The Yvette Bremner-trained stalwart National Park
has not been seen out this season, but is full of well-being and might well be
seen in KZN again this year for the SA Champions Season.
He has had one or two slight niggles but nothing
serious.
Bremner said, “He is so naughty and has
been causing his own little injuries. If I could geld him again, I would! We
want to race him for a long time so I am not rushing him back, but he could
well be seen in Durban again this year, he will be ready in time for that
season.”
The Gimmethegreenlight gelding was last seen
finishing a three-quarter length second to Twist Of Fate in the Grade 2 KRA
Guineas at Greyville on the opening night of the SA Champions Season on May 3
last year.
His is the only horse to have ever beaten
Hawwaam in Johannesburg and achieved that when winning the Grade 2 Gauteng
Guineas by 2,70 lengths at Turffontein last February.
He also won the Grade 3 Graham Beck Stakes over
1400m at Turffontein last season but was beaten 7,40 lengths and 7,25 lengths
respectively by Hawwaam in the Dingaans over 1600m and the Grade 1 SA Classic
over 1800m.
His most obvious big race targets in KZN would
be the Grade 2 IOS Drill Hall Stakes over 1400m and the Grade 1 Rising Sun Gold
Challenge over 1600m.
The Dennis Drier-trained Wealthy is in fine shape
ahead of his bid to retain his Listed Michael Roberts Handicap crown at
Scottsville on Sunday.
Wealthy has always managed to fly under the
radar and won this race last year at whopping odds of 22/1. The bay gelding is
now a seven-year-old but is a typically evergreen son of Silvano and after
three good comeback runs this season the bookmakers might have been more wary.
However, once again he is a long shot and is quoted at 16,67/1 by
Hollywoodbets.
So far this season Wealthy has run third in the
Listed Michaelmas Handicap over 1900m at Greyville, fourth in a handicap over
2000m at Greyville and a close second in the KZN Summer Challenge 2000 final at
Scottsville.
His merit rating has come down one point this
season from 99 to 98 and he carries a nice galloping weight of 54,5kg. He also
has a good draw of five in the 14 horse field.
Last year off an 85 merit rating Wealthy was 1kg
under sufferance and won by 0,75 lengths from Dark Moon Rising, who carried
60kg. He faces the latter horse on identical terms. Dark Moon Rising is
returning from a layoff, yet he is quoted at 10/1.
Wealthy is effectively only one point higher in
the merit ratings for this year’s race compared to last year as the 1kg he was
under sufferance and the across the board ten point raise at the beginning of
the season must be taken into account.
Dennis Drier’s assistant trainer Stuart Ferrie
said, “He is very well. His last three starts have been very good and he’s
honest. He’s well drawn not that it makes that much difference because he comes
from off them anyway.”
The race favourite is the Brett Crawford-trained
G G’s Dynasty, who has won four of his last six starts from 1400m to 1600m. His
dam by Right Approach won twice over 1200m and 1400m respectively, so there is
a slight question mark over the trip, although the Vodacom Durban July-winning
Dynasty’s influence will help.
The five-year-old Silvano gelding Born To
Perform is out of July winner Dancer’s Daughter, so this lightly five-time
winner from just nine starts should stay the trip.
The value in the race could be the 14.29/1 shot
Marchingontogether as he has won all four of his starts around the turn at
Scottsville. Bernard Fayd’Herbe will be riding him as Gavin van Zyl’s stable
jockey Warren Kennedy is aboard Michaelmas winner Blackball.
Other eyecatching contenders are Christmas
Handicap winner The Dazzler and the talented Tristful.
However, none of the runners can be discounted and it should be a thriller.
Paul Lafferty’s Summerveld yard are going all out to hang on to
their lead in the Hollywoodbets Sizzling Summer Challenge.
Every race in KZN from the beginning of December until the end
of February counts towards the competition. The points gathered for each race,
whether a Grade 1 or a maiden, is dependent on the number of horses in the
field and the finishing position. If there are ten runners in a race the winner
will get ten points, the runner up nine points and so on all the way down to
the tenth placed finisher who will get one point. If there are seven runners in
the race then the winner gets seven points, the runner up six etc. The points
are awarded to the relevant trainer, jockey and horse.
