WOMEN jockeys are increasingly making an impact around the world and, if sheer determination is anything to go by, Erin-Lee Watkinson may one day make her mark in what is still largely a male dominated profession.
The Andre
Nel-trained Magnetic Dime opened one of the favourites for the Work Riders’
Maiden but punters, most of whom had never heard of her, allowed her mount to
drift out to 107-20.
They won’t
make that mistake again. This may have been only Miss Watkinson’s third ride but
she sent her mount to the front 400m from home and coolly kept her going to
score by three-parts of a length. Not bad for a qualified
engineer!
The
24-year-old explained: “I made a deal with my parents – I wanted to become a
jockey but they said ‘You must get a qualification first.’
“I have
already spent a year at the Jockey Academy but then they changed the rules.
However Andre is now applying for me to be apprenticed to him. If that doesn’t
work out then I will go to New Zealand because the academy there has already
offered me a place.”
Vardy,
winner of last season’s L’Ormarins Queen’s Plate and expected to be one of the
favourites for South Africa’s premier mile race in January, will be out of
action for several months after suffering an injury to his near-fore
suspensory.
Trainer Adam
Marcus, speaking at Kenilworth on Saturday, said: “It’s not career-ending but he
has a small lesion in the suspensory branch on his near-fore. I’ve dealt with
injuries like this before and they take a lot of TLC but I am hoping that we can
get him back on the course.
“The lesion
is something that can heal with time and we picked it up immediately. We will
give him the time he deserves. He is a gelding, and lightly raced – and we still
hope that we can bring him back to his best.
“But for the
moment one step at a time. We will rescan in two months and then we will be able
to see the speed at which the injury is healing.”
Marcus
disclosed that this is not the first time the five-year-old has suffered a
serious setback, saying: “He is prone to issues. As a young horse he had surgery
to remove chips from his near-fore knee and his off-fore fetlock. He is a big
horse and this time he may have simply put his foot wrong during
training.”
Justin
Snaith, out of luck at Turffontein, won three of the other seven races but he
disclosed that he has been going through a fair bit of soul-searching about the
races in which he should risk his three-year-olds. Like most trainers, he has to
consider what the handