THE Darling of
the South African turf, Summer Pudding, is doing well at Milnerton in
preparation for the Grade 1 Cartier Paddock Stakes over 1800m at Kenilworth on
Saturday but trainer Paul Peter admitted the defending champion Queen Supreme
was the horse to beat.
He said,
“Summer Pudding is fresh and bright and eating well but this will most
definitely be her toughest task to date. It is her first run in the Cape and
her first time around a left hand turn but she does seem to be taking to the Cape.”
Peter
continued, “I am scared of Queen Supreme. She has been very impressive in
her last two starts and is perfectly course and distance suited. She is the
horse to beat.”
Summer Pudding
has a wide draw but this is the norm for her.
Peter said,
“It might be a blessing. They have the Cape
crawl here so better to be in the open where you can go as quickly as you want
rather than boxed in.”
Warren
Kennedy, in accordance with the lockdown restrictions, has chosen to ride in
the Cape for the month of January especially
for this ride.
Pater said,
“Warren
has sacrificed a lot to be here, he loves this filly. He rode her in a grass
gallop last Wednesday. She galloped with Heart Stwings and they both went very
well.”
Summer Pudding
will be attempting to make it ten out of ten, which will put her just one short
of the unbeaten record of eleven set by Homeguard in the late 1960s.
Queen Supreme
runs in the same familiar black and yellow colours of the Oppenheimer family,
which are officially owned by their Mauritzfontein Stud farm these day.
Heart Stwings
is also in the Paddock Stakes and Peter is hoping for a place.
He said,
“She is thriving here in the Cape and ran
way above her rating when a half-a-length second in the Victress Stakes last
time (same course and distance as the Paddock Stakes). She is a natural handy
or front-running type and if she had sat closer to Silvano’s Pride last time
she might have even got closer. I am hoping she will run into the money.”
THERE is a low-key meeting at Hollywoodbets
Greyville today where punters will be thoroughly tested. Nothing stands out as
a solid exotic bet banker but if one is looking to cut down on expenses, then
Rock Flight in the fourth may fit the bill. Gavin van Zyl’s filly has is
showing steady improvement over shorter but is bred to stay this trip.
The opposition is no great shakes but Duquesne Whistle looks to be
coming along the right way and is another who should do well over this trip
judged on pedigree. Magikos was a distant third last run over ground but gets
first time blinkers which could see her improve further.
In the card opener, Dandolo has been rested and gelded but has shown promise. He may just have needed his last run where he showed good pace before fading late but Tony Rivalland’s charge is way better than that showing.
Thumbs Up is a filly taking on males but has useful Highveld form in
good company. She is never far back and could give Dandolo most to do. Another
threat could come from Ziva La Winter who has been close-up in both handicap
starts. He goes well this trip and should contest the finish.
The second is a minefield with plenty in with chances.
Twice As Cold has run two disappointing races in the soft but in her
first run on a solid surface she was only caught ate after leading for most of
the journey. On exposed form she should take to the poly. Storm Chaser has put in two promising efforts
since being gelded but has been caught a little one-pace over the final furlong
over a mile. He makes his poly debut and this trip should suit. has shown up
nicely in his last two on the turf. The shorter trip on the poly should suit.
What A Ryder showed promising improvement in his first local start and looks to
be coming to hand while West Coast Lover is showing improvement with each
outing and should enjoy the extra.
It may pay to load up this, the first leg, of the PA.
If Dandolo obliges then Tony Rivalland could make it a double with
Let’s Go Fly in the opening leg of the Pick 6. The gelding has put in two
decent efforts on the poly and meets a particularly weak field here and should
make a bold bid. August Red has had
plenty of chances but probably needed his last run from a wide draw and can
come on from that while Silver Celebrity showed some improvement in cheek
pieces last run in weak maiden company.
The fifth is a tricky handicap with most in with chances.
Gentleman’s Wager ran below par on the turf last run but his poly form before
that was excellent. With a 2.5kg claimer up he should be up there when the
whips are cracking. Galway is looking for a
winning hat-trick but he did get a five-pound penalty for his last win. He
should never the less be competitive again. Run To Denmark has found recent
form and stays the trip well. The ‘lurker’ could be Born To Perform. The grey
has let the side down lately but may now be looking for this trip and is more
than capable on his day.