At the end of the competition the top six trainers, jockeys and
horses will split respective prize money of R250,000 apiece.
The top trainer, jockey and horse will each receive R100,000.
Lafferty led the trainers table after yesterday’s Scottsville
meeting with 447 points. Breathing down his neck were Garth Puller and Alyson
Wright on 429 and 414 points respectively. Dean Kannemeyer, Duncan Howells and
Dennis Drier were next best on 337, 324.5 and 314 respectively.
Lafferty’s assistant trainer Roy Waugh revealed that a virus
which had plagued the yard for a long time appeared to have been conquered and
the horses were currently performing well.
He said, “It was the most insidious virus, I have never see
anything like it, and it hit us for about a year. They think it is a herpes
virus, but they are not sure. The horses become anaemic overnight and it was
very hard to get rid of. We ended up spraying virus-cides everyday, then we
started vaccinating with rhinopneumonitis every three to four months. The
symptoms were subtle and the horses didn’t look bad or train bad but they would
then run twenty lengths below their form. If you could, the right thing to do
was to just stop racing. This would allow them to recover and get their
immunity back. If you brought them back too quickly they would get it again. So
we haven’t seen the virus since October but we have had to build the horses up
again and get them fit.”
The yard is thus on an upward curve and, for Hollywoodbets
Sizzling Summer Competition purposes, the horses are coming well at the right
time.
The yard had a winner yesterday but so did Puller and the pair
joined Kannemeyer on the most winners during the competition, seven.
Dennis Drier would likely have started favourite for the
competition but it falls at the wrong time as he has a string down in Cape
Town. Drier’s assistant trainer Stuart Ferrie said the yard welcomed any points
gathered for the competition but they were taking things as they came and not
doing anything out of the norm to try and win it.
Anton Marcus and Warren Kennedy, amazingly enough, were locked
together at the top of the jockeys table after yesterday’s meeting on a tally
of 657 points apiece. Keagan de Melo is hot on their heels on 653 points.
Marcus increased his lead early in the meeting when winning the
first on Heroic Victory, the first leg of a double on the day for Gareth van
Zyl. Warren Kennedy fought back by winning the second on the Gavin van
Zyl-trained Living Waters but Marcus then won the third on the Glen
Kotzen-trained Imperial Rage. However, Kennedy rode in all eight races while
Marcus only rode in four and this allowed the former to close the gap.
The Lafferty-trained Bint El Malak won for the second time third
time in four runs during the challenge yesterday and she leads the horse table
on 55 points, 15 clear of her stablemate Explosive Beauty. The Darryl
Moore-trained Forest Jump rose to third place on 38 points courtesy of her
runner up finish in the first race.
Meanwhile, the Lafferty yard’s three best horses, Dark Moon
Rising, Sniper Shot and Share Holder, are gearing up for the SA Champions
Season.
Dark Moon Rising carries topweight of 62,5kg in Sunday’s LIsted
Michael Roberts Handicap over 1750m at Scottsville.
He is returning from a three month layoff.
Waugh said, “He is doing alright. He is carrying a lot of
weight and the distance is a bit short of his best but he will run a decent
race, he will be there or thereabouts. It’s his comeback run but he runs well
fresh.”
Share Holder is close to full recovery from a nasty foot injury.
After winning his debut back in February he managed to pull his
“whole quarter off.”
He is still running with bar shoes and Waugh reckoned that only
with his next shoeing will the foot have fully grown back.
He finished unplaced yesterday over 1200m in a Novice Plate.
However, the strapping Australian-bred colt by Zoffany should be right by the time of SA Champions season features like the Grade 2 Daisy Guineas.
Sniper Shot has been doing well and is due to make his comeback in March.
