The richest race in history, the US $20 million
Saudi Cup, will be screened live on Tellytrack at 12 noon on Saturday 29
February.
It will be run on a dirt surface over 1800m at
King Abdulaziz Racetrack.
The race has attracted a star studded field from
around the globe, including Maximum Security, whose only two losses in nine
races were in a preparation outing and when controversially disqualified in the
Kentucky Derby. This Jason Servis-trained colt is by the Street Cry sire New
Year’s Day and was the meritorious winner of the Derby, having crossed the line
well clear. He will be hard to beat, especially as the surface is predicted to
favour front-runners. However, he will have to handle the new environment
and also the absence of standard USA medication lasix and bute, which is not
allowed in this race.
Top America dirt horses McKinzie and Mucho
Gusto could be the chief threats.
They are both trained by Bob Baffert, who has
won the Dubai World Cup before and is more used to shipping and running horses
internationally than is Servis.
McKinzie is reportedly in the best form of his
career.
Mucho Gusto was the winner of the recent Pegasus
World Cup at Gulfstream Park.
Aiden O’Brien runs the mare Magic Wand, who was
second in the Pegasus World Cup Turf invitational last time out, but her
pedigree suggests she might not be suited to dirt.
Benbatl is an interesting contender from Britain
as he has won three Group 1s, all on different continents, and is currently in
good dirt form in Dubai.
Frankie Dettori rides Gronkowski, second to
Justify in the 2018 Belmont Stakes, but he was well beaten by Benbatl last time
out in Dubai.
Chrysoberyl and Gold Dream finished first and
second respectively in Japan’s Champions Cup.
The remaining two are both from America, Midnight Bisou, who was second in the Breeders Cup Distaff, and two-time Group 1 winner Tacitus, who comes off a disappointing third in the Group 1 Jockey Club Gold Cup.
Winning your first horse race, be it apprentice
jockey or trainer, is a thrill never forgotten. As an owner it is even more
special as it can be a long time between drinks.
The horse winning in the first-time owner’s
colours gives even more of a kick and Wayne Maybery could hardly wipe the smile
off his chops after Stella Act won the first at Hollywoodbets Scottsville yesterday.
Apprentice Jabu Jacobs steered the filly home
for trainer Glen Kotzen, Maybery and partners and giving Jacobs the first of
his three winners.
Summerhill-bred Stella Act was the second winner
for freshman sire Act Of War and was never in doubt from the jump as Jacobs let
her roll chased home by favourite Nirvana Girl and Ziva De Grace.
Jacobs made it a quick double getting Matchless
Captain home in the second for Brett Crawford, favourite Candy Man arriving on
the scene too late to trouble the winner.
Brunilda was an armchair ride for Anton Marcus
as the Garth Puller-trained filly put six lengths over the opposition in the
third.
Behind every horse that steps onto the track
there is a story.
Most are mundane but there is always a story.
Keep On Dancing boasts a pedigree, that with a
win or two behind her name will make her a sought-after broodmare, but she
nearly did not make it to the track.
“She degloved (badly skinned) a leg that she had
to be rested for six months,” revealed Wendy Whitehead. “But Jane Thomas said
we should send her to Summerveld and give her a try.”
“She was a box walker, or should I say she ran
in the box.
“So, I built her a lean-too and she lives
outside.
“She only comes in when it’s raining – a really
a big storm.”
Having only her third start, Stuart Randolph
played cat-and-mouse.
He let To The Max and Empress Ella pass him in
the straight, but when he asked for an effort, Keep On Dancing took to the
floor like the winner of ‘Strictly Come Dancing’.
Jet Lignite finally proved brave enough to win a
race as Tristan Godden coaxed him home. “This horse has so much talent
but he’s his own worst enemy,” confided Alyson Wright.
“He’s not a brave horse, he’s always got to have
his friend with him, Kotchka, the lead pony.”
“They went so slow he should have led but we
wanted him to settle.
“When he gets to the other horse you saw that he
just wants to stay there.”
Wright and stable rider Tristan Godden were back
for a further welcome into the winner’s circle with Deposition denying Jacobs and
Puller their fourth winner of the afternoon.
Godden, talented enough to be selected to attend
the British Racing School apprentice programme in his formative years has had a
spell in the doldrums but has come good with valuable support from Wright and
Paul Lafferty, was wary of stable companion and favourite Sea Sponge.
