Red Ray (Candiese Marnewick)

In mom’s honour

The victory of Red Ray in Saturday’s Gr.1 Mercury Sprint was a bittersweet occasion, as just four days earlier, Lammerskraal Stud had lost his dam Nacarat.

According to stud manager Sally Bruss, the 20-year-old mare had been suffering from Cushing’s disease (a dysfunction of the pituitary gland) and suddenly foundered very badly in the days leading up to her death.

Founder is the layman’s term for Laminitis, an acutely painful affliction of the feet where the laminae, which lie between the horny wall of the hoof and the pedal bone, become inflamed. This notoriously dreaded affliction has claimed the lives of many prominent thoroughbreds, amongst which the great Secretariat.

A Lammerskraal homebred herself, Nacarat, one of just a handful of daughters of Pas De Quoi at stud, showed ability on the track by winning four races as a three-year-old. However, it was as a broodmare that she was destined to make her mark. Red Ray is one of seven stakes performers amongst her ten winning foals, of which six were sired by the late resident champion stallion Western Winter.

A sibling to Gr.1 Thekwini winner Nania and Listed East Cape Oaks victress Valor Red, Red Ray is also an own brother to Brutal Force, winner of this season’s Gr.2 Merchants in the same Jooste silks, and to the Listed Summer Juvenile Stakes third, Bishops Bounty, all of which must surely now put Nacarat in line for the Equus award of Broodmare of the Year.

The mare’s last two foals are a yearling own brother by Go Deputy to the triple stakes winner Adobe Pink and a weanling colt by Western Winter’s champion sprint son What A Winter.

Nacarat’s legacy as a broodmare looks assured, as Red Ray is destined to exchange the rigours of a racing stable for life as a stallion. More importantly though, at least four daughters are treasured members of the Lammerskraal broodmare band: Valor Red, Adobe Pink, Gr.3-placed Vermillion and Chambre, who is already the dam of Gr.3-placed three-year-old Mr Roy.

Nacarat’s demise counts not just as a huge loss to the stud’s broodmare band, she has also taken a piece out of Sally’s heart: “She was a great mare to me and I will not only miss her grand presence, but also her extremely loving nature.”

Ada van der Bent

Ramsden: ‘He’s a machine’

Vodacom Durban July-winning trainer Joey Ramsden spoke of the emotional roller coaster he had ridden as trainer of the luckless “machine” Red Ray and of just how much the five-year-old entire’s Gr 1 Mercury Sprint victory on Saturday meant to both himself and jockey Anton Marcus.

Ramsden has bundles of outstanding memories in his training career, but one which will never fade is of a gallop Red Ray put up over six furlongs at Kenilworth under Andrew Fortune in which he annihilated the older Gr 1-winning filly Blueridge Mountain by some ten to fifteen lengths giving away weight.

In his next start, his first as a three-year-old, Red Ray beat the subsequently named Equus Horse Of The Year Legislate by 2,5 lengths in the Gr 3 Cape Classic over 1400m under Marcus. It was an impressive display, but Legislate was not well known at that stage and had started at odds of 20/1.

Joey Ramsden (Nkosi Hlophe)

Joey Ramsden (Nkosi Hlophe)

Therefore the talking point became Ramsden’s seemingly over bold statement of Red Ray’s ability when interviewed for a live Tellytrack audience in the winner’s enclosure. He said in the interview he regarded Red Ray as “similar but probably better than Variety Club”. The latter had by that stage won four Gr 1s, had proved himself one of the best milers the country had ever seen, and had twice been named Equus Horse Of The Year.

However, Ramsden stood by his statement on Saturday after the Mercury Sprint win.

He said,  “I always felt Red Ray was the equivalent of Variety Club, if not better. This horse was a living, running machine of absolute epic note. I have never been one to cry when horses move on, but when this horse went away to Dubai I absolutely cried. He was a very unlucky horse at three from terrible, terrible draws and should have won a Gr 1. When we brought him to Scottsville and he got beaten from a 15 draw when they all went up the other side, I literally cried that night. We ran him in races like the Queen’s Plate from bad draws.

