Cape Speed (Nkosi Hlophe)

Cape Speed a ‘smart horse’

South Africa’s Champion Season is still a month off but hands are being raised at every meeting with Cape Speed the latest to show Classic potential at Greyville yesterday.

“He’s a smart horse,” said Dean Kannemeyer. “But I don’t think the penny has quite dropped,” he added after the son of Ideal World had disposed of his four opponents. This was his fourth win from eight starts, his second on the bounce after being gelded. “He was a rig so we had no choice. We took him to Cape Town where he won one but I think it was bothering him,” Kannemeyer continued. “He may still need blinkers to sharpen him up …. I think he will stay 2400m.”

Cape Speed (Nkosi Hlophe)

Cape Speed (Nkosi Hlophe)

Anthony Delpech concurred. “He’s a lazy bugger. You saw how I had to wake him up in the ring and I trotted him around at the start.”

Cape Speed races in the same Khaya Stable silks of Lady Christine Laidlaw that Power King carried to victory in last year’s Vodacom Durban July and while Cape Speed has a way to go, the signs are good.

The same combination was back in business half-an-hour later as Never Settle made light of a six-month break to deny the strongly fancied Bagger Vance. “We thought he was our best two-year-old last season,” Delpech revealed in his earlier interview. Never Settle obviously has as he was well supported in the market and came from near last to land the honours.

Racing lore dictates that one race is the equal of four home gallops in bringing a horse on and that was pretty much the case as Zelig hit the front from the jump and galloped the opposition into the ground in the first. The unraced Desert Winter opened favourite but Zelig supports took the bookies to the cleaners as Gavin van Zyl’s runner was backed in to 16-10 from an opening call of 7-1.

“He was very unlucky in his first start. He got squeezed out and dug in his toes,” said Warren Kennedy, but the run obviously brought him on. “We jumped him through the starting stalls with some quite decent horses and he put up a good gallop,” Van Zyl summed up. “He will go a ‘mile’ and has got a bright future ahead of him.” Good news for his legion of owners, many on course to lead in the son of Lateral.

Never Settle (Nkosi Hlophe)

Never Settle (Nkosi Hlophe)

The bookies were wise to Spice Girl in the second and Anton Marcus, taking a leaf out of the Kenney book, had the 4-10 favourite out and running from the start. “She did it the hard way and I think she’s a very decent filly. Thank God we have a share,” commented Charles Laird making music for the ears of Alesh Naidoo in whose silks the filly races. “I want to go for the big races,” said the prolific owner. “I’m tired of the little ones.”

Even the stable cat is in danger of being saddled up while the Tarry yard is in such mustard form as Ostentation gave log-leading Sean Tarry another winner. Owner Chris van Niekerk is probably the best ‘horse’ in the yard but he is very well rewarded as Tarry places his horses expertly and has them right on the day. Long-time assistant Deshone Steyn saddled up for apprentice Lyle Hewitson yesterday where his 4kg claim was the difference between victory and defeat. Registering the sixth win of his professional career, Hewitson edged out former champion Marcus aboard the front-running Victory Takeover.

A drop in distance and merit rating was enough to get Shap Shap home for Brian Burnard with Gareth van Zyl and Warren Kennedy working out how to race the tearaway gelding. “He ran away with me last time,” admitted Kennedy of the strapping son of Noordhoek Flyer. “He fights you all the time and he fought me behind the pens so I just let him stride. He had had enough in the end but it was a win full of merit.”

By Andrew Harrison

Inara (Liesl King)

Follow the Bass string

Mike Bass’ South African Champions Season string will be worth following this winter as they have all been doing well at Summerveld.

Inara (Liesl King)

Inara (Liesl King)

The string at present consists of Inara, Silver Mountain, Nightingale, Tafferty Tart, Helderberg Blue, Mountain Master, Three Balloons, Lanner Falcon, Ernie, Fly By Night and Night Trip. Paterfamilias is still in Cape Town but will be entered in the Vodacom Durban July and it hasn’t been decided yet when he will join the string. There are others who might also still make the journey and these include the exciting Var filly Wake Up Maggie, who was bred by rival Milnerton trainer Joey Ramsden and is unbeaten in two starts.