Apprentice Khanya Sakayi, after a solid start to
his career, has been short of confidence and winners in recent months, but a
winner does wonders for confidence as he picked up a chance ride in the last
for Tony Rivalland and obliged on Clara for one of racing stalwart owners, Mary
Liley.
Punters should get
off to a good start at tomorrow’s Vaal meeting, which two races beyond a mile
are around the turn and the rest are down the straight.
Weiho Marwing
sends out Adorable Alley in the first, a Workrider’s Maiden over 2000m, and she
will be ridden by the top workrider Sam Mosia. She is an impressive specimen by
Flower Alley, a stamina influence, and was only caught late last time when
stepped up to this trip by a promising sort in Smoking Hot. She was also beaten
by Super Duper but was only 0,80 lengths off the winner. It was only her third
career start and she has plenty of scope for further improvement. She jumped
from draw 14 out of 14 last time so was probably forced to lead, but from draw
seven out of 16 this time she can be ridden a touch more conservatively. Ever
Fair has some fair form but was beaten nearly seven lengths by Adorable Alley
last time. Miss Cap Mala ran on for a one length third over this trip last time
and beat Ever Fair by 1,75 lengths, but she had a plum draw that time and now
has to negotiate a tricky draw, as does Ever Fair.
In the second race
over 1200m Candice Dawson and Warren Kennedy could continue their good form
together with Little Rain. This Captain Al filly has caught the eye from day
one but has bumped some decent sorts. This will be the least inspiring field
she has faced and she should get off the mark over an ideal trip. St. Joseph’s
Lily nearly caused a 20/1 shock last time and it is interesting to note that in
early December she beat Little Rain by five lengths over this course and
distance. It is thus going to be an interesting clash but Little Rain is given
the nod as that defeat was her second run after a six month layoff and her
performances have improved significantly since then. Birdwatcher made a fair
debut over this trip and could earn with expected improvement.
In the third race
over 1400m Bravo One went close in his penultimate start over this course and
distance and Nooresh Juglall is on board again. He should be enough to get
punters through the PA. Akwaan has been expensive to follow, failing three
times as favourite in four starts. He hasn’t raced since November last year but
the rest and gelding should have helped. He gets blinkers on for the first
time. Eppagilia has 3,2 lengths to find on Bravo One from their last meeting
over course and distance but could earn in this field.
In the first leg
of the Pick 6 Crank It Up is interesting stepped down from 2000m to 1400m. He
went close over 2000m at Greyville but has also earned over as short as 1000m,
so he should enjoy this trip. Curious has some fair form over this trip and
Khumalo sticks with him. Opening Gambit comes off a fair second over 1600m on
Saturday but he was beaten 2,5 lengths by Curious when they last met over this
course and distance, which was in soft ground. Trend Master should go close if
Bravo One wins the previous race as he was just half-a-length behind him over
this course and distance in soft ground in early January. Bassam looks capable
of improving and should relish the step up in trip.
In the first leg
of the jackpot Curvation is capable of a strong finish and got there just too
late over this 1600m trip this time after being dropped out from a wide draw.
Going down the straight will make her task easier. The Flower Alley filly Fire
Flower is interesting after making a decent debut over 1200m as she should
relish the step up to a mile. Rock You also has decent form and should go close
despite not having raced for 86 days.
In the sixth over
2400m Before Noon just failed in his penultimate start when flying up over this
trip after being dropped out from a wide draw. The horse who beat him,
Imperial Ruby, has come out and won since. Gold Griffin was well beaten by Imperial
Ruby in a race won by Out Of Your League but last time out he beat Out Of Your
League. Warren Kennedy stays aboard and he carries just 52kg. Odd Rob is always
a must include in staying events as he has class on his day. Pilgrim’s Progress
and Fife are the only two females in the race and are both well weighted.
However, the former is out of form. The latter can be included. Major Return,
Palace Green and Mr Greenlight are worth considering too.
The seventh over
1400m looks to be a match race between Rock The Globe, who finished third in the
Grade 1 Premier’s Champions Stakes last season, and the up and the progressive
filly Isle De France. The former gets the vote but both can be included in the
Pick 6.
In the next race
the enigmatic Perfact is doing well with blinkers on and might well relish the
slight step down in trip as she has been racing strongly over 1600m and
placing. The enigmatic Lazarus Tree could have it go his way over a course and
distance he has won over. Bockscar is unreliable but can turn it on his day and
can’t be ignored. Liberado, Windy Flight and Pop Icon should also be
considered.
In the last race over 1400m Encryption has been catching the eye over 1200m and should enjoy the step up in trip. Westwing Belter has shown signs of class and has her easiest task for some time over a suitable trip.
Bernard
Fayd’Herbe has been given a compliment by the handicappers who, in a press
release explaining their adjustments to the merit ratings following last
Saturday’s big Kenilworth meeting, said that they raised Selangor Jet Master
winner Crown Towers from 103 to 109.
They added:
“Crown Towers actually achieved a mark of 112 but we felt that he may well be
flattered by this mark and we attributed the performance to an enterprising
ride from Fayd’Herbe.”
Crown
Towers’ trainer Justin Snaith is expecting what he calls “a monster day” on
Saturday when he runs Strathdon (Richard Fourie) and Swift Surprise (Anthony
Andrews) in the Kenilworth Cup.
He made this
prediction after springing a 20-1 shock with August Leaves (Craig Zackey) in
the first at Kenilworth yesterday and apparently the gelding came close to
adding his name to those recent ‘sold without engagement’ scratchings.
Snaith said:
“We had a few offers from Mauritius and it was 50:50 whether to sell but owner
Michael de Broglio said it was not that lucrative a price and we had waited
this long for the horse to go over ground.”
Devin Ashby
was out of luck on his only ride yesterday but he has come in for praise from
Eric Sands for his handling of Cape Derby winner Golden Ducat in his work at
home. “Devin is a horseman who is much under-rated,” said Eric Sands. “He and
Golden Ducat’s groom Lucky are probably the only ones to have sat on the horse
and he has done a great job with him as well as with the reschooling of Rainbow
Bridge.”
Ashby rides Lady Of The Lake for Sands I the 1 400m handicap on Saturday.
It’s
beginning to look as if Halfway To Heaven’s achievement in producing a Group 1
winner – or equivalent big race winner in the days before the Pattern was
introduced – from each of her first three foals could be a world record.
Charles
Faull, widely regarded as the most knowledgeable pedigree expert in the
country, says the Rainbow Bridge, Hawwaam, Golden Ducat feat is definitely a
first in South Africa and so far his researches have not shown up anything to
match it around the world.
Toussaud had
four Group 1 winners from her first six foals and Hasili (dam of Dansili) had
three from her first four and five in all, but Faull has yet to find one that
has had three from her first three offspring.
It is
perhaps appropriate that Halfway To Heaven’s three winners were bred by Mary
Slack and her daughter Jessica Jell because they are as well bred as any of
their horses. They are the daughter and granddaughter of Harry and Bridget
Oppenheimer who bred and raced a string of July winners as well as the
legendary Horse Chestnut.
For good
measure Golden Ducat races in the famous black, scarlet cap colours that were
carried to victory by Royal Palace in the Epsom Derby and by Maori Venture in
the Grand National. They were bequeathed to Mrs Slack by Jim Joel, a De Beers
director who had engraved on his tombstone this quote from the Psalms: ‘Some
trust in chariots, and some in horses, but we will remember the name of the
Lord!”
It has been a long time between drinks for the filly
Railtrip, almost a year to the day since her last win, but that could change at
Hollywoodbets Scottsville today where she lines up in the Track & Ball
Gaming Handicap over 2400m.
However, the race is just a taste of what punters can expect
with trainers having lined up in numbers with nine races on a packed programme.
Seven runners are quoted between 4-1 and 8-1 in a 10-horse field which should
give punters some indication of what they are up against.
Weak 4-1 favourite Twice Golden was a comfortable winner
first up out of the maidens but hit a wall when stepping up in class, fading
out to finish over 10 lengths back to Blackball in a competitive handicap. However,
today he does have the benefit of a 4kg claimer aboard and is proven over the
course and distance which adds to his appeal.
While Twice Golden’s handicap rating has been on the up,
Railtrip’s has been on the decline and from a career high of 100, she steps out
as a 90 today. That said, she will not have it easy as only stable companion
Just Cruised In carries more pudding over a distance that the filly tries for
the first time. Warren Kennedy has opted for Railtrip in preference to Just
Cruised In, and that choice could prove significant.