“He is an amazing horse and he’s just as good going to the front, although he probably doesn’t quite get home over a mile, as he is being held up. I was lucky enough that year to have some brilliant horses like Variety Club and a very good filly called Blueridge Mountain, and Red Ray made mincemeat of them all. And he was never a morning glory horse, everything he did he reproduced. Whether it happened on the track due to various factors, it was just one of those unlucky things. If ever I was frustrated over a horse, and through none of his own fault, it was with him.

“He is and was a living, walking machine and one of the most handsome horses I have trained. You only have to look at his head to see this horse will make it no matter what he does. I am glad the public got to see the best of him today. They could tell from Anton’s interview how much he thinks of him and thought of him too. I would like to think we were not totally bananas in what we felt about his true ability.”

 

Marcus said in the winning interview on Saturday, “This horse on raw ability is probably the best horse in the country.”

The great jockey had been at “sixes and sevens” to explain Red Ray’s below par run in the Gr 2 Post Merchants. Ramsden said simply nothing had gone right for Red Ray that day and felt he had also been a touch unlucky in the Gr 1 Tsogo Sun Sprint, which was his comeback from a year-and-a-half layoff.

Ramsden and Markus Jooste’s racing manager Derek Brugman went back to the drawing board and decided to fit blinkers for the first time in the Mercury Sprint.

Anton Marcus retrospectively described this decision as “a stroke of genius.” The great jockey said working out how the race would pan out had been like trying to decipher hieroglyphics. However, Red Ray travelled down to the start well in the blinkers and after breaking well managed to find the rail quite comfortably in suitably fast conditions. He was then given a perfect lead by Captain Alfredo at a fast enough pace to allow him to use his considerable stride.

Red Ray Gr1 Mercury Sprint (Candiese Marnewick)

Red Ray Gr1 Mercury Sprint (Candiese Marnewick)

When asked the question in the straight, Red Ray responded magnificently and passed the line full of running and two lengths clear of a quality field. It was the second year in succession the Markus and Ingrid Jooste silks had been carried to victory in the Mercury Sprint. This time they did the one-two as the Mike Bass-trained six-year-old Night Trip enjoyed the step down in trip and stayed on strongly from a handy position for second. Three Gr 1-winning sprinters, Real Princess, Gulf Storm and Talktothestars, filled the next three places.

The Western Winter entire’s winning time of 69,31 seconds, albeit with the aid of a tailwind, was considerably quicker than Captain Of All’s time of 70,84 last year, despite the latter having won by five lengths and being accorded a merit rating of 126.

The race put the cherry on the top of a fine season for Red Ray’s breeders Lammerskraal Stud, who also bred SA Triple Crown winner Abashiri.

Ramsden heaped praise on his Summerveld assistant trainer Alson Ndzilana, whom he described as a “supreme horseman.”

He added later, “Today Anton (Marcus) showed exactly how good the horse really is, he made me feel very, very proud of Red Ray and exceptionally proud of Anton himself.”

Ramsden was going to savour every moment of the vindication on Saturday and it was not a selfish vindication because his only concern after making that bold statement back in October 2013 had been the fear he had made a fool of the horse.

He concluded, “Maybe this horse means a bit more to me than The July.”

David Thiselton

Pictures: Nkosi Hlophe and Candiese Marnewick

zante

All the way Zante

Neil Bruss won the Queen Palm Stakes, now downgraded from Listed to non-black type, for the second year in succession on Saturday at Greyville and this time it was with the Ideal World four-year-old filly Zante, who was bred by Mauritzfontein’s assistant stud manager Nigel Page.

Bruss did the one-two as Zante beat last year’s winner Deputy Ryder by six lengths. The Joey Ramsden-trained Grey Light was third.

After original jockey Weichong Marwing had been booked off, Anton Marcus had seemed a bit reluctant to be substitute, according to Bruss, as he had questioned whether Zante would stay the 2400m trip.

However, after Bruss had replied, “If you take her to the front she will go around twice,” Marcus had then agreed to take the ride.

Marcus put the advice into action after his initial attempt to hold Zante up behind the leaders had seen her racing a touch keen. She then bowled along into a six length lead and showed no signs of stopping in the straight.

