Dennis Drier (Nkosi Hlophe)

Drier regains KZN crown

KZN’s chief flag bearers in the 2014/2015 season were once again the respectively powerful yards of Dennis Drier and Duncan Howells and it was the former who recaptured the title of KZN Champion Trainer. Gavin van Zyl finished in the top ten on the National log for the fifth season in succession, Charles Laird had won of the highest strike rates in the country and it was a roller coaster season in more ways than one for Paul Lafferty. Mike de Kock is officially a KZN trainer, although he is generally regarded as an international trainer, and he finished second on the national log.

Dennis Drier (Nkosi Hlophe)

Dennis Drier (Nkosi Hlophe)

Drier can look back on a particularly memorable Champions Season in which he won five Gr 1s. Historians are always hard pressed to accurately present previous racing records in this country as the archives are poorly kept, but it would appear that the great Terrance Millard won six Gr 1s during the Durban Winter season (now known as Champions Season) of 1990 (Illustrador won the SA Guineas, the Durban July and the Gold Cup, Jungle Warrior won the Schweppes Challenge and the Champions Stakes and Olympic Duel won the SA Fillies Guineas).

Drier’s five Champions Season Gr 1 victories were achieved through Captain Of All (Gr 1 Tsogo Sun Sprint and Gr 1 Mercury Sprint), Seventh Plain (Gr 1 Tsogo Sun Gold Medallion and Gr 1 Durban Golden Horseshoe) and Chestnuts N Pearls (Gr 1 Zulu Kingdom Golden Slipper). The Scottsville Sprint meeting was the first time Drier had landed two Gr 1s on the same day and then he did it again on Vodacom Durban July day. Drier’s Cape Summer Of Champions Season was plagued by the travel sickness many of his string picked up on the way down and having won Gr 1 races down there for the previous three seasons he came home empty handed in that regard this year.

However, Captain Of All was reckoned by all and sundry to have won the Gr 1 Cape Flying Championship until the photo finish showed otherwise. Drier still had a successful time in Cape Town, winning a Gr 2 and two Listed events, while his Var colt Generalissimo broke the Kenilworth 1200m course record in a Graduation Plate over 1200m. In KZN, on top of the five Gr 1s, he also won a Gr 3 and three Non-Black Type features and at the postponed Super Saturday meeting, which officially fell in this season, he won a Listed race. Drier finished sixth on the National log with stakes earnings of R8,946,512 and was crowned KZN Champion trainer with 74 winners in his home province.

Captain Of All (Nkosi Hlophe)

Captain Of All (Nkosi Hlophe)

Howell’s chief horse in the season was the brilliant three-year-old filly Same Jurisdiction. She had a luckless Johannesburg campaign, but still claimed a Gr 1 runner up position in the Wilgerbosdrift SA Fillies Classic. In KZN she won the Gr 1 Jonsson Workwear Garden Province Stakes and the Gr 3 Flamboyant Stakes and she was a fast finishing second in the Gr 2 Tibouchina. Howells also won the Gr 1 Thekwini Stakes on Super Saturday with the filly Lauderdale and had earlier won the Gr 2 The Debutante with the exciting unbeaten filly Cosmic Light.

The yard also won three Listed races and two Non-Black Type events and one of the winners of the latter, Saratoga Dancer, is another horse to follow this season. Howells finished twelfth on the national log with earnings of R6,862,038, but lost his KZN Champion trainer title partly due to his string not initially taking well to polytrack racing. However, he still finished second on the KZN log with 61 winners.

Van Zyl operated out of Summerveld and Turffontein and had Gr 2 wins with No Worries (Jo’Burg Spring Challenge) and Heart Of A Lion (SABC Gold Vase). He also won two Gr 3s and a Non-Black Type event. He finished eighth on the National log with earnings of R8,009,800 and fourth on the KZN log with 44 winners.

Charles Laird

Charles Laird

Charles Laird won the hitherto richest race in South African history, the R3,85 million Emperor’s Palace Ready To Run Cup over 1400m on the tough Turffontein Standside track with Rich Girl and this was a fine training feat for a filly who appears to be better at sprints. This was a restricted race so didn’t count towards the national log statistics. Laird also worked wonders with the talented but problematic Ice Machine, who joined his yard as a six-year-old at the beginning of the season.

The classy Silvano gelding won the Gr 2 IOS Drill Hall Stakes in emphatic fashion and then ran a great race in the July over a trip too far before being touched off in the Gr 1 Champions Cup over 1800m by Equus Horse Of The Year Futura. The yard also won two Listed events and a Non-Black Type feature and finished 17th on the national log with earnings of R6,022,850 achieved at a strike rate of 15%. The yard finished joint fourth on the KZN log.

