Bint El Malak (Candiese Lenferna)

Bint El Malak does Lafferty proud

Summerveld trainer Paul Lafferty was thrilled his charge Bint El Malak could win the lucrative Hollywoodbets Sizzling Summer Horse challenge for stalwart owner Brian Riley.

Riley also owns the third-placed horse Explosive Beauty in partnership with Sherwin Jerrier.

Lafferty said, “Brian and Sherwin are two of the gentlemen of the game, every stable would like to have people of this ilk in their yard.”

Bint El Malak (Candiese Lenferna)
Bint El Malak (Candiese Lenferna)

Lafferty said that once Bint El Malak, a four-year-old Kings Chapel filly, had gathered 14 points with a win on the first day of the challenge, which stretched out over three months from December 1 to February 29, it was decided to try and win it.

That first win was in a qualified maiden in her 13th start, but nevertheless she started out her handicapping career in fine style with two seconds, a win, a third and a sixth. This increased her tally to 75 points and she finished eight clear of Wendy Whitehead’s Jayden’s Shreya.

Lafferty said, “I didn’t think she would improve that much, but she did and is still in fine shape so will probably be out again soon.”

The competition came at the right time for the yard because in about October last year they had finally overcome a persistent virus which had blighted them for about a year.

The yard then hit form and Lafferty finished second in the Sizzling Summer Trainer’s competition.

He said, “Garth Puller was too strong but I think we had the highest percentage if I’m not mistaken. Well done to the Puller yard. Alyson Wright in third place also pressed hard and won a number of races for their clients, who have got to be happy.”

Lafferty praised Hollywoodbet for the initiative in providing this excellent incentive.

Warren Kennedy won the Jockeys challenge from Anton Marcus.

The R750,000 total prize money, R250,000 for each of the three challenges, was split between the first six places with R100,000 going to the winner of each challenge.

Lafferty and team are determined the yard will never be affected so badly by a virus again and have taken extreme precautions. He said, “We check bloods everyday and it was a very tough time, the blood pictures were shocking. But the horses have come well and now we take many measures, including spraying the boxes with viruscides and administering herpes injections every three months.”

By David Thiselton

Greg Cheyne (Nkosi Hlophe)

Cheyne destined for a great season

Greg Cheyne, heading for his best season in terms of races won, rides two favourites and three second favourites from eight rides when Cape Town racing reverts to Durbanville on Saturday.

The early betting suggests that his best prospect is the Andre Nel-trained Tostada who has opened a warm 11-10 favourite for the Racing Association Maiden (race two) but Our Prized Jewel also heads the market in the Hospitality & Venue Booking Handicap. The Brett Crawford-trained 2-1 shot was impressive when odds-on for her debut and is bred in the purple, being a half-sister to both Cape Fillies Guineas winner Silver Mountain and SA Nursery scorer Cloth Of Cloud.

Cheyne is on the 127-winner mark at the moment and his present strike rate suggests he will top last season’s 160 winner total. Three times before he has bettered 150 winners.

Also doing well is Grant van Niekerk who is lying fifth on the Hong Kong log with 31 winners, the same number he achieved in the whole of last season. But, being Van Niekerk, he has also had interference problems and has had five suspensions since September. These have cost him nearly R400 000 in fines alone.

He told the Racing Post’s Graham Cunningham: “Racing here is quick – you are always trying to find the best position – so occasionally you are going to find a bit of trouble. I just have to make sure it doesn’t happen as often and do my best to stay out of the boardroom!”

By Michael Clower

Cozy Dot Com (Candiese Lenferna)

Winter Sun turned up the heat

A maiden winner with a merit rating in the 90’s is either good according to the handicappers, or over rated if you listen to the trainer. The handicappers won out at Hollywoodbets Greyville yesterday as Winter Sun gave all sunburn in the Durban View Restaurant Novice Plate.

Michael Roberts thought well enough of Winter Sun to race her mostly in feature company last season that earned the filly a lofty 97 rating. But yesterday she showed that her rating was very much in the mark.

Roberts, a world champion rider in his day, has given Serino Moodley a break and he has paid the faith. “Mister Roberts picked the right race.

Cozy Dot Com (Candiese Lenferna)
Cozy Dot Com (Candiese Lenferna)

“She gave me a good feel at work so this was not a surprise. Mister Roberts told me to ride her aggressively and she won well.”

