 lengths back in third.
The third race over 2 000m was run at a slow pace which allowed Warren Kennedy to get up from a handy position on the widely drawn Gavin van Zyl-trained Oratorio filly Oratorina.
The favourite Green Ice jumped from pole and traveled
well but could not make up the leeway off that slow pace and finished unplaced.
The low drawn jockeys didn’t learn from the previous
race and allowed Craig Zackey on the outside drawn Joy Maisha to claim the lead
without doing any work in the fourth race over 2 000m.
The Argentinian-bred Dennis Bosch-trained filly built
up a sizeable lead steadily and held on by 1,30 lengths from the favourite What
A Thrill.
The handy horses came out trumps in the fifth over 2
000m too and it was Raymond Danielson on the MJ Odendaal-trained Querari
gelding Wildlife Safari who held on from the favourite Favour and High Green.
In the sixth over 1 000m the Louis Goosen-trained Main
Aim mare Yaas, a 20-1 shot, was given a good ride by Billy Jacobson.
He managed to slot in behind the leader from a draw of
eight and extract the necessary extra to prevail in a blanket finish.
In the last race over 1 600m Gareth Wright wisely went
handy from pole position on the Andre Nel-trained Run To Denmark and the Black
Minnaloushe gelding ran on well to beat Hexatonic by 1,10 lengths with Dutch
Alley next best.
By David Thiselton
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