Both Zante and Deputy Ryder will be aimed at the Gr 2 Gold Bracelet over 2000m on Super Saturday.

David Thiselton

lady of kildare

Record-breaking season for Tarry

National Champion trainer Sean Tarry scored another milestone when reaching a likely record of 200 winners for the season on Saturday at Greyville and it was fitting it happened in a feature race.

Tarry had a strong hand in the Listed Off To Stud Stakes over 1600m on the polytrack.

However, in the end it was the least fancied of his five runners, Lady Of Kildare, who prevailed under a typically polished ride from Anthony Delpech, beating stablemate Enchanted Silk by 1,75 lengths.

This Klawervlei Stud-bred five-year-old Captain Al mare has now won half of her eight starts on the Greyville poly.

Tarry is thought to be the first trainer to have ever reached the 200-winner mark in a South African season. He saddled three more winners at Turffontein yesterday to take his season tally to 203.

David Thiselton

Red Ray set for stud

Red Ray looks set to be retired to stud at Klawervlei following his inspired return to form in the Mercury Sprint at Greyville last Saturday.

Owner Markus Jooste’s racing manager Derek Brugman said yesterday that he is having discussions with the stud’s directors and that he might not know for sure until the end of the week.

But he added: “Red Ray is a brilliant horse and he has achieved everything we set out for him. With his pedigree, winning a Group 1 was all he needed on his CV to make a top stallion.

The Conglomerate (Nkosi Hlophe)

The Conglomerate (Nkosi Hlophe)

“It is a bit late in the season to send him to stud but we can make a plan to make it work for all the breeders who support him.”

The Sean Tarry-trained Legal Eagle, who many thought would go for the Champions Cup after side-stepping the Vodacom Durban July, is to have a rest before having another crack at the top Cape Town races. The four-year-old won the L’Ormarins Queen’s Plate in January before beating all except Smart Call in the Met.

Brugman explained: “Legal Eagle raced in two different provinces [he also won the HF Oppenheimer Horse Chestnut and the Premier’s Champions Challenge] and, while I would have expected him to win a race of the calibre of the Champions Cup, I didn’t think it was prudent to put that pressure on the horse.

“I discussed it with Sean and we have decided to give him a break and bring him back for the feature season in Cape Town.  He would probably then go back to Jo’burg for the Horse Chestnut and Premier’s Champions Challenge.”

Durban July hero The Conglomerate also misses the Champions Cup and the Joey Ramsden-trained four-year-old is to be aimed at the Sansui Summer Cup that Markus and Ingrid Jooste won with Wagner in 2012. They were also part-owners of the 2013 winner Yorker.

Brugman said: “I know it’s sacrilege to give the Champions Cup a miss when the horse is in such good form but we would like to be able to go for the Summer Cup off his present rating.”

Michael Clower

Red Ray shines bright

Red Ray won possibly the most important race of his life when landing the Gr1 Mercury Sprint at Greyville yesterday. Racing in blinkers for the first time he motored to the line under Anton Marcus to beat home rank outsider Night Trip and the filly Real Princess. Favourite Talktothestars had a nightmare trip from his wide draw and did well to finish fourth.

Not only did Red Ray enhance his reputation but probably also saved a visit from the vet and instead book a place on the Klawervlei Stud stallion roster. It was also another Gr1 winner for Markus and Ingrid Jooste, their placed further cemented at the top of the leading owners list with the Mike Bass-trained Night Trip providing a one-two.

Joey Ramsden, fresh off the high of winning the Vodacom Durban July a fortnight ago, and Jooste racing manager Derek Brugman deemed Red Ray good enough to take his chances in Dubai under the care of Mike de Kock. But it proved an ill-fated journey as the son of Western Winter managed only a single start. He was however, thought good enough to warrant the expense of a return trip home. It proved an inspired decision.

“He came from Mike in absolutely tip-top condition and all I had to do was put the cherry on the top,” complimented Ramsden.

Red Ray made a promising return after his lengthy break with a fourth in the Gr1 Tsogo Sun Sprint and then did not get the best of passages in the G2 Post Merchants. Red Ray found good market support in both races which should have tipped off punters that there was still a big race in the entire.