Inara is being prepared for the Gr 1 Empress Club Stakes over 1600m at Turffontein on April 16. This Trippi filly is a leading light of possibly the best female crop in South Africa racing history.

In her last two starts she finished runner up in the Gr 1 Maine Chance Farms Paddock Stakes over 1800m to Smart Call, who is currently rated the joint sixth best racehorse in the world, and she then successfully defended her crown in the Gr 1 Klawervlei Majorca Stakes, her third career Gr 1.

She was not herself in KZN last year and was reportedly found to have had a lung infection, but all seems well so far this year and she put up a pleasing gallop yesterday (Tuesday).

Silver Mountain (Liesl King)

Silver Mountain (Liesl King)

Lanner Falcon is another older female who must be followed. Assistant trainer Robert Fayd’Herbe said this Trippi five-year-old is just getting better and better. He reckoned she has the ability to win the Gr 1 City Of Pietermaritzburg Sprint in what might be a below par season in the female sprinting division and other races like the Gr 2 Tibouchina over 1400m and Gr 1 Jonsson Workwear Garden Province Stakes over 1600m will likely be on her agenda too. In her last two starts she won the Gr 2 Khaya Stables Diadem Stakes over 1200m comfortably, beating Gr 1-winning stablemate Fly By Night, and then finished third in the Majorca.

Fly By Night, who won the Mercury Sprint two seasons ago at Clairwood, has become difficult to predict, but appears to be in a good space at present and the City Of Pietermaritzburg Sprint is her obvious target.

Silver Mountain stamped herself as the best three-year-old filly in the country when demolishing the Gr 1 WSB Cape Fillies Guineas field by five lengths. She was subsequently narrowly beaten into fourth in the Gr 1 Grand Parade Cape Guineas and was then a 0,75 lengths runner up in the CTS Million Dollar. The latter two performances were disappointing to those who are willing her to greatness, but in the context of her SA Champions Season tasks, they were peerless. She is a diminutive filly with an electric turn of foot and will be ideally suited to the tight Greyville track. The yard are considering finding a race for her before her first big target, the Gr 2 Canon Fillies Guineas on the Friday night of May 6.

Helderberg Blue (Nkosi Hlophe)

Helderberg Blue (Nkosi Hlophe)

Tafferty Tart is just below the best three-year-old fillies, while Nightingale is a progressive sort who could develop into a Woolavinton 2000 or Oaks type.

Helderberg Blue will likely have a similar program to last year where he raced in the Drill Hall,  the Betting World 1900, Cup Trial, July and Champions Cup, finishing fourth in both the Cup Trial and Champions Cup.

Ernie always goes to the races with the words “Believe in Ernie” ringing in his ears due to the fun characters of his owners and such will be the case on Friday night when he runs in the Gr 3 Byerley Turk over 1400m at Greyville. This is his maximum trip and he will subsequently be kept to sprints with the Gr 1 Tsogo Sun Sprint over 1200m at Scottsville on June 4 a possibility.  This Elusive Fort gelding has a fine turn of foot and as Cape Town merit ratings tend to be suppressed due to the superior class of horse it would be no surprise to see him win on Friday night as he is officially the third highest rated horse in the race off 101.

Mountain Master’s aim is to win races, without taking in big features, and he is one to follow in handicaps off an attractive merit rating of 82.

Three Balloons is a stayer who was raised 13 points to 89 after his Gr 3 CTS Chairmans Cup runner up finish over 3200m and the big staying features culminating in the Gold Cup are his obvious targets.

The enigmatic Night Trip has been accompanied to KZN by his retired lead pony Epic Tale and his chief ambition will be to win the Listed Darley Arabian over 1600m on the poly on Super Saturday for the third year in succession.

By David Thiselton

Muscatt (Nkosi Hlophe)

Strong KZN sprint contingent

The KZN challenge for the Gr 1 Tsogo Sun Sprint to be run on June 3 over 1200m at Scottsville is looking increasingly strong.

The Michael Roberts-trained Muscatt showed his breaking of the recent Scottsville 1000m course record was no fluke when winning just as impressively over the same course and distance on Sunday in a time of 56,18 seconds, just 0,37 seconds off his own record.

