Impressive gallops all round

The Vodacom Durban July gallops were enjoyed by an enthusiastic crowd yesterday and all of the horses worked well.

The first pair out were French Navy and Samurai Blade and trainer Sean Tarry was pleased with both. Lyle Hewitson works Samurai Blade often and described his last two pieces of work as fantastic, adding yesterday’s work had been the best he had felt the horse.

The second favourite Black Arthur was next out and worked exceptionally well. He was clearly enjoying himself. Trainer Justin Snaith confirmed the horse had been a bit above himself, having not raced since winning the Canon Guineas in early May, so this should bring him spot on for the race.

Later, his stablemate and July favourite Bela-Bela strode out well and her lovely action included her usual rhythmic nodding of the head, an indication she was enjoying herself.

The other Snaith pair It’s My Turn and Dynamic were not asked to do a lot but pleased their respective big race riders Richard Fourie and Lyle Hewitson.

The Mike Bass-trained Marinaresco put up a tremendous gallop and showed just how well he can quicken.

Ten Gun Salute was another who quickened well and the gallop pleased trainer Duncan Howells.

The latter’s stablemate Saratoga Dancer also strode out well.

Solid Speed (left) & Mambo Mime at the VDJ Gallops (Nkosi Hlophe)

Solid Speed (left) & Mambo Mime at the VDJ Gallops (Nkosi Hlophe)

Solid Speed worked on the poly together with his Dean Kannemeyer-trained stablemate Mambo Mime and both did well, crossing the line as one.

Joey Ramsden’s aim was to show the public the well-being of his pair and them moving well and he felt both The Conglomerate on the poly and St. Tropez on the turf achieved that.

The Gavin can Zyl-trained Rocketball was a bit keen when the stable companion kept it at a crawl early on, but he stretched well in the straight and is looking in fine shape.

Abashiri showed his giant stride and was looking well. His Mike Azzie-trained stable companion Rabada cantered slowly at Summerveld, having been excused from the Greyville gallops as he runs on Sunday in the KZN Breeders Million Mile.

Mac De Lago worked on the poly and wasn’t asked to a lot but strode out well.

Reserve runner Deputy Jud was not asked to do a lot.

Master Sabina put in a good televised gallop on the Highveld with a companion.

In the ensuing panel discussion at Greyville yesterday Kevin Shea made Solid Speed and French Navy his best value bets, Garth Puller opted for Black Arthur and St. Tropez and Track and Ball bookmaker Pierrick Maujean selected Solid Speed and Mambo Mime.

However, the July beans indicate the race rests between Abashiri, Rabada and Mac De Lago.

David Thiselton

Andrew Fortune (Nkosi Hlophe)

Jockeying for position

Andrew Fortune and the weighing room scale have fought a three decade long battle with the former champion jockey most often on the wrong end of exchanges and also officials.

The following epic saga of jockey versus scale will play out over the next two weeks after Sean Tarry declared Fortune on Samurai Blade for the Gr1 Vodacom Durban July.

Andrew Fortune (Nkosi Hlophe)

Andrew Fortune (Nkosi Hlophe)

Fortune is most comfortable at the top end of the weights but he has shown in the past that given incentive he has the willpower to lay off the pasta and 55,5kg is within his capabilities – just!

Fortune’s booking could also be a master stroke by Tarry given that many pundits have expressed fears that there is no obvious pacemaker in the race. There is no finer judge of pace than Fortune and while he will make the most of his chances – there are no ‘gimme’s’ in Fortune’s resume –  he is likely to ride at a pace to suit his mount and quite possibly top weight and stable companion to Samurai Blade, French Navy.

Tarry’s stable jockey and champion elect S’manga Khumalo was widely expected to be aboard Trophy Wife after Weichong Marwing kept the ride on French Navy but there may still be more intrigue to unfold before Saturday week.

Tarry was no doubt expecting Trophy Wife to make the final cut and was outspoken in his criticism of the selection panel. “Not only was she beaten only two lengths by Met winner Smart Call at Turffontein in November, she was third behind the same horse in last season’s Woolavington and, more recently, won the Gr 2 Gerald Rosenberg Stakes – tell me how they can leave her out?”

Trophy Wife is first reserve so much could hang on how the Rabada saga plays out.

Mike Azzie made no bones at the function to announce the July field that he was unhappy in being forced to run the Gr1 Daily News winner in both the KwaZulu-Natal Million Mile this coming Sunday and the July. He may still get his way should Rabada contest Sunday’s race.

