Step Up lead in (Jul 16) - Candiese Marnewick

Ready for the step up

The Vaughan Marshall-trained two-year-old Horse Chestnut colt Step Up put his hand up as a runner in the Gr 1 Premier’s Champions Stakes over 1600m on Gold Cup day when winning a Juvenile Plate over the same course and distance comfortably on Saturday under MJ Byleveld.

The intuitive Marshall bought this Horse Chestnut colt for a mere R50,000 at the CTS Emperor’s Palace Select Yearling Sale last year, despite her Joshua Dancer dam being a half-sister to dual Gr 1-winner Crimson Waves. Marshall then put a syndicate together which includes his son Steve.

The imposing colt has won two of his four starts to date. His first win was also over 1600m at Greyville, albeit on the polytrack.

Step Up lead in (Jul 16) - Candiese Marnewick

Step Up lead in (Jul 16) – Candiese Marnewick

In his penultimate start Step Up was caught hopelessly wide from a high draw in the Listed Gatecrasher Stakes over 1400m at Greyville and pulled throughout.

Marshall was correct in saying before Saturday’s event a line could be drawn through that run.

Byleveld, who was not aboard in the disappointing previous race, settled him beautifully in the box seat on Saturday from a good draw and he quickened effortlessly to win  by 3,5 lengths.

A downside to the form is that The Boxster, who is quite an exposed maiden, finished second although he did obviously appreciate the step up in trip.

On the bright side Step Up’s time was three seconds quicker than the fillies equivalent race, which was won in eyecatching style by the Dennis Drier-trained The High Life, who is also by Horse Chestnut. The High Life resembles her great sire and made up considerable ground in the straight under Sean Veale to just get up, although as a maiden (who had actually won a race which was later declared null and void) she did have a 3kg advantage over the winners. Despite the impressive display The High Life does not hold an entry in the Gr 1 Thekwini Stakes. The High Life was purchased for R150,000 at the National Two-year-old Sale.

David Thiselton

 

Rabada (Nkosi Hlophe)

SUPPLEMENTARY ENTRIES for the 2016 Gr1 Premiers Champion Stakes

*Indicates Supplementary Entries = ONE

SUPPLEMENTARY ENTRIES for the R600 000 Gr1 Premiers Champion Stakes to be run over 1600m at Greyville on Saturday 30 July 2016:

DR HORSE               A/S WGT        TRAINER

7  AFRICA RISING      (2C) 60.0   0   Sean Tarry

10 ALWAYS IN CHARGE   (2C) 60.0   0   Vaughan Marshall

25 BOLD REX           (2C) 60.0   0   Mike de Kock

24 BOLD VIKING        (2C) 60.0   0   Sean Tarry

33 BUFFALO SOLDIER    (2G) 60.0   0 C Charles Laird

11 CROWD PLEASER      (2C) 60.0   0   Johan Janse van Vuuren

30 GOOD TO GIVE       (2C) 60.0   0 B Charles Laird

15 GUNNER             (2G) 60.0   0   Paul Gadsby

22 HACK GREEN         (2C) 60.0   0   Dennis Drier

21 HEAVENLY BLUE (AUS (2C) 60.0   0   Mike de Kock

29 HIGHWAY EIGHTYFIVE (2G) 60.0   0 B Doug Campbell

18 LAST WINTER        (2C) 60.0   0   Dean Kannemeyer

32 LEGEND             (2C) 60.0   0   Duncan Howells

23 LOTUS ELAN         (2C) 60.0   0   Corne Spies

13 MISTY BIRNAM       (2C) 60.0   0   Mike de Kock

28 MR O’NEILL         (2C) 60.0   0   Dean Kannemeyer

2  OCEAN DRIVE SOUTH  (2C) 60.0   0 B Kumaran Naidoo

3  OVER SURE          (2C) 60.0   0   Kumaran Naidoo

26 PALLADIUM          (2C) 60.0   0   Charles Laird

31 *QEYAADAH (AUS)    (2C) 60.0   0   Mike de Kock

9  RIVARINE           (2C) 60.0   0   Mike Azzie

20 ROCKEFELLER        (2G) 60.0   0   Charles Laird

6  ROCKY VALLEY       (2C) 60.0   0   Dennis Drier

34 RYDER              (2G) 60.0   0   Mike Azzie

5  SECRET CAPTAIN     (2C) 60.0   0   Duncan Howells

8  SKIP THE RED       (2G) 60.0   0   Lezeanne Forbes

4  STEP UP            (2C) 60.0   0   Vaughan Marshall

19 VIKING RED         (2G) 60.0   0   Frank Robinson

17 WINTER IS COMING   (2C) 60.0   0   Frank Robinson

12 WITHOUT A DOUBT    (2G) 60.0   0   Gavin van Zyl

14 ZELIG              (2G) 60.0   0   Gavin van Zyl

1  ZODIAC RULER (AUS) (2C) 60.0   0   Justin Snaith

16 BONNE VIE          (2F) 57.5   0   Corne Spies

27 SEATTLE SINGER     (2F) 57.5   0   Corne Spies

(34)