Lafferty’s top class three-year-old colt Harry’s Son was one of the most travelled horses of the season and he won the Gr 3 Graham Beck Stakes over 1400m as well as the Gr 2 Gauteng Guineas at Turffontein and also finished second in both the Gr 1 Grand Parade Cape Guineas and Gr 2 Investec Dingaans and fifth in the Gr 1 SA Classic. Lafferty was at the centre of one of the most heartwarming stories of the season as the industry rallied around him and raised funds for treatment after being diagnosed with lymphoma. Lafferty also won both a Listed and a Non-Black Type event with “the miracle horse” Double Clutch.

Ice-Machine (Nkosi Hlophe)

Ice-Machine (Nkosi Hlophe)

De Kock was second on the national log with earnings of R19,616,262 and third on the KZN log with 50 winners. His highlights were wins in both the Gr 1 Cape Flying Championships and Gr 1 Computaform Sprint with the brilliant filly Alboran Sea, victory in both the Gr 1 Avontuur Estate Cape Fillies Guineas and the Gr 1 Laurie Jaffee Empress Club Stakes with his champion filly Majmu, Ertijaal’s win in the Gr 1 Investec Cape Derby, Entisaar’s wins in both the Gr 2 SA Fillies Nursery and the Gr 1 Allan Robertson, Pine Princess’s win in the Gr 1 Wilgerbosdrift SA Oaks and he also won the Gr 1 eLan Property Group Gold Cup on Super Saturday with Wild One, which put him into the lead on the current season’s log.

Weiho Marwing officially became a KZN trainer this season and won the Gr 1 President’s Champions Challenge with Wylie Hall and he also won a GR 2, a GR 3, a Listed race and a Non-Black Type feature.

Weiho Marwing

Weiho Marwing

Mike Miller had a fine Champions Season considering his small string. His gelding Sheik’s Brashee won a Non-Black Type Sprint before finishing third in the Gr 1 Tsogo Sun Sprint at odds of 33/1 and his colt King’s Night won the Gr 2 Umkhomazi Stakes.

Colin Scott won the Gr 3 Christmas Handicap with Fourth Estate and the yard also won a Non-Black Type event with the old soldier Stolen Destiny.

Dennis Bosch won the Non-Black Type KZN Yearling Sale Million with Cutting Edge.

Mark Dixon won a Non-Black Type event with his classy filly African Dream and she was later a mere 0,35 lengths behind the runner up when fifth in the Gr 1 Mercury Sprint.

Alyson Wright won a Listed event with Deputy Ryder.

There were Non-Black Type wins for all of Alistair Gordon, Paddy Lunn and Doug Campbell.

Kom Naidoo was sixth on the KZN log with 38 winners and 32nd on the National log.

By David Thiselton

Futura & Sean Cormack (Nkosi Hlophe)

Futura crowned Horse Of The Year

Futura received uproarious applause when deservedly named Equus Horse Of The Year for the 2014/2015 season at a glittering ceremony held in the Emperor’s Palace Convention Centre in Johannesburg last night.

Captain Of All - Nkosi Hlophe

Captain Of All – Nkosi Hlophe

The brilliant Dynasty colt was trained by Brett Crawford to win both the Gr 1 L’Ormarin’s Queen’s Plate and the Gr 1 J&B Met and by Justin Snaith to win the Gr 1 Champions Cup. He was owned in the first two events by Jack Mitchell, John Freeman and Ian Longmore. Longmore then sold his share to Drakenstein Stud, a happening which led to the horse changing yards.

Futura also won the Champion Older Male and Champion Middle Distance award. Last Friday evening he won the equivalent of these three titles at the Western Cape Racing Association Award ceremony held at the Lanzerac Hotel in Cape Town.

French Navy (Nkosi Hlophe)

French Navy (Nkosi Hlophe)

Three of the most eagerly awaited Equus Awards were that of Champion Sprinter, Champion Stayer and Champion Three-year-old Male and in the end all three required a vote by the tie-breaking panellist Larry Weinstein.  Captain Of All was crowned Champion Sprinter on the likely grounds that his 1200m wins in the Gr 1 Tsogo Sun Sprint and Gr 1 Mercury Sprint were superior combined performances when compared to the Mike de Kock-trained Alboran Sea’s wins in the Gr 1 Cape Flying Championship and Gr 1 Computaform Sprint. Alboran Sea defeated Captain Of All in both of the latter events, there only clashes of the season, but Captain Of All was invincible over his preferred trip of 1200m and ended the season on a merit rating of 126, the joint second highest rating in South African history.

Legislate (Liesl KIng)

Legislate (Liesl King)

Alboran Sea had consolation in that she was named the Champion three-year-old filly of a vintage crop, which included the like of Majmu, Same Jurisdiction and Siren’s Call.

Champion Stayer was awarded to the De Kock-trained Gr 1 eLan Property Group Gold Cup winner Wild One at the expense of the Gr 1 SA Derby winner Legal Eagle. The Gold Cup winner is usually awarded this title due to the race being the country’s premier staying event and it also being a true test of stamina.

