Viva Rio, second in the Cape Guineas, has been installed
17-10 favourite to give Glen Kotzen his third Cape Derby victory at
Kenilworth’s Prawn Festival meeting on Saturday week. The Woodhill trainer was
successful with subsequent Vodacom Durban July winner Big City Life in 2009 and
with Eyes Wide Open two years ago.
The Justin Snaith Politician winner Silver Host is second
favourite at 9-2 for the ARF Commemorative-backed Grade 1 with stable companion
Sachdev next in the market on 11-2. Snaith has won the race three times – with
Russian Sage (2008), Legislate (2014) and It’s My Turn four years ago. Final
declarations are this morning.
Anton Marcus, having won on all three rides last Saturday,
is again the focus of attention in the early betting for this Saturday’s
Kenilworth meeting. He has four mounts and three – Hello Tomorrow, In Auro and
My Wicked Ways – have opened favourite while the Eric Sands-trained Morse is
3-1 second favourite for race three.
Candice Bass-Robinson is now beginning to focus on the SA Champions Season in KZN after enjoying one of the best days of her career on Sun Met day, where she sent out two Grade 1 winners, Clouds Unfold and Russet Air.
She won the Vodacom Durban July in her first season as
a licensed trainer, becoming the first female trainer in history to win the
country’s premier horse race.
Sun Met day enhanced her reputation for big race
preparation skills and also amplified how well she does with the progeny of
former stable star What A Winter.
Both Clouds Unfold, who defended her crown in the
Grade 1 Bidvest Majorca Stakes over 1600m, and Russet Air, who won the Grade 1
Cape Flying Championship, are by What A Winter.
Bass-Robinson said most of her SA
Champions Season campaigners would be prepared at her home base of Milnerton
before their first KZN races. They would be transported to KZN shortly before
the race and then stay at Summerveld until the completion of their campaigns.
This approach worked with
Marinaresco in 2016, when still trained by Candice’s father Mike, as he ran in
the Cape winter series before running second in the July and then winning the
Grade 1 Champions Cup.
The following season he arrived
in Durban shortly before winning the Drill Hall Stakes and two runs later won
the July.
Last season the same approach
worked with Santa Clara, who was prepared in Cape Town before running a narrow
second in the Umzimkhulu Stakes on April 7 and then winning the KRA Fillies
Guineas on Champions Season opening night, May 3.
Freedom Charter was prepared in
the same manner and won her first race in KZN on May 3 at Greyville, the Grade
3 Poinsettia Stakes.
Bass-Robinson said, “They
are used
to Milnerton and it is not easy when the training tracks are completely
different.”
She has booked 15 boxes at
Summerveld for the winter but is not sure yet exactly which horses will be
going.
However, Clouds Unfold will
definitely be one of them.
The star filly’s campaign will
start on June 13 at Greyville in either the Grade 1 Rising Sun Gold Challenge
over 1600m or the Grade 2 Tibouchina over 1400m. Her chief target is the Grade
1 Jonsson Workwear Garden Province Stakes over 1600m on Vodacom Durban July
day.
Clouds Unfold was set to be one
of the stars of the SA Champions Season last year but unfortunately broke loose
one day at Summerveld and fell.
Bass-Robinson said, “She
chipped the point of her hip. It was a serious injury and she spent three
months doing nothing.”
However, the Majorca, which she
won with authority, proved she has fully recovered.
Russet Air might avoid KZN and be aimed at the Grade 1
Computaform Sprint at Turffontein.
He will first take in the Grade 2 Diadem over 1200m on
February 22 at Kenilworth where he will carry a 2kg Grade 1 penalty.
Bass-Robinson said, “He doesn’t really enjoy
running around a turn and I think the Turffontein track will suit him.”
The horses being looked at to try and make it a fifth
Bass-trained Vodacom Durban July winner overall (Mike won three and Candice has
won one) are More Magic, Sovereign Spirit and Majestic Mozart.
Bass-Robinson spoke of her success with What A
Winter’s progeny.