Please note:

  • Declarations close at 11:00 on Thursday, 21 July 2016

 

 

Fly By Night (Liesl King)

Bass trio for Mercury Sprint

Mike Bass will be three-handed in his bid to win the Mercury Sprint for the third time in five seasons at Greyville on Saturday.

With stable jockey Grant van Niekerk sitting out a ten-day interference suspension – when winning the Garden Province on Inara – Brandon Lerena gets the call for 2014 winner Fly By Night while Stuart Randolph will be on Lanner Falcon and Callan Murray rides Night Trip.

Brett Crawford is expecting a much-improved performance from his Cape Flying Championship winner Gulf Storm who ran below his best under second top weight in last month’s Tsogo Sun Sprint.

He explained: “I put blinkers on for the five furlong Cape Flying and I made the mistake of leaving them on over six at Scottsville and as a result he pulled too hard. He will race without them on Saturday and I am sure he will run a much better race.”

Justin Snaith will return his three-year-old stars It’s My Turn, Bela-Bela and Black Arthur to Cape Town this week after the trio finished fourth, sixth and seventh in the Vodacom Durban July.

He said: “They are top horses so we are saving them for next season but Dynamic may stay for the Champions Cup (July 30). He is an older horse who has been there and done that.

“Golden Horseshoe winner Zodiac Ruler will run in the Premiers Champion on the same card assuming all goes well and there are no hiccups. He is drawn one but a bad draw would have meant him coming home.”

July runner-up Marinaresco is among the 20 nominations for the Champions Cup but he is unlikely to line up. “He came out of the July fine but he is drawn 18 in the Champions so I don’t think he will run,” said Candice Robinson. “Next season he will be aimed at the Queen’s Plate and the Met.”

Michael Clower

Zodiac Ruler’s not done

Justin Snaith’s horses have all pulled up well from Vodacom Durban July day and he said the unbeaten Gr 2 Durban Golden Horseshoe winner Zodiac Ruler would be considered for the Gr 1 Premier’s Champions Challenge on eLan Gold Cup day.

He also spoke of his empathy for distraught owner Adriaan van Vuuren, having been in the same boat before, while at the same time coming out in defence of Gold Circle and KZN racetracks.

Snaith said the only reason Zodiac Ruler had ended up being at his Summerveld SA Champions Season yard was because the colt had been at his satellite yard in Johannesburg at the time of the latter’s closure. The two-year-old had not been allowed to return to Cape Town without going through quarantine. Snaith said his Johannesburg satellite yard had been closed because it had not been financially viable. He added it had only been opened in the first place because he had been led to believe restricted races would be included in the National Trainer’s Championships, but the NHRA had later changed their minds.

Zodiac Ruler (Nkosi Hlophe)

Zodiac Ruler (Nkosi Hlophe)

Snaith said about the classy Zodiac Ruler, “I had never thought much of him, because we don’t push our babies. We have done very little with him.”

On debut over 1400m on the Greyville poly Zodiac Ruler was allowed to go off at odds of 14/1. Yet, despite losing four lengths at the start, he had still managed to get up to win under apprentice Lyle Hewitson.

 

On Saturday, just two-and-a-half weeks after that debut and now ridden by Richard Fourie, he was slow away by two lengths in the 1400m turf contest and was green early on the turn before settling beautifully on the rail behind a fast pace. Class usually comes through in a true run race and so it proved. He was last at the 400m mark, but then moved through effortlessly to put himself in contention. He responded well to the whip from the 250m mark and won with what looked to be plenty in hand by 1,5 lengths, converting odds of 8/1. The time of 82,23 seconds was only just outside the class record.