Herecomestherain only won a maiden last start but was a comfortable
winner in spite of losing a shoe. He looks to have some scope and although he
meets some hard-knocking handicappers he does appear capable. Running Freely
has come on nicely since a rest. He has a good draw and the extra furlong could
bring out the best. Lord Wylie is 1.5kg better off with Bedazzled Jocker and
can turn the tables although Bedazzled Joker won his last two but is back up
the handicap and a wide draw could further hamper his chances.
In the seventh Vihaan’s Pie shows promise and just needed her last
run. She can go much closer here. Marsanne comes from a very much in form
stable and is back over her best course and distance. She is better off at the
weights with Elusive Current but there should not be much between them. Meet At
The George was caught out by a wide draw last start so can do better in this
small field.
The last is another wide-open affair but Bordeaux showed up well from a wide draw last
start. He has run two good races in useful company and from a plum draw should
at least contest the finish. Vunderbar has been close-up in fair company since
his maiden win and looks capable in this field while Tromso didn’t feature when
tried over further from a wide draw but can do better this trip as he was in
fair form before his last effort.
THE Vaal straight course has an eight race meeting today and there look to be a few opportunities for punters.
In the first
race over 1200m Supreme Dance made a good debut when running on strongly for second
behind the promising Sea Virescent who was entered in a Listed feature next
time out. This Futura colt should come on from the run and on a line through
Marrakech has the beating of chief market rival Eyes On Tiger by one-and-a-half
lengths. Eyes On Tiger has improved and runs for an in-form combination of Paul
Matchett and Muzi Yeni and he looks to be the only danger.
In the second
race over 1200m Right Choice was unlucky last time over 1100m at Turffontein
Standside as she was slowly away and then had to be switched to the Inside
before running on for a 0,30 length second to stablemate Dunyaa with the rest
six lengths back. She should appreciate the extra 100 metres being by Global
View who won a Grade 2 over 1700m out of a Lecture mare who won over 1200m.
However, preference is for the well bred first-timer Ancestral Prayer, who is
by Ideal World out of the Grade 2 KRA Fillies Guineas winner Maybe Yes who has
to date produced the 91 rated Spero Optima. The Lucky Houdalakis yard usually
bring them on slowly but surely but have had two first-timer winners this
season and one of them, Castle Durrow, was ridden Craig Zackey, who is aboard
Ancestral Prayer today. Furthermore, Ancestral Prayer would not need to be a
superstar to win this race. Incognito can fill a trifecta position if
reproducing her best.
In the third
race over 1600m Rosaprima is the choice. This Diane Stenger-trained Marchfield
mare was handy over 1400m last time and then hit a flat spot halfway down the
Turffontein Standside straight. However, she then suddenly got going again and
was finishing strongly for a 2,50 length second. The winner, Perfect Angel,
then ran a decent third first time out the maidens over the same trip off an 84
merit rating. Rosaprima should also relish the step up in trip being by
Marchfield out of an Australian-bred mare who won up to 1800m. Mode has been in
hard-knocking form and has a fine chance too. Last time she was a bit short of
room late over 1700m but was doing good late work for third and two winners and
a second have come out of that race from seven subsequent runners. Masaaken
should also be in the shake up as she was making eyecatching progress over
1160m on debut and on pedigree she will relish the step up in trip being out of
European Champion two-year-old Teofilio, whose two Group 1 wins were over seven
furlongs, out of a Stratun mare who won up to 1800m.
The fourth is
an interesting MR 93 Handicap over 1600m. Spice Market has raced quite strongly
in front in her last two starts over this trip bit as entitled to as she had to
be rushed to the front to overcome wide respective draws. She was still stretching
clear at the line last time to win her maiden by 5,25 lengths with another 3,25
lengths back to the third placed horse. An interesting formline is that in a
previous maiden over this trip she lost by a quarter of a length to Ululate and
would have been receiving 3,5kg from the latter has she not been scratched. Chloris
showed a fine turn of foot when winning her maiden over 1400m and being by
Flower Alley will be a big runner too over a step up in trip she should enjoy.
Her stablemate Sparkling Water has plenty of scope and came from last to run a
good second in just her second career start last time over 1400m having won on
debut over 1450m. This big filly will relish the step up in trip and makes appeal
too.
The rest of
the races, consisting of two fillies and mares handicaps and two Classified
Stakes races, are more difficult.
In the first
of the handicaps over 1600m Un Deux Trois form is an enigma as she finished
unplaced in a handicap over 1400m in her penultimate start but then ran a
cracker over this in a Graduation Plate where she faced the classy 112 rated
Marygold and was beaten just four lengths. She beat the 92 rated Elusive Woman
and the 106 rated Gee For Go so if reproducing that run off a 77 rating she is
the one to beat. The hard-knocking Tartan Dancer is chosen to fight it out.
However, Kayla’s Dream. Fleur Du Cap and Phoenix
must be considered too.
In the second
of the handicaps over 2000m The Sash makes plenty of appeal despite being double
figure odds. The Azzie yard are in fair form and this Brave Tin Soldier mare
cracks her first good draw since jumping from pole and finishing a 2,25 length
fourth to the decent sort Kokeshi over this course and distance. Furthermore,
she is now two points lower in the merit ratings. Fire Flower relished the step
up to 1800m last time and won well and a further step up to 2000m from pole
position could see her able to overcome a six point raise for that win.
The Classified
Stakes races are based on merit rated bands and females are given an allowance
too, so some horses are at a weight advantage over others.
In the first
of the Classified races over 1000m Alex The Great is distance suited and is the
form choice. However, Touch Of fate has developed into a fair sort and over
this ideal trip it would be no surprise to see him follow up on his win last
time. He lost to Alex The Great on these same terms the last time they met but
fly-jumped badly that day and was then rushed before fading. Florence, Capitiana and Lagertha make most
appeal of the rest.
The last race,
a Classified over 1400m, is wide open. Dogliotti is coming into his own and
should enjoy this trip. Master Uletide has substance and should enjoy the step
up in trip. Heart Of A Legend makes most appeal of the female runners.
IF Supreme Dance pulls off a win in today’s first race at The Vaal it
will be a meaningful win for trainer Brett Warren.
Warren’s biggest ever sales
purchase was when he bought the damsire of Futura, Badger’s Drift, for
R500,000.
Unfortunately Badger’s Drift, who went on to win three Grade 1 classics
in succession, the SA Classic, SA Derby and Daily News 2000, was moved from his
yard before he raced.
However, Warren
deliberately looked for a suitable progeny of his to buy at the sales and thus
purchased Scribblin’ The Cat.
The latter won only won one race, although she only had four starts, and
she went on to become dam of Equus Horse Of The Year Futura.
Warren then went looking for
progeny of Futura at the Sales.
Futura’s son Supreme Dance can thus finally bring Warren just reward for his good judgement.
DONOVAN
DILLON has had to weigh up his options regarding the current lock-down with
jockeys restricted to a single province as from yesterday.
It
will have been a tough decision given that the he will miss the ride on Golden
Ducat in both the Gr1 Queen’s Plate on Saturday and the Gr1 Met. However, he
pointed out that he has to make a living and staying in KZN he was more likely
to keep food on the table.
Dillon
got his afternoon off to a good start at Hollywoodbets Greyville yesterday as
he steered Wendy Whitehead’s filly Reckless Love to a comfortable victory. It
was a more than satisfying success as Whitehead revealed that the daughter of
Marchfield had been close to death, suffering from a bad colic.
“The
vets couldn’t do anything so we finally decided to leave her out in the paddock
overnight and what would be would be. Next morning, she was looking for her
food,” she said.
After
a lengthy quiet spell and the covid virus putting some owners under pressure
and deserting, Duncan Howells is now one of the biggest owners in his yard.
However, those runners now sporting his colours are paying their way.
By
Howells’s own admission, Straight Up has been a touch disappointing and stands
accused of not being the bravest but that opinion may have to be reassessed
after apprentice Thabiso Gumede punched him through the tightest of gaps before
going on to win comfortably with second-placed Fever giving Raymond Danielson a
difficult ride as he looked to shift in under pressure.
Howells
has been giving the laid-back Gumede plenty of chances and the young apprentice
is repaying the faith shown in him.
Wave
Crest in the next was another runner sporting the Howells silks and managed a
third-pace cheque under Gumede but proved no match for hot favourite It Must Be
Love. It was something of an armchair ride for Antandiwe Mgudlwa as Gareth van Zyl’s filly
powered home under the hands with Indigo Moon getting up late to touch off Wave
Crest.
Arctic
Princess is unbeaten in two starts since Ashburton-based Gary Rich took her
over and has won well on both occasions. The addition of blinkers may have a
lot to do with it but her manner of victory suggests that she will not stop
with this win. A furlong out, almost the entire field was spread across the
track and the race was there for the taking. However, Stuart Randolph, having
navigated from a wide draw, got his mount going up the outside fence and Arctic
Princess popped clear like a cork out of a champagne bottle.
Foxy
Lady, drawn widest of all fought clear for second with the luckless Colour Of
Light being edge out of third by outsider Satara.
It’s
has been a long time between drinks for Rocket Fire, another sporting the
Howells silks with Gumede aboard, and the gelding was given no time to think as
he came wide into the straight with Gumede rousting him along. For once Rocket
Fire lived up to his name as he put it all together. The mare Noemi came out of
the pack for second with Justaguything staying on for the shallow end of the
purse.
One
rider who will be spending the next month in Cape Town is Keagan de Melo. As stable rider
to Dean Kannemeyer he will have opportunity in the big races. Making the most
of his absence is Raymond Danielson who has chosen KZN over Gauteng and he got his month off to a
winning start. After a close-up second on Fever he was on the mark with the
Kannemeyer-trained To The Max but it was a close call. Sean Veale, has forsaken
Cape Town and
boss Dennis Drier, to stayed home and help out Drier’s stable assistant Stuart
Ferrie. But it was aboard Paul and Beth Gadsby’s runner Capriccio that he came
up a nose short of To The Max in a desperate finish.
Global
Ash won on debut in PE and had put in two solid performances in his local
starts for Carl Hewiston. He put it all together yesterday and cruised to a
comfortable win in the seventh.
Lasata
looked to have the last wrapped up 50m from home as Randolph produced him with what looked to be
a winning run but apprentice Jabu Jacobs got Miss Charlotte going strongly in
the closing stages to run Lasata down in the dying strides.
SEAN TARRY is
still undecided whether Celtic
Sea will have another
tilt at the Grade 1 Majorca Stakes on Cape Town Met day or take on the boys in
the Grade 1 Cape Flying Championship.
Meanwhile,
Cirillo is on track for the Met and Tarry is lining up his troops for the
Johannesburg Autumn season.
Tarry said,
“I will nominate Celtic
Sea for both races and
then have a look at the opposition and the draws before deciding.”
The twice
Equus award-winning Captain Al mare has won two Grade 1s over 1200m in her
career and one over 1600m.
However, in
her last start she ran over 1000m for the first time in the Grade 2 Southern
Cross Stakes and she gave the Cape’s best sprinting filly, and the race’s
defending champion, Run Fox Run 1kg and a length beating. It was her first
start of the season which gave the victory even more merit.
If she runs in
the Majorca she will face the Cape’s best
female miler Clouds Unfold on 1kg terms than in a handicap. However, Clouds
Unfold did beat her by 0,30 lengths in this weight for age event last season.
She might also be up against the Equus Horse Of The Year Summer Pudding in The
Majorca if the connections decide to avoid the Met.
If Celtic Sea
runs in the Cape Flying, also a weight for age event, she
will receive a 2,5kg female allowance. The 126 merit-rated filly will thus face
128 rated Kasimir on 1,5kg better terms than she would in a handicap and she
would be 3kg well in with the defending champion and Equus Champion Sprinter
Russet Air and she will be 2kg well in with Run Fox Run.
The first
entries for both races are on January 6.
Cirillo has
been doing “very well” and is quoted at 20/1 for The Met. This
five-year-old has consistently proved to be just behind the best and has
achieved six Grade 1 places from 1600m to 1800m.
However, Tarry
pointed that Cirillo is one of the few older stalwarts in the country who was
still an entire.