Merlin From Berlin is in good form since being tried in
blinkers and can go in again but there should be little between him and stable
companion Paybackthemoney with a neck separating them the last time they met.
There are no obvious exotic bet bankers on the card but if
Keep On Dancing takes to the turf she could get the Pick 6 off to a good start.
Wendy Whitehead’s filly improved markedly on her debut and from a good draw
should at least be competitive. Justadoreher showed up well last start and
appears to have come to hand and the extra furlong should suit. Fateful
Mistress and To The Max also make appeal.
Jet Lignite, runner up at his last two, most recently over
course and distance, and Double Gemini could possibly prove the pick in the
Greyville Convention Centre Maiden over 2400m. The form in maiden races over
ground is generally weak and these two stand out in a modest field.
The seventh is the proverbial minefield. First Sighting was
a narrowly beaten favourite last run and with a four-claiming apprentice up she
has a light weight. Coyote Girl seldom runs a bad race and over her best trip she
has a strong chance again. Bella Ballerina was much improved in blinkers last
run and that form has held up while Miss Marmalade won well on debut. She is a
half-sister to Halfway To Heaven, dam of Rainbow Bridge, Hawaam and Saturday’s
Derby winner Golden Ducat, so may need a touch further.
It often pays to take note of horses on the drop as far as
merit ratings go and Highveld raider Chipofftheoldblok could pay to follow in
the eighth. He has been up against stronger on the Highveld but his rating has
dropped ten points in his last four starts and he now looks competitive off his
new mark. Sea Sponge is consistent and
goes well over this trip and he may be the horse to beat.
The ninth is another coin-toss but Master Tobe was a recent maiden winner but has made steady improvement. He meets a weak field here and the step up in trip could see further improvement. Storm Ruler is a five-time winner that has dropped to a more competitive mark and was much improved last run. He needs to repeat. Rasputin’s Remedy had his consistency rewarded with his maiden win last time out. He can feature prominently in this field.
Dual Vodacom
Durban July hero Do It Again has been diagnosed with ulcers and this is now
thought to be the reason why he failed to fire in the L’Ormarins Queen’s Plate
and the Sun Met.
Justin Snaith explained: “We scoped him and did some extensive tests, including with a gastroscope. This revealed the ulcers. I had a feeling it might have been that and so he was already on ulcer medication by the time we did the tests.”
You might
think it strange that racehorses could develop ulcers – after all they are
exercised like athletes, cosseted like babies, given as much food as they can
eat and have no obvious reason to feel stressed– but apparently it is a common
complaint.
Snaith
explained: “A high percentage of horses in training – world-wide, not just in
South Africa – get ulcers and it is partly because of their high-energy feed.
Do It Again has been sent to Drakenstein for a holiday and he is now doing very
well. He will stay there for a while.”
Stable
companion Bunker Hunt, beaten only by Hawwaam in the Premier Trophy before
taking fifth in the Met, is on the shortlist for the July.
His trainer
said: “He was fully exposed in the Met and had a hard race that day but it’s
now the Durban season for him and I am hopeful he could get into the July with
a nice light weight.”
Rio
Querari
Snaith
believes that CTS Ready To Run second Rio Querari has the makings of a good
sprinter and said: “He has been gelded and, while I might take him to Durban
for a race or two, I won’t do too much with him there because I want him for
the next Cape season.”
Erik The
Red, who came off a straight line sufficiently to prompt a race review when
winning last Saturday’s Kepu Cape Of Good Hope Nursery, remains a possible for
the Tsogo Sun Gold Medallion at Scottsville on May 30. “I haven’t done a lot of
grasswork with him and he is extremely green,” said Snaith who won last year’s
Allan Robertson with 22-1 outsider Miss Florida and the 2012 SA Fillies Sprint
with Ebony Flyer.
Dean
Kannemeyer, successful in the SA Fillies Sprint with Real Princess four years
ago, confirmed that he still has the Allan Robertson in mind after Delta Queen franked
her first-time potential in the Capetown Noir Kenilworth Fillies Nursery. “I am
very excited about this filly,” he said. “She has the blood and so much natural
speed.”
Undercover
Agent
Ricky
Maingard will train Undercover Agent when the recently-sold 2018 Gold Challenge
winner moves to Mauritius. The five-year-old should relish the tight Champ de
Mars circuit and it’s not hard to envisage a horse of his speed and class
leading the opposition a merry dance in race after race.
The 2017
Cape Guineas winner Tap O’Noth, who ran so well in the 2 800m New Turf
Carriers Western Cape Stayers on Met day, heads the eight declared for the
Kenilworth Cup on Saturday.
Lastly, but
certainly by no means least, the handicappers have raised Cape Derby winner Golden
Ducat a whopping 21 points to 110 for Saturday’s victory but that only puts him
25th in the South African three-year-old rankings.
Worlds Your
Oyster could be worth a punt at around 9-2 in the TAB Telebet Handicap at
Kenilworth today.
This meeting
was to have been held at Durbanville but was switched late yesterday morning.
“There is a patch at the 1 500m mark that hasn’t recovered,” explained
racecourse boss Dean Diedericks. “After having discussions with the jockeys we
made the decision to move the meeting to Kenilworth.”
It won’t
bother the Geoff Woodruff grey who is unbeaten in two starts here but it was
last time’s first run out of the maidens which marked him out as one for the
notebook. He led inside the final furlong to score by three-parts of a length
and won rather more comfortably than that margin might suggest.
The
handicappers also thought so and raised him five points but the way he won
suggested that he might well have had more in hand than that. A negative is the
hot field and another is that the talented Keagan de Melo has switched to the
Eric Sands-trained impressive maiden winner Royal Return (6-1). But
jockey-of-the-moment Craig Zackey is a definite plus.
Yorktown is
the reason for Anton Marcus’s flying visit and the Brett Crawford runner was
5-2 favourite yesterday. He has come down a kilo for his last run and, while he
is an obvious threat, it’s not one that bounces off the racecard. Bernie and
Magic Mike have chances just as good.
Marcus’s
other two rides are both for Mike Robinson and the Philippi trainer says this
is the first time the former champion has ridden for him since he was third on
Goodtime Gal in the Diana Stakes at Durbanville in October 2018.
“When I saw
that Anton was coming and had only the one ride, I phoned him,” says Robinson.
“He told me that he would ring me back when he knew that he was definitely
making the trip. In fact he called me just 20 minutes later. I’ve got some nice
runners today and both Sudden Star and Grey Princess have good chances.”
Sudden Star
gets the vote in race one even though the form book says he has only a fifth of
a length in hand over Pannington when the Brett Crawford colt did not get an
entirely clear run.
Grey
Princess was left on the same mark after last time’s good run over 1 500m
and is 7-2 second favourite for the last. She has strong claims even though
there is an extra 300m to travel but it could pay to look further down the
weights.
Flatware,
the 22-10 favourite, and 11-2 shot Flash Fire make particular appeal. If you
ignore Sandile Mbhele’s then 1.5kg allowance (he doesn’t claim any more) there
is little between them on their January 14 running. Flash Fire receives 2kg
here so she gets the vote.
Lady Wylie,
very disappointing on Sun Met day, can recover the losses in the
Tabonline.co.za Maiden.
Australian-bred
mare Spitfire Lady is unusual from a South African perspective in that she was
not brought over here to race but was specifically purchased as a broodmare.
The Millstream
farm-base mare is proving to be a valuable acquisition.
Her first foal is
the Adam Marcus-trained Grade 1 WSB Cape Fillies Guineas winner Missisippi
Burning and her second foal, the Barend Botes-trained Noble Tune colt Fire And
Ice, got off the mark in fluent style on Saturday over 1160m at Turffontein.
Neither of her
first two foals reached their reserve at the Sales.
Jan Mantel of
Millstream pointed out, “She has a beautiful pedigree, but she does
not throw Sales horses. They are not big, flashy horses at sales time.”
Bloodstock Agent
Kerry Jack often visited Australia, mainly to buy weanlings either for
pinhooking or for clients, but in 2015, for the first and only time, she bought
a broodmare, Spitfire Lady.
The mare was
bought on behalf of Mario Ferreira with the intention of standing her at
Rathmor Stud in the KZN Midlands. Ferreira’s newly acquired stallion Noble Tune
was initially based at Rathmor and his arrival coincided with him going on a
mare-buying spree. Noble Tune and the band of mares were later moved down to
Millstream in Robertson in the Western Cape, where the stallion and mare
strength is greater.