The
National Horseracing Authority is proud to announce the appointment of Susan
Rowett as its new Chairperson. Rowett is the first lady Chairperson to be
appointed in the 138 years history of The National Horseracing Authority of
Southern Africa (previously known as The Jockey Club of Southern Africa).
Rowett holds a Master of Jurisprudence degree and a Master of
Management degree and is a Director of a multinational packaging company.
Rowett is also a Life Member of The National Horseracing Authority and, as a
thoroughbred racehorse breeder and owner, Rowett has been actively involved in
the horseracing industry in South Africa for forty years.
Rowett has served as Chairperson on various
Boards within the horseracing industry and previously served as a National
Board Director from November 2012 until April 2016 when the constitution of the
NHA was amended, at a Special General Meeting, in order to restructure the
National Board.
The NHA and its National Board hereby wishes to
thank the previous Chairman, Ken Truter, for successfully leading the
organisation through some turbulent times over his three year tenure as
Chairman. Truter will continue to serve as a National Board Director.
The handicappers made short work of Whizz Of Odds rise to
fortune as the diminutive filly proved no match for Candy Galore at
Hollywoodbets Scottsville yesterday. There was six lengths between the pair
when last they met over course and distance and Gavin van Zyl’s filly was
lumped with a seven-pound penalty for that win. The 6kg difference was reduced
to 1.5kg yesterday and Candy Galore gave young Gareth van Zyl his second winner
of the afternoon after saddling Heroic Deed to a comfortable win in the card
opener.
Apprentice Denis Schwarz, out of his time next week and
Gauteng-based, is becoming a regular in KZN and his services will be in high
demand if he continues to ride as he did yesterday, setting Candy Galore alight
when it mattered and leaving Whizz Of Odds battling to hold off third-placed Be
Happy.
In retrospect Whizz Of Odds had a lot against her and was
beaten by an older filly that had looked to be going places earlier in her
career.
Anton Marcus’s bid for five consecutive victories came up
short in the fourth where favourite Paybackthemoney could only manage third.
Marcus had two wins from two rides at Kenilworth on Saturday and had two
winners from two under his belt going into the fourth.
Thabiso Gumede is one of the most laid-back apprentices in
the Jockey Academy but has plenty of ability as he showed when getting Twice
Golden to quicken from last to master Wildlife Safari and Paybackthemoney.
Twice Golden was aided by a postage stamp on his back, the two older runners
giving him 8.5kg and 12kg respectively.
Marcus kicked off the meeting with an easy victory on Heroic
Deed in the first with favourite Forest Jump relegated to second once again
with the luckless Khanya Sakayi winless for nearly six months after a stellar
start to his career.
It was the turn of Gavin van Zyl and Warren Kennedy in the
second as Living Waters built on his promising debut to run out a comfortable
winner of the second even though Black Fox under Schwarz and Fade To Black
under Keagan de Melo pressed hard at one stage.
Marcus earned every cent of his riding fee on favourite
Imperial Rage as he got Glen Kotzen’s runner home in a driving finish.
Given a pedestrian early pace, Marcus took the initiative
and went clear before the field turned for home. It proved an inspired move but
the three-times champion jockey was forced to pump away for 800m to hold off
Rock With Me and Cassius Colt.
Enjoy The View finished tailed off behind Spiritofthegroove with heat fatigue in his last start at Turffontein but his form before that had been patchy hence his 22-1 starting price. Serino Moodley made no mistakes on Michael Roberts’s charge yesterday as he pounced at just the right time to hold off the mare Made In Hollywood and favourite Wave.
Do It Again’s participation in the Sun Met on Saturday
fortnight hangs in the balance after the horse’s L’Ormarins Queen’s Plate run
was found to have taken more out of him than normal – and apparently this was
due to a delay after the race as much as to the 22 minute hold-up at the start.
Justin Snaith said yesterday: “We are doing a lot of things
to try and get him ready and we are going to see what his wellbeing is like
closer to the race. Much will depend on the next week or so.