Tarry said he
would like to think Cirillo had a future at stud and added, “There is a
lot to be said for an honest, solid and sound horse. Such types are worth their
weight in gold at stud. Our breeders are always looking overseas to improve our
bloodlines but they often overlook what we have locally.”
Tarry is well
aware that winning a Grade 1 is of paramount importance as far as support at
stud goes but he would be able to point to the like of Skitt Skizzle as an
ordinary performer on the track who has become a decent stallion. This
Tarry-trained son of Jet Master won his first start by ten lengths but was
never able to fulfill his potential because as an entire he just became too big
and he ended his career without a black type win. However, at stud his first
crop consisting of a handful of foals from moderate mares included the like of
Tierra Del Fuego, Cordillera and River Jordan.
Cirillo will
continue a Tarry legacy if he does go to stud. His sire Pomodoro gave Tarry his
first Vodacom Durban July victory and Pomodoro’s dam Golden Apple, bred by
Sean’s brother Mark, provided him with his first Graded winner.
So, it is no
surprise that one of Tarry’s best three-year-olds, the Gimmethegreenlight
gelding Paisley Park, is from the family of Pomodoro. Paisley Park’s second dam is a half-sister to
the dam of Golden Apple.
Paisley Park’s debut win provided one of the best
form maidens of the season on the Highveld and he followed up by winning the
Listed Secretariat Stakes over 1400m despite still being green. He beat the
promising Copper Mountain in the latter race by
half-a-length, although he was receiving 4.5kg.
Tarry said,
“He was immature as a youngster and has scope. I can’t get too excited yet
but he is on the up and is one of the horses on my shortlist for the Autumn
classics.”
Others on the
shortlist are Eagle Alley, Silver Tycoon and Flying Carpet.
Eagle Alley
also unbeaten in two starts, is by Silvano out of a full-sister to the
legendary four-times Ascot Gold Cup winner Yeats so has a Derby pedigree. Tarry
said, “He has done well over less ground to date and has a bright
future. If the SA Derby does become a target he will have a reliable pedigree
for it.”
Silver Tycoon,
by Silvano out of the Grade 1-winning Jet Master mare Soft Landing, was beaten
10,25 lengths into second on debut over 1400m by the ultra promising Reunion
but followed up with a 6,25 length win over 1400m.
Tarry said,
“He had strengthened up a bit and was very impressive.”
Flying Carpet
finished a close third in the Emperors Palace Ready To Run Cup as a maiden but
then failed in the Dingaans. He then came out and won his maiden impressively
this week over 1400m. Tarry confirmed about the 103 rated Judpot colt, “He
ran below par in the Dingaans.”
Chimichuri
Run, Eden Roc and Warrior’s rest will be having Johannesburg and KZN campaigns.
The former
pair, by Trippi and Var respectively, are both still entries and Tarry also has
stud careers in mind for them.
THE
Paul Matchett-trained War Of Athena laid claim to being the best three-year-old
in the country on Saturday when downing her arch rival, the previously unbeaten
Stuart Pettigrew-trained Anything Goes, by 1,75 lengths under Muzi Yeni in the
Grade 3 Three Troikas Stakes over 1400m at Turffontein Standside.
Later,
the Paul Peter-trained Dingaans winner Catch Twentytwo made a similar claim
when winning the Grade 3 Tony Ruffel Stakes over the same course and distance
under Gavin Lerena.
War
Of Athena had been beaten twice before by Anything Goes. The latter ran as if
she needed the run yesterday after a three month layoff and she also had to
give War Of Athena 1kg. Furthermore her saddle slipped back in the running.
The
pair’s rivalry will be one of the features of the season and their next clash
will likely be in the Grade 2 Wilgerbosdrift Gauteng Fillies Guineas on
February 6.
However,
of the pair, War Of Athena looks more likely on pedigree and running style to
handle the step up to the 1800m of the Grade 1 SA Fillies Classic.