French Navy (Nkosi Hlophe)

French Navy (Nkosi Hlophe)

That would leave MJ Byleveld with a hard-luck story as he has been booked for Rabada in the July but it would open the way for Khumalo to partner Trophy Wife.

Adding fuel to the intrigue is that Anton Marcus, successful on Rabada in the Daily News, passed him over opting for the mount on the relatively unexposed St Tropez. Winner of the East Coast Derby in PE, he was a smart second to Solid Speed – beaten a neck – and ahead of Dynamic and The Conglomerate in the G2 Betting World 1900. The Betting World 1900 had somewhat lost its reputation as a July pointer until last year when Power King and Punta Arenas, second and third respectively, finished first and second in the July.

Piere Strydom was offered the ride on Gr1 Rising Sun Gold Challenge winner Mac De Lago by Weiho Marwing but because of prior commitments finds himself aboard The Conglomerate, winless this season but slowly finding his best form.

By all accounts current champion jockey Gavin Lerena’s stint in Hong Kong is all but over and he heads back to partner Geoff Woodruff’s runner Master Sabina.

Duncan Howells was pleasantly surprised that Saratoga Dancer made the field and was quick to book rising star Craig Zackey, a rider he mentored in his apprenticeship before his move to Gauteng.

Justin Snaith, with four runners in the race and three top flight jockeys in Anthony Delpech, Dougie Whyte and Richard Fourie, has placed huge faith in apprentice sensation Lyle Hewitson. Barely a year into his apprenticeship, Snaith has booked him for Dynamic and with his mount being drawn in pole, his mettle will be properly tested.

By Andrew Harrison

French Navy (Nkosi Hlophe)

Draw concerns Marwing

Most French Navy fans would have been thrilled to see the strapping Sean Tarry-trained horse land a seemingly plum draw of four for the Vodacom Durban July, but jockey Weichong Marwing had in fact been hoping for a wide draw.

Weichong Marwing

Weichong Marwing

A wider draw would have given Marwing more options.

He explained in a slow paced race it was sometimes easier to find a position from a wide draw. A lot of the wider drawn horses will be attempting to get to the front down the back straight and should be able to achieve this in a slow paced race. Once they are ahead they are able to move inward towards the rail. They can then relax and wait for the next wave of wider drawn horses to come around them. Thereby, in a slow paced race, a widely drawn horse could possibly find itself in a handy position with cover.

Meanwhile, with each horse which has come around the field to the front, the well drawn horses will have been shuffled backwards. Of course the well drawn horses can prevent all of this from happening by holding their positions. However, they would need to use up energy to keep the wider horses out, and this is especially the case at Greyville because the back straight is uphill.

French Navy’s problem is his relative lack of gate speed. From a low draw it looks likely he has little option but to sit at the back early and hope for a fast pace. However, from a wide draw Marwing would have been able to drop him out if adjudging the pace to be quick, or send him up there if adjudging it to be slow. As the great jockey Michael “Muis” Roberts once said, the first fifty metres of a race are in fact the most important.

French Navy (Nkosi Hlophe)

French Navy (Nkosi Hlophe)

Marwing was philosophical. He said the draw was a factor which could not be changed and he would simply have to re-plan his strategy.

In the two renewals of the July to date which have been run on the narrower track, the horse drawn in barrier six crossed the line first, i.e. Wylie Hall and Power King respectively. Draw six this year belongs to the Tarry-trained Samurai Blade.

However, Legislate was awarded the race in the boardroom two years ago at the expense of Wylie Hall and he jumped from draw eleven. If the reserve runners come out, the horse drawn eleven this year will be Rabada. The latter is engaged to run in the KZN Million Mile this Sunday.

The last horse to take in both the Million Mile and the July was Love Struck in 2013 and he finished downfield in both races.

Rabada’s trainer Mike Azzie was forthright and said he believed this horse had had an outstanding July preparation, provided he did not run in the Million Mile on Sunday. However, the decision to run him on Sunday is out of his hands.

By David Thiselton

Marcus on St Tropez

The final pieces of the Vodacom Durban July jigsaw have been put together as Anton Marcus has been declared to ride the Joey Ramsden-trained St. Tropez, Piere Strydom has been declared to ride the Ramsden-trained The Conglomerate, MJ Byleveld has been declared to ride the Mike Azzie-trained Rabada, Andrew Fortune has been declared to ride the Sean Tarry-trained Samurai Blade, S’Manga Khumalo has been declared to ride the first reserve, the Tarry-trained Trophy Wife, and Craig Zackey has been declared to ride the Duncan Howells-trained Saratoga Dancer.