“The ten minute wait after the race was something the horses
didn’t need and there seemed to be confusion between the course vet and the
stipes. We were waiting for the all-clear from the stipes and every time the
vet asked if he could let the horses go there was no answer forthcoming. The
horses were tired and dehydrated and we wanted to get a hosepipe on them.
“What happened makes my job of getting Do It Again ready for
the Met that little bit harder and it just might prove to have been the turning
point in whether he runs or not.”
Senior stipe Ernie Rodrigues, who was dealing with another
matter while the course vet was waiting for a decision, yesterday confirmed
that there was a delay in giving the go-ahead for the horses to leave the
parade ring post-race.
In contrast Adam Marcus was delighted with the way the
winner Vardy came out of the race and said: “You expect a horse to take a day
or two to recover after winning a race like that but Vardy was jumping out of
his skin and I couldn’t be happier with him.
“Twist Of Fate (fourth) also came through it exceptionally
well and Aldo Domeyer feels he will be better suited to the 2 000m of the
Met.”
The trainer’s uncle kept punters happy by winning on his
only ride of the day, the superbly bred newcomer Our Prized Jewel who started
9-10 favourite for the 1 200m maiden. The Ridgemont-Highlands homebred is
a half-sister to Cape Fillies Guineas winner Silver Mountain and to Cloth Of
Cloud who won the SA Nursery.
The 9-10 shot led two furlongs out and won convincingly.
“She hadn’t been tuned up at home and she might take another run or two to
learn what it is all about,” said Anton Marcus. “But she is a nice filly, she
has ability and I like her.”
Also odds-on was Cape Guineas runner-up Viva Rio who put up
a good performance under top weight in the Tabonline.co.za Progress Plate with
Morne Winnaar’s mount scoring by two and a quarter lengths.
“This should have been a 1 800m race going towards the Cape Derby (Feb 22) but they changed the programme and put it back to a mile, “said Glen Kotzen.” Viva Rio is a proper horse and the Derby is where he is heading.”
The eight race
meeting at the Vaal tomorrow provides a few good looking opportunities for
punters.
The first race
over 1000m should be won by the Paul Peter-trained Judpot colt War Room,
despite him having to give 3kg to the rest of the field. He showed a lot of
pace on debut to beat Zimbala by 0,75 lengths over this trip and the rest of
the field were 6,25 lengths back. The form of the race has worked out well. A
Promise To Dream looks the best of the others to have run and the first-timer
who makes most appeal is Karnallie, a gelding by Futura out of a three-time
winner over 2000m.
The second might
provide Paul Peter with a quick double, although the first-timer Brooklyn
Bridge is preferred. Peter’s two-year-old filly Miracle Flight is unbeaten in
two starts. She has a lot of pace and stays on so might hold on over the
minimum trip despite having to give the rest of the field 5kg. However, there
could well be an upset as it is not easy for an early two-year-old to give that
amount of weight away. Brooklyn Bridge is by promising new sire Global View.
The latter has had two runners and both won on debut, so he will be attempting
here to equal Western Winter’s feat of having three debut winners with his
first three runners. Brooklyn Bridge is out of full sister to Listed-winning
Australian-bred sprinter Uber Rock so should have speed and is tipped to upset
Miracle Flight. Elusive Woman could give some cheek being 2kg better off with
Miracle Flight for a 3,75 length beating.
In the third race
over 1200m Viper Jet comes off a far from disgraced fifth place finish in the
Listed Secretariat Stakes over 1400m. He has some zip and will likely enjoy the
step down in trip so is going to be hard to beat in this maiden. However, there
will be very little between him and Solarize. The latter has run two good races
over 1200m and the horse who beat him by 1,10 lengths last time, Valetorio,
finished fifth in the Grade 3 Tony Ruffel Stakes over 1400m next time out.