Fitting blinkers was probably the master stroke yesterday and although running around in the finish the result was never in doubt once Red Ray had collared pacemaker Captain Alfredo.

Red Ray (Candiese Marnewick)

Red Ray (Candiese Marnewick)

The pace was on from the start as apprentice Lyle Hewiston committed Captain Alfredo early. But Marcus has few rivals when it comes to the start and as if by magic he had Red Ray out of his 10 gate in a flash and up with the pace. Trip Tease made a tardy start and was swamped on the rail while Gavin Lerena opted to drop out from the jump and Talktothestars was last after the field had travelled a furlong. With a strong tailwind in the straight his goose was already cooked.

Red Ray tackled Captain Alfredo early in the straight but the pacemaker had done his dash leaving Marcus in front. Real Princess and Night Trip finished best of the pack but Red Ray had the race nailed a long way out.

Ramsden summed up, “I’m glad to have finally won it. I’ve run second too many times.”

In earlier action, top weight In Other Words started favourite for the Off To Stud Stakes (Listed) but it was stable companion Lady Of Kildare and Anthony Delpech, riding his 201st winner of the season, who spoilt the party for punters who plunged on the more fancied runner. The win also gave Sean Tarry his 200th winner of a season that he will never forget. He is R9 million ahead of nearest rival Justin Snaith in the now one-horse race for the National Trainer’s title and he can dust off his penguin suit for the Equus Awards on August 16.

Delpech, as is his want, had Sean Tarry’s mare perfectly placed to challenge coming off the false rail and she quickened through the traffic to win fluently from the third of Tarry’s runners, Enchanted Silk who edged out Silver Class in a photo.

In Other Words was in trouble soon after entering the straight and Piere Strydom eased her out of the race with something obviously amiss.

Weichong Marwing, still battling a dodgy back, was booked off the ride on Zante for the Queen Palm Stakes but Neil Bruss was more than happy to toss the bone to Marcus.

He proved an inspired replacement, riding his rivals to sleep and skipping home with six lengths to spare. Gathering Fame set funereal early fractions in the 2400m event but with half the race gone Marcus allowed Zante to pick up the gallop. Coming up the hill he had plenty of daylight on his field with Lerena on favourite and stable companion Deputy Ryder seemingly unperturbed in the back seat.

But all the jockey’s barring Marcus got it wrong as Zante kept rolling to win as she liked, Deputy Ryder putting in a belated finish for second but six lengths adrift at the line.

Andrew Harrison

Trip To Heaven (JC Photo)

Versatility key to Heaven

The Gr 1 Mercury Sprint, which looks to be ultra competitive, heads a nine event card for the racing purist to savour at Greyville on Saturday.

Trip To Heaven has speed and class as well as a good draw and he looks set to land his first Gr 1. S’Manga Khumalo knows the lightly raced four-year-old Trippi gelding well and should bring the best out of him. This horse is versatile so can use his speed to lead if jumping well or could otherwise bring his devastating turn of foot to the table if coming from off the pace.

Trip To Heaven (JC Photo)

Trip To Heaven (JC Photo)

Talktothestars is officially the highest rated runner in the field by a whopping seven points. He displayed a fine turn of foot in the Computaform Sprint and might have to employ it to the maximum from his wide draw here, or otherwise he will have to get lucky if opting to be as handy as he was when winning the Tsogo Sun Sprint. Gavin Lerena’s Hong Kong experience will be of huge benefit in this race as the 1200m races there are all around the turn.

Trip Tease jumps from pole position and although only ever racing beyond 1000m once in his career he has been settling well lately, as he did last time when sitting behind a fast pace over 1000m in  a Pinnacle event at Turffontein, before turning it on impressively to win going away by 3,25 lengths.

Barbosa didn’t raise a gallop in the Tsogo Sun, having run an excellent third in the Computaform Sprint before that. In January he showed how well he can turn it on from behind over 1200m at Greyville when beaten just a neck by Ice Machine at level weights. A repeat from his tough draw of 14 here will give him a chance.