War
Of Athena, who was bred by Summerhill Stud and is by Act Of War out of Requiem
maiden Qaphela, cost a mere R30,000 but has it all as a racehorse. She has good
gatespeed and early pace and can be switched off in the running. At the
business end she possesses an electrifying turn of foot and has a heart as big
as the great outdoors. Lastly, she is sound and consistent. Saturday’s
race was her eleventh career start and her fifth victory. She has not been out
of the first two this season and her only run out of the first three was on
debut when fifth.
The
feeling last season was that the two-year-old fillies were superior to the
colts and geldings and it was proven on
Saturday when the filly that won the Grade
1 Premier’s Champion Stakes against the boys, Sentbydestiny, was beaten six
lengths by War Of Athena despite receiving 3kg.
This
season the male three-year-olds made an early impact and there were predictions
of it being a special crop. However, they begun fluffing their lines in the
Dingaans when the previously unbeaten Grade 2 Hawaii Stakes winner Mount Pleasant ran
unplaced. The Grade 1 Cape Guineas then produced a 100/1 shock winner in
Russian Rock, who had won only one of his previous four career starts.
However,
among the fillies there is no doubting the class of Anything Goes and War Of
Athena, whose form has also been franked by Princess Calla down in Cape Town. The latter,
beaten 3,30 lengths and three lengths respectively by Anything Goes and War Of
Athena in the Grade 1 Thekwini Stakes over 1600m last season, won the Grade 2
Western Cape Fillies Championship over 1400m and then finished a 2,25 length
second in the Grade 1 WSB Cape Fillies Guines to the smart Captain’s Ransom.
Catch
Twentytwo is one of the male sophomores’ who could still save his crop’s
dwindling reputation as this rangy Narrow Creek Stud-bred Elusive Fort gelding
proved he is progressive when beating stablemate MK’S Pride by half-a-length at
level weights. The interesting formline here is MK’S Pride’s short-head victory
over War Of Athena in the Peermont Emperor’s Palace Ready To Run Cup over 1400m
in which the latter received a 2.5kg female allowance, although it has to be
said that not much went right for the filly in that race.
The
other interesting formline from the Tony Ruffel is Copper Mountain
being beaten two lengths into third at level weights. Copper Mountain was
an easy winner in the only defeat to date suffered by the promising Second Base
and later he gave another promising sort in Paisley Park 4.5kg when
losing by just half-a-length.
Catch
Twentytwo and War Of Athena were both rated 116 going into yesterday’s
respective races, but the latter beat the 120 rated Anything Goes whereas the
former’s runner up MK’S Pride was rated only 112.
Mount Pleasant remains the highest rated three-year-old on 127 based
on his cosy victory over the top class older pair Cirillo and Chimichuri Run in
the Hawaai.
The
other feature on Saturday’s card was the London News Stakes over 1800m and it
saw Muzi Yeni converting a Grade 3 double on the Fanie Bronkhorst
owned-and-trained Running Brave. She began over-racing a touch when not getting
to the front from a wide draw but Zillzaal did her a favour by setting a good pace.
This allowed Yeni to skilfully ease past Chijmes and slot in behind Zillzaal.
Running Brave showed just how courageous she is when taking the lead at
the 500m mark and fending off the classy ExpressFromTheUS to win by
three-quarters-of-a-length. However, she was well in at the weights with most
and ran at level weights with the runner-up, to whom she would have had to give
3kg in a handicap. Running Brave, a Summerhill Stud-bred five-year-old mare by
Brave Tin Soldier, has now won eight times and this was her third Graded
victory. She has substance and can go on to win more features. A Grade 1 win
this season would not be completely out of the question either.
MOMBELA has for a long time been one of the Sean Tarry yard favourites and this good looking Trippi gelding earned bold black type at the age of nine yesterday when producing his usual devastating finishing burst to win the Grade 3 Lebelo Sprint over 1000m at Turffontein Standside under Lyle Hewitson.
Tarry said, “He is an unbelievable
looking horse with a magnificent eye and is so honest. He has been around for a
long time too, so it is hard to not like a horse like him. He was
overdue.”
In Mombela’s previous start over the same
1000m course and distance he was tailed off at the 400m mark but then switched
on the turbos and looked like he would knock the wall of horses in front of him
over he was closing so fast. Jockey Chase Maujean had to switch him to the
outside which cost him valuable momentum and ground and he only managed fifth.