In the fourth race
over 1200m Allez Le Bleu makes most appeal having finished close to Lady Of
Steel over this course and distance in her penultimate start, but does have a
low draw which might be problematic. Little Rain ran on strongly last time over
1160m at Turffontein and just failed so can go close. Roman Royalty was slowly
away in that race after being backed from 10/1 into 33/10 on debut and she ran
on well before tiring in the latter stages to be beaten 1,90 lengths into
third. She will have come on from the run and should be right there. Leading
Fast went close over 1160m last time and ran an identical time to Little Rain
on the same day. She is by Silvano so should be improving. Fire Flower showed
good pace on debut in that race and with improvement will be right there too.
Bid Catcher was backed on debut and after a slow start stayed on for a
reasonable 3,75 length sixth to Masaaqaat, so she is another who could
earn.
The fifth race
over 1200m should go to Eden Roc, who is a Grade 1 winner over this trip and is
well in at the weights. Carbon Atom and Fitzwilliam are selected to follow him
home.
In the sixth over
1200m Mr Flood impressed in his comeback from a year’s layoff last time when
winning the Grade 3 Lebelo Sprint. He needed that run and can follow up here.
Van Halen is a Grade 1 winner over this trip and has been in fine, consistent
form so is the main danger. Schippers is the best in at the weights and will
relish the step back down in trip and hopefully her low draw will not be a
problem. Romi’s Boy could be in the shake up to, being 1kg better off with Mr
Flood for a 1,25 length beating. Rebel’s Champ is a must include as he has
speed and a lot of courage and comes off a narrow loss over this trip. Matador
Man is an interesting runner as he has class and should be flying home after
his usual slow start.
In the seventh
over 1500m Three Peaks won cosily over 1400m in the maidens and off an opening
handicap mark of 81 she could follow up. Oh Mercy Me ran on strongly over 1600m
last time after being dropped out from a wide draw and should be closer to the
pace down the straight here. Gavon Lerena stays aboard and she will go close.
Seven Sea has to be included too after running a good race in the Three
Troikas.
In the last race
Evening Bell ran a disappointingly flat race over 1600m last time but she has
been lowered two points and will relish the step up to 2000m here. Hawthorn
didn’t take to blinkers last time and they are off so she will be a threat. It
is an open race and Moroccan Flame, Jive
Express, Plum Field, Jacko Boy, Sammi Moosa, Cranberry Crush and Rabia The
Rebel also warrant consideration.
It’s never easy for a horse to step into a 92 MR Handicap
straight out of the maidens and win – but when they do, it is worth sitting up
and taking note.
Whizz Of Odds has given out all the signals that she is a filly out of the top drawer, a view that can be confirmed at Hollywoodbets Scottsville today.
Gavin van Zyl acted pleasantly surprised when Whizz Of Odds
trotted up in a strong field over the same course and distance last time out
but heaped praise on the filly. “I was happy to be in the first three. That
would have been a good run against seven-time winners like Effortless Reward. I
must be honest, I was pretty impressed with that.”
Warren Kennedy also sang the filly’s praises and was talking
about the SA Fillies Sprint come Champions Season.
The drop in class today and the strength of her win has
resulted in a corresponding hike in the weights and the 59kg on her back will prove
a searching test but another victory will set her up nicely for the season.
At the other end of the scale and draw is Captain Of Colour.
Johan Janse van Vuuren’s charge took time to shed her maiden but Van Vuuren was
not shy to take on males. She is a filly with plenty of substance and was
touched off by the promising High Voltage at her penultimate start. All her
local outings were on the Hollywoodbets Greyville poly but stepping out on the
Scottsville turf for the first time she ran out a comfortable winner beating
Flaming Lass who has since franked that form.
Apprentice Thabiso Gumede takes 4kg off her back so she will be in receipt of 9.5kg from Whizz Of Odds which is a lot of pudding. The latter is at 5-2 while Captain Of Colour is easy to back at 12-1.
Van Zyl also saddles Wave (15-10) in a Novice Plate and if the
gelding can live up to the promise that he showed last season he should prove
difficult to peg back.
He made a smart seasonal debut when beaten by the older
Goliath Heron last time out and although the blinkers come off he should strip
fitter now.