“She over race in the Flamboyant, and she pulled her way to the front,” opined Roberts. “I thought this Novice Plate would suit her. She’s a nice filly.”

Shane Humby is a trainer of few words and his runners seldom have a lot of mileage on the clock. Prime example was Mr Fitz, a four-year-old with just seven runs under his belt, but who stamped himself as a horse for South Africa’s Champion Season with a convincing win.

“He was not putting it in so we had to resort to the unkindest cut of all,” he explained.

This was the now gelded Mr Fitz’s first outing minus his family jewels and he produced for stable rider Donovan Dillon. “He needed gelding but still looked to get out of it and I had to give him a few reminders,” said Dillon.

Humby is not one to run his horses for the sake of it but has built up a band of patient owners.

“I don’t tell my trainer what to do,” said former bookmaker Trevor Fourie who has a share in Mr Fitz. “He trains the horse so knows what is best, I don’t get involved.”

Mr Fitz, not out of the money in his seven starts, could be a horse to follow in the next few months.

Earlier Humby was in front of the TV cameras after Diamondsandpearls landed the first leg of his double. Notching her fourth win, she is not the easiest temperament wise but has been a good earner for owner Geoffrey van Lear.

The filly has temperament issues but, “we are getting on top of them and once we have sorted them out, she can go further,” said Humby.

Frank Robertson is not known for producing his two-year-olds early but he may have uncovered a gem in Love Bomb who quickened away like a good horse to win the Maiden Juvenile Plate.

The luckless Ziva De Grace did everything right but was no match for the finishing burst of Love Bomb.

“She’s got everything,” commented a clearly impressed Robinson. “From day one she has looked like a good filly and I think she can go the whole way. I rate her highly.”

Sean Veale was equally impressed. “I said to Frank, ‘don’t take me off this one.’  I think that she can go on to win a small feature.”

By Andrew Harrison

General Manager returns to Kenilworth

Kenilworth Racing is to have a general manager once more. This post was abolished, presumably as a cost-cutting measure, some years ago and was not thought necessary when the day-to-day running of Kenilworth and Durbanville was taken over by Phumelela under a management arrangement.

Recruitment consultants Baard and Partners have been appointed to find a suitable person and their advertisement appears on the Sporting Post website. Applicants are expected to have a post-graduate business qualification and at least ten years of relevant experience.

The job involves rather more than just ‘the buck stops with you’ problems on racedays and complaints from racegoers. The successful applicant will be expected to secure maximum returns from the company’s considerable property portfolio as well as from functions and conferences, and also to attract sponsors.

The appointment will be a major stepforward in re-establishing good relations with the racing and betting public. For too long racegoers have had nobody to whom they could address their concerns – whether they were about the food, betting display boards, non-working escalators or anything else. Just having somebody who is known to be in overall charge will work wonders. Applications should be emailed to info@baardandpartners.co.za.

Jonathan Snaith and Justin Vermaak have resigned from the Western Cape Chapter of the Racing Association at the RA’s agm held at Kenilworth and Turffontein Racecourses last month. This is one of several fascinating facts to emerge from the copy of the minutes obtained by the Sporting Post and published on its website.

The relevant minute states that they resigned under the terms of the RA’s Memorandum of Incorporation but (surprisingly) did not make themselves available for re-election. They have been replaced by racecourse commentator Philip Sarembock and Drakenstein racing manager Kevin Sommerville who will sit alongside CTS sales boss Wehann Smith, Ridgemont’s Craig Kieswetter and Avontuur Stud owner Philip Taberer.

Sarembock called for riding fees to be reduced in order to increase the return to owners. Quite what the jockeys will make of this proposal can only be imagined! The proposal was not adopted but, according to the minutes “discussions were ongoing.”

Mike de Kock, who is a director of the RA, proposed that money contributed by race sponsors should be split 50:50 between stakes and Phumelela. At one time Phumelela got the lot but at the moment it is divided 70:30 with Phumelela taking the lion’s share.

By Michael Clower

Dancing Feather (Candiese Lenferna)

High hopes for Dancing Feather

Summerveld trainer Gavin van Zyl is the only raiding trainer in either of the two classics at Turffontein this Saturday.

He travels his promising Duke Of Marmalade filly Dancing Feather up on Friday to compete in the Grade 1 Wilgerbosdrift SA Fillies Classic. 