Tarry said, “He is one of those
horses who is able to produce an incredibly fast furlong, his fractions over a
furlong must be frightening. But with that asset he also requires a clear run
and he often doesn’t get one.”
Mombela had a moment of bad luck
yesterday when squeezed out at the start between Donderweer and Oravar
This left him detached at the back.
However, Hewitson knows him well and
switched him to the inside to get on to the back of a train of horses. He then
switched him further inward to ensure he had a clear run.
He was still last at the 400m mark with
about five or six lengths to make up but then started the engines and flew home
to beat the up and coming sprinter Bold Ransom by a head. Miracle Flight,
Oravar and Donderweer were next best beaten 0,60, 0,85 and 2,45 lengths
respectively.
Tarry believes the key to the victory was
that Mombela was able, unusually, to have three runs in succession in what has
been a stop-start career.
The Drakenstein Stud-bred has a lot of
issues and after making his debut in the January of his three-year-old year he
had to wait more than a year for his second start. The issues were continuous
and yesterday’s run was only his 20th career start.
Mombela has won five times now and placed
nine times.
He was running off a 102 merit rating
yesterday and receiving 1kg from Bold Ransom so it will be a big step up to a
race like the Grade 1 weight for age Computaform Sprint over this course and
distance. Tarry also believes he is better at 1200m.
The Grade 1 Golden Horse Sprint, a
handicap over 1200m at Hollywoodbets Scottsville, might be an option.
Tarry has gained a reputation for keeping
older horses going and Mombela is not the oldest horse he has won with.
He won a race with the ten-year-old
Sorevof in February 2003.
However, Mombela is likely the oldest
horse he has sent out for a black type victory.
Tarry and Hewitson combined for a treble
yesterday, also winning with two promising sorts in Flying Carpet and Seehaam.
TRAINER Greg Ennion was confident that his quirky, but talented speedball, Elusive Trader would retain his Southeaster Sprint crown at Kenilworth over the unusual 1100m distance. The Elusive Fort gelding, who does best when conserved for a late dart, duly blitzed past front runner Constable to score at odds of around 5/1. He was ridden with aplomb by master jockey, Anton Marcus.
Marcus
does his pre- race research with great attention to detail and even though he
had not sat on the horse before, knew how best to ride him. He thanked
experienced conditioner, Ennion afterwards for teeing up the opportunity, and
confirming optimal tactics. The race, into an appropriately brisk S/E headwind,
turned out ideally for Elusive Trader, who recorded his fourth victory from 28
starts and has now raked in stakes of R1.5 million. The best jockeys make
potentially awkward strategies look straight-forward – Marcus explained simply
afterwards, “They went a reasonable pace, and he came on for a courageous win.”
Ennion
was justifiably satisfied as his charge has battled with soundness issues and
is not the easiest customer to keep in one piece as a result. His hold- up
style of running has also lead to a number of tough beats, hence the relatively
low win rate. Ennion said, “This 1100m trip is perfect. He has a turn of foot
as good as any sprinter in South
Africa. We will go for the Cape Flying
Championships next.”
Pace-presser,
Constable was game in second, building on a sterling run to Erik the Red in the
Merchants. The trifecta slot was up for grabs till the last jump – top weight
Cartel Captain just edging out Captain Tatters by a lip, with feisty grey,
Worlds Your Oyster just off these placed horses.
Justin
Snaith has his string in sparkling fettle and continues to crank out winner
after winner, saddling four on the day. He was in the No 1 box with Crown
Diamond, Taking Silk, La Quinta and Gertrude Bell. In contrast Dennis Drier,
usually a perennial threat when in the Cape during Summer has endured a lean spell
by his high standards, but, the veteran horseman rectified that lull when
heavily punted favourite, Hail Columbia swept past rivals in the last to
provide Drier with his first winner of the Cape
season.
THE Peter Muscutt-trained Indi Anna, paying R30.70 a Tote win and R7.00 a place, romped to a comfortable win in Saturday’s Grade 3 Flamboyant Stakes at Hollywoodbets Greyville under Raymond Danielson.
There was also an upset in the Listed Christmas Handicap
over the same 1600m course and distance as Keagan de Melo extracted a strong
finish from the Dean Kannemeyer-trained bottom weight Mount Anderson,
who paid R11.00 a win.