David Thiselton2016 VDJ Final Field2

 

Marinaresco (Liesl King)

Mixed views on draws

Marinaresco’s 19 draw was greeted with disappointment bordering on disgust by the horse’s connections at Kenilworth yesterday.

Marinaresco (Liesl King)

Marinaresco (Liesl King)

“That’s the worst draw I could have,” said rider Grant van Niekerk while Candice Robinson greeted questions with a blunt “Don’t even ask me,” before adding: “We had bad luck – we didn’t even get a chance to choose a number. Marinaresco has to be dropped in – that’s the way he is ridden – so we are going to have to hope that there is a good pace.”

It was also a bitter disappointment for all those punters who have backed the three-year-old to give Mike Bass success with his last hurrah, making him the gamble of the race so far. Bookmakers, doubtless breathing a sigh of relief, promptly marked him out from 6-1 to as much as 15-2.

Bernard Fayd’Herbe, who won from pen three on Pocket Power eight years ago, was totally unimpressed with Mac De Lago’s 16, saying: “That’s very bad.”

Surprisingly, though, Richard Fourie expressed himself delighted with his number 14 stall for It’s My Turn. It could be significant that Legislate started from only three places inside that when Fourie won on him two years ago.

He said: “That’s a beautiful draw and a good one for this particular horse. Most of those drawn low are speed horses and they are going to cut each other’s throats. I am happy that I am out of trouble, I know my horse stays and now I’m just hoping for a fair run through the race.”

By Michael Clower

Bela-Bela (Nkosi Hlophe)

Bela-Bela cracks ideal draw

The three-year-old Dynasty filly Bela-Bela is likely to become the outright favourite for the R4.25-million, Grade 1 Vodacom Durban July over 2 200m at Greyville Racecourse on July 2 after drawing an ideal three barrier draw at the official announcement of the final field and barrier draw function at the Theatre Of Champions.

The Justin Snaith-trained three-year-old, set to carry 54.5kg in the big race, had been joint favourite with stable companion Black Arthur before the draw but after the three-year-old Silvano colt drew 17 he is likely to ease out in the betting. He could, however, come in two places if the 18 horses guaranteed a run stand firm and the two reserves, Trophy Wife and Deputy Jud, drop away.

Jockey Anthony Delpech, looking for his fifth win in the country’s premier event, will have been delighted with the filly’s draw claiming that Bela-Bela is probably the second best filly he has ever ridden, the best being Igugu on which he won the race from a 10 draw under 55kg in 2011.

Looking at the field, there do not appear to be any hard luck stories among those that did not make the cut but what racegoers will be anxious to find out is which of the three Jooste runners – Rabada, The Conglomerate and St Tropez – Anton Marcus will be riding as no jockeys had been declared for any of them.

One man that will be happy, and it was reflected in the screams of joy by joint owner Rika Van Vuuren, is Mike Azzie whose three-year-old Triple Crown winner Abashiri drew barrier two. The colt has a big weight to shoulder at 59kg and the good draw will certainly make his task easier.

Stable companion Rabada drew at 12 but that is not necessarily a bad draw.

Cape trainer Joey Ramsden was clearly unimpressed when he drew 20 barrier for The Conglomerate and 11 for St Tropez but Dean Kannemeyer looked pleased when he drew the five berth for his Betting World 1900 winner Solid Speed.

Solid Speed, the five-year-old Dynasty gelding is one of only five runners in the race that are correctly weighted according to their basic ratings with the other 13 runners including the filly Bela-Bela being under sufferance, the filly by 0.5kg.

The 20 horses carded, along with horses competing in other feature races on the big day, will be on show in the July Gallops at Greyville early on Thursday morning.

Delpech big on Bela

Anthony Delpech, hoping that Bela-Bela can give him a fifth Vodacom Durban July victory, believes that the grey filly has a big chance on Saturday week.

The former champion said yesterday: “I always had a question mark in my mind about whether she would stay because she has so much speed and then she won the Woolavington. I said then to Justin Snaith ‘If you are going to run the filly in the July I am going to ride her.’”

Immediately after the Woolavington Delpech said that his 2011 July winner Igugu was the best filly he had ever ridden but that Bela-Bela could be the second best. He confirmed that view yesterday, adding: “She is very good, really special.”

Michael Clower

Delpech opts for Bela

Bela-Bela now heads the market for Saturday week’s Vodacom Durban July following Anthony Delpech’s shock decision to jump ship and get off the favourite Black Arthur in order to ride his stable companion.

World Sports Betting has cut the Woolavington winner from 15-2 to 11-2 clear favourite and Betting World has her 5-1 joint favourite with Black Arthur while Marinaresco comes next on 6-1 with French Navy a 13-2 chance.