She said, “I enjoy training them as they have
good temperaments, they respond and do well and when you get a good one you get
a really good one. We have bought a number because he throws nice specimens,
they look like horses that will win. His best is still coming in the next two
seasons because he is now not just getting numbers he is getting good quality
mares too.”
Dutch Philip, Magical Wonderland and Snow Report
are among the other good What A Winters that Bass-Robinson has trained. All
three are Graded winners.
What A Winter won the Cape Flying Championship twice
and was an Equus Champion Sprinter twice.
However, as Clouds Unfold proves, he doesn’t only
throw pure sprinters.
Clouds Unfold is out of a Montjeu mare, which might
explain it, or otherwise she has been influenced by What A Winter’s damsire
Ahanoora, who like her, was a chestnut.
Ahonoora was a sprinter who progressed from
handicapping as a three-year-old to Group company as a four-year-old and his
biggest success was when being awarded the Group 1 William Hill Sprint
Championship (The Nunthorpe) over five furlongs at York after an objection.
However, he exceeded all expectations at stud and proved capable of siring top class performers at a wide range of distances. He proved to be one of the most successful and important representatives of the Byerley Turk Line in the modern era and his best progeny include Epsom Derby winner Dr Devious, the Group 1-winning sprinter and successful sire Indian Ridge and he is damsire of the like of New Approach, Cape Cross, Azeri. Leroidesanimaux and Acclamation.
Maybe Diva, Black Caviar and more recently Winks, have been
the iron horses of modern day Australian racing. Their performances on the
racetrack are legendary but the one thing that they all have in common is their
age, sex and iron will.
This exalted trio raced to an age where most thoroughbred
racehorses will have been retired to the breeding shed, hacking brigade or show
jumping arenas. But with hardly a blemish on their form in an age where most
fillies and mares – and males for that matter – will have been put out to grass
and deemed past their sell-by date, they soldier on into equine immortality.
The Pat Lunn owned and trained – officially by Johan Janse
van Vuuren – Ginger Biscuit hardly fits the bill as super star but in common is
that she is eight years old and soldiered to her ninth career victory at
Hollywoodbets Greyville yesterday.
The daughter of Admire Main, not a popular commercial
stallion, was bought for R20k as a yearling and in seven seasons has clocked up
79 races and her ninth win.
Lunn is a man of few words but Keagan de Melo, successful
with a top class ride on Mythos in the second for Dean Kannemeyer, expanded a
little.
“Very gutsy,” he said when quizzed post-race by Paul
Lafferty, one-time assistant to Lunn in the days of yore. “When she comes to
the course you can always rely on her to finish in the first three. Today she
won and is a bonus and she truly deserve it. She is very consistent and I just
enjoy riding her.”
Serino Moodley is fast making a name for himself as a solid
and reliable rider and although in the past he has fallen foul of authority for
his over enthusiastic use of the stick, he still managers to get his mounts in
the right place at the right time. With legendary jockey Michael Roberts in the
background giving advice, it’s not surprising that he is maturing. He scored on
the Roberts-trained rank outsider Forever Amber on the first but was more kind
to punters in the seventh as he steered Guru’s Pride to an easy win, bursting
through late to win as he liked.
It is not often that
a jockey is priced up favourite for seven out of eight races on the card – and
probably eight had his mount not been scratched – but Anton Marcus is in warm
demand in KZN by all trainers. Although when he calls for a ride, you can knock
two or three points off the bookmaker’s odds regardless of the form.
But being favourite and winning are two different scenarios
and in South Africa where conspiracy theories abound for little more reason
than a punter has ‘done’ his cash, opinions can get heated.
There have been a few ugly scenes of disgruntled punters verbally abusing, trainers, officials and jockeys at the past two Hollywoodbets Greyville meetings, and while one can admire their passion, their poor behaviour cannot be condoned. There are other avenues of complaint to the stipendiary stewards – views legitimate or not.