The latter win was possible to find as Mount Anderson
had snuck into the handicap with the minimum weight of 52kg, although he did
have half-a-kilogram overweight to contend with, and he had run a close second
off his current mark the last time he ran in good ground at Hollywoodbets,
although that was over 1400m.
However, Indi Anna would not have been given much chance by
mathematicians as she had finished fourth, fifth and fifth in her last three
handicap starts over distances from 1400m to 1600m and she was now 9kg under
sufferance with the best weighted runner in this conditions event. However, a
closer scrutiny of the form showed that she had won four races in the top
centre of Cape Town to reach her current merit rating and her first run in KZN
followed national lockdown and she was then given another five month layoff before
two more runs, so this was going to be her peak run. Furthermore, Cape
Town-based horses of this calibre usually arrive in other centres with
suppressed merit ratings due to the class of horse down there and it was proved
again in this race.
Indi Anna broke well from draw eight but found herself
without cover behind the leader Electric Surge and was threatening to over
race. However, Petra
was taken around runners to join the leader and thus provided Indi Anna with
cover.
Anybody who happened to tune in as they left the narrow
false rail could easily have mistaken Indi Anna for an odds on favourite as she
is a big and impressive specimen with a big stride and she quickened well. The
Master Of MY Fate filly had the race in safekeeping halfway down the straight
as she was clearly not stopping.
The Grade 2-winning three-year-old Love Bomb started Tote
favourite and had the run of the race in the box seat behind the leader.
However, she could not match Indi Anna’s finishing speed.
Instead, it was another outsider, Mary O, who was 6kg under
sufferance with the best weighted runner, who ran on from off the pace to
finish a clear second, 1,50 lengths behind the winner and 2,1 lengths ahead of
Love Bomb, who just held on for third from the best weighted runner Gallic
Princess.
Mary O finished second in last season’s Grade 2 WSB Fillies
Guineas over this course and distance so yesterday’s performance was no
fluke.
Gallic Princess is a top class sprinter so was a bit
stretched by the trip, but stayed on steadily.
The fancied Silent Crusade sat behind Love Bomb in the
running and stayed on for fifth.
The only other horse in single figure odds was Magic School
who is a big galloping type who was going to be dangerous if managing to get to
the front or in to a handy position. However, when she missed the break and
ended up last in the running the writing was on the wall. She could only stay
on forlornly for seventh.
In a similar scenario to the Flamboyant Stakes, Mount Anderson
broke well and found himself one out and one back without cover. However, on
this occasion jockey Ant Mgudlwa was not keen to keep his mount
Farland in the box seat after the
pacemaker Priceless Ruler had begun applying the brakes, so he moved alongside
and this provided perfect cover for Mount
Anderson.
The favourite Baby Shooz now had the box seat and, carrying
just 53.5kg, had the opportunity to prove that his entry in The Met is not a
pipe dream.
Priceless Ruler had soon cried enough and Baby Shooz moved
up well to take the lead. However, he needs further and Mr Fitz, who had sat
behind him, was clearly finishing stronger. However, Mount Anderson, who is
well bred being by Vercingetorix out of the Grade 1 Golden Slipper (1400m) and
Grade 2 Gold Bracelet (2000m) winner Gilded Minaret, then found a burst and in
the end won cosily by half-a-length from Mr Fitz, who pipped Baby Shoes by a
short-head for second. Sniper Shot finished next best ahead of
Shareholder.
Danielson rode a double on the day as the Gavin Van
Zyl-trained Blackball was at his impressive best when carrying joint topweight
of 61.5kg to a 3,50 length win in a Pinnacle Stakes event over 2200m.
Serino Moodley scored a double on the Lezeanne
Forbes-trained Underthemistletoe and the Michael Roberts-trained Alado’s Pride.
Wendy Whitehead scored a double with Teichman, ridden by
2.5kg claimer Jabu Jacobs, and Macara, who converted favouritism in the last
race under Donovan Dillon.
The meeting had also begun well for punters as the Tony
Rivalland-trained Guitar King converted favouritism in the first under Lyle
Hewitson.
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