The Champion Three-year-old Male award went to dual Gr 1-winner French Navy at the expense of the luckless Legal Eagle, although Sean Tarry trained both of them so he was still full of smiles.

Alboran Sea (Nkosi Hlophe)

Alboran Sea (Nkosi Hlophe)

Tarry later received a huge ovation when officially accepting the award for National Champion Trainer, having finished second on three occasions in the past and in the top ten for the previous ten seasons.

Gavin Lerena was admired for his true grit in winning his first National Champion Jockey title and also received loud applause.

The Two-Year-Old Awards expectedly went to the Drier-trained colt Seventh Plain and the De Kock-trained filly Entisaar respectively.

Seventh Plain (Nkosi Hlophe)

Seventh Plain (Nkosi Hlophe)

The Champion Older filly/mare category was not strongly contested this year, as the contestants generally had to play second fiddle to the three-year-olds. However, the Mike Bass-trained mare Hammie’s Hooker, who won both a Gr 2 and a Gr 3 during the season, because in previous seasons she was the perennial bridesmaid to the brilliant Beach Beauty.

The Champion Miler award raised one or two eyebrows as Futura lost out to his current stablemate Legislate, but a close look at their performances vindicates the decision. Legislate broke the Kenilworth Old Course record when beating Futura in the Gr 2 Lanzerac Le general Green Point Stakes over 1600m and was then clearly not himself when defeated by Futura in the Gr 1 L’Ormarin’s Queen’s Plate. In KZN he exacted revenge when beating Futura in the Gr1 Rising Sun Gold Challenge.

2015 Equus Award winners:

CHAMPION 2YO COLT

Seventh Plain

CHAMPION 2YO FILLY

Entisaar (AUS)

CHAMPION 3YO COLT

French Navy

CHAMPION 3YO FILLY

Alboran Sea (AUS)

CHAMPION OLDER MALE

Futura

CHAMPION OLDER FILLY/MARE

Hammie’s Hooker

CHAMPION SPRINTER (1000-1200m)

Captain Of All

CHAMPION MILER (1400-1600m)

Legislate

CHAMPION MIDDLE DISTANCE HORSE (1800-2200m)

Futura

CHAMPION STAYER (2400m upwards)

Wild One

SPECIAL ACHIEVEMENT AWARD

Piere Strydom

CHAMPION STALLION

Captain Al

CHAMPION BROODMARE

Si Senorita

CHAMPION BREEDER

Klawervlei Stud

OUTSTANDING STALLION ACHIEVEMENT AWARD

Dynasty

OUTSTANDING BREEDER AWARD

Highlands Farm Stud

MEDIA AWARDS

Print – Michael Clower

Television – Kevin Harris

APPRENTICE OF THE YEAR

Craig Zackey

CHAMPION JOCKEY

Gavin Lerena

CHAMPION TRAINER

Sean Tarry

OWNER OF THE YEAR

Mrs I & Mr M J Jooste

HORSE OF THE YEAR

Futura

By David Thiselton

Tarry’s record-breaking season

Sean Tarry broke through for his first National Trainer’s Championships this past season having finished in the top ten for the previous ten seasons in succession and having been runner up on three occasions. In the process his yard set a new South African stakes earnings record of R25,924,250, which surpassed the mark of R22,191,845 set by Mike de Kock in the 2009/2010 season.

He said when asked what the title meant, “It was important to achieve the goal we set and worked hard for and it has left me with a sense of achievement.”

Siren's Call (JC Photo)

Siren’s Call (JC Photo)

Champion Trainer status probably opens doors for overseas opportunity, but this is not on Tarry’s current list of priorities.

“International racing is very attractive and lucrative and there is talk of things getting easier for us but there is no evidence of it happening. Until the restrictions on movement are relaxed I think I will sit on the fence. Michael (De Kock) has been successful under very tough conditions that only look to be getting tougher.”

Tarry usually pays tribute to the loyal team behind him in his post-race interviews and also occasionally mentions he is not always easy on them. He did not go as far as saying he was a “hard task master” but said he was definitely not a “soft touch.” He added, “There is only one way and that’s the right way. Each time you drop the ball that’s an opportunity lost. It is always going to be a game where 90% is not good enough. There is a recipe and it has to be followed 100%.”

The base of Tarry’s team have been with him for a long time. Further evidence they are happy in their positions was seen one day this season at Summerveld in the week of The July, when the harmonious singing of the Tarry yard grooms riding a string back to the stables rose above the early morning mist.