L’Ormarins
Queen’s Plate hero Vardy is being given a lengthy break following his tough
time in the Sun Met when he was nearly brought down as he clipped the heels of
Hawwaam early on.
Adam Marcus
said: “He got roughed up, and he went a bit quiet on me for a few days. It’s
the first time that has happened to him and he is not a straightforward horse.
He has a delicate mouth for a start and things have to go his way. I put him on
a soft feed, got him relaxed again and he began to freshen up once more.
“He is not
going to go to a farm. He will stay with me so that I can keep an eye on him.
He can be very playful and I have lovely paddocks at my yard.”
The Durban
season is on the agenda and he could run in the big one despite the doubts
about him getting the trip. “The Vodacom Durban July is a big option,” says the
four-year-old’s trainer. “Nothing is set in stone at this stage but it is the
prestige race of the season. That apart, he will go for some of the other big
races.”
Stable
companion Twist Of Fate, who ran his usual honest race to take fourth in the
Met, was third in last year’s July for Joey Ramsden and will also be going to
Durban. “He came through his race beautifully and he loves Greyville,” said his
trainer who celebrates his 31st birthday in eight days’ time. “If
Twist Of Fate can go into the race with a nice weight he will be a very big
runner.”
Saturday week
Justin Snaith has already declared four for Saturday week’s Kenilworth Fillies Nursery – S’Manga Khumalo rides December winner Favorita, Richard Fourie will partner Met day Listed race third Stuck On You and Bernard Fayd’Herbe has been booked for Trickster although no jockey has yet been decided on for Trippin The Stars. Met day Listed race winner Erik The Red (Fourie) has been declared for the Cape Of Good Hope Nursery.
There has
been some criticism of the decision to transfer these two Grade 3 races from
their traditional June slots, and the critics point to the small entry of 13 in
each, but both races have often struggled to get a decent-sized field in the
past. The colts’ race has had a field of only five three times in the last
seven years and it has not reached double figures since 2008 while the fillies
race has averaged only seven in the past eight seasons.
The races
were moved because Kenilworth Racing wants to put up as impressive a show as
possible for those at next week’s Asian Racing Conference. With the Prawn
Festival meeting expected to attract a crowd at least equalling that of the Sun
Met, the delegates’ reports home should be extremely favourable – something
that can only benefit our industry in the long term.
The Vaal stages an
eight race meeting tomorrow and it looks to be competitive so the exotics are
probably the best way to approach it.
In the first race
over 1200m the three that make most appeal are Putins Promise, Bergerac and
Bassam. Putins Promise had to be pushed along most of the race last time over
this trip but finished strongly, so is probably looking for further but he
could mow them down late. Bergerac had a tough low draw in a big field over
1160m on Charity Mile day but was nevertheless backed in to 18/10. He was tired
by the end but was not disgraced in fifth, beaten 5,25 lengths, and he should
have improved, although he has gone 103 days without a race. Bassam showed fair
pace last time over 1200m and on formlines there is not much between him and
Bergerac. Qutro Passi showed pace on debut in a fair field and was not
disgraced so could earn. Intothemystic hasn’t run for 173 days but has shown
signs of ability and has blinkers on. Doublethink and Opening Gambit are two
others who are hard to ignore.
In the second race
over 1000m Elusive Woman ran a fair 4,75 length second to the promising Varina
over this trip in just her second start and she looks the one to beat. Great
Stratz stayed on quite well over this trip on debut and was also exactly 4,75
lengths behind Varina in that race so there is nothing in it. There are plenty
of first-timers in this race but the one who makes most appeal is the Sean
Tarry-trained Ecastatic, who is by Gimmethegreenlight out of a mare who
finished second in the Grade 2 Ioi Tombe Challenge.
In the third race
over 1000m the first-timer Slalom Queen makes plenty of appeal. She is by
Querari out of Blizzard Belle, who broke the Fairview course record over 1000m,
so she should have plenty of speed. The only winner in this Juvenile Plate
field is Garden Party, who won on debut over 800m back in November. He now has
to give the other males 3kg and the females 5,5kg. The only other horses to
have run are Sultan’s Daughter and Valyrian King, so with the first-timer rule
Pick 6 players can be garunteed to get through by just including those three.