Muscatt (Nkosi Hlophe)

Muscatt (Nkosi Hlophe)

He downed another Tsogo Sun candidate, the Dean Kannemeyer-trained Captain Alfredo by 0,75 lengths despite starting at odds of 17/10 compared to the latter’s even money. Muscatt was ridden by apprentice Calvin Habib and had the latter’s 2,5 kg claim as the only weight advantage over Captain Alfredo. However, Captain Alfredo will appreciate the extra 200m of the Tsogo Sun (he looks likely to be a huge runner), while the jury will be out on Muscatt in that regard as his form suggests he prefers the minimum trip.

The Roberts-trained Natal will be another big runner if he lines up in the Tsogo Sun as expected and will certainly enjoy the 1200m trip.

Mark Dixon’s London Call was beaten 2,5 lengths into second place by Muscatt when the latter broke the Scottsville 1000m record, although he was giving the latter 1.5kg. He might go straight for the Tsogo Sun due to his soundness issues and is another who will love the 1200m trip.

The Dennis Drier-trained Triptique likely needed his run on Sunday and was 3,5 lengths behind Muscatt, but he is classy and progressive and will also relish the step up to 1200m. His stablemate Barbosa has had a cracking season and is another who could bolster the KZN challenge.

Meanwhile the recent Scottsville 1200m record breaker Humidor has been entered by trainer Tony Rivalland in a MR 82 handicap over 1200m at Scottsville this Sunday. He is only merit rated 80, despite his debut in a four start career to date being his only defeat, so has his work cut out to make it into the Tsogo Sun field.

By David Thiselton

Mike Miller (Nkosi Hlophe)

Clear sailing for Miller

The Mike Miller-trained Argonaut filly Clear Sailing became the latest in a long line of mares in foal to succeed on the racecourse when winning the Listed Kwa-Zulu Natal Stakes over 1000m at Scottsville on Sunday and she completed a feature double for Miller in the process.

Mike Miller (Nkosi Hlophe)

Mike Miller (Nkosi Hlophe)

Miller had earlier sent out the Argonaut colt Rob’s Jewel to land the Non-Black Type Sentinel Stakes over 1000m at odds of 1/3, although he beat home just three opponents in a disappointingly small field.

Being by Argonaut was not the only thing the two horses had in common as both were originally owned by Robert and Robin Muir.

Argonaut was also originally wholly owned by the Muirs. Shares in Argonaut were sold after he had won two Gr 1s as a two-year-old for Geoff Woodruff, including a start to finish five-length destruction of the Gr 1 Premier’s Champion Stakes field over 1600m at Clairwood.  He was exported to Australia, where he was injured and never raced. He then returned to South Africa to stand at Cheveley Stud, who bred him. Argonaut, who was ultimately shunned by breeders and recently sold on, is now suddenly beginning to fire. Clear Sailing and Rob’s Jewel follow the like of Natal and Beat The Retreat as horses to have recently put their hands up for the sire.

Clear Sailing’s former trainer Dennis Drier revealed she had cracked a pelvis as a weanling and later developed a breathing issue. Argonaut was not firing as a sire either, so the Muirs decided to put her up for sale after just three career starts, which included a debut win over 1200m at Clairwood.

Well known Durban owner Cecil Baitz then bought her together with his son Gary, a veterinarian practicing in Australia. Upon moving her to the Miller yard Gary advised the use of a “spoon bit”, which is used in Australia to keep the tongue down. Whether the bit is the reason Miller has been able to extract another three wins from her is open to question because it did not solve the same breathing issue found in another Drier horse named Eternal Jet. The latter’s claim to fame, on top of being promising as a youngster, was being the fastest horse the Onderstepoort veterinary team have ever witnessed on their Overground Exercise Laryngoscope. He is now battling in Port Elizabeth.

Clear Sailing (Nkosi Hlophe)

Clear Sailing (Nkosi Hlophe)

Clear Sailing showed her class in her second victory for Miller, in a handicap over 1000m at Scottsville, as she downed the useful Paul Gadsby-trained sprinter Miss Varlicious. However, she was found after the race to have bled. The connections consequently decided to have her covered by the former Pat Shaw-trained Singapore dual Gr 1-winning sprint-miler Ato, who now stands at Summerhill Stud. She then returned to training at Summerveld.

Miller believes she has been more relaxed since being scoped in foal.