Dancing Feather (Candiese Lenferna)
Dancing Feather (Candiese Lenferna)

He said, “She is doing well, I am happy with her, she is in a good space. If she reproduces either her 1600m maiden win or her following win over 1750m she will be competitive and that is why I am sending her, I think she has a shout. She is a good horse and we have to give her this chance. She was going further and further away and used all of the straight atGreyville and Scottsville in both of those wins so she should enjoy the Turffontein Standside course. She is not big but stands over a bit of ground and although slightly long in the back is nicely made and has a good action. Keagan de Melo has been very happy with her work and is upbeat about her.”

Meanwhile, Van Zyl’s Grade 1-winning Equus two-year-old champion from last season Gabor is set to make her comeback ahead of her SA Champions Season campaign. She had a problem with her knee which was “not serious” but required time off.

He is bullish too about the future of two three-year-olds in the yard, Trippi gelding Guru’s Pride, who has won three in succession, and Silvano filly Voice Of Reason, who won her maiden third time out over 1600m at Kenilworth. Both of their formlines are looking good and they could be possible SA Champions Season campaigners. 

Older stalwart Blackball continues to do his owners proud.

The yard is looking particularly strong in the two-year-old division. 

Van Zyl is already eyeing the Grade 1 Tsogo Sun Gold Medallion and other features with Greenlighttoheaven, who cruised to victory in a Maiden Juvenile Plate over 1000m at Scottsville on debut.

Waiting in the wings is the like of R800,000 purchase Secret Is Ours, a Dynasty full-brother to Bela-Bela, who did well in a Barrier Trial recently.

Van Zyl has another superbly bred Dynasty colt called Gotitall, who is out of a USA-bred mare whose dam is a half-sister to a very successful USA-bred sire called Jump Start. Gotitall was scratched from a recent barrier trial as he needs a bit more time

Van Zyl said a full-brother to Rocketball, and therefore a half-brother to Blackball, should be looked out for in a forthcoming barrier trial.

There are others too by the like of Silvano and Global View to keep an eye out for.

By David Thiselton

Hawwaam (JC Photographics)

Hawwaam’s SA campaign continues

The Mike de Kock yard have revealed Hawwaam was sent back to Randjesfontein after the Sun Met and has stayed in work.

Meanwhile, they are preparing their contenders for the Grade 1 SA Classic and Grade 1 Wigerbosdrift SA Fillies Classic, both to be run over 1800m at Turffontein this Saturday.

Hawwaam’s ultimate goal is an overseas campaign but it was decided by the connections that rather than subject him to a long an arduous journey straight after his Met run they would wait until after the EU Audit on African Horse Sickness, which is due to take place this year, to see whether there would then become the advantage of a shorter route in the foreseeable future.

Hawwaam (JC Photographics)
Hawwaam (JC Photographics)

Hawwaam has been entered in the Grade 1 Premier’s Champions Challenge, which he won with consummate ease last year, and his route into that race will either be through the Grade 1 HF Oppenheimer Horse Chestnut Stakes or a Pinnacle Stakes event.

The yard run Frosted Gold and Marshall in the SA Classic.
Matthew de Kock said, “They are both very well, we are very happy, but they have the Tarry duo to beat.”

Marshall will be the one best suited to this trip on pedigree and running style. This big Vercingetorix gelding is held in high regard but to date that is based mainly on his exceptional homework. Matthew said this horse had his problems and was not straightforward and perhaps that was the reason he was yet to bring his homework to the course to its full extent. However, if he does put his best foot forward he will be a big runner.

Matthew said Frosted Gold was a genuine horse who was loaded with ability and always tried his hardest. He has hardly put a foot wrong. He agreed this New Zealand-bred by All Too Hard had a stamina question mark but was quick to add that Sean Tarry’s stalwarts Shango and Ikigai did too.

Shango, who beat Frosted Gold going away in the Dingaans over a mile, is by sprinter Captain Of All out of a Jet Master mare who won from 1200-1400m. However, he runs as if he will stay further.

Conversely, Ikigai is by Vercingetorix out of an Al Muft mare who won over 1600m, which suggests he should stay 1800m, but he has a plenty of speed which creates the stamina doubt.

The De Kock yard have an interesting runner in the SA Fillies Classic in Virtuosa.

Matthew said, “She turns it on very quickly and hit the front a long way out in the Fillies Guineas. We will have to ride her very patiently this time.”

She is by Visionaire out of the De Kock-trained Checcetti, who won the Grade 2 Gerald Rosenberg over 2000m, so on pedigree she should stay the trip although she finished unplaced in her only attempt at 1800m to date.