Zoidac Ruler is one of a number of successful horses Paul Lafferty has bought in Australia during his time as South African ambassador to the Magic Millions Sales company. The Summerveld trainer  said he had always believed Zodiac Ruler’s sire Zoffany would make it. He was proven correct immediately as the son of Dansili was the European Champion first crop sire in Europe in 2015. Zoffany won a Gr 1 over six furlongs in Ireland, but his biggest claim to fame was finishing just three-quarters of a length runner-up to the mighty Frankel in the Gr 1 St. James Palace Stakes over a mile at Royal Ascot.

Prolific owner Fred Crabbia spotted Zodiac Ruler on Lafferty’s website, liked the look of both him and the pedigree and duly bought him. He was spelled by Jane Thomas at Far End Pre-training in Mooi River and she described him as being “magic”. Crabbia then put him through the CTS Lanzerac Ready To Run Sale and had to go to R450,000 to buy him back, despite Thomas having not gone anything other than slowly with him either at home or at the Ready To Run breeze ups due to him still being too “big and dum”.

Snaith continued, “The Greyville track doesn’t look good, but all of our horses have pulled up well. Our horses have in fact had more injuries in other centres than in KZN this season and I have the statistics to prove it.”

He added, “It is not easy these days and I think Graeme Hawkins and Gill Simpkins and others at Gold Circle did a fine job in making the July a success and the Tote turnovers were up.”

Snaith said the field and draw for the Premier’s Champions Challenge would be “looked at”, before a decision to run Zodiac Ruler was made.

He said of his July runners, “The main thing is they all came back safely.”

He had few excuses, but said Black Arthur had unfortunately been carried outward at the top of the straight and had thus ended up on the outside rail, where they had not wanted him to be. The colt had then been conscious of the crowd, so was reluctant to take the gap. Jockey Douglas Whyte believed he could have otherwise possibly finished third.

Bela-Bela (Nkosi Hlophe)

Bela-Bela (Nkosi Hlophe)

Richard Fourie lamented not being able to have a horse to offer cover for his mount It’s My Turn, who had to jump from a tricky draw of 12. He said his reasons were more due to “peace of mind” than anything else as the horse had settled nicely throughout. It’s My Turn sat in third on the quarters of Ten Gun Salute. Fourie pointed out the winner had sat behind him, so he believed he had been in the right place. The Crabbia-owned horse stayed on well for fourth. Fourie concluded by saying the Dynasty colt might have even won had he been “more forward (mature).”

Anthony Delpech said yesterday Bela-Bela had lost her position when bumped around early and felt she might otherwise have finished in the top four.

Snaith said none of his July runners were likely to appear again this season.

Snaith said about Triple Crown-winning owner Adriaan van Vuuren’s shock statement he would be pulling out of horseracing, “He is talking from his heart, he loves his horses and I know what it is like to have a horse injured, we had to endure this anxiety with Legislate two years ago. He (Van Vuuren) doesn’t deserve to be taken to pieces like this in the media and it is due to people like him that so many are able to be employed in the industry.”

David Thiselton

Palladium (Nkosi Hlophe)

Laird in top form

Former National Champion Trainer Charles Laird scored a tremendous treble at Greyville on Saturday, including winning two black type events for his chief client these days Alesh Naidoo.

However, Laird said he would not be supplementing Gr 3 Cup Trial winner Exit Here for the Vodacom Durban July. He said, “He has drawn well in five for the consolation event anyway.”

Laird was relieved to have been proven correct in his assessment of Exit Here’s poor last two runs, in which he believed the jockeys had gone to hard out in front. The blinkered Moutonshoek-bred Jay Peg colt was asked to go a particularly ridiculous pace in the Gr 2 Canon Guineas.

Palladium (Nkosi Hlophe)

Palladium (Nkosi Hlophe)

By contrast Weichong Marwing rode him to perfection on Saturday, controlling the pace from the front before extracting the necessary extra to repel challengers and beat the second favourite Dynamic by a quarter of a length. He converted odds of 40-1.

Naidoo was largely behind the decision to purchase Exit Here for R1,1 million at the CTS March Yearling Sale in 2014. Exit Here is a half-sister to Eventual Angel, who won four races for Naidoo, including the Gr 3 Umzimkhulu Stakes. Naidoo owns Exit Here in partnership with Laird’s long-time stalwart client Markus Jooste.

Earlier on Saturday, Laird and Naidoo had combined to win the Listed Gatecrasher Stakes over 1400m with the Avontuur-bred Silvano colt Palladium, who remains unbeaten after two starts.

Despite the tailwind, Palladium was able to come from last with an impressive run and beat the favourite Daffiq by a neck under Keagan De Melo.