Delpech, bidding for his fifth July win, has not got where he is today by picking the wrong one but Justin Snaith is not entirely convinced that the record-breaking former champion has made the right move.

He said: “Personally I think it’s too close to call. The weights are not in Bela-Bela’s favour and she only gets a kilo from the colts.

“But Anthony says that Bela-Bela has given him an unbelievable feel and he wants to stick with her regardless of the weights.”

When he heard that Mike Azzie had cancelled Dougie Whyte’s booking for Abashiri, and reinstated the gelding’s Triple Crown-winning partner Karl Zechner, Justin’s brother Jonathan moved quickly to secure the 13-time Hong Kong champion for Black Arthur even though Whyte will be riding at Sha Tin the night before and will not arrive in Durban until mid-morning.

Azzie, speaking at Greyville last Friday evening, explained: “We are going for the July with Abashiri and we are going to do our best to try and win it but we didn’t feel we needed the pressure of having to wait in case he doesn’t make his connecting flight. Adriaan van Vuuren has had a bit of a tense week with the press having a go at him about jocking off Dougie but it was a joint decision and this is the reason we took it.”

The Snaith camp, though, reckon the flight risk is worth taking and Justin said: “We had an opportunity to have a renowned international champion and I felt we should take it. Having him brings an extra spice to the race and I am very grateful to Alec and Gillian Foster (Black Arthur’s owner-breeders) for allowing this to happen. Without them it wouldn’t have been possible and I’m not worried about the flights – unless there is some world problem he should get to Durban on time.”

Snaith is bidding for a third July win following dead-heater Dancer’s Daughter in 2008 and the promoted Legislate two years ago (he jokes that he is the only trainer in the history of the race to have won it twice without having a horse passing the post with its head in front!) and he can hardly wait for the big day.

He said: “We have a serious chance and we have three runners – hopefully four with Dynamic – who are all doing well. We just have to get through the draws and the July gallops which are always a worry. But we are very excited and I wouldn’t swap the position I’m in with anyone.”

The final field and draws will be announced tomorrow and the July gallops are on Thursday.

Michael Clower

 

Abashiri (Liesl King)

Zechner back on Abashiri

Karl Zechner is back aboard his SA Triple Crown-winning partner Abashiri after Hong Kong-based superstar Dougie Whyte had originally been declared for the ride.

Meanwhile, Abashiri has been allotted the heaviest weight a three-year-old has ever been asked to carry in the big race, 59kg, after the weights were dragged up 2,5kg across the board due to the scratching of Legal Eagle.

Trainer Mike Azzie said, “Dougie said initially he would be able to fly in on the Monday before the race, but the Hong Kong Jockey Club would not release him and he was then going to be able to fly out on the Thursday. However, due to some jockey suspensions he was then required to ride in Hong Kong on the Friday, meaning he would fly out that evening and then catch a connecting flight to Durban on the morning of the July. He has done this sort of thing before and when he told me the jet lag would not affect him I believed him. However, a flight delay anywhere along the line would mean we could end up without a jockey. We have enough pressure on us already to have to add more by running that risk. I am sorry for Dougie, but Karl will be based in Durban for the next two-and-a-half weeks, so will be with the horse every day until the race.”

Abashiri (Liesl King)

Abashiri (Liesl King)

Zechner has partnered Abashiri five times for five victories, including all three legs of the coveted SA Triple Crown. He copped criticism from some quarters for his ride in the last leg, the SA Derby, despite getting the job done and in some people’s opinions riding a fine race.

Abashiri’s relative weight will not be affected by the dragging up of the weights as all horses’ weights will be going up by 2,5kg and the bottom weight will now be 54,5kg.

He will in fact be the only three-year-old in the field who is not under sufferance.

However, Azzie was still concerned about him having to carry the welter burden of 59kg and pointed to horses like Jackson, whom he said was not the same horse after carrying 56kg in the race, while the great Horse Chestnut was scratched when asked to carry too much weight.

Azzie admitted “If I owned Abashiri I would not be running him. I am not saying he can’t win the race, we are going to have him fit and well enough, but he has his whole career ahead of him and personally I would have waited for him to strengthen and furnish and bring him back here as a four-year-old.”

However, he added it was owner Adriaan Van Vuuren’s life-long dream to win the July.

Van Vuuren, who dotes on all of his horses, has shown himself to be one of South African racing’s most passionate owners and it is understandable he doesn’t want to miss the opportunity of experiencing his beloved Abashiri  running in the country’s premier horseracing event.

David Thiselton