TAB will operate a second Jackpot pool on one South African
race meeting daily from today’s race meeting at Fairview.
The second Jackpot will start on the race after the first
leg of the normal Jackpot at race meetings comprising eight or nine races.
So, at an eight-race meeting, Jackpot ONE will be on races 4
to 7 as normal and Jackpot TWO on races 5 to 8.
In the case of a nine-race meeting, Jackpot ONE will be on
races 5 to 8 and Jackpot TWO on races 6 to 9.
TAB customers must note that in order to play Jackpot TWO in
Phumelela regions they must mark venue oval number 9 and the first-leg race
number of Jackpot TWO.
TABGOLD customers in KwaZulu-Natal totes must mark the SPQ
oval.
This is in order to ensure that will pays for both Jackpot
pools on a meeting can be displayed correctly.
If there are two South African meetings on a
day, Jackpot TWO will be offered on the race meeting likely to attract the
biggest pool.
Paul Gadsby
was caught off guard when the course commentator announced that La Duchesse
would be ridden ‘cold’ not having given any instruction to her jockey. In any
event, La Duchesse was ridden from off the pace and arrived on the scene too
late, snapping a string of placed runs.
Making
excuses for beaten horses is bad punting policy but Warren Kennedy is back in
the irons for the first at Hollywoodbets Greyville tomorrow evening and La
Duchesse may be worth another chance in spite of being labelled a bookies
favourite.
Her latest
defeat was particularly painful for those that had banked her in their exotics
as the field looked ripe for the taking. Tonight, she faces a more competitive
line-up. Masters Beauty was much improved last run but may have found the 2000m
a touch too far when trying to make all. Lightly raced, she appears to have
come to hand and this shorter trip should suit. Imperial Seal comes from an in
form stable and has been close up at recent starts while Storm Tune has come to
hand and goes well over course and distance and is a must for all bets.
Keeping up
with an ever-changing programming can be a testing exercise and for the first
time in KZN we have Progress and Graduation Handicaps. The first of these comes
in the second, a Progress Handicap (maximum three-time winners capped at MR90)
for fillies and mares. Wendy Whitehead has been amongst the winners of late and
she saddles Liquid Irish in an exceptionally difficult race with all 11 runners
in with some sort of chance. Liquid Irish has only once been out of the money
and was a game winner of her last start beating the useful Statute. She is
equally at home on the poly and the turf and should be thereabouts. The lightly
raced Star Vega won well from a wide draw on her poly debut and may still have
more to come. She should start at long odds as should Just One More looks held
on current form, but this is her third run after a break and improvement is
expected off her light weight. This trio could be the pick in a tough race.
Head Boy is
the obvious choice in the third given his consistent form over the trip and the
modest opposition but Paddy’s Legacy is the highest rated runner who was badly
in need of his last start. He makes his poly debut and had shown some fair
Highveld form early in his career. Royal Pursuit showed improvement first time
out for his new stable and on the poly. He may be worth following.
Backing
horses first up in handicap company is a risky business but Silva Magic finally
got it right when coming from a long way back to shed her maiden and second-placed
Magic Mountain has franked that form. Silva Magic does face stronger here but
is lightly raced and can go in again. Zagara is on her favourite surface and
found good market support last outing while Silver Prancer improved last run
and her two best recent efforts have been on the poly. Chatty Cathy finally had
some luck last run for a well deserved win and is definitely not out of the
reckoning.
By the way, JG Guthrie is not a new trainer – Julie Dittmer married Gordon Guthrie last month. All the best Jules.
The National Horseracing Authority confirms
that an Appeal was held in Johannesburg on 15 November 2019, against the
finding and the penalty relating to a contravention of Rule 72.1.11
imposed by an Inquiry Board on 8 August 2019.
BACKGROUND:
At
an Inquiry held at its offices in Turffontein on 8 August 2019, Jockey M Yeni
was charged with a contravention of Rule 72.1.11, in that whilst riding the
horse MR GREENLIGHT, he intimidated and interfered with Jockey L Hewitson, when
he took his hand off his left side rein and placed it on Jockey Hewitson’s arm,
in the second race at Hollywoodbets Greyville Racecourse on 27 July 2019.
Mr
Yeni pleaded not guilty to the charge.
The
Inquiry Board found Mr Yeni guilty of the charge.
