The Highveld Hawks snatched a short-head decision as they landed the New Turf Carriers Rider Cup at Scottsville yesterday. At the end of the four-legged contest, the Hawks scraped home by five points ahead of the KZN Falcons with the Cape Eagles a rather distant third.
The Highveld Hawks Team (Candiese Marnewick)
The Falcons were seemingly cruising going into the third leg but Gavin Lerena pulled one out of the bag on outsider Sonar Active for Mike Miller and Marco van Rensburg and Lyle Hewitson, a late replacement for S’Manga Khumalo, also collecting a bag-full of points for the Hawks.
Diamond In The Sky was the only runner in the final leg not to have a cross behind her name denoting a chance in the Computaform but Kom Naidoo had her spot on in her first outing for the yard and Falcons rider Warren Kennedy drove her hard for an upset win with less than two lengths covering the first seven home.
It was too little too late for the Falcons as Lerena and Hewitson, along with Van Rensburg and Zackey earning enough points to scrape in by five.
Some consolation for the Falcons was that Anton Marcus finished Victor Ludorum, eight points clear of second-placed Hawks rider Gavin Lerena who had a lucrative afternoon, booting home a double.
Lerena is headed back to the UK shortly where he still has a month of his contract to run.
The race for title of Champion KZN Trainer is going down to the wire with the two perennial contenders Dennis Drier and Duncan Howells in a neck-and-neck tussle.
Drier is the ruling champ but after yesterday’s meeting finds himself four behind Howells who won the opener on the card with Mind Your Business and shut the door in the last with the Antonius Pius filly, Sorceress. The money came for Mind Your Business as if the result was already known and from an opening call of 10-1, started second favourite at 3-1, but the false start resulted in some frayed nerves. “Unfortunately, it was a false start,” said winning rider Gavin Lerena. “But she handled it well. We didn’t go very far.”
Lyle Hewitson & Craig Zackey (Candiese Marnewick)
“She’s had a few niggly problems,” said Howells. “But she’s quite a smart filly and has improved a lot since her first run.”
Paul Lafferty has had some horses with startling names in his yard, Goat and Another Goat, to name but two and Freddie Flint, who triumphant in the second, was not named after Fred of the Flintstones, but rather British bloodstock agent John Kilbride. “He’s a dead ringer for Freddie Flintoff (famous English cricketer) so we had to name a horse after him.”
Freddie Flint had the most exposed form in the race and had been up against some useful runners in his short career, so his win was not entirely unexpected although he started easy to back at 16-1.
The starter had a tough afternoon after having called a false start in the first race of the day and later The Slade playing up in the gate and going to the line sans rider Anthony Delpech. Post-race he was declared a non-runner after it was judged that the starter’s assistant did not release the gelding’s head before the gates opened. The Slade is never the easiest horse at the start and one can hardly lay the blame on the starter’s assistant.
Similarly, the starter was caught between a rock and a hard place at the start of the first. Innocently Naughty played up just as the gates were sprung and the runners were called back.
There were a number of unhappy trainers but as chief stipendiary steward Shaun Parker pointed out it was a case of “damned if you do and damned if you don’t”.
“If you don’t call a false start and the favourite gets beaten, then there are calls for the race to be declared null and void. If the offender happens to run into a place then it cannot be declared a non-runner and it could quite possibly beat the favourite. Basically, the starter does not know what is going to happen at the end of the race. He has to make a split-second decision.”
By Andrew Harrison
INTERPROVINCIAL RIDER CUP