Laird had advised De Melo to stick with Palladium after his strong finishing-debut win over 1200m at Greyville, knowing Anton Marcus would be tied to ride the Markus Jooste-owned stablemate Buffalo Soldier, who ran a decent 1,9 length fourth on Saturday.

Laird said he would keep De Melo aboard for Palladium’s next two races, which are due to be the Gr 2 Golden Horseshoe over 1400m on July day and the Gr 1 Premiers Champion Stakes over 1600m on eLan Gold Cup day.

Palladium is a half-brother to the former Equus Champion Sprinter Val De Ra, but Laird said he took more after his sire Silvano and would get the mile.

Laird clinched the treble with a brilliant front-running ride by Marcus on the Jooste-owned Top Form in the R200,000 KZN Winter Challenge 1200.

There was also disappointment for the yard as the luckless Ice Machine ran unplaced in the Gr 1 Rising Sun Gold Challenge.

Laird said Ice Machine had always been a horse who preferred being taken to the outside for his run as he was then able to be taken through the gears gradually on the back of a momentum building outwards catapult,  whereas taking a horse inward for a run, like he was on Saturday, required committing the horse too soon. “He is not getting any younger,” he said about the seven-year-old.

By David Thiselton

Mike Azzie (Nkosi Hlophe)

Split targets for Azzie duo

Mike Azzie will rest his Gr 1 Premier’s Champions Stakes winner Rabada and give him his African Horse Sickness (AHS) vaccinations before aiming him at the R2 million Ready To Run Stakes over 1400m at Turffontein on October 31. He will then possibly send the Summerhill Stud Brave Tin Soldier colt to Cape Town for two big Gr 1 events, the Grand Parade Cape Guineas and the Investec Cape Derby.

His Premier’s Champions Stake third-placed Go Deputy colt Abashiri will also be rested and given his AHS vaccinations. He will then be aimed at next Autumn’s Triple Crown.

Azzie also has big race hopes for Gr 1 Thekwini Stakes runner up Melliflora and his older horse Deputy Jud.

His Summerveld Champions Season string were on their way back home to Randjesfontein yesterday.

Azzie has no doubt the unbeaten Rabada will stay the 2000m trip of the Cape Derby and said, “Anton (Marcus) has always maintained that is the trip he is looking for and that he would be best on a galloping track. We didn’t give him any stamina work at Summerveld, we kept his work short and sharp, because of the nature of the 1400m and 1600m races he ran in at Greyville. We haven’t seen the best of Abashiri yet. He is one very serious horse and is a very exciting prospect for the future. If you analyse the way the race panned out on Saturday, when he wanted to make his run he had to be switched out and come eight or nine wide into the straight. It could otherwise easily have been a different result. He was not as sharp as Rabada because the penny hasn’t dropped with him yet and when it does the sky could be the limit.”

Azzie didn’t allow the one week postponement of Super Saturday to add any pressure and simply took the view that everybody was in the same boat.

He said about the Querari filly Melliflora, who ran on well from midfield for a 0,25 length second in the Thekwini, “She is gangly and immature and I have not let up on her, so now that I can give her some down time I think she will do some developing and blossom. I think she will also prefer a galloping track and the way she cruised to victory at Scottsville in her previous start has made me quite excited about her.”

He was also pleased by the Judpot colt Deputy Jud’s 6,5 length eighth in the Gr 1 Champions Cup over 1800m and said, “It was an improved performance and I have been given permission to do what I have wanted to do for a year, geld him. I think he will now keep his mind on the job and do what he’s supposed to do.”

Azzie said he had left Summerved with “heavy feet”.

He elaborated, “It is the best training centre in South Africa. It is away from the humdrum of racing and the fact that my unsound horses came sound there speaks volumes for the tracks. I love KZN, the staff and people are so friendly and always make our visit pleasurable.”

Azzie became emotional in the winner’s enclosure on Saturday when talking about his own staff and this includes his younger son Ryan who has recently joined older son Adam as part of “The Azzman” team. Yesterday he could not help drawing a parallel between his two sons and the Snaith brothers Justin and Jonathan, whose results as a team speak for themselves.

He said, “Ryan was always the one who spent most time at the stables with me as a kid, but is business orientated and always has his finger on the pulse. Adam is laid back and will not allow the silly things that have sometimes worried me to get to him. I will one day be more in the background offering advice because together I think they will make a formidable team.”