In
determining a suitable penalty, the Inquiry Board balanced Mr Yeni’s factors in
mitigation with the need to protect the integrity of horseracing, the public’s
perception regarding racing control and from circumstances which have the
potential to cause danger to both horse and rider. Accordingly, the Inquiry
Board imposed a suspension from riding in races for a period of 90 (ninety)
days.
Mr Yeni was afforded the right of Appeal against the finding and the
penalty imposed.
The National Horseracing Authority and Mr Yeni were legally represented
at the Appeal hearing.
The Appeal Board found as follows:
The Appeal Board dismissed the Appeal in
respect of the guilty finding by the Inquiry Board as well as the penalty
imposed by the Inquiry Board.
The Appeal Board noted that because of the
seriousness of the contravention by Mr Yeni, if appropriate evidence in respect
of aggravation of penalty had been led on behalf of The National Horseracing
Authority, the Appeal Board would have been prepared to consider interfering
with the penalty imposed, by increasing same. However, the Appeal Board
elected not to interfere with the penalty imposed by the Inquiry Board of a
suspension from riding in races for a period of 90 (ninety) days.
The Appeal Board ordered that the prescribed fee be forfeited in terms of rule 85.5.8. The decision of the Appeal Board was unanimous.
Gold
Circle and Hollywoodbets are pleased to announce that in an exciting change,
beginning 1 December 2019 and on a trial basis for 3 months, the carded horse
number will reflect the barrier draw of the horse for all races in
KwaZulu-Natal. In a change from the traditional top-weight-down, or
alphabetical order, horses will now be carded according to barrier positions,
regardless of the allocated weights.
Whilst
this breaks with the traditional system used to allocate card numbers in South
African racing, it will serve the purpose of making it easier for newcomers and
racing fans in general to follow their selections from the saddle cloth number
and standardised saddle cloth colour, through to the starting stalls where the number
and colour will be clearly displayed.
Reserve
runners will no longer be allocated a barrier draw, but should there be a
scratching, the reserve will automatically take up the barrier of the scratched
horse that it replaces.
“This
move aligns our racing with international standards currently used in the USA
and South America, and will make our KZN product more attractive to
international racing punters, which in turn will increase turnovers in
commingled pools”, said Raf Sheik, Racing Executive of Gold Circle.
Brand and Communications Manager for Hollywoodbets, Devin Heffer, added “As partners with Gold Circle, this is another joint initiative to differentiate KZN Racing, to generate interest and provide something new to our current racegoers, and make racing brighter, easier to follow and more appealing to newcomers to our wonderful sport. This trial period will run in conjunction with the Hollywoodbets Sizzling Summer Challenge, details of which will be released soon.
The finish of the Tabonline.co.za Handicap at Kenilworth yesterday would have done credit to any of the
scrums in the Rugby World Cup with horses and jockeys being dangerously bounced
against each other as if they were made of rubber.
Aqua Bolt was first past the post but he continuously
drifted right into the path of those trying to close on him, particularly
second-placed Jephthah. What was even more surprising was that the Andre
Nel-trained “winner” was hanging into the whip. Normally horses drift away from
it.
One of the stipes promptly lodged an objection on behalf of
both M.J. Byleveld’s mount and third-placed Brave Tiger. To nobody’s great
surprise this was quickly upheld with Jephthah declared the winner, Brave Tiger
promoted to second and Aqua Bolt demoted to third. His rider Anthony Andrews
did the right thing by having his whip in his right hand but the stipes felt he
should have done more to minimise the interference and so he faces a
disciplinary hearing.
You might think that a racehorse trainer has a charmed life,
paid to go out into the fresh air while the commuter faces living nightmares in
the traffic as he battles his (and her) way to work, and is then treated like a
celebrity on the racecourse. Mike Robinson revealed that things are very
different in real life and that the worrying insecurities of the existence can
take years off you.
After Bernard Fayd’Herbe had got up close home on Wendy
Hartley’s Happy Wanderer in the 1 200m maiden to give the Philippi trainer
his first winner since that glorious treble two months earlier, Robinson said:
“The treble feels like a year ago and I was getting worried. The horses were
well, their coats were shining and they were all working like bombs but I was
starting to doubt myself.”