Carry On Alice (Nkosi Hlophe)

Carry On Alice (Nkosi Hlophe)

Tarry lists his highlight of the season as being the entire Johannesburg Autumn Season, in which he enjoyed considerable success. March 28 was a particularly good day as Siren’s Call won the Gr 1 R1 million Wilgerbosdrift SA Fillies Classic, French Navy won the Gr 1 R2 million SA Classic, Amber Orchid won the Gr 3 Jacaranda Handicap and Carry On Alice won the Gr 3 Man ‘O War Sprint. Siren’s Call later failed by one stride to land the Triple Tiara. She lost a shoe and played up at the start that day in the Gr 1 Wilgerbosdrift SA Oaks and this could have cost her victory. However, her other wins, including victories in the R2,5 million CTS Book 2 Graduates Race over 1400m at Turffontein and the Gr 2 R500,000 Wilgerbosdrift Gauteng Fillies Guineas saw Tarry walking away with a R1 million bonus as trainer of the highest earning three-year-old from the 2013 Book 2 Sale.

Another highlight was the overall brilliance of his three-year-old string. Seven of them earned 50% of his entire season’s stakes.

Therefore he has much to look forward to this season with only one of them, the filly Tamaanee, having been retired to stud.

Asked on his lowlight he said, “We did Durban a little differently with a couple of my Gr 1 horses. I didn’t have the confidence to move the whole string like we used to at Clairwood and I don’t think we fired as well as we usually do, although we did still win two Gr 1s (French Navy won the Daily News 2000 and Carry On Alice won the City Of Pietermaritzburg Sprint).

French Navy (Nkosi Hlophe)

French Navy (Nkosi Hlophe)

Tarry added being unlucky in the July with a number of his horses hadn’t helped.

Tarry pointed out that historically the July was a race where 18 to 20 horses fanned out at the top of the straight and generally had fair chances from then on in. However, he said it should now be accepted that it was a different race and sincerely believed the size of the field should be reduced to 16 on a track which is narrower than it used to be.

He said, “The July is the race the whole Champions Season revolves around and it is going to lose some of its sparkle if we continue to have rough races with sad luck stories and objections.”

Tarry praised the proactive approach of Tony Rivalland in his position at Summerveld and said he might approach the Champions Season differently next season, although he was hoping one or two changes would still be made at the KZN training centre, where he also has a permanent satellite yard.

He said of the yard’s jockeys for this season, “Raymond (Danielson) and S’manga (Khumalo) have done well for the team and I hope the relationships continue, but we have a big string (about 180) and we might look at a couple of other jockeys to spread it around a bit.

Pomodoro (Nkosi Hlophe)

Pomodoro (Nkosi Hlophe)

Tarry recently submitted an affidavit in favour of Khumalo regarding the 60 day suspension the latter was given after being charged of being in contravention of Rule 62.2.1 in that “he failed to take all reasonable and permissible measures to ensure that SUPERTUBE (a first-timer) was given a full opportunity to win or obtain the best possible placing” in a race on November 5 2013. The case went on appeal but Tarry submitted the affidavit on the grounds that the belief in a first-timer (he was trainer of Supertube) was largely about “speculation”, whereas a few runs down the line form and jockeys comments give a much better idea of what the horse was all about.

Tarry is also looking forward to the stud career of Pomodoro, who became the second horse he has trained after Fort Beluga to have made it into the stallion ranks.

He believes the July-winning Pomodoro “ticks all the boxes” although he is mindful that only 5% of all stallions “make it.”

Tarry’s ability as a trainer is chiefly seen in the loyalty shown to him over many years by his chief owner Chris van Niekerk, because it is well known that top businessman like the latter are results driven.

Tarry looks to be in a strong position to add a few more championships to his CV in years to come, although it is never going to be easy in a country which boasts many top class trainers.

By David Thiselton

harrys son wins graham beck jc

Harry’s Son in good spirits

The Paul Lafferty-trained champion colt Harry’s Son is in good spirits in Mauritius on the second leg of his arduous five month journey to Dubai.

Harry’s Son has been accompanied from day one of the journey by one of the Lafferty yard’s head grooms, Paulus Ntlali, who drew high praise from the Johannesburg quarantine station staff for his horse care skills and his organised approach.

Top Mauritian trainer Ricky Maingard has also been keeping an eye on Harry’s Son in Mauritius and has been providing his popular Capstone feed.
The colt has been able to make use of the cantering track at the Mauritius quarantine facility.

Lafferty’s Summerveld assistant Roy Waugh will be leaving for Mauritius on August 21 and will stay with Harry’s Son for a month.
The Australian-bred colt is a laid back character but will need to keep up his base fitness.

Waugh will be an integral part of Lafferty’s plans to establish a yard in Dubai. He helped Herman Brown set up a yard in Chantilly at the outset of his Dubai sojourn and spent time in his yard in Dubai on a number of occasions. This coupled with his experience of dirt tracks in the USA, where he was a successful trainer, will make Waugh an invaluable asset in the current Dubai racing climate considering Meydan switched from a tapeta surface to dirt last year.

Harry’s Son himself has only raced on grass to date and will likely stick to the grass in Dubai. However, being by a Mr Prospector line sire out of a dam who is by a Danzig line sire, he looks to have a very suitable dirt pedigree.