However, Slalom Queen is also worth including for those who want to double up.
In the fourth race
Makara caught the eye as a juvenile and made a good comeback on January 7 after
a nine month layoff. She can get of the mark here, although it is competitive.
Allez Les Bleu is a solid sort who has pace and stays on so she could be a
threat. Potency is an interesting first-timer being a R425,000 Captain Al filly
and a half-sister to the classy Lazer Star, who won her first four races
including the Grade 3 Magnolia Handicap and the Listed Swallow Stakes and she later
won the Grade 2 Spring Fillies and Mares Challenge. Western Vision has run
three good races and also has a chance. Roman Royalty is an eyecatching sort
and he did not appear to stay a mile last tie so is interesting back at this
trip.
In the fifth over
1200m Leading Fast has been given a lenient looking opening handicap mark after
an easy win over this trip. However, it’s never easy first time out the maidens
and a few others warrant consideration, including Royal Lily, who has faced
some of the best of her crop without ever being disgraced and now runs in a
handicap off a mark which has come down from a high of 98 to 86. Encryption was
drawn wide last time over this trip on the Vaal Classic track and was just 1,25
lengths back at the line. Malteza is knocking hard and The Fifth Wave was
not disgraced last time against the cLassy Sarah at level weights, but she
consequently copped a five point raise. Glowtoria is another one to
consider.
In the sixth over
1400m. Oden was not disgraced in a strong field in his penultimate start over
1475m and then stayed on well over 1100m last time so this trip should be down
his alley. He is selected s a banker in the PA, although the trip might still
just stretch him so going wide is the suggestion for the Pick 6.
In the seventh
race the suggestion to go thin despite it being competitive as there have to be
some budget saving legs. Written In Stone might have a slights tamina doubt on
pedigree but on running style he should get this 1600m trip from a good draw of
two. He has fair crusing speed and always runs on late in races over 1200m up
to 1450m and in his only attempt at this trip he was drawn very wide. He can
handle a four point raise for his win last time. War Jewel has faced two good
sorts in his last two without being disgraced and runs off a one point lowered
mark. Norland is hard knocking and must be included despite being given another
two point raise for his close second last time.
In the last race a chance is taken on getting through with just two horses Duke’s Game and Crank It Up, who bot look to be improving sorts who will be distance suited, although the first mentioned has a good draw and the latter is drawn wide.
Liverpool Champ has not been out of the money since being ‘run over’ by Justfortheepenny prior to shedding his maiden but Gavin van Zyl obviously believes that the gelding is better than his last two starts would suggest.
Not too many horses are capable of backing up their maiden
win but Liverpool Champ did just that when beating the consistent Techno
Captain first up in a handicap.
Since then, Liverpool Champ has got himself on the wrong
side of the handicappers as his handicap rating was pumped up from an 86 to a
current 91 rating courtesy of a second-placed finish to Merlin From Berlin in
spite of giving the winner 3kg.
The mechanics of the MR system are a mystery to most but
Liverpool Champ, blinkered for the first time, does look capable of registering
his third victory and defying top weight of 61kg.
Anton Marcus has ben loyal to Brett Crawford’s colt Baby
Shooz after a facile maiden win. The son of Jackson has since been touched off
in two races over 1600m and the step up to today’s trip of 2000 on the
Hollywoodbets Greyville poly may be what he is looking for.
Greek Sword and Walterthepenniless are others to consider
along with the filly American Princess who was a fast-finishing second over
course and distance last time out but Marcus has deserted in order to partner
Baby Shooz.
Garth Puller could hold the key to the fifth where he
saddles Noemi and First Sighting.