By David Thiselton

Wild One and jockey Anthony Delpech (Nkosi Hlophe)

Wild One gets it right

The Mike de Kock-trained Wild One went one better than last year when winning the country’s premier staying race, the Gr 1 eLan Property Group Gold Cup over 3200m, at a sun-bathed Greyville yesterday under Anthony Delpech.

Later the country’s highest rated horse, the Justin Snaith-trained Futura, secured the Equus Horse Of The Year title with a stunning victory in the Gr 1 Champions Cup over 1800m under Bernard Fayd’Herbe, despite not getting the best of starts.

The Scott Brothers-bred six-year-old Mogok gelding Wild One provided a first Gr 1 win for passionate Hillcrest-based owner Sean Phillips and his yellow and red colours also flashed past the post in third place as he owns a share in the Joey Soma-trained Savage Wind.

It was a third Gold Cup win for De Kock and a first for Delpech. The latter had finished second in the race on no fewer than six occasions.

Wild One and jockey Anthony Delpech (Nkosi Hlophe)

Wild One and jockey Anthony Delpech (Nkosi Hlophe)

The Dean Kannemeyer-trained rank outsider Balance Sheet ran a gallant second. The Dominic Zaki-trained Gauteng raider Storm Warning ran fourth and the Geoff Woodruff-trained Wild Ash was the first female home in fifth place.

After his narrow second in last year’s Gold Cup, Wild One was given a ten month layoff due to a soft tissue injury. De Kock said that he had come back sounder than ever and his problems appeared now to be behind him. This has been shown in his recent starts, as he finished second in both the Gr 3 Cup Trial over 1800m and the KZN Breeders Million Mile in his two comeback runs.

Kingston Mines led for the first half of the race and Savage Wind then took it up. Wild One was beautifully positioned in a handy position throughout.

Savage Wind set sail for home on the inside rail and looked full of running, but Wild One soon had his measure. Balance Sheet then appeared from nowhere and looked dangerous, but as he came alongside the blinkered Wild One the latter found another gear and surged to the line a one length winner. Balance Sheet pipped the gallant Savage Wind for second. Storm Warning stayed on well to catch Wild Ash and secure the final quartet position.

Phillips had a dispersal sale in January and expected to get a good price for Wild One, but it was not to be. However, his decision to buy him back for R200,000 has now paid dividends.

Summerveld trainer Jeff Freedman found Wild One at the KZN Yearling Sale and bought him for R95,000, before training him for Phillips for his first couple of seasons.

In the Champions Cup Futura appeared to hit the gate before they had opened and lost a little bit of ground early. He consequently had to be used up quite significantly to find a good position and this left many of his supporters a tad concerned. His stablemate and chief rival Legislate began pulling his way around horses just before they turned for home and the Charles Laird-trained Ice Machine was sitting in behind him ominously. When Ice Machine switched out it looked race over because he showed his usual magnificent acceleration to shoot past Legislate and he had Futura in his sights.  However, the incredible Futura, despite having used that early energy, clawed his way back after being overtaken and got his nose in front on the line. Legislate finished third.

The five-year-old entire Futura, owned by John Freeman, Jack Mitchell and Drakenstein Stud and bred by Guy Murdoch, will be a most deserved winner of the Horse of The Year Award as he also won the L’Ormarin’s Queen’s Plate and J&B Met. However, his sire Dynasty will not be so lucky because the prize money for the Champions Cup counts towards the new season and he would otherwise likely have overtaken Captain Al and won the National Sires title.

The Gr 1 Premier’s Champions Stakes over 1600m saw one of the meeting bankers, the Mike Azzie-trained Brave Tin Soldier colt Rabada, keeping his unbeaten record in impressive style under Marcus.

He was given a lead by his stablemate High Game and went for his run down the inside. Meanwhile, the Zaki-trained raider Prospect Strike and Rabada’s stablemate Abashiri were flying home on the outside.

However, Rabada held on to win by 0,75 lengths with Abashiri a shorthead further back. Mogok Master and Nephrite were next best.

It was the third time Azzie had won this race. Rabada was bred by Summerhill Stud and is owned by Markus and Ingrid Jooste.