Spitfire Lady is
by Hussonet out of a Maroof mare called Galroof, who won a Group 3 over 1630m
and had two Group 1 seconds in the Queensland Derby over 2400m and Doomben Cup
over 2000m respectively as well as a second in the Queensland Guineas.
Spitfire Lady was
a useful racehorse herself, winning four races from 1200m to 1600m and
finishing Listed-placed multiple times. Furthermore, she is a half-sister to
Grade 3 winner and twice Grade 1-placed Sabrage and to Listed winner and Grade
1 runner up Pinnacles as well as being a full-sister to a Listed placed horse.
Kerry Jack looked
at a few mares for Ferreira and Rathmor Stud at the Gold Coast national
broodmare Sale of 2015 and between them they settled on Spitfire Lady.
“We didn’t
think we would have to spend as much as we did,” she said.
The mare was
knocked down for Aus $240,000.
Fire Ice is
in-bred 3x4x5 to Mr Prospector and 5×5 to Northern Dancer and as Noble Tune is
out of a mare by Storm Cat, who hails from the Northern Dancer/Bold Ruler
cross, the two lines of Bold Ruler in Spitfire Lady’s pedigree are
eye-catching. Spitfire Lady also brings a line of Princequillo, two lines of
which are found in Noble Tune’s pedigree. The Bold Ruler/Princequillo cross of
course produced Storm Cat’s famous damsire, Secretariat.
Spitfire Lady had
to stand in quarantine in Cape Town upon arrival in South Africa and Jack thus
suggested to Ferreira that this would provide her with the opportunity to get
off to a good start by being sent to Cape-based champion Captain Al.
The result was the
diminutive Missisippi Burning.
She has already
won four races, from just seven starts, and has accumulated R794,063 in stakes.
The Cape Fillies
Guineas was her first race beyond a sprint and having jumped from draw two and
had a rails run throughout she showed a tremendous turn of foot from a midfield
position to win easily by three.
Marcus decided to avoid the Grade 1 Bidvest Majorca Stakes on Sun
Met day as she had drawn wide and he felt the quality of the older fillies
at present would have also made it tough.
He said, “She is a young, lightly raced filly with a lot of
ability. The SA Champions Season in KZN willl be her main aim as she will be
able to race against her own age group. She is small but compact and is all
heart.”
She should be suited to the tight Greyville track, where the
ability to quicken immediately is a valuable asset.
Fire And Ice, who is similarly unimposing, placed four times
before winning at the fifth attempt on Saturday.
One noticeable characteristic he shares with his half-sister,
besides size, is courage.
In his penultimate start he didn’t enjoy blinkers and was booked
to miss out on the places when under pressure in the final stages. It seemed
for all money he would fade right out but he somehow found enough to go from
fifth to third in the last 125 metres.
The blinkers were dispensed with on Saturday and he showed good
cruising speed to be within striking distance. He made his run on the
unfavourable inside of runners but was still able to exert his authority over a
decent field of maidens to win cosily by 1,30 lengths, despite starting odds of
10/1.
He will be interesting stepped up in trip, which he should be
looking for on pedigree considering his grandam’s ability to stay and Noble
Tune’s Grade 2 win over 1700m.
Spitfire Lady currently has a Querari October-born foal at foot.
She went to Twice Over for a late season cover
but did not get in foal.
It is said that freak ability is unlikely to be passed on to future generations, whereas courage can be. Spitfire Lady is thus a mare to follow.
She is the first and only Grade 1-producing mare of Ferreira’s breeding operation to date.
Eric Sands’ expertise as a trainer was highlighted by his win on
Saturday in the Grade 1 Asian Racing Conference Commemorative Derby with Golden
Ducat, who couldn’t be sold as a youngster due to a serious hock injury and
might not have existed at all if Sands had not managed to nurture his mother
Halfway To Heaven into a stakes performer after she had survived a number of
incidents as a youngster.
Halfway To Heaven has now achieved the phenomenal feat of
producing three Grade 1 winners with her first three runners.
Golden Ducat’s half-brothers are no ordinary Grade 1 winners, they being Rainbow Bridge, (Ideal World) and Hawwaam (Silvano), who need no introduction.