Real Princess’s draw of six should allow her to find cover before using her exceptional turn of foot. Gulf Storm has the blinkers off and should be running on strongly from a tricky draw. Heartland has always been hightly regarded and should also be making late headway being a horse better suited to 1400m.

Lanner Falcon is a dark horse as one who will relish this tough 1200m and she was a touch unlucky when having to be switched wide for a run in the Gr 1 City Of Pietermaritzburg Sprint. Triptique’s excellent Drill Hall Stakes runner up effort gives him a chance of earning here too. Fly By Night is a former winner of this race when it was staged at Clairwood and showed in the recent Post Metchants she can run on well from behind as she will likely need to from a tricky draw here.

Red Ray (Liesl King)

Red Ray (Liesl King)

Red Ray has his third run after a long layoff and is another with the class to win. Night Trip is an intriguing runner as a classy 1400-1600m horse who has done well at Greyville before and he did win the last time he was tried over this distance way back in October 2013 at Durbanville. Exelero finished a fine third in the Tsogo Sun but officially has the toughest task at the weights here.

Captain Alfredo will have to improve on his Post Merchants run to be a factor and strikes as being a bit too one-paced to be a threat at this level, although he could perhaps play an important role by leading as this will likely give him his best chance from a tricky draw.

The selection is Trip To Heaven to beat Talktothestars, Trip Tease, Barbosa and Real Princess.

In the first race over 1600m on the turf Philanthropist colt Rockefella impressed when running on over 1400m on the Greyville turf to win on debut and he should relish the step up in trip. His paternal half-brother The Slade is a half-brother to two-year-old Gr 1-winner Afrikaburn and has a fair draw with Anthony Delpech up. Step Up is a lot better than his last run when caught hopelessly wide and he is the dark horse from a good draw.

In the second over 1600m The High Life won a race over this trip at Scottsville which was later declared null and void, so has a weight advantage here receiving 3kg as a non-winner. Costa Da Sol won fluently second time out on the poly over this trip and Dancing Wall could improve.

In the third over 1400m on the poly, the hard-knocking Hejira could beat a weak field.

In the fourth over 1600m on the poly, the form of Lonelyarethebrave’s win over course and distance last time has been franked so he could make it a course and distance hattrick off a four point higher mark, despite a wide draw. Emperor Niarchos and Danish Wood make most appeal of the rest.

Seventh Heart is an improving sort and looks the one to beat from a tough draw in the Listed Off To Stud Stakes over 1600m on the poly. In Other Words and Chennai Babe should be thereabouts too.

In the Queen palm Stakes over 2400m on the turf, Deputy Ryder has some class and is drawn well over a suitable trip. Gathering Fame and Zante could be threats.

In the eighth over 1000m on the poly Zinnavar should be cherry ripe to deliver over a suitable course and distance. Big King can’t be ignored from a good draw and Shenyang is the dark horse as one who is a lot better than his last two runs.

In the last over 1200m on the poly, Wind Singer has some class and could make amends for her disappointing last run from another good draw. Lily Gray has a chance from pole and Shizam is a two-year-old who caught the eye in her last win over this trip at Kenilworth and she is also well drawn.

David Thiselton

Fly By Night (Liesl King)

Bass duo big runners

Mike Bass’ Summerveld assistant trainer Robert Fayd’Herbe made the two mares Fly By Night and Lanner Falcon big runners in Saturday’s Gr 1 Mercury Sprint, while admitting Night Trip was “taking his chances” over a trip too sharp.

They have all been doing well at Summerveld and Fayd’Herbe said, “Fly By Night has been doing well in KZN this season, but is drawn wide (12) so will have to come from off them. There is not much between her and Lanner Falcon.”

Fly By Night (pictured) ran on well in the Gr 2 Post Merchants over this 1200m course and distance a month ago for second, albeit from a good draw. In last year’s Mercury Sprint she ran on well for fourth despite being caught wide behind a slow pace early. She will be out to reclaim the crown she won two years ago when the race was run at Clairwood for the last time.