The latter has been priced up favourite by Track & Ball
after her close-up third behind Mai Tai and the presence of
Anton Marcus in the saddle along with first-time blinkers will also have
trimmed some of the odds. However, stable companion Noemi may prove a better
proposition. She is over her best course and distance and with a 4kg claimer up
should be right there.
Lady Legend is young and improving filly that Wayne Badenhorst
– who has since joined forces with his sister Barbara, now Kennedy and former
KZN assistant to Dean Kannemeyer – felt was good enough to contest a Highveld
feature. It was a trip in vain as Lady Legend faded out behind the smart Mill
Queen, a fancied runner in the Gr2 Gauteng Fillies Guineas at Turffontein
tonight, but she recouped expenses with a game win next time out on the
Greyville turf.
With Gareth Wright on the injured list, Calvin Habib takes over in the saddle from a pole position draw. T&B are quoting 11-1 in the ante-post market but that will all change after the scratching of ante-post favourite Marsanne who spiked a temperature over the weekend.
Paul Peter has
been unable to work his string ahead of the rescheduled Gauteng Guineas meeting
at Turffontein Standside on Wednesday as the tracks are waterlogged but he
doesn’t believe they could have lost much fitness.
He said,
“They are looking bright, eating well and we have been taking them for
long works.”
Summer Pudding is
the favourite in the Grade 2 Wilgerbosdrift Gauteng Fillies Guineas and he is
bullish about her chances.
Although she is
unbeaten in three starts some have questioned the strength of her formlines.
However, he said,
“She is a very smart filly and is improving all the time. Her mission is
the Triple Tiara and the further she goes the better she will be. So this race
is going to be her most difficult leg as it is over a mile, but I’m sure her
class will pull her through.”
Summer Pudding is
by Silvano out of the Strike Smartly mare Cherry On The Cake, who is a
half-sister to Triple Tiara heroine Cherry On The Top, so it is not surprising
she is progressive.
Peter runs three
in the Grade 2 Gauteng Guineas and said both Riverstown and Astrix should
definitely be included in the Pick 6 and Arapaho should be included in quartets
etc.
Peter’s admiration
for Riverstown is well documented but he pointed out, “There is not much
between Riverstown and Astrix at home. Astrix is much better than his last run
(in the Dingaans) as he was caught wide and needed gelding at the time. Arapaho
has had a wind op and has improved so can also be thrown into the
exotics.”
He concluded,
“All three runners are well in
themselves.”
He runs the
talented What A Winter filly Fly Away as well as Chief Of State in the Grade 3
Tommy Hotspur Handicap over 1000m and said, “Fly Away is a very fast
filly. My only concern with her is that she would prefer the going to be on
top. She has a perfect action so doesn’t enjoy soft ground. Hopefully it will
have dried out a bit by the time of the race. If it has she is a massive
runner. Chief Of State has improved with blinkers and has been working
exceptionally well.”
Fly Away hasn’t
run since October 31 due to a persistent mouth abscess but the lack of a recent
run doesn’t worry Peter.
He said, “She
is hard on herself at home so doesn’t need much racing.”
Peter’s meeting
starts with Fromheretoeternity in the first over 1160m and he said, “She
is drawn on the wrong side but she could still place.”
In the second he
has South East and said, “”He is drawn on the right side. He needed
his first start and I will be disappointed if he does not finish in the first
three.”
He continued,
“My best runner on the day is Diamond Dancer (fourth race 2000m). We have
been trying him over further but those distances stretched him. He is now
ideally distance suited. He is very well, fit and sound and has been working so
well. He doesn’t have to go to the front, he can sit second or third.”
In the fifth over
1600m he runs Shukamisa and said, “I am quietly confident with him. He
likes the wet and it’s his third run after a rest and is the best I have had
him since acquiring him. He doesn’t take
much work so the interruption to the preparation in the last few days shouldn’t
affect him.”
In the last race over 1160m he runs Var filly Carioca and said, “It’s her third run after a rest and she has been doing exceptionally well at home. If she had been drawn on the outside I would have made her a massive runner but she unfortunately has draw 2. But she should still run into the quartets.”