Eden Roc and African Warrior, two of the feature winners
that he was up against last season, have not exactly covered themselves in
glory this term which is something of a worry as far as Wave’s form goes but
they have been contesting features whereas Van Zyl has taken a more cautious route.
Still a maiden, High Voltage (10-1) finished ahead of Wave
in the Godolphin Barb Stakes last season but his form from there on was patchy.
He stepped out as a gelding back in November and had a battle royale with the
filly Captain Of Colour to shed his maiden. But his rider had his stick knocked
out of his hand and the winning margin could have been greater. He raced in
some top company last season and the form of his maiden win has been franked.
Share Holder (11-2) and Cavalieri (10-1) are others to consider.
Staying races are often tricky to call given the quality of
the runners in KZN but Paybackthemoney (16-10) was narrowly beaten by the much
improved stable companion Merlin From Berlin last run and should be good enough
to go one better in the fourth. Greek Sword (5-1) ran a good race first up in
handicap company last time out beaten by Victorious Man and Clouds Of Witness.
He has come well since arriving in KZN from the Cape and this trip should suit.
Of the balance, Impact Zone (12-1) was only a length behind Paybackthemoney
when last they met and has been coming to hand again while MJ Odendaal has
given notice that his yard is finding form with Quick Star winning the last on
Sunday. He saddles Wildlife Safari (20-1) who has been a little disappointing
at his last two but this trip will suit and the tongue-tie goes on. Top of the
Computaform speed ratings is nine-year-old Crime Victim (12-1), probably the
only horse still racing that shed his maiden at Clairwood Park.
With a yard seemingly over-flowing with quality bloodstock,
Paul Peter is the envy of many a battling colleague. That said, Peter has
worked his way up the ranks and now must look further afield for opportunities
for his charges on a crowded Highveld programme that does not have a synthetic
track.
Peter’s runners are now becoming regulars on KZN tracks but
he only has a single participant on the poly at Hollywoodbets Greyville on
Sunday.
There are more than just a few Manchester United supporters
in the province and Theatre Of Dreams, trained by one of the country’s best,
ridden by one of the country’s best in Anton Marcus, poses something of a
conundrum for United, and in deed, Theatre Of Dreams supporters.
Log-leading jockey Warren Kennedy is Peter’s go-to man on
the Highveld where the combination has tremendous success but in KZN, Kennedy
is closely aligned with the Gavin van Zyl yard.
“Trainer’s are the ones that usually fire jockeys but I’m
worried that Warren will fire me,” quipped Van Zyl after they had teamed up for
another winner at Hollywoodbets Scottsville recently.
Kennedy was aboard Theatre Of Dreams when well supported in
her recent Vaal start but switches to the Van Zyl-trained Al Jazeera.
Kennedy has ridden the filly in all of her last five starts
and knows her well. Not the easiest, she was tried in pacifiers for a spell and
her form held good, but ear-muffs may have been the right piece of equipment as
she finished a close-up second to the hot favourite Themba on the Greyville
turf last time out from a difficult draw.
Al Jazeera has again pulled a tricky gate at 12 while
Theatre Of Dreams jumps from barrier three which could on summation be the
difference between the two and hopefully she fares better than the mis-firing
Red Devils.
This pair may dominate but Chase Maujean, a rare visitor to
KZN these days, is down to ride for Johan Janse van Vuuren so Maldives could prove
a threat and he also partners Van Vuuren’s runner Gentleman’s Wager in the
seventh, his only two rides on the card.
The key to most exotics is finding a reliable banker, two or
more if you can, in order to cut down on expenses.
Two stand out on Sunday in the form of Jackson Wells in the
fourth and Captive Gold two races later, in the sixth.
Jackson Wells takes to the poly for the first time but has
put in two cracking performance since ‘winning’ her barrier trial.
Mark Dixon legs up Keagan de Melo, a regular for the Dixon
yard, who partnered the filly on debut. Dixon has tossed a bone to Marcus who
partners Blanchetta for the stable, the filly finishing a distant fourth when stretched
to a mile last time out.