By David Thiselton

captainalfreemanstallions

Captain Al a deserving champion

Klawervlei Stud’s Captain Al has deservedly added the South African Champion Sire title to his glittering CV.

Klawervlei will go down as the first stud in the country to have stood a champion stallion that they themselves bred since Henry Nourse’s Dwarsvlei Stud achieved this with Dignitary in 1934. Klawervlei were also champion breeder for the second time and Captain Al was champion sire of two-year-olds for the seventh consecutive season.

Captain Al (pictured), a son of the 1999 champion sire Al Mufti, was a Vaughan Marshall-trained sprint-miler who won the Gr 1 Cape Guineas as well as two Gr 2s over 1200m and a Gr 3 and a Listed race over 1400m. He set a new South African record as a freshman sire in the 2004/2005 season with 22 individual two-year-old winners, although Jet Master raked up more earnings to land the freshman sire title. Captain Al broke his own record in 2009 when siring 30 individual two-year-old winners of 40 races. He also set a two-year-old earnings record of R3,02 million.

John Koster, the original owner of Klawervlei who is now a partner in the farm with Markus Jooste, Chris van Niekerk and Bernard Kantor, believed in Captain Al from day one. “You sometimes have to put your head down and I put all my faith in him.” His optimism increased after seeing his first two foals. “They were like peas in a pod and looked like their sire, well balanced, athletic and they had a bit of white on them.”

When Jooste became a partner in Klawervlei he not only brought another exceptional sire in National Emblem but also overseas buying power. Koster recalled being at the Newmarket Tattersalls December Sale in the UK looking for broodmares when Captain Al had his first two runners. “His first runner came second and the second one won.”

An intriguing ding-dong battle ensued between Captain Al and Jet Master for freshman sire. Later when Captain Al produced the Gr 1-winning fillies Captain’s Lover and Captain’s Gal in his third and fourth crops respectively and the Gr 1-winning colt Exhilaration in his fifth crop, Koster knew “we were on to something.”

Captain Al has to date produced 10 individual Gr 1 winners from eleven crops to have raced, four males and six females, and between them they have won Gr 1s from 1200m up to 2450m.

Koster said, “He is one of the most versatile stallions around and is a real Mr Fixit. He improves maiden mares, bad-legged mares and gives substances to mares that lack it. He is phenomenal because he also produces good looking foals that sell well. Ask any trainer, they would fill their yards with Captain Als. They are honest, sound, can win over any distance and when you pay proper money for them you usually get results and could get a Gr 1 winner. There are very few hard luck stories with Captain Als. You can also sell Captain Als on and at present they are cleaning up in Mauritius.”

Captain Al is this year lying second in the world on the Gr 1 list behind Dubawi, courtesy of two Gr 1s with Captain Of All, one with Captain America, one with Carry On Alice and one with Pine Princesss. Captain Of All, on 126, is the second highest merit rated horse in South African history, together with Jet Master, and has joined his father on Klawervlei’s stallion band.

Captain Al’s mother Off The Wall (Complete Warrior), is still at Klawervlei at the age of 32 resting in the “old age home”. She has two daughters on the farm and her Gr 1-winning granddaughter Thunder Dance has “a belter” of a Silvano filly at foot and is in foal to Var.

Captain Al has produced two Gr 1s as a broodmare sire, the brilliant filly Same Jurisdiction (Mambo In Seattle) and the colt Potent Power (National Emblem). There are about 30 Captain Al broodmares currently at Klawervlei Stud.

Klawervlei could have a long run as champions, but Koster is by no means complacent. “Micky (Goss of nine-times champions Summerhill) gave us a good run. The stallions which  covered our mares last season are of a better quality than ever before. We are firm believers of bringing in bloodstock from overseas and Markus and Chris also race good fillies which they can bring to stud. But it’s ok getting to the top, it’s staying there that is tough. There is also Wilgerbosdrift, Mauritzfontein, Drakenstein, Varsfontein and others. I don’t think there has ever been a time in South Africa when breeding has been boosted by such a wide range of people. This is great for all breeders in the country, including small breeders. In my early days I welcomed big farms bringing in expensive overseas broodmares because it would give us the opportunity to later buy into these families at affordable prices.”

Captain Al is now 19-years-old, but both his results and the quality of mares he is being sent are improving. He is also one of the few stallions in the world still keeping the once influential Roberto line alive.

Captain Al would have lost out on the Sires Championships to Dynasty if the postponed Super Saturday meeting had fallen in July instead of August 1. However, Futura’s win in the Champions Cup will bolster Dynasty’s chances this season.

Koster also spoke of “the rub of the green” having once cost Captain Al when eight Cape meetings were washed out and he ultimately lost the title to Jet Master by a mere R90,000.