She enjoyed the forgiving conditions on Sunday and loves running down the rail, so the low draw suited. Anthony Depech also gets on well with her and she finished 0,75 lengths clear of the hot favourite, the Wendy Whitehead-trained Free State. The latter lost her unbeaten record but a lot more will be heard of this Ideal World three-year-old as that was her first run for five months.

Clear Sailing will be scoped again and if proven to still be in foal, as opposed to the possibility of having absorbed the foal, she will be retired. Otherwise she will remain in training.

Rob’s Jewel was bred by the Muirs and they sold him after a promising fourth place finish in the Listed Storm Bird Stakes over 1000m at Turffontein, which followed a debut win over 800m. Miller believed he had needed the Turffontein run as he moved up well and only ran out of steam in the last few yards.

Gold Circle CEO Michel Nairac bought a share in him together with Miller’s son Sterling and Mauritian ML Jean Hardy. The purchase yielded immediate dividends on Sunday, as Rob’s Jewel repelled the only other previous winner in the field, Skip The Red, to win by a comfortable 1,75 lengths under Alec Forbes. His time of 57,58 seconds was 27 seconds quicker than the subsequent winner of the Non-Black Type King’s Pact Stakes, the Mike de Kock-trained New Approach filly Al Hawraa, who ran on strongly under Anton Marcus.

Executive Power (Nkosi Hlophe)

Executive Power (Nkosi Hlophe)

Miller might now aim Rob’s Jewel at the Gr3 Godolphin Barb Stakes over 1100m at Scottsville on May 1. However, he is reluctant to enter him in the Gr 1 Tsogo Sun Gold Medallion over 1200m in early June, regarding it as too tough a race and one which can effect a horse’s future.

Miller also has another promising two-year-old in the superbly bred filly Call Me Winter, who is by Western Winter out of a mare the Miller yard trained, Outcome by Muhtafal, who won the prestigious Gr 1 Garden Province Stakes over 1600m. Call Me Winter impressed on debut with a fluent win over 1200m on the poly. The form has been franked and Miller is now targeting the Listed Devon Air Stakes over 1400m at Greyville on June 11, although she is due to race again before then.

Miller will run the promising Warm White Night gelding Executive Power in Friday night’s Gr 3 Byerley Turk over 1400m in order to “find out how good he is.”

He won over the course and distance last time out.

By David Thiselton

power king fin

The Vodacom Durban July 2016 – diary note

Durban – The 120th running of the Vodacom Durban July, Africa’s Greatest Horseracing Event, will take place at Greyville Racecourse on Saturday 2 July 2016.

The event will be preceded by a full programme of fashion competitions and shows:
Thursday 5 May: Selection of Vodacom Durban July Fashion Challenge finalists off storyboards at Ice Models, Durban
Tuesday 24 May: The Vodacom Durban July Young Designer Award Semi-final selection, Members Lounge, Greyville Racecourse.
Monday 13 June: The Vodacom Durban July Young Designer Award Semi-finals & Designer Collection.
Wednesday 15 June: The Vodacom Durban July Fashion Showcase Cheese and Wine, including the premier of the Vodacom Durban July Invited Designer Showcase.
Friday 17 June: The Vodacom Durban July Young Fashion Showcase Dinner, including the Vodacom Durban July Invited Designer Showcase.

Applications for Media Accreditation can be found here and close punctually at 2pm on Tuesday 21 June 2016.

The 2016 Vodacom Durban July takes place at Greyville Racecourse on Saturday 2 July. More information can be found at www.vodacomdurbanjuly.co.za

Princess Royal and jockey Anthony Andrews (Liesl King)

Princess Royal aimed at Fillies Sprint

Glen Kotzen is going to aim Princess Royal at the Gr 1 Fillies Sprint at Scottsville on June 4 and last year’s Gr 1 Allan Robertson runner-up boosted her claims by producing a spectacular turn of foot to sprint away from the opposition at Kenilworth on Saturday.

Admittedly the Sceptre winner had nothing of the calibre of Carry On Alice to contend with this time but, as part-owner Peter de Beyer put it, “She did it far better and far easier than I thought she would.”

Anthony Andrews, who gets on so well with what can apparently be a tricky customer, said: “The key to her is keeping her calm beforehand. If she plays up with you down at the start you’ve as good as run your race.

“This was only an allowance plate whereas the Sceptre last time was a Group 2 but I wouldn’t think she was 100% – it was a prep before going to Durban and she would have needed it.”

Princess Royal (Liesl King)

Princess Royal (Liesl King)

But keep an eye on Captain’s Flame. The lightly raced second favourite would have been closer than fourth had she not been hampered and twice forced to switch.

Mike Bass has the Cape Of Good Hope Nursery on May 28 as his objective for the highly regarded Caballo Blanco who comfortably landed the odds in the first.

“He shows a lot of ability at home and I’m very excited to see how he progresses,” said Candice Robinson while Grant van Niekerk, who rode five winners for his boss in two days, added: “This horse is talented and he will go places.”

The Kenilworth Fillies Nursery on the same day is the target for stable companion Live Life who also justified odds-on and is a half-sister to Cold As Ice.

Mike Stewart reckons he will make winter hay with Al Wahed who was sent to him from Duncan Howells to avail of the daily benefits of sea-water. But, according to his new trainer, the vet’s knife has also improved the four-year-old who certainly came good under Brandon May in the Soccer 6 Handicap.

The Noordhoek trainer explained: “Al Wahed has an offset knee but it’s since I gelded him three weeks ago that he has begun moving nicely. This is going to be a serious horse to follow over the winter.”

Cape Town-born Ralton Peters is optimistic that a long-awaited first South African winner will open up new avenues of opportunity.

Peters, 31, said: “I was sent to Zimbabwe by the Jockey Academy in 2001 because they had very few apprentices there and I stayed until I joined Brett Crawford two years ago.”

Newcomer Make It Raine in the 1 200m fillies maiden was Peters’ first winner since Approval Rating in the 2013 Zimbabwe Guineas and only his sixth ride of the season. He had to sit and suffer when he found his path blocked approaching the 200m mark and he then coolly switched the 25-1 shot through a gap to look as impressive as his mount.

Wayne Kieswetter and his Ridgemont manager Craig Carey were impressed with both horse and rider. “Ralton does a hell of a lot with the horses at Brett Crawford’s. We were a bit worried about this filly because she has taken a long time but she suddenly seems to have come good,” said Carey.

But the hero of the hour was racehorse owner Dr Sarembock. The failure of the booked medical officer to turn up  caused consternation both at Kenilworth (“The start of racing has been delayed indefinitely,” announced the public address) and Turffontein where race times had to be put back with Clyde Basel assessing his various options as busily as punter working out the bipot. Sarembock calmly stepped into the breach and, not surprisingly, was welcomed like manna from heaven.

> Aldo Domeyer, successful on Tripinthemist for Paddy Kruyer in the last, has been suspended for a week (April 6-12) for interference when winning on Streaming the previous Saturday.

By Michael Clower

London Call (Nkosi Hlophe)

Turk test for Chaos

Summerveld trainer Mark Dixon will begin sizing up his South African Champions Season hopes after Friday night’s Greyville meeting (April 8), where his gelding Captain Chaos runs in the Gr 3 Byerley Turk over 1400m on the turf and his filly Isingamoya runs in the Umzimkhulu over the same course and distance.

Mark Dixon (Nkosi Hlophe)

Mark Dixon (Nkosi Hlophe)

However, Dixon’s chief SA Champions Season hopes probably lie with his sprinter London Call.

Captain Chaos is a former Cape-based horse who won the Gr 3 Cape Of Good Hope Nursery over 1200m at Kenilworth by 3,5 lengths in just his third career start, having won over 1100m on debut. He beat the like of Tar Heel and Eighth Wonder in the Nursery, so must possess some class.

After opening his KZN career with a sprint, the good looking bay by Captain Al stayed on well from some way back for a 5,5 length second to Beat The Retreat in a Progress Plate over 1300m on the Greyville Turf a couple of weeks ago. He was giving the winner 2kg and Dixon said, “He has come on from the race and I think he will get the mile, so might go for the Canon Guineas although I don’t know whether he is good enough.” Captain Chaos is drawn 27 of 35 entries in the Byerley Turk and as a two-time winner will carry the minimum weight.

Isingamoya by Muhtafal caught the eye when running on fluently to comfortably win her maiden over 1200m at Scottsville second time out and she has finished close up thirds in all three of her subsequent starts from 1200-1300m.