Should Jackson Wells fail to run up to expectations, it may
be prudent to back up with as many as finances one can afford as the balance of
the field look evenly matched.
A safer option could be Captive Gold. Like Jackson Wells, she makes her poly debut but Duncan Howells has brought her along to where she should be at boiling point come Sunday. Apprentice Thabiso Gumede has been replaced in the saddle by Marcus and given the quality of the opposition there should not be any mistakes.
Hawwaam can
bridge a nine-year gap for Mike de Kock in the R1.5 million L’Ormarins Queen’s
Plate at Kenilworth tomorrow.
It was in
2011 that he won South Africa’s premier mile race with Mother Russia, the first
– as well as the most recent – of her sex to land the Queen’s Plate since the
great Empress Club 18 years earlier. Appropriately Anton Marcus, who rode them
both, is also on Hawwaam as he bids for his own eighth success.
Hawwaam has
looked something special ever since he made a winning debut in that historic
no-whip race at Turffontein in November 2018 and he has been beaten only once
in eight races since.
His suspect
temperament has been well documented and is likely to be tested to the limit by
all the razzmatazz on Sun Met day but tomorrow is much quieter occasion. He
came through an even quieter one in the Premier Trophy, hardly turning a hair
despite provocation in the form of a long delay at the start. “We are
constantly working with him and Malan does a lot too,” says his trainer who
believes that age and racing experience are also helping to settle the
four-year-old. A negative is that four of the last six Queen’s Plate favourites
have been beaten.
Second
string Soqrat has had a tougher build-up than Hawwaam but he is a good horse
and on last season’s Cape Guineas form he holds Twist Of Fate and One World who
never runs a bad race and should not be far away.
Do It Again,
one of a number treated like a boxer’s punch bag in the WSB Green Point, has
been coughing since and Justin Snaith will have to have worked a near-miracle
if the dual July winner is also to make it two in this race.
Rainbow
Bridge had a rough time of it as well, in his case just over a furlong out, and
his jockey had to stop riding. He is a tough customer, though, and he should
not be far away despite a suspicion that he is better over a bit further.
However the
biggest threat may come from Vardy despite his being worse off with his Green
Point victims. His running that day in his first race of the season, and in his
first since a knee-chip operation, was a revelation. True, he came close to
losing it by hanging in – as he had done last season – but it was still quite
some performance. Adam Marcus is convinced he has come on a fair bit since and
Craig Zackey’s mount appears to be still improving. His Achilles heel is his
trouble keeping straight under pressure.
Snaith runs
three in his bid to win the Cartier Paddock Stakes for the fourth successive
season, and the sixth time in all, but 15-10 favourite Front And Centre looks
too talented.
De Kock has
won the race four times, most recently with Mother Russia ten years ago, and
his Summer Cup fourth Queen Supreme is 22-10 second favourite. The Irish-bred
receives a kilo Northern Hemisphere allowance for being six months wrong but
you would have to wonder if this is enough when the local three-year-olds
receive 5.5kg.
A big danger
at a decent price (7-1) could be Snapscan who showed signs of significant
improvement when winning the Victress over this trip three weeks ago.
Champion
sprinter Kasimir reappears in the Design Indaba Pinnacle but it could in the
long term be more profitable to study this race rather than bet on it. However
stable companion Belgarion will give you a run for your money in the Glorious
Goodwood Peninsula Handicap.
Today Celtic Sea may thwart Candice Bass-Robinson’s bid to win the Cartier Sceptre Stakes for the fourth year on the trot. The Sean Tarry filly was fast enough to win the SA Fillies Sprint at Scottsville.
By Michael Clower
Image: Richard Fourie gallops DO IT AGAIN (left) with Crown Towers at Kenilworth in preparation for the L’Ormarins Queen’s Plate at Kenilworth tomorrow. (Liesl King)
Racing Tools
Calendar, stats, racing videos, it's all here!
Get all the latest race stats on your favourite filly, watch racing videos from your couch or find out who's running where!