By David Thiselton

Winter Sun (Candiese Lenferna)

Winter Sun should run hot

A maiden winner with a merit rating in the 90’s is either good according to the handicappers, or over rated if you listen to the trainer. So, when set weights race like the Durban View Restaurant Novice Plate come around, trainers with horses with high ratings jump at the opportunity.

Two that stand out are Winter Sun and Dive Captain at Hollywoodbets Greyville today.

Michael Roberts thought well enough of Winter Sun to race her mostly in feature company last season. This earned her a lofty 97 rating but last year’s juvenile feature winners, both male and female, have not set the tracks alight in the current season which makes Winter Sun’s rating appear suspect.

Winter Sun (Candiese Lenferna)
Winter Sun (Candiese Lenferna)

Roberts stepped his filly up to a mile in the Flamboyant Stakes on Boxing Day and it was an experiment that did not have the desired result. Using her light weight, Denis Schwarz had her up with the pace before blowing out of the back door.

Winter Sun’s sprint form is far superior and although she takes to the poly track for the first time she does look capable of notching her second win, and if her rating is correct, it should be a comfortable win.

Dean Kannemeyer’s KZN string is firing nicely and if the ratings hold any water, Dive Captain should pose the biggest threat to Winter Sun. Although rated 3kg inferior, she is in turn rated 4.5kg superior to the next highest rated filly, Cut Loose.

Dive Captain made no show in the soft at Scottsville last time out but prior to that showed good early toe on the poly, only to be run out of it in the last few strides. Her effort behind the useful Petra in a Graduation Plate was a particularly commendable effort and a repeat on her favourite surface could see the opposition chasing shadows.

Tony Nassif will never go home wondering. He wears his heart on his sleeve and when he raids KZN it is always worth taking note. Cut Loose ran out of puff when well fancied at her second start at the Vaal but was reported to be making a respiratory noise. The addition of a tongue-tie appears to have solved that issue as she scored a comfortable win over the Hollywoodbets Scottsville 1400m next time out. She could be anything and probably worth including as a safety measure in the exotics.

 Some quick horses contest the Greyville Convention Centre Handicap and a win for Drunken Sailor would not be out of turn. Yogas Govender’s gelding has earned a cheque in all of his 10 starts and his fourth behind Scottsville specialist Ishnana being his only finish out of the first three.

Regular pilot Billy Jacobson has been signed up by Louis Goosen so the ride goes to Sherman Brown but it was probably on Jacobson’s advice that Govender has declared blinkers for the first time.

The irony is that Jacobson could provide the stiffest opposition as he partners the Goosen-trained poly specialist Di Mazzio, the combination bidding for a winning hat-trick – never an easy feat – but the stable does appear to have turned the corner.

Coldhardcash would appear to be held by Di Mazzio given their last meeting but apprentice Jabu Jacobs claims his 4kg and Coldhardcash will be out and gone when the gates open.

In the fifth, Arrabiata has shown up well in two starts since shedding her maiden over course and distance. She tried further last run but looks more at home over this shorter trip. Diamondsandpearls, Popova and Barinois could feature as the main threats. Diamondsandpearls won well last run and the extra furlong should not hold any fears from her good draw while Popova has been coming to hand slowly for her new stable and caught the eye over course and distance last time out. But judging by the riding arrangements, Arrabiata is the stable elect. Barinois is over her best course and distance but will not have her original 1.5kg claim as apprentice Jason Gates booted home his 60th winner on Sunday and is now ineligible to claim.

Jacobs landed a treble at Scottsville last week and he could finally see Ziva De Grace into the winner’s enclosure in the first. Kom Naidoo’s filly has been game in defeat in all three of her starts and the five furlongs on the poly with the claim could be enough to see her home.

By Andrew Harrison

Andrew Harrison

Hollywoodbets Greyville Wednesday Tips and Race Previews

Hollywoodbets Greyville Wednesday Tips and Race Previews by Andrew Harrison

Race 1

6 ZIVA DE GRACE   8 KINSKEY’S TUNE   3 GALACTICO   2 WINTER WHISTLE
Preview: The 4kg claim by apprentice Jabu Jacobs who booted home a treble at Scottsville last week, could finally see ZIVA DE GRACE (6) into the winner’s enclosure. Kom Naidoo’s filly has been game in all three of her starts and the five furlongs on the poly with the claim could be enough to see her home. KINSKEY’S TUNE (8) found good betting support last time out after making a promising debut but took on males in a small field but she looks a threat. GALACTICO (3) was not too far back in her Highveld debut and is sure to improve. WINTER WHISTLE (2) trialled well and is one to watch. (Andrew Harrison: 6-8-3-2).