Lanner Falcon (Liesl King)

Lanner Falcon (Liesl King)

Lanner Falcon was a touch unlucky in the Gr 1 City Of Pietermaritzburg Sprint over this trip at Scottsville when having to be switched outward considerably to get a clear run. She only finished two lengths behind Mercury Sprint contender Real Princess there and was only 0,75 lengths behind Fly By Night. From a fine daw of four she has a chance on Saturday at a course where her fine turn of foot is a valuable asset. She last ran on Vodacom Durban July day in the Gr 1 Jonsson Workwear Garden Province Stakes where she was cramped for room close to home and not disgraced. Fayd’herbe expected her to come from about midfield on Saturday.

Officially both mares have a tough task on paper as Laner Falcon is merit rated 107 and Fly By Night 105, way below the 121 rating of Talktothestars.

Fayd’herbe said about the 103 merit rated six-year-old Night Trip, who jumps from a plum draw of three, “It is a bit short for him, but he hasn’t run for a while so is fresh. We had to take our chances from the draw and he will then go for the Darley Arabian on Super Saturday (which he bids to win for the third time in succession). He seems to like a right hand bend and could maybe sneak into the quartet.”

Brandon Lerena is aboard Fly By Night, Stuart Randolph rides Lanner Falcon and Callan Murray rides Night Trip.

David Thiselton

Real Princess (Nkosi Hlophe)

Princess has the credentials

Dean Kannemeyer believes his Gr 1 City Of Pietermaritzburg Sprint winner Real Princess deserves a crack at the Gr 1 Mercury Sprint against the boys and has freshened up his other runner Captain Alfredo.

He said, “Real Princess has got the credentials. I said before the Scottsville Sprint if Carry On Alice could win it then on form so could she (having finished on top of Carry On Alice in the Gr 2 Southern Cross Stakes) and she then proved it.”

The beautifully bred Trippi filly also beat Fly By Night and Lanner Falcon in the City Of Peiermaritzburg Sprint and Kannemeyer rated that pair as ”very good fillies.”

Real Princess (Nkosi Hlophe)

Real Princess (Nkosi Hlophe)

He continued, “I stayed out of the Gr 2 Diadem Stakes and Lanner Falcon and Fly By Night beat the boys there and finished one-two (six months ago in December). Real Princess is a better horse as a late four-year-old than she was six months go.”

She will be suited to Greyville as Kannemeyer pointed out she had “fantastic cruising speed” and she also showed at Scottsville how good her turn of foot was.

He said about Captain Alfredo, “He’s a tough campaigner and was a little below his very best in his last two starts. He found a bit of interference in the straight last time in the Post Merchants and before that in the Tsogo Sun Sprint didn’t quite finish, so I have freshened him up now. He is a bull of a horse and is tough and sound, but he hasn’t got a great draw.”

Real Princess has a good draw of six with Anthony Delpech retaining the ride and Lyle Hewitson rides Captain Alfredo from draw eleven.

Kannemeyer concluded, “They are both very well, but it’s a very strong race.”

Kannemeyer said his first-timer in race one over 1600m, The Slade, who is a big colt by Philantropist and a half-brother to Gr 1 winner Afrikaburn, would likely need a run or two for the penny to drop  but felt he could develop into a promising sort.

David Thiselton

Red Ray (Liesl King)

Ramsden has faith in Red Ray

Vodacom Durban July-winning trainer Joey Ramsden has no doubt Red Ray is as good as he was before leaving for overseas two years ago and is happy with his work ahead of Saturday’s Gr 1 Mercury Sprint.

However, Ramsden does have a little doubt whether running the five-year-old Western Winter entire in first-time blinkers from a tricky draw is the right thing to do for obvious reasons (he could end up caught wide.) However, it is difficult to tell where the pace will come from in the race and it could pay to have him handier than he was in the Gr 2 Post Merchants.

Red Ray ran a good fourth in the Gr 1 Tsogo Sun Sprint, despite likely needing it in his first run since his only disappointing run overseas a year-and-a-half before. That run is one reason Ramsden believes he still retains his ability.

In the Post Merchants he had traffic problems in the straight and could have got closer. Anton Marcus stays aboard from a draw of nine.

David Thiselton