However, the last two of those runs were in Plate races against some promising sorts and Dixon said, “She is still building up and can improve.”

She has drawn well in three of 32 entries in the Umzimkhulu.

London Call (Nkosi Hlophe)

London Call (Nkosi Hlophe)

Dixon said he would make his five-year-old Kahal gelding London Call a “massive” runner in the Gr 1 Tsogo Sun Sprint to be run on June 4 at Scottsville if he were able to get into the field off his current merit rating of 101. He might in fact send him straight into the race due to his soundness problems.

While he is not a horse who can be raced often, he is on the other hand one who is easy to get ready for a race.

London Call deserves to line up in the Tsogo Sun, having won four of his eight career starts and being placed second twice.

Of others in the yard, the four-year-old Kildonan gelding Blessed Release could be one to follow in the lower divisions. He was accorded only a 66 merit rating after winning his maiden in very soft going over 1400m at Scottsville by 7,5 lengths against an admittedly uninspiring field. That was his seventh career start but Dixon said the best had not yet been seen of this gelding.

By David Thiselton

Legal Eagle far too sharp

 

In a pre-race interview for the Gr1 HF Oppenheimer Horse Chestnut Stakes Sean Tarry chose his words like a crafty politician. “Obviously the race at the end of the month is the main aim …. so I’ve left some meat on the bone,” he cautioned gloomily, pausing after each word.  Anyone listening will have been left pondering the question; was an obviously under-done Legal Eagle good enough to win the unofficial second leg of the Gr1 WFA Championship, after the L’Ormarins Queen’s Plate?

Tarry’s words were ringing in the ears coming through the 700 m mark as Gavin Lerena gambled on New Predator, bulleting past the pace-making Legal Eagle and pinching four lengths on the odds-on favourite.

But commentator Alistair Cohen had it nailed. “New Predator’s gone for broke a long way out,” he called.

The early pace was desperately slow and Anton Marcus confirmed. “It was never by design. I didn’t really want to lead,” and Tarry concurred. “There were two gallopers in the race and I couldn’t understand their tactics. But I’m not going to complain in the winner’s box.”

Marcus found himself in front for nothing and played the field on the brake but briefly his plan looked to have backfired as New Predator pounced off the false rail. Caught flat-footed for a few strides, Legal Eagle responded; he changed down a gear, got the revs up, and roared past a tiring New Predator with the odds on the gelding winning the Premiers Champion Challenge slashed from evens to odds-on in a matter of strides.

Last year’s winner Captain America was in the box seat all the way round but once Legal Eagle turned it on he was always chasing and did enough to collar a game new Predator on the line to take second.

Later Abashiri proved that he is everything he is touted to be as he nailed down the second leg of the Triple Crown with a bloodless victory in the Gr1 SA Classic. An injury after his Gauteng Guineas win was a well-kept secret by a trainer who wears his heart on his sleeve and no doubt Mike Azzie will have found himself biting his tongue as the media questions were put.

“I’m not the old brash Michael Azzie,” he said but he will still have been under tremendous pressure, inside the yard and out, after an injury scare put Abashiri’s participation in the Classic and the Triple Crown in doubt.

“He had eight days of box rest,” admitted Azzie after an early morning call from his son and assistant saying, “We have a problem.” Not quite the same magnitude as Apollo 13 but for a trainer the words will have triggered a cold sweat. “But he was a fit horse before the injury,” reasoned Azzie, “and a horse does not lose its fitness in eight days.”

Karl Zechner, savouring his first Gr1 victory, was lavish in his praise for his mount. “It was an ordinary race to him and he made it look like an ordinary race.”

Injury scare or not, Abashiri was ridden with supreme confidence by Zechner, the son of Go Deputy scything through the opposition down the Turffontein straight. Midfield in the opening exchanges, shadowed by Marcus and Brazuca, Zechner hunted a clear passage up the straight and confidently punched through a yawning gap. Marcus knew quickly that he was in trouble. Zechner had a hard hold while his whip was flapping and it was just a matter of who would run second.

Given the manner of victory the SA Derby and the Triple Crown are at his mercy and owners Adriaan and Rika van Vuuren can invite a few more orange-clad guests to the party for Derby Day come the end of the month.