Earlier, the De Kock-trained Ideal World filly Persian Rug looked to have the Gr 1 Thekwini Stakes wrapped up as she hit the front early in the straight and was beginning to stretch away from them. However, she dug her toes in when she came to the grandstand shadow and this allowed the Duncan Howells-trained Elusive Fort filly Lauderdale to take the lead and stay on to win under Muzi Yeni. The Mike Azzie-trained Querari filly Melliflora stayed on well for a 0,25 length second and Persian Rug came back in eyecatching fashion for third. The latter looks to be a class sort in the making. Flying Ice was another unlucky horse as she had to come wide into the straight and then had to be switched inward. She only finished 0,75 back in tie fourth. The favourite Chestnuts N Pearls was having her first run in the Drakenstein Stud silks as a share was sold in her after her fluent win in the Gr 1 Zulu Kingdom Golden Slipper Stakes over 1400m. She was lying in a handy position turning for home and ran on for tie fourth. Lauderdale is owned by Brian Burnard and was bred by Dr RJ Antrobus.

The Gr 2 Gold Bracelet saw a deserved win for the ever improving Joey Ramsden-trained Silvano filly Gallica Rose, who produced a late run to overtake the De Kock-trained Estidraaj and the Snaith-trained Acrostar was third.

The Mike Bass-trained Trippi gelding Night Trip retained his Listed Darley Arabian crown over 1600m on the poly with a flying finish under Anton Marcus, despite being eleven points higher in the merit ratings and carrying topweight.

By David Thiselton

wildonenkosihlophe

Wild One fits the bill

All the pieces but one are in place for Wild One to complete the puzzle in today’s Gr 1 eLAN Properties Group Gold Cup. Injury, illness, bad draws and bad rides can often scupper well laid plans but Mike de Kock looks to have avoided all those pitfalls and given some luck in the running at Greyville this afternoon, Wild One will fit the final piece to the jigsaw and go one better than last year for owner Sean Phillips.

Wild One has long been the ante-post favourite after two exceptional efforts in his lead-up. Second to Wavin’ Flag last year, the gelding was not seen out until June this year where he made his seasonal debut in the Cup Trial over 1800m, a distance regarded by most pundits as way too short.

He trailed most of the field turning for home but then unleashed a powerful late run under Anthony Delpech to finish runner-up to the rejuvenated Punta Arenas. Next up was a crack at the KZN Million Mile and again he switched on the afterburners in the straight to run Gr 1 winning “miler” Bezanova to within a length.

Although racing off a six-point higher rating than last year, the handicappers have only given Wild One a single point increase for his last two showings. Given his record over ground, a plum draw at five and a handy galloping weight, only bad luck in running or an exceptional performance by one of the opposition stands in his way.

That performance could come in the form of Solid Speed. Dean Kannemeyer has had an exceptional Champions Season and while Power King provided the icing by winning the Vodacom Durban July, Solid Speed can add the cherry.

Power King carried the silks of Lady Christine Laidlaw’s Khaya Stables and Kannemeyer and Stuart Randolph would pull off a rare double should Solid Speed prevail for Khaya Stables.

Since arriving for Champions Season Solid Speed has landed the Highland Night Cup and the Lonsdale Stirrup Cup, both over 2400m, and then went down less than a length in the 3000m Gold Vase lumping 60kg.

He was not stopping in the Vase and with 7kg off his back and an inside draw this afternoon the extra furlong should hold no fears and he looks the biggest threat to Wild One.

Bookmakers are giving very little away with the majority of the 16-horse field quoted at 16-1 and less so they are expecting a tight finish. However, Wild One and Solid Speed have everything in their favour and can inflict some financial damage on the gentleman of the crossbar.

Highlight of the meeting and a fitting end to the season – although strictly speaking a day over into the new term – will be the clash between stable companions Futura and Legislate in the Gr 1 Champions Cup; at stake the Equus Horse of the Year crown currently held by Legislate.

It has been a tumultuous year for the connections of both horses with illness and backroom discord amongst the various owners adding some intrigue. Justin Snaith has been treading on egg shells since both horses ended up in his yard and it has been a difficult juggling act trying to keep all happy and picking the right races.

After his move from Brett Crawford, Futura won his opener for Snaith rather more easily than the winning margin would suggest, but there were a few raised eyebrows when the stable companions met in the Gr 1 Rising Sun Gold Challenge. Legislate, dictating from the jump, kept finding while Futura, trailing for much of the race, got going too late to affect the result.

Since then the two have taken opposite routes into today’s race with Futura finishing a very creditable fourth in the VDJ under top weight while Legislate was caught for finishing speed in the Gr 1 Mercury Sprint won by Captain Of All.

Bernard Fayd’Herbe is back aboard Futura and with the two drawn alongside each other and over what looks to be the optimum trip for both, we will hopefully be in for a fascinating tactical battle.

Of the balance, although Punta Arenas had two lengths to spare over Futura in the July he is now 3.5kg worse off and looks held, particularly if judged on the J&B Met form, while Ice Machine’s stamina limitations were exposed in the July and he will be much more at home over today’s trip and he is fully capable of an upset.

Best bets

Greyville

Race 2: (6) In Other Words

Greyville

Race 6: (12) Rabada

Greyville

Race 8: (1) Futura

By Andrew Harrison

Wild One (Nkosi Hlophe)

Wild to go one better

The Gr 1 eLan Property Group Gold Cup is always one of the most exciting races of the year and Saturday’s running at Greyville will be no different.

Wild One (Nkosi Hlophe)

Wild One (Nkosi Hlophe)

Ruling favourite Wild One finished second last year and appears to have improved since being given a long rest. He has landed a good draw of five and has a nice galloping weight.

Storm Warning has benefitted from a breathing operation and bounced back to his best last time out over 3000m at Turffontein. He won’t mind a wide draw because he likes to be dropped out and has the necessary turn of foot to do well at Greyville.

Coltrane has a reasonable weight for a horse of his class and stamina capacity and has been working well since being freshened up.

Kingston Mines could set the fractions and comes in with a fair galloping weight. He didn’t appear to go on with it the last time he tried this trip on the Highveld but on the coast it could be a different story.

In form Solid Speed loves Greyville and is well drawn and nicely weighted. He gives the impression he will stay this trip and has enjoyed a similar preparation to Kannemeyer’s 2012 Gold Cup winner In Writing.

Vino Veritas appears to love her racing and gives the impression she could gallop all day, but she is quite high in the weights for a female.

Hot Ticket is the reigning Equus Champion Stayer and will be a tough nut to crack off a lowered merit rating, but the slight concern is that this is the first time he has tried this trip since a wind operation.

Gold Onyx loves Greyville and gets on well with jockey Grant Behr, but is six points higher in the merit ratings than when finishing third in this race last year.

Solid Speed (Nkosi Hlophe)

Solid Speed (Nkosi Hlophe)

Wild Ash was staying on when runner up in the Gr 2 SABC Gold Vase over 3000m, but will now be 3kg worse off with Solid Speed for a neck beating, although she will now be cherry ripe.

Disco Al was only accorded a one point merit rated raise for winning the Gr 2 Track And Ball Derby over 2400m at Scottsville last time out and is 1kg better off with Solid Speed for a 1,25 length beating over 2400m at Greyville before that. However, he is not a certainty to stay the full two miles.

Ash Cloud fought back to win the Gold Circle Oaks and has little to lose as this is her final start before going to stud. However, she has a big weight for a filly and is eight points higher in the merit ratings than last year when finishing sixth.

J’s Outsider won the Gold Bowl over this trip at Turffontein and should be cherry ripe. He has a light weight, but his wide draw makes it tough.

Balance Sheet was running on well in the Gr 3 tabGold 2200 and on pedigree has a good chance of staying the trip.

Kolkata is well handicapped on his second place finish in this race in 2011, but has not been in the same form this season.

Gone Baby Gone was found to be a bit anaemic after staying on fairly well in the Gold Vase for fifth and with treatment is expected to be in better shape. He went close in the Gr 3 Chairman’s Cup over 3200m at Kenilworth, but faces the winner Coltrane on 3,5kg worse terms.

Savage Wind was just 0,2 lengths behind Disco Al in the Track and Ball Derby and is now 3,5kg better off. That didn’t appear to be a true run race, but his form in Johannesburg also puts him in with an outside chance.

Futura & Sean Cormack (Nkosi Hlophe)

Futura (Nkosi Hlophe)

Wild One is selected to beat Storm Warning, with Coltrane, Kingston Mines and Solid Speed next best.

Futura and Legislate are the main protagonists in the Gr 1 Champions Cup over 1800m. However, Ice Machine is full of class and is tipped to mow them down under Anton Marcus.

Chestnuts N Pearls could give Dennis Drier an amazing sixth Champions Season Gr 1 win in the Thekwini Stakes over 1600m. Flying Ice and Melliflora could follow her home and Persian Rug and Old Em make most appeal of the rest.