David
Nieuwenhuizen has three feature runners at the rescheduled Gauteng Guineas
meeting, which is now to be run at Turffontein Standside tomorrow evening.
Nieuwenhuizen’s
Querari filly Mill Queen has not had an ideal preparation but he is still
upbeat about her chances.
He said, “We
couldn’t get Gavin Lerena for the Three Troikas and she was drawn wide so we
decided it would be an unnecessarily hard race and pulled her out. But she is
very well, although it is a bit unsettling to have a postponement as it is not
easy to keep a horse in the right place for the extra few days. This is the
biggest race of her career to date and I think we have The Paul Peter filly
Summer Pudding to beat. Paul Peter is quite confident but we hope we can do it.
Mill Queen might go for the second leg too over 1800m, and a sprint-miler type
like her might get it depending on how the race is run. But we are not thinking
of that right now.”
Mill Queen ended
her campaign as a two-year-old with a 0,80 length second in the Grade 1
Thekwini Stakes to the subsequently named Equus Champion two-year-old Gabor.
However, she had to come from a wide draw that day and did not know the track,
which was unlike the winner on both counts.
In
her only start this term she won the Grade 3 HSH Princess Charlene
Starling Stakes over 1400m on November 2, despite not having enjoyed a smooth
preparation into the race.
Nieuwenhuizen said after that win, “Thank
goodness Gavin (Lerena) has a good feel for a horse. He rode her with a bit in
reserve and it looked like she did need it. She still has to mature
mentally and physically, she is a late maturer who is still furnishing, so
hopefully she will get a lot better. She is doing extremely well despite being
backwards and that is just down to her ability, so we have to look after her.
She is a filly who gives her all, so we also have to be careful with her in
work.”
Lerena will be
back aboard tomorrow evening.
Nieuwenhuizen is
bullish about the chances of Factor Fifty and Flichity By Farr in the Non-Black
Type Allez France Stakes over 2400m. Lerena was unable to stay aboard Flichity
By Farr, as he is contracted to ride for the owners of Chitengo, and he is replaced
by high-flying Craig Zackey.
Nieuwenhuizen said, “They are both very well and I expect two big runs. Factor Fifty is an up and coming filly and is the stronger of the two so takes more work, but Flichity has proven class. They are very close and I hope we can have a win with either of them.”
Justin
Snaith is hopeful that Kasimir, beaten less than a length when third to 25-1
surprise winner Russet Air in the Cape Flying Championship, can reverse the
placings in the Khaya Stables Diadem Stakes at the now famous Prawn Festival
meeting at Kenilworth on Saturday week.
He reasons:
“Kasimir went into this year’s Cape Flying a run short. There was a race put on
but they cancelled it because there were not enough acceptors. However he
pulled up well from the Cape Flying, looks amazing and I am expecting a good
run.”
Kasimir won
last year’s Diadem when Russet Air, one of only three three-year-olds in the
race, was three and a half lengths back sixth. There are ten other entries this
time including Bold Respect who was a short head second in the Cape Flying,
stable companion Run Fox Run (fourth) and Chimichuru Run who was fifth.
But Snaith,
unlike Candice Bass-Robinson with Russet Air, is not going to have a crack at
the Computaform Sprint in Turffontein on May 2 – “I’m not a Jo’burg person” –
but he is considering the Tsogo Sun Sprint at Scottsville four weeks afterwards
even though the race is a handicap and Kasimir could well have to give weight all
round.
The dual
champion trainer said: “I regretted not running him in the race last year and,
if I don’t go for it this time, there is not all that much for him – and I
don’t see a lot of top sprinters around.”
Russet Air
has the altitude problem to overcome on May 2 but Candice Bass-Robinson has
already decided not to send the horse to Jo’burg weeks beforehand or to raid
from Summerveld – “I am going to prepare him from Cape Town. His sire What A
Winter did that and he won the Computaform Sprint in 2013.”