Koster concluded by recounting the story of the famed Springbok rugby forward ‘Boy’ Louw, who was asked to comment after a lucky three point win by the Boks over the All Blacks. Louw simply said, “Looks at the score board.”

By David Thiselton

 

persian rug nd

Persian Rug a real treasure

The Ideal World filly, Persian Rug, who races in the silks of Mike de Kock’s assistant trainers Stephen Jell and Natie Kotzen, seemed to have the Thekwini Stakes (Grade 1) over 1600m sewn up. However, as Kotzen relates it, “when S’manga Khumalo starts going after her, she pricks her ears, ducks to the left and then digs her toes in” approaching the line made by the grandstand’s shadow.

Khumalo, obviously feeling the crop was doing nothing for her chances, hid it away against his body and rode her hands and heels to the wire. Persian Rug took off in the final 50m and finished third, a rapidly closing 0.50 lengths behind winner Lauderdale.

Said Kotzen: “Anton Marcus, who won on her first time out, said she did the same thing to him. She’s just green and doesn’t know what’s going on yet.”

Even though she didn’t win the race, Kotzen was pleased with the filly, leased to the partnership by Jessica Slack’s Mauritzfontein Stud. “It was a great run. At least we know she’s got ability.

“She’s a big horse who is still immature and is going to strengthen up. She’ll come into her own as a late three-year-old,” he said.

De Kock has already sent the horses he is taking to Dubai for next year’s Carnival to Mauritius, so Persian Rug, who won her first two starts, is staying in South Africa for at least her three-year-old career, according to Kotzen. “I’d love to see her race in Dubai, but that decision has to be Jessica’s.”

Initial plans, he said, were the Triple Tiara in Johannesburg next year, so the filly, who he has had in his care since she first came into training, will be leaving his Durban stable bound for Randjesfontein.

* According to Charl Pretorius, editor of De Kock’s website www.mikedekockracing.com, the stable’s Dubai-bound horses currently in quarantine in Mauritius are: Australian-breds Ertijaal, winner of the Cape Derby; Almashooqa, runner-up in the 1400m Golden Slipper, and two-time winner Mutamakkin, as well as an ex-Joey Ramsden-trained Trippi four-year-old Liquid Mercury, winner of the Winter Derby, and former Geoff Woodruff-trained Tellina. Highly regarded grey filly Majmu, who at this point is retiring to stud in the UK, is also in Mauritius.

TABNews

Picture: Persian Rug finishing third to Laurderdale in the Thekwini (Nkosi Hlophe)

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

wildonenkosihsite

More success for Mogok

One of the country’s most underrated sires, The Scott Brothers’ USA-bred Storm Cat stallion Mogok, had the fourth Gr 1 winner of his career when the Mike de Kock-trained Wild One stormed home on Saturday to convert favouritism in the country’s premier staying race, the eLan Property Group Gold Cup over 3200m.

Mogok was originally owned and bred by the one of the world’s most prominent racing families, the Niarchos’s.

The Scott Brothers seized an opportunity to bring in a stallion with a magnificent international pedigree when noticing Mogok up for auction on a French Sale as an unraced two-year-old.

The Niarchos family are known for their high quality band of broodmares. The Scotts had also noticed Mogok had been given two wind operations before attempts to race him were abandoned. Therefore, they knew the connections must have thought a lot of him.

Another bonus was that, as a mere two-year-sold, he would have a long stud career ahead of him. Indeed, despite having already thrown eleven crops, he is now only 15 years of age, so has a good few seasons still left in him.

At the time of Mogok’s purchase, Storm Cat was one of the most expensive stallion s in the world at around $400,000 a service with no guaranteed return.

His female line was even more attractive. Mogok is a half-brother to Machiavellian, who was one of the leading sires in Europe. His third dam is Natalma. The dam of the possibly most influential sire in the history of the thoroughbred breed, Northern Dancer

Mogok is also a half-brother to two French-based Gr 1 winners, Exit To Nowhere and Coup de Genie.

Furthermore, close to the time of the Scotts’ purchase, Mogok’s family produced a winner of one of the world’s most prestigious races, the Gr 1 Prix de l’Arc de Triomphe, with the Niarchos-bred Nashwan colt Bago.

Robin Scott pointed out breeding was not an exact science, “it’s luck”, and what separated a good stallion from the also rans was that when a big horse was produced they were “very big.”

However, in Robin’s opinion, Mogok could well have been a champion sire if standing in the Cape, where the mares are of superior quality.

Mogok has not only produced four Gr 1 winners from the lesser KZN mares, but two of them have taken on some of the best in the world and beaten them. His daughter Gypsy’s Warning won a Gr 1 in the USA, while The Apache won the prestigious Gr 1 Arlington Million, beating many international Gr 1 winners, before being demoted to second after an objection. The Apache also finished second in two Gr 1s in Dubai, having earlier won a Gr 2 there.