The Gr 1 Premier’s Champions Stakes over 1600m sees the top class Rabada facing his first true test and on his first two career performances he looks hard to beat. Prospect Strike is unfortunately widely drawn but will nevertheless be a huge runner and Abashiri, Rikitikitani, Malak Al Moolook, Captain’s Causeway and Cutting Edge are others to consider.

The classy and versatile Jet Belle could retain her Gr 2 Gold Bracelet crown from Gallica Rose and Patchit Up Baby.

The Listed Darley Arabian over 1600m on the poly could see Night Trip retaining his crown as he has recently matched it with the best milers in the country.

The Listed Umgeni Handicap could see a deserved win for Al Ciberano, who has a nice galloping weight. Brutal Force, Barbosa, Moofeed, Tiger Territory and Mod Barley make most appeal of the rest.

Cape Speed impressed last time out and will relish the 1900m trip of the third, which is always one of the most interesting races on the Super Saturday card. He could beat home the well regarded Mooghamir, who was green on debut and should improve.

By David Thiselton

Mike Bass (Nkosi Hlophe)

Bass still with a chance

Mike Bass has not enjoyed the best of Champions Seasons by his high standards but still has a chance of going home to Cape Town with a Gr 1 trophy as he contests a couple of big races at Greyville’s Super Saturday meeting this weekend.

He runs Helderberg Blue and Ashton Park in the Gr 1 Champions Cup over 1800m.

He said perhaps a bit too much use had been made of Helderberg Blue early in the Vodacom Durban July, but the Jet Master gelding has come out of the race well and is now well drawn. However, he does face a tough task at the weights with the like of Futura, Legislate, Ice Machine and Punta Arenas in the race, at least according to official merit ratings. Donovan Dillon rides.

The Champions Cup often sees the relatively fresh horses who have not run in the July doing well and Ashton Park fits into this category. He has not been seen out since the Gr 1 Rising Sun Gold Challenge over 1600m on June 6. Bass admitted there was a question mark about him staying this 1800m trip, but he could be an interesting contender if finding cover behind a slow pace, because he has a fine turn of foot and is suited to the tight Greyville circuit. His draw of seven will make it tricky to find the cover he needs. However, veteran jockey Karl Neisius rides and as a good reader of a race will give him every chance of doing so.

Bass runs the Visionaire colt Jet Air in the Gr 1 Premier’s Champion Stakes over 1600m. The yard rate him although Bass admitted Rabada looked hard to beat. Jet Air was stepped up to 1600m for the first time at Scottsville last time out and won well, beating the well regarded Mike de Kock-trained first-timer Mooghamir by 2,5 lengths. The colt unfortunately has a tough draw of eleven to overcome. Nevertheless, he looks be an interesting contender with Bernard Fayd’Herbe up.

The yard run the Count Dubois mare Counting Angels in the Gr 2 Gold Bracelet over 2000m. She has a tough task on paper in this weight for age race plus penalties as she is only off a merit rating of 87. Furthermore, she is drawn wide in 14. However, she did over race a bit last time out in the Listed Queen Palm Stakes over 2400m and still managed to finish second, so she should love this trip. Furthermore, she should be cherry ripe. Donovan Dillon rides.

Bass’ classy Trippi gelding Night Trip defends his crown in the Listed Darley Arabian over 1600m and has a plum draw of three with Anton Marcus up. Marcus was booked off his last three rides at Scottsville yesterday (Wednesday) when not feeling well, but is likely to be rearing to go again for Saturday’s big meeting. Night Trip, like most Trippi’s, loves the poly.  He is off a 106 merit rating in this handicap event compared to a 95 last year, but has recently shown his class against the best over a mile so looks to have improved. He finished 0,2 lengths behind Futura over 1600m at Greyville when receiving only 1,5kg and then finished just 1,4 lengths behind Legislate in the weight for age Gr 1 Rising Sun Gold Challenge over 1600m, a race in which Futura beat him by just a-quarter-of-a-length. Bass added Night Trip had been doing well and he expected him to run well.

He also runs the Jet Master gelding Mountain Master in the Darley Arabian and sounded quite bullish about his chances. Since his Champions Season pipe opener in the IOS Drill Hall Stakes over 1400m the yard have tried him over trips from 1900m to 2400m. He is interesting coming back to this trip off a lowered merit rating, considering he won a good race on the Greyville turf over 1400m in May last year. Jet Master’s progeny seem to love the poly too. He could be in with a shout here with just 53kg on his back from a good draw with Richard Fourie up.

By David Thiselton

Picture: Mike Bass (Nkosi Hlophe)