He won’t now – at least not for a few weeks – but perhaps he
could take lessons from Greg Ennion who has suffered plenty worse and learnt,
not only to live with it, but how to bounce back and he struck with Etienne
Braun’s R75 000 buy Winter Tango in the first.
Ennion said: “The horse was unlucky in his last two starts.
In the most recent one he went a furlong too soon and in the previous race he
got squeezed out. But he is improving all the time.”
Racing will not switch to the summer course until next
month. Nothing unusual about that you might think – it’s the same every year –
but Glen Kotzen yesterday queried the established practice.
He said: “It’s summer now so why aren’t we using the summer
course? What we are doing, by not using it, is throwing the punter off.
Saturday’s Concorde Cup will be completely different over the longer run-in
when we come to the Cape
Guineas. I know it means
using the course more but so be it.”
Course manager Dean Diedericks answered: “This is a question that often comes up but the fact is that the summer course does not recover as well and this is a lot do with the soil temperatures. The extra month that we have on the winter course is a huge help to the summer one.”
The European Union (EU) has agreed to an
audit of South Africa’s bloodstock export protocols and has committed to
announce the date of the audit in the next few weeks.
This follows South Africa’s long-standing
efforts to get the restrictions on bloodstock exports lifted by the EU.
The South African Equine Health &
Protocols (SAEHP) stated recently that all SA’s disease control measures were
in place, that they were of a world-class standard, and in fact exceeded all of
the EU’s disease control requirements.
However, an impasse occurred because of a
trade dispute between the EU and South Africa over poultry, and the EU for
several months held firm that no audit regarding horses will be forthcoming
while poultry exports to South Africa were closed after the 2017 Avian
influenza outbreak.
In a message to Adrian Todd, CEO of SAEHP,
the Chief Director of Trade Negotiations, International Trade and Economic
Development Division (ITED), Niki Kruger, wrote: “We had a follow-up meeting with
the EU yesterday (Monday). The EU confirmed that they will come to do an audit.
They will confirm the date within the next few weeks but it will definitely
happen. We requested that the audit happens as soon as possible.”
Todd commented: “This is great news, we are
almost there. The way everybody in South Africa came together to address the
African Horse Sickness case reported near Randjesfontein last week, our
movement controls, and the moving of the Ready To Run race showed how
effectively we can deal with these issues and this would’ve made an impression
on the EU.
“This is an example of what can be achieved by working together. We are delighted, and credit is due to the Department of Trade and Industry and the Department of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries for having worked so hard to get us to this stage. Our thanks and appreciation also to the EU for separating the poultry and equine issues.”
“Exam passed; no further action required.” Insufficient
recovery time was the explanation given for Hawwaam’s scratching from
tomorrow’s Racing Association Pinnacle Stakes at the Vaal but his absence clears
the way for Cirillo and Sean Tarry’s contingent in the 1400m event.
Cirillo was a member of the sophomore elite last season and
although mostly finding one or two to finish in front of him, Tarry’s runner
boasts an exceptional record and may well have given Hawwaam a searching test
had the later stood his ground.
Third behind Rainbow Bridge and Soqrat in the Gr1 Champions
Cup at Hollywoodbets Greyville on the last Saturday of the season – two
high-class performers – Tarry had kept his charge on the boil for much of the
early part of this year and the colt will have welcomed the three-month break.
But with the Cape Summer season on the horizon and Champions
Season in the offing, it is back to business.
With Hawwaam out of the picture, Cirillo faces a field of
mostly well exposed older horses who would be hard-pressed to make it at the
highest level. In truth, Cirillo will have to turn in a well-below par
performance to get beaten.
The one possible improver is stable companion Tierra Del
Fuego. Current form suggests that he is no where in the class of Cirillo but he
is still a young horse and was a more than comfortable winner of his seasonal
debut. He is in receipt of 8kg from Cirillo, but even that should not be
enough.
Gelding can do wonders for a colt’s behaviour and more
importantly his concentration in races and Leprechaun can weave a bit of Irish
magic in the second. A 7-1 chance in early exchanges, Mike and Adam Azzie’s
charge showed in two starts that he is not short of pace but was reported to be
making a respiratory noise. The addition of a tongue-tie could sort that
problem and now that he is ‘two stones’ lighter he looks a fair price to
ante-post favourite Duke Of York who has been costly to follow.