It was a tough day at the office for Johan Janse van Vuuren who had third, second and second in the three Gr1’s.

Stanley Ferreira is a man of few words, none in fact after Juxtapose caused a major upset in the Gr1 Wilgerbosdrift SA Fillies Classic, second leg of the Wilgerbosdrift Triple Tiara. Ferreira has eight stables booked at Ashburton for South Africa’s Champion Season and Juxtaposed booked her box and a crack at the Gr1 Woolavington 2000 with a grinding win over favourite Negroamaro with first leg winner Heaps of Fun back in the pack.

The last furlong was a lung-bursting grind to the wire as Negroamaro, Juxtapose and She’s A Dragon fought their way clear of the pack but treading treacle. The trio were dead on their feet crossing the line but Chase Maujean got his filly’s head down when it counted for his first career Gr1 success.

Tarry is in lethal form at present and kicked off the meeting winning the first three races with the promising juvenile filly Cloth Of Cloud showing solid credentials for the SA Fillies Nursery later in the month. She ground the Gr3 Pretty Polly Stakes field into the turf in spite of racing green and almost sending S’Manga Khumalo over her neck and into the Turffontein landfill as she dug her toes on the line and Bull Valley making a winning debut for the stable in the Gr3 Man ‘O War Sprint.

Tarry and Khumalo signed off a red letter day with Captain’s Causeway in the last.

Andrew Harrison
Picture: Abashiri (SportingPost)

Sean Tarry (Liesl King)

Bank on Tarry

Many punters looking for a banker in Saturday’s carryover Pick 6 (estimated pool R4million) will reach for trainer Sean Tarry and seriously consider two of his runners at the meeting, Legal Eagle and Heaps Of Fun.

Sean Tarry (Liesl King)

Sean Tarry (Liesl King)

The ruling champion trainer, who is the leading the championship by some way this season, says: “I wouldn’t dissuade anybody from bankering either horse” and is cautiously optimistic about their chances.

Legal Eagle is the top-rated runner still racing in South Africa and will line up in the R1-million HF Oppenheimer Horse Chestnut Stakes over 1600m. The race is run at weight-for-age and Legal Eagle is at least 1.50 lengths better than any of his rivals in the race.

“He is going for the R4-million President’s Champions Challenge so this is a prep race and while I believe he’s a better horse over 2000m, he did win the Queen’s Plate over 1600m in January. So it would not be foolhardy to judge him a suitable banker. But we’re hopeful rather than confident. If he wins, that’ll be fantastic.”

Tarry will also field Halve The Deficit in the Grade 1 race and believes he must not be left out of Quartets.

“He pulled up with a virus in the SANSUI Summer Cup so we had to give him time. I wasn’t unhappy with his sprint-up, when seventh in an 1100m Pinnacle race. He’ll be thereabouts.”

Heaps Of Fun, who races in the R1-million Wilgerbosdrift SA Fillies Classic over 1800m, beat 10 of these rivals when winning the Gauteng Fillies Guineas in February.

Legal Eagle (Liesl King)

Legal Eagle (Liesl King)

She races over 1800m for the first time, but Tarry says: “I think she’s probably looking for the ground and don’t see a problem with the distance.”

He did confirm that he is certainly not going to restrict the filly to front-running tactics again.

“That was our game plan in the Fillies Guineas. She hadn’t been racing from the front before that, but I knew tactically it would work for us because the others wouldn’t worry about us.

“She’s a simple, laid-back and straightforward horse, who came out of the Fillies Guineas nicely. She’ll be competitive, for sure,” he said.

Negroamaro, who started favourite in the Fillies Guineas and finished a 0.90-length second, is the horse he fears most because “there is a lot of talk about how good she is and I’m not sure if there were excuses in that race”.

“Mike de Kock’s coupling, Noor and Persian Rug, have scope for improvement over the distance, but I make the grey filly the horse to beat.”

Tarry’s other runner in the SA Fillies Classic is Witchcraft. She won over 2000m in her last race and “the form has worked out well,” said Tarry. “She’s definitely an Oaks filly and this will be a nice test for her in this kind of company. We’ll see how she handles the jump in class. If she handles it, I wouldn’t expect her to get beaten too far. She’s very well.”