Race 2

9 HOT MONEY   8 RETAIL THERAPY   2 SPANISH OASIS   4 INGAKARA
Preview: Open race with weak form. HOT MONEY (9) was a beaten favourite at his last two but has been consistent and it could be third time lucky. RETAIL THERAPY (8) boasts some fair Cape form and was not too far back in her recent Vaal debut. She looks a threat. SPANISH OASIS (2) has done better than her last run and a tongue-tie has been added to her equipment. INGAKARA (4) made a modest debut last Wednesday but can come on from that. (Andrew Harrison: 9-8-2-4).

Race 3

6 COZY DOT COM   4 TEETOTAL   8 AMBERBELL   1 PLAMHEART
Preview: COZY DOT COM (6) improved nicely at her second start when making her poly debut. She meets a weak field here and could have a little more scope. TEETOTAL (4) is a battling maiden but goes well on the poly and has not been far back. She will never get an easier chance. AMBERBELL (8) is another struggler nut has shown her best over coursed and distance PALMHEART (1) is down in trip and the blinkers go on. She may be one to keep an eye on. (Andrew Harrison: 6-4-8-1).

Race 4

11 JONATHAN   5 FINAL ASSEMBLY   1 ENTERTHEDEBUTANTE   6 PETER PIPER
Preview: JONATHAN (11) was due to run last Friday night. He has a tricky draw but is much better than his last effort on the turf and is back on his favourite surface where he has shown consistent form. He does step up in trip. FINAL ASSEMBLY (5) was close-up in a blanket finish last run and a repeat can see him close again. ENTERTHEDEBUTANTE (1) takes on males but showed up well from a poor draw last run. Blinkers, a light weight and a plum draw sees a lot in her favour. PETER PIPER (6) is always game and was a fair second to Roy’s Physco who finally managed a second win last time out. (Andrew Harrison: 11-5-1-6).

Race 5

10 ARRABIATA   3 DIAMONDSANDPEARLS   9 POPOVA   11 BARINOIS
Preview: ARRABIATA (10) has shown up well in two starts since shedding her maiden over course and distance. She tried further last run but looks more at home over this shorter trip. DIAMONDSANDPEARLS (3) won well last run and the extra furlong should not hold any fears from her good draw. POPOVA (9) has been coming to hand slowly and caught the eye over course and distance last time out. BARINOIS (11) is over her best course and distance. She was a close-up second last run and Jason Gates takes 1.5kg off her back. (Andrew Harrison: 10-3-9-11).

Race 6

2 WINTER SUN   8 DIVE CAPTAIN   9 SANSKRIFT   7 CUT LOOSE  
Preview: WINTER SUN (2) feature placed last season and has shown her best form over this distance. Her run in the Flamboyant Stakes is best ignored. DIVE CAPTAIN (8) is back on her favourite surface and can do much better than her last showing. CUT LOOSE (7) was a comfortable maiden winner last run but is lightly raced. SANSKRIFT (9) has been over further at her last two. She was a beaten favourite last run and can make amends. (Andrew Harrison: 2-8-9-7).

Race 7

4 DRUNKEN SAILOR   10 DI MAZZIO   9 COLDHARDCASH   3 MR FITZ
Preview: DRUNKEN SAILOR (4) is seldom out of the money. The blinkers go on from a good draw. DI MAZZIO (10) goes for a winning hat-trick. He has drawn wide but is over his best course and distance. COLDHARDCASH (9) is quick and with a 4kg claimer aboard can make all. MR FITZ (3) is smart but is returning from a break and may just need it. (Andrew Harrison: 4-10-9-3).

Race 8

3 LORD CARO   6 KING CYRUS   12 SOLICITOR GENERAL   11 TRANSONIC
Preview: LORD CARO (3) made sudden improvement last run. Good chance if he can repeat. KING CYRUS (6) was a little disappointing last run but is back on the poly where he showed some improvement. He’s lightly raced. SOLICITOR GENERAL (12) has shown his best form on the poly but has again drawn wide. TRANSONIC (11) has also drawn wide and returns from a break but he has shown some ability and has a chance in a weak field. (Andrew Harrison: 3-6-12-11).