Yet Robin is of the belief that the big, strong and rangy Mogok colt Orbison, who downed the like of Pocket Power and Bold Silvano when winning the Gr 1 Champions Cup of 2010, was even better than The Apache. Unfortunately, Orbison broke down in Dubai and never raced again after leaving South African shores.

Wild One has benefitted from a long layoff and is at present as sound as a bell. His versatility has been displayed in his last three starts, finishing second in both the Gr 3 Cup Trial over 1800m and the KZN Breeders Million Mile before winning the Gold Cup over 3200m. He is still lightly raced, despite being six-years-old, and looks to have a bright season ahead of him, although a lot could depend on the punishment the handicapper hands him for Saturday’s win.

Meanwhile, Scott Brothers have another blue-blooded formerly Niarchos-owned stallion standing on the farm, Eightfold Path. He is owned by the Chinese national Hui Guo. Eightfold Path is by six-time Gr 1 winner and three-time American champion sire Giant’s Causeway out of the European Champion Kingmambo mare Divine Proportions, who won five Gr 1 races in France. Guo has a few broodmares on the farm too and is likely to be looking ahead to when China unbans horseracing, which looks to soon become a reality.

ThereEightfold Path showed tremendous speed to win a Gr 3 over six furlongs as a two-year-old in France and after going wrong he came back to win a Listed event over a mile as a five-year-old. Robin believes he could become an important sprint stallion.

Mogok and Eightfold Path stand for bargain fees of R20,000 and R10,000 respectively.

However, Robin did divulge that he would likely be more selective with the mares he accepts for Mogok this season.

Robin and his brother Des have a proud history in breeding over nearly a half-a-century and are seldom out of the news. Their success is based on a combination of careful stallion selection and a high quality broodmare band. On top of the imported stallions, they have also brought in excellent pedigreed mares from USA and Europe.

The first of these imported mares was Ofa (Ribot), who produced the mighty Durban July and dual J&B Met winner Politician. Others were Carnet De Dance (Dance In Time), who went on to produce July and Dubai Duty Free winner Ipi Tombe, and Northern Banner (Nothern Dancer), who produced July-winner Teal.

By David Thiselton

Picture: eLan Property Group Gold Cup winner Wild One (Nkosi Hlophe)

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Champion duo take a break

The Equus Horse Of The Year elect Futura and last season’s Horse Of The Year Legislate have both arrived safely at Drakenstein Stud where they will enjoy a one month holiday before being brought back for the Cape Summer Of Champions Season.

The Justin Snaith-trained pair of five-year-old Dynasty entires finished first and third in the Gr 1 Champions Cup over 1800m at Greyville on Saturday. Futura put in a phenomenal performance and will thoroughly deserve the country’s highest accolade. He hit the starting gates before they had opened and this caused him to lose ground.

Snaith revealed the reason for him hitting the starting gates was probably due to getting a fright when Legislate alongside him kicked the back of the gate. Legislate did the same in the IOS Drill Hall Stakes and had to be scratched after his foot became momentarily stuck between the two back gates.

However, Gold Circle reacted to this and a subsequent incident by padding the back gates with rubber, which not only softens the blow but also prevents the foot from slipping through, and this paid dividends in respect of Legislate on Saturday as he ran his race and was beaten fair and square by two firecrackers.

After losing about a length-and-a-half Futura had to be used up significantly by Bernard Fayd’Herbe to get into the desired handy position. The effect of such fuel burn is usually revealed in the latter stages of the race, but not in the case of Futura, who must have a massive engine on top of his athleticism and wonderful action.

Ice Machine, who was given the perfect tow by Legislate until being switched out at the 300m mark used his tremendous turn of foot to overtake Futura and looked to have the race in the bag, especially considering he had the peerless Anton Marcus aboard. But amazingly Futura fought back under hard and superbly rhythmical driving from Fayd’Herbe to snare Ice Machine on the line.

Ice Machine has blossomed in the Charles Laird yard and deserves a Gr 1 victory. There looks to be no reason why he can’t continue racing as a seven-year-old, especially as he is by Silvano, whose progeny get better with age.

Snaith paid tribute to the gallant Futura, whom he felt beforehand would be in tip top condition and he proved correct.

Part-owner Jack Mitchell pointed out that one of Furura’s best career runs was in the Vodacom Durban July, considering he had carried a welter 60kg.

Both Snaith and another part-owner John Freeman paid tribute to Futura’s groom, Cyprian Mkhonowana, who gained some fame in 2008 because the decision to fly him in from Cape Town half-way through the Champions Season appeared to turnaround the fortunes of the filly he was devoted to, Dancer’s Daughter.

Drakenstein are part-owners in both Futura and Legislate and will be looking forward to them standing at stud one day, although not before they have likely added more big race success to their already glittering CV’s. They have now each won four Gr 1’s apiece and Futura has won the Champions Cup two years running.