With nine races
carded, the PA kicks off in the third where backers face a tricky race. If Duke
Of York does not perform, Johan Janse van Vuuren backs up with four competitive
runners, best of which could be Magnificus. Like his stable companion, he has
been running on the Hollywoodbets Greyville poly but is showing some
improvement. Lady Scarletina and Supreme Win take on males but both have light
weights and are a must inclusion in all exotics. A possible upset could come in
the form of Grey Power with Tony Nassif engaging log-leading rider Warren
Kennedy. Current ante-post favourite is the Sean Tarry debutant Nebraas.
Single Red Rose will be a popular choice in the opening leg
of the Pick 6. She has yet to finish out of the money and must have a change of
fortune sooner rather than later. Pun intended. Tartan Dancer, a close-up
second last Saturday, could be a threat. The blinkers may go back on – keep an
eye on the changes.
Hawwaam may be a casualty on the day but the De Kock stable
is firing on all cylinders and Masaaqaat should start a short-priced favourite
in the fifth. She showed up well in her seasonal debut, finishing with a rattle,
and the extra furlong should count in her favour. She should dominate along
with Cosmic Ray, who has put in two smart efforts and was a touch unlucky last
run. She looks the biggest threat to the
favourite.
The sixth is a difficult handicap and the advice is to load
up as many as possible in the exotics. Tokyo Drift is a little long in the
tooth but has put in two promising recent efforts and should go well in this
company while Movie Magic, Lazarus Tree and Norland appeal as likely
challengers.
The last two races are also tricky affairs. In the eighth,
Golden Spiral is in cracking form and although taking on stronger here she must
have a decent winning chance. Scent Of Evening took on a strong field last time
out and takes on a lot weaker here. She has a big weight and should at least be
competitive. Zulu Dawn and recent maiden winner Land Of Rubies can also feature
prominently.
Hidden Agenda is another seasoned campaigner but has not
been out of the money since his last win. He stays the trip and could finally
have a change of luck. Nimcha has improved in blinkers and has only been run
out of it late in his last two starts while At Hand was a comfortable winner
under Hailey Turner last Saturday. He does not have the best of draws here. He
will get a penalty but may also be scratched. Kurt’s Approval is another to
consider as he has his first run for a new stable. Muzi Yeni stays with the
ride and they can go close.
Golden Ducat is taken to defy the general rule that you shouldn’t
back horses first time out of the maidens when he contests the Tellytrack.com
Handicap at Kenilworth today.
The principle makes a lot of sense because so many horses
struggle when they are pitted against seasoned handicappers for the first time.
Their maiden wins were achieved against fellow novices, many of whom in all
probability were slow to leave the pens or spent a lot of time looking around
them. Now the opposition all know they are there to race.
But this mile event is slightly different and not just
because Golden Ducat is a half-brother to Rainbow Bridge and Hawwaam. His two
main dangers, at least according to the betting, also won a maiden on their
most recent start.
Eric Sands, who said previously “I think Golden Ducat is
going to be a top horse,” said: “I am confident about his ability” when asked
how he thought his horse would fare in today’s race. Mind you, he did qualify
that by expressing concerns about the horse’s mental approach, much as he had
done when Golden Ducat won last month.
Possibly the colt’s 2-1 price does not fully take this into
account but he gets the vote on the strength of the way he won and the fact
that runner-up Turn It Up Harvey went close last Saturday.
Favourite at 17-10 is Pinkerton who comfortably justified a
very short price to win at the fifth attempt at the beginning of the month.
Richard Fourie rides him in preference to 11-2 stable companion Peaceful Day
who receives a kilo and got up close home to score in his fourth and most
recent race.
“They are both horses who will go through the divisions but
I think Pinkerton is a bit more ready and that Peaceful Day may need another
run out of the maidens,” says Justin Snaith. “Pinkerton is a big runner and he
will go very close.”
Top weight Late At Night (13-2) has had two races out of the
maidens and lost ground at the start last time. “I am expecting a good run
here,” says the in-form Brett Crawford. “He is doing very well at home and I
think he will love the mile.”
Six Degrees (8-1) is the only four-year-old in the field and
Glen Kotzen says: “I ran him the other day over 1 400m and he needs
further. He has a nice draw and I give him a good chance.”