Heaps Of Fun (Nkosi Hlophe)

Heaps Of Fun (Nkosi Hlophe)

He has four runners in the topliner at the meeting, the R2-million SA Classic, Malak El Moolook, Lunar Approach, Liege – the choice of stable rider S’manga Khumalo – and Samurai Blade.

Tarry believes they all have a bit to do on merit ratings and says: “If I get a piece of the pie I won’t be unhappy.”

He points out there were valid reasons why they can do better this time.

“Malak El Moolook didn’t disgrace himself in finishing third behind Abashiri and Champagne Haze in the Gauteng Guineas and he got his tongue over the bit when well beaten by Liege last time out. We’ll try a tongue tie and see if that helps. But he is suspect over the trip.

“Liege had a problem in the stalls on Guineas Day but won his next race very well. I knew he was capable but the runner-up Count Tassilo was badly out at the weights. He won well enough and couldn’t do more than that.

“Lunar Approach’s saddle slipped in the Gauteng Guineas so you can’t read much into him finishing last.

Halve The Deficit (Nkosi Hlophe)

Halve The Deficit (Nkosi Hlophe)

“The interesting runner is Samurai Blade, who is only having his second run for the yard. I’d planned to run him in the Derby Trial but his prep run – when second in a Pinnacle Plate – was so good, I thought I’d take a chance and see how he goes in this race.”

Are any of them underrated, in his opinion? “Maybe Lunar Approach is lurking under the radar,” he says. “It didn’t work out for him in Cape Town and he only had one run – in the CTS Million. But I don’t think Liege has done much wrong either.

“They’ve all been well prepared and with a clean run, we’ll see where they fit in.”

Another runner he believes can do well is very talented but temperamental Cloth Of Clouds. “She’s interesting because depending on how she does, we’ll decide whether to take on the colts in the SA Nursery at the end of the month or go against the fillies.”

As for his other runners on the day, he says none of them can be summarily discarded. “I’ve got a lot of good horses running and they should be competitive throughout, but it’s hard racing and nothing really stands out.”

– TABnews

Neil Bruss

Bruss pair back for more

Cape Trainer Neil Bruss has brought his promising fillies Flying Ice and Zante back to Summerveld for further tilts at South African Champions Season feature races.

Neil Bruss

Neil Bruss (Nkosi Hlophe)

The three-year-old Go Deputy filly Flying Ice won the Listed Devon Air Stakes over 1400m at Greyville last season before finishing a 0,75 length fourth in the Gr 1 Thekwini Stakes over 1600m. She was a touch unlucky last time out in first time blinkers when a 1,25 length runner up in the Gr 3 Prix Du Cap over 1400m at Kenilworth.

She had to be continually switched out and only saw daylight 200m out. She then flew home, but it was too late to catch the winner, the decent four-year-old Cuvee Brut. Bruss had been confident of winning the Prix du Cap, despite her 33/1 odds, as she had recovered from the illness which had affected her previous run. Cuvee Brut raced off a 103 merit rating that day and the 98 merit-rated Flying Ice faced her on weight for age terms, so it was a fine performance by the latter considering her bad luck in running. The progeny of Go Deputy show continual improvement with age and she has been doing well since arriving at Summerveld, so is one to follow.

Four-year-old Zante is another filly who should be improving being by the top class sire Ideal World. She ran a 3,25 length fourth to Smart Call in last year’s Gr 1 Woolavington 2000 and, of course, that form now looks outstanding. Bruss was forced to race Zante mainly against males in the Cape Summer, as there were no suitable races for her, and she has consequently dropped to an attractive 89 merit rating. Bruss said there would be many opportunities for this staying type during the SA Champions Season and she starts her campaign on Sunday in a 1600m Conditions Plate at Scottsville. She is affective over a mile, despite preferring further.

Bruss has also brought another decent four-year-old staying type in the Go Deputy filly Deputy Ryder. She won three races in KZN last year for the Alyson Wright yard, including the Listed Queen Palm Stakes over 2400m at Greyville. She should love being back at Summerveld and is likely to have as many opportunities as the similar type, Zante. She only found the frame once in four starts during the Cape Summer, but was up against some good types, and the handicapper has consequently only dropped her one point to a 94 merit rating.

By David Thiselton