By David Thiselton

Picture: Legislate left Futura right (John Lewis)

Lauderdale claims third Thekwini for Howells

Duncan Howells landed his second Gr 1 victory of the Champions Season when retaining his crown in the Thekwini Stakes over 1600m at Greyville on Saturday with the Elusive Fort filly Lauderdale and jockey Muzi Yeni has certainly grabbed the opportunity of being stable jockey to this powerful yard with both hands as this was his second Graded race win for them in the space of two weeks.

It was the third time Howells had won the Thekwini and was his first Gr 1 winner for a new owner in the yard, Brian “Buffalo Bill” Burnard, who also won this race with the Gavin van Zyl-trained Along Came Polly two years ago.

Lauderdale, who was bred by Dr Jim Antrobus, was pin-hooked by Allan Bloodlines at the Cape Thoroughbred Sales (CTS) March Yearling Sale last year for a mere R40,000. The filly is from the second crop of the Fort Wood stallion Elusive Fort, whose first crop filly Siren’s Call went within a stride of landing this year’s Wilgerbosdrift Triple Tiara. Lauderdale was later bought by Burnard on the Bloodstock South Africa Emperor’s Palace Ready To Run Sale for R220,000.

Lauderdale (Nkosi Hlophe)

Lauderdale (Nkosi Hlophe)

Lauderdale was sent off at odds of 12/1 on Saturday.

Howells said after the victory that he had been confident of finishing in the first three, “If you watch her last race she broke well from a good draw and then was kept out the whole way, so she had to race flat out the whole 1400m and it was very difficult for her to finish the race. I knew she was crying out for the 1600m and also knew she is quite precocious in herself so thought this would make it a lot easier for her to get a good position before holding her up and making a sprint for home. Muzi, I must hand it to him, rode a great race.”

Yeni got Lauderdale right up there from the off from his tricky daw of eight and it then panned out perfectly when the big striding Mike de Kock-trained Persian Rug went to the front as this enabled Yeni to shadow her about a length behind.

Persian Rug stretched away impressively in the straight and looked to have it won until being confused by the grandstand shadow and digging her toes in. This must have been a heartbreaking moment for owners Nathan Kotzen and Steven Jell, who are assistant trainers to De Kock and own the Ideal World filly together. However, it enabled Lauderdale to pounce from the perfect position on the outside and stay on to win by 0,25 lengths from the Mike Azzie-trained Querari filly Melliflora, who ran on well from midfield under Donovan Dillon. Persian Rug did amazingly well to pick herself up and run on for third and she will undoubtedly be a big horse for the classics this season.

The favourite Chestnuts N pearls, who won the Gr 1 Zulu Kingdom Explorer Golden Slipper over 1400m, stayed on for tie fourth with Flying Ice, who was the other hard luck story of the race as she had to be brought around them into the straight, then switched inward and was a bit tight for room in the last few strides.

Howells commented on how strong Lauderdale was for her age and is an admirer of her honesty. She will qualify for the country’s hitherto richest ever race, the CTS Million Dollar, which is due to be run over 1400m at Kenilworth on January 23 next year. She also qualifies for the R2 million Ready To Run Cup over 1400m at Turffontein on October 31 and will likely go for this season’s fillies classics .

The Burnards were unusually not on course on Saturday having had a family celebration to attend to on their farm, but were represented by on course presenter Warren Lenferna, who has a long association with the Howells yard.

Yeni’s first graded win for the Howells yard was with Cosmic Light in the Gr 2 Debutante Stakes over 1200m at Greyville on July 18. This was another feather in cap for Howells’ partner Cathy Rymill, who selected her at the National Yearling Sale where she was bought for R200,000, as she provided the exciting news season stallion Querari with his first Graded winner. Cosmic Light looks to have tremendous scope and will surely make her presence felt in next season’s classics.

Two years ago Rymill selected Same Jurisdiction at the Suncoast Yearling Sale, before Howells secured her for R270,000. This filly is from the first crop of Mambo In Seattle and proved herself possibly the best filly in the land when winning the Gr 1 Jonsson Workwear Garden Province Stakes over 1600m in ultra classy style on Vodacom Durban July day. Same Jurisdiction won the Thkekwini last year, having earlier won the KZN Yearling Sales Million, and her Johannesburg classic campaign this season was plagued by bad luck. Significantly, the Howells yard also have the probable second best Mambo In Seattle in the land too, the ever improving gelding Saratoga Dancer, selected by Rymill at the Emperor’s Palace Ready To Run Sale for a bargain R140,000. Saratoga Dancer looks sure to step up to the top flight this season.

Howells first winner of the Thekwini was Gypsy’s Warning, who was from the second crop of Mogok, and after her victory in this race at Clairwood in 2008 she was sold on and went on to win the Gr 1 SA Fillies Classic and the Gr 1 Matriarch Stakes in the USA.

By David Thiselton