To take a bet go to www.tabgold.co.za or www.trackandball.co.za

Mercurana (right) Liesl King

Mercurana aiming for gold

Mercurana has been raised a massive 20 points (10kg) for his shock 45-1 win in last Saturday’s Kenilworth Cup.  His new 97 merit rating should give the Candice Bass-Robinson four-year-old a good chance of getting into the DStv Gold Vase and the eLan Gold Cup.

Swift Surprise, headed almost on the line, has gone up four to a new mark of 95 but Troop The Colour, who earned only R7 500 for finishing fourth, has been hit with a 13 point-rise to 80.

Strathdon (third) and fifth-placed Cedar Man have been left unchanged as has top weight Tap O’Noth who would surely have finished a lot closer than last – admittedly only beaten just over three and a half lengths – had he not been repeatedly denied a clear run. Last year’s Gold Cup winner Dynasty’s Blossom, who made a lot of the running before finishing sixth, is the only one of the eight runners to have been dropped and she comes down from 108 to 106.

Mercurana (right) Liesl King
Mercurana (right) Liesl King

Durbanville, forced to switch to Kenilworth on the morning of the racemeeting a week ago, has been given the go-ahead to resume on Saturday.

Racecourse manager Dean Diedericks said yesterday: “We are fine for Saturday and we could do with a few drops of rain.” None is forecast but the problem area – 50m from the winning post and in the centre of the track – is now back to normal.

The MR 78 1 000m handicap had only five acceptors when declarations closed at 11.00m and has been scrapped. The fillies 1 250m maiden and the 1 400m MR94 handicap have each attracted only six runners but the rest of the card has held up well. Candice Bass-Robinson has the most runners with ten while Justin Snaith has nine and Brett Crawford eight. Richard Fourie and Greg Cheyne are the only jockeys with a ride in every race but Sandile Mbhele and Corne Orffer each have seven mounts.

King Of Gems, winner of the Concorde Cup in November but only eighth in the Cape Guineas and last but one in the Cape Derby, has been diagnosed with a wind problem and is to have an operation.

Stable companion Front And Centre goes to Durban even though it was thought that the 2018 WSB Cape Fillies Guineas winner wasn’t at her best there last year. “She will continue racing until the end of the season and she will probably just have two races – in the Tibouchina (June 13) and the Jonsson Workwear Garden Province on July day,” Crawford reports. She started second favourite for last year’s Garden Province but finished only seventh.

Ready Steady Go could also be making the Great Trek after running such a good race in the Khaya Stables Diadem Stakes ten days ago. Despite being continually held up for a clear run and having to be switched, the 40-1 shot was only beaten a length and a quarter in fourth.

Michelle Rix said: “We decided to run him fresh, he flew up from last and was unlucky. We weren’t planning to send him to Durban but we will now look at the KZN season with him. We will talk to the owner (Francis Carruthers) and, if he agrees, we will send the horse.”

Prawns

The estimated 3 700 crowd at Kenilworth’s Prawn Festival meeting consumed a total of 2.1 tonnes of prawns. That works out at just over half a kilo per person. Interestingly Kenilworth’s events supremo Clinton Theys reveals that it was the racecourse which footed the bill and then sold the prawns to the public at cost. He is now trying to come up with a similar promotion for Durbanville – not prawns but something (he doesn’t yet know what) that is likely to be just as appealing to the general public.

By Michael Clower

Wylie Wench (JC Photographics)

Pedigree confirms Wylie Wench’s worth

The athletic Mike and Adam Azzie-trained Wylie Hall filly Wylie Wench was one of the most eyecatching winners of the weekend and she looks capable of justifying the money Varsfontein Stud Farm South Africa paid to acquire her.

A quick glance at her rich pedigree is all that is required to know why she has brought two famous racing families together. Her story starts with Anthony Kalmanson, a Durbanite who used to enjoy riding in jumps races in England. He used to look for fillies in Europe to bolster his broodmare band at Varsfontein Stud, which he founded in 1974. He would race them over there and sometimes ride them in hurdles races before bringing them out to South Africa.

In the early 1970’s he bought a filly called Lucky Libra, who was by the Fair Trial line sire Great White Way. She won three races in England, one over 1600m on the flat and two over hurdles. Despite winning a hurdles race over two-and-a-half miles, she was destined to become the founding mare of a family whose most famous names are sprinters, although some members of the family are versatile.