What A
Winter was flown up on that occasion but in his two previous attempts (when he
was second and third) he went by road only two days before the race so that the
effects of altitude did not have time to set in.
The
Milnerton trainer is also going to prepare her dual Bidvest Majorca winner
Clouds Unfold for her Durban targets in Cape Town. “I believe they are better
off down here where they know the tracks and so Clouds will have a prep run at
Kenilworth and then maybe the Tibouchina at Greyville on June 13 before going
for the Jonsson Workwear Garden Province which is her main aim.”
Saturday week’s Cape Derby has attracted 15 entries headed by Glen Kotzen’s Cape Guineas runner-up Viva Rio who is rated 4.5kg clear of the next best, the Brett Crawford-trained Concorde Cup winner King Of Gems.
Yesterday’s Hollywoodbets Greyville meeting on the
polytrack saw Anton Marcus scoring a treble and closing the gap slightly on
Warren Kennedy in the Hollywoodbets Sizzling Summer Challenge Jockeys table.
Marcus scored 51 points on the day to Kennedy’s 33 and
is now 64 points behind with six meetings left.
In the trainer’s table Garth Puller had a second and a
third from his seven runners and was able to pull further clear of his nearest
rival Paul Lafferty, who only had two runners on the day.
Lafferty’s two runners included Bint El Malak, who
gained seven more points with a sixth place finish in the fourth race to go 15
points clear of Jayden’s Shreya in the Hollywoodbets Sizzling Summer Challenge
Horse table.
In the first race, a Maiden Juvenile Plate over 1
000m, the Mike Miller-trained Fencing Master gelding Walls Of Dubrovnik
converted favouritism after being hard-ridden by Eric Ngwane down the inside.
He had come from midfield in the small field of seven
and just got up to beat Ziva Da Grace by a head.
In the second race, a Maiden Plate over 1 000m, the
1,5kg claimer Jason Gates took the raiding Clinton Binda-trained Kings Road to
the front and kept him going despite the Vercingetorix gelding not negotiating
the bend too well. The 15-2 shot beat the fancied Nikhils Inn by a
quarter-of-a-length while the favourite Macallan found little and finished
unplaced.
In the third, a Maiden Plate over 1 000m, the odds-on
favourite Afriel went missing as she found little down the inside having been
on the rail in the running.
Keagan de Melo hooked the winner Matadora’s Parade, a
Johan Janse van Vuuren-trained Toreador filly, to the outside and she won
comfortably by 3,50 lengths despite starting odds of 13-2.
In the fourth race over 1000m the Yogas
Govender-trained Querari filly Enrapture burst through the centre to win extending
by a neck from Itsapleasure and the favourite Bell Jar.
Marcus rode the next two winners.
In the fifth, a MR 68 Handicap over 1 600m, he
switched the Alyson Wright-trained favourite Roy’s Physco out before reaching the straight
having seen the horse in front of him struggling. The big, rangy
Australian-bred Casino Prince gelding made steady inroads and once he hit top
gear he easily passed the leader Silver Cent and won by 1,75 lengths from a running
on Peter Piper. Roy’s Physco is still immature and has scope for further
improvement.
In the sixth, a MR 98 Handicap over 1000m, the
talented Glen Kotzen-trained Querari gelding Calvary
was too good. Marcus took him to the front and he won by 2,25 lengths.
In the seventh over 1200m the Shane Humby-trained
Oratorio gelding Letaba jumped from a wide draw and was held back until the
straight by Donovan Dillon. The big horse somehow managed to find his way
through a maze of horses on the outside to win by a shorthead from Kingston
Rock.
In the eighth over 1950m Yogas Govender clinched a
double and Marcus a treble with the progressive Jackson colt Bayview Express.
Marcus gave him a fine ride. He continually improving
position in the running and it paid dividends later. In the straight it was
soon clear he would easily catch the leader but at the same time he had left
the rest of the field flat-footed. Second-placed Double Gemini was beaten 3,25
lengths and the rest were unsighted.
By David Thiselton
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