Brandenburg (15-2) finished two lengths in front of Six
Degrees last time and is only half a kilo worse so, in theory at least, he
should confirm the placings. Jean’s Man is the outsider of the party at 12-1
but it could be significant that he is stepping up in trip.
Aldo Domeyer’s mount Congo Compaq, racing without blinkers
this time, is marginally preferred to the improving August Leaves in the first
and 35 minutes later Smart William may be able to reverse last time’s placings
with Alpha Pappa.
The R2.5 million CTS Ready To Run Stakes at Kenilworth has
been switched from this Saturday to 14 December as a result of the recent
African Horse Sickness outbreak in Gauteng.
There were 18 declared by 11.00am yesterday but Sean Tarry’s
quartet and the Mike de Kock-trained Dublin Quays would not have been able to
make it because of the restrictions placed on horses travelling from
Randjesfontein.
Ashley Fortune got Etched In Blue and Invidia out in time
and they will now run on Saturday in the Graduation Plate put on as an extra
race at the end of the card. The Joey Soma-trained Tiger’s Rock will also run
in this 1 400m race. The Johannesburg-based declarations accounted for
seven of the top ten merit-rated in the Ready To Run.
Cape Thoroughbred Sales boss Wehann Smith said in a
statement that the overriding concern was to do everything possible to ensure
that all buyers at last year’s CTS Ready To Run Sale had the very best chance
of having a runner.
He added: “We consulted all trainers with entries in the
race and the balance of opinion was overwhelmingly in favour of rescheduling.
This was particularly the case for the Cape-based trainers who were as one
in their support of the move. I believe this show of support is a genuine acknowledgement
of their willingness to welcome the up-country trainers for the season – and
that ultimately being in the best bigger picture benefit to racing in the
Cape.”
The Graduation Plate has attracted eight others, notably
leading Cape Guineas hope Captain Tatters who was beaten less than half a
length by Silver Operator in last month’s Cape Classic.
In other news the unbeaten Captain Of Stealth, the forgotten
man of last season’s two-year-olds, is about to start on the long road back
after suffering a career-threatening leg injury when odds-on for the Langerman.
Part owner Pat Freestone said: “We have been given the
all-clear but it will be six months before you see him.”
Last Winter is to stay in training with Sir Michael Stoute as a seven-year-old but he will not race again this year. The 2018 Sun Met runner-up was beaten over ten lengths when fourth of six in the mile and a half Matchbook Floodlit Stakes at Kempton 15 days ago, his first experience of the all-weather.
Hawwaam continues his education through the starting stalls
at the Vaal on Thursday where he lines up in a Pinnacles Stakes event over
1400m.
Similar to last week, this race is more about the starting
stalls and the race day experience rather than a must win scenario.
Having his first run back after being scratched at the start
of the Vodacom Durban July, Hawwaam behaved impeccably, loading quietly and
breaking on terms. From there on it was a matter of ‘how far?’ as he showed his
class by winning comfortably over a distance well short of optimum.
“To
say I am relieved is an understatement,” Malan de Toit, one of the country’s
best known equine behavioralists, wrote on his Facebook page after that win. “The
last time this horse saw the race course was on July day in Durban. Absolute
devastation!! The favourite scratched because of behavioral problems at the
starting gate. Between then and now there was a lot of brain storming on what
would work for him.
“Between
then and today, lots and lots of work was done with him by the team comprising
of Mathew de Kock, Vengi Masawi, one of team De Kock’s assistants, work riders,
Anton Marcus, Ben, one of the best handlers (starter’s assistant) in Gauteng
and myself.
“Today
a plan came together.”
Thursday’s 1400m will be more to Hawwaam’s liking but if he
behaves there should only be one result in spite of the opposition including
the smart performers Cirillo and Zouaves.
A recent case of African Horse Sickness (AHS) reported in
the Nietgedacht area of Gauteng early this month has put a question mark on
horses moving from the Highveld to the Western Cape for their summer season but
will hopefully not prevent Hawwaam lining up for the Gr1 L’Ormarins Queen’s
Plate and Sun Met early next year.
Should the outbreak scupper travel plans to the Cape, the next obvious target will be Champions Season and the Vodacom Durban July.
By Andrew Harrison
Image: A relieved Malan du Toit, Anton Marcus and Mike de Kock after Hawwaam’s victory at the Vaal last week.
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