Wylie Wench (JC Photographics)
Wylie Wench (JC Photographics)

Her first South African-bred foal Crown Sable (Peacable Kingdom) won nine races from 1000m to 1900m, including a Grade 3 over 1000m. Lucky Libra was then sent to Scott Brothers’ five-times champion sire Jungle Cove and the result was the filly Enchanting, who was a superb racehorse and became a matriarch at stud. She won two Grade 1s and a Grade 2 over 1600m, inlcuding the Gosforth Park Fillies Guineas.

Anthony Kalmanson passed away in 1979 and the running of Varsfontein had been handed down to his twin offspring, John and Susan. The twins, to their lasting regret, sold Enchanting. However, they always look for her family members at the Sales. Enchanting was exported to the USA after her racing feats out here and stood at her owner Graham Beck’s Gainesway Farm.

She was later sent back to SA to stand at Beck’s Highlands Farm Stud, but not before she had produced four USA-bred foals, including the Spend A Buck filly Enchanted Dollar.

Enchanted Dollar won twice in South Africa before standing at Highlands. She produced two Graded winners including the champion National Assembly colt National Currency.

The latter was purchased for R500,000 at the National Yearling Sales and Beck took a share in him together with A Christoforou, C J W and N Hilt and J E H Clarke.

National Currency, trained by Mike Azzie, broke 1000m course records at Turffontein and Newmarket on his way to nine career wins, including three Grade 1s.

He was an Equus Champion two-year-old and an Equus Champion three-year-old sprinter.

The big 16-hands-2-inch bay earned the nickname “the horse with the movie star looks” and was still said to be maturing when tragically passing away as a four-year-old.

In his penultimate start in South Africa in the Grade 1 Mercury Sprint over 1200m at Clairwood, when still a three-year-old, he destroyed them by 5,25 lengths.

He then went over to Hong Kong and ran second to the legendary Silent Witness, who was named world champion sprinter for three years in succession.

Azzie had claimed before that race that had it been over six furlongs and not five the opposition would have been better off not pitching up.

National Currency’s next start in Dubai in a Listed race over 1200m on the dirt perhaps proved him correct as he cruised in by six-and-a-half lengths.

National Currency had the world at his feet and it was a devastating blow to Azzie and SA racing fans when his life was then claimed by a suspected snake or scorpion bite.

Azzie was once asked by the Racegoer when he had a runner in the Mercury Sprint to compare the favourite of that race to National Currency and he said, “National Currency could have stopped for a cup of tea at the 400m and still beaten him.”

That is how much he revered him.

Enchanting’s first SA-bred foal was Harry’s Charm, an ARCSA Champion two-year-old and three-year-old filly and she was later a Champion Older Sprinter.

Later in 1998, just a year before National Currency was born, Enchanting produced a filly by National Assembly called Enchantress.

Her eight wins included the Grade 1 SA Fillies Sprint and she was named Equus Champion Older Female Sprinter in 2002.

Enchantress has produced the Grade 1 Thekwini winner and Equus Champion two-year-old filly Laverna and the Grade 3 Lonsdale Stirrup Cup winner Nevvay, proving there are still lines of stamina coming through from Lucky Libra.

Wylie Wench, bred by Lammerskraal Stud, is the eighth foal of Enchantress.

Susan Rowett (nee Kalmanson) of Varsfontein bought Wylie Wench at BSA’s National Two-year-old Sale for R600,000.

Mike Azzie had also liked her conformation and he and Susan had soon agreed that as he knew the family so well Azzie Racing Stables would be the right ones to train her.

After all her dam is a three-parts sister to National Currency.

The Azzies provided Wylie Wench with a test on Saturday which was going to help them plan her future.

It was just her second career start and she was being asked to overcome a wide draw in the 1450m fillies and mares maiden on the tight Turffontein Inside track.

After dwelling slightly she was caught wide in the running without cover.

However, she remained relaxed and made up the deficit easily at the top of the straight.

She then wandered around in the front before a backhander from Raymond Danielson saw her surging to win as she liked.

The Azzies said she had taken time to mature.

Her sire Wylie Hall is one of the best performed South African-based sons of the late great Australian champion sire Redoute’s Choice and he is already beginning to make waves as a sire himself.

The Azzies are not getting ahead of themselves but Wylie Wench undoubtedly has more to come and is definitely a horse to follow.

By David Thiselton