Sands’ biggest thank you after the race was reserved for Halfway
To Heaven and in referring to her three Grade 1 winners from three runners he
said, “When I was a kid my father was with George Azzie and Hawaii
was there. He was out of Ethane who also produced William Penn. But I have
never seen this before. I don’t know if it has been done before and I don’t
know if it will be done again. She is phenomenal.”
Golden Ducat became his sire Philanthropist’s first South
African-bred Grade 1 winner, although he did produce a Grade 1 winner in Canada
before being imported to stand at Drakenstein Stud.
Rainbow Bridge, Hawwaam and Golden Ducat were all bred by Wilgerbosdrift and Mauritzfontein Studs.
Craig Zackey rode a faultless race on Saturday to record his third
Grade 1 win of the season. His previous two also came at Kenilworth, both for
Adam Marcus. It was an eighth career Grade 1 for 25-year-old Zackey.
Golden Ducat lined up as the joint lowest rated horse in the field
on a merit rating of 89 but, with just four previous races under his belt, had
not yet had a chance to prove himself.
Sands believed the tall bay had run “way above” his
merit rating in his previous start over 1500m which was “far short of his
trip.”
He also pointed out he himself had won a Cape Derby before by
avoiding features with an immature horse, although he was likely referring to
Money Bags, who crossed the line first in 2006 but was later demoted after an
objection.
Sands had previously won the Cape Derby with Jungle Warrior in
1988 and Grande Jete in 2001.
Zackey’s confidence was boosted on the way to post.
“He’s a big strapping fella with a huge action and knowing
how Hawwaam and Rainbow Bridge get the ten furlongs I said to myself he is
going to get it even better.”
Zackey, after jumping from draw two, settled him in the perfect
position in midfield one out with cover alongside the favourite Silver Host.
The good pace suited the big gelding, as he was able to stride out
throughout. He had plenty in the tank turning for home and produced a sustained
finish to overtake and beat Sachdev by half-a-length.
Zackey is sponsored by Wilgerbosdrift and Mauritzfontein Stud. He
had won a Grade 1 before in the colours of Jessica Jell’s Mauritzfontein Stud
and on Saturday achieved the double he had longed for by winning a Grade 1 in
the colours of Mary Slack’s Wilgerbosdrift Stud.
His association with the current champion breeders started around
2015 when he stuck with a filly called Nother Russia, who was so temperamental
nobody wanted to ride her. Zackey spent hours of his spare time helping
“horse whisperer” Malan du Toit school her as well as “showing
her a lot of love”. One day her grateful owner and breeder, Jessica Slack,
now Jell, said to him, “This is your filly until the end of her
career.”
Jessica was true to her word and the Mike de Kock-trained filly
won eight races under Zackey, including the Grade 1 Empress Club Stakes.
Zackey believes there is a lot more to come from Golden Ducat,
describing him after Saturday’s race as a big baby who was still
learning.
“The day he puts his head down and puts it all in you’re
going to see a really good horse.”
Sands applauded Zackey for his ride and showed
considerable emotion when thanking Mary Slack.
Golden Ducat was gelded in November last year after starting to
become “a bit impossible”.
His mother had temperament issues too, as do both Rainbow Bridge
and Hawwaam.
Gavin Walker, the former owner of Bush Hill Stud, bred Halfway To
Heaven.
As a youngster she knocked herself out one day by running headlong
in to a pole. She then survived a flood and she later cut herself badly on barb
wire when escaping into a vineyard.
That all happened before being sent to Lisa Humby to be backed,
She was then went to Sands, where sore shins initially plagued her.
She was also nervous and “quite dangerous” and
reportedly put two Sands’ stable employees in hospital.
However, with veterinary help for her shins she was able to win
six races for Sands, including the Grade 3 Prix du Cap over 1400m.
She was then sold by Walker to Mary Slack and won the Listed Off
To Stud Handicap over 1800m for Mike de Kock shortly before being retired to
stud.
Walker had bought Halfway To Heaven’s grandam Our Elegant Girl on
instinct when watching her antics at Scottsville one day. Her rider had fallen off
on the way to the start and, astonishingly, she stopped, turned around and
allowed him to remount, an unheard of happening in thoroughbred racing.
Halfway To Heaven is in-bred 3×3 to Northern Dancer through Jet
Master and Rambo Dancer.
She should go on to smash more records as she has two more
Silvano’s on the ground, a filly and a colt, as well as a Querari filly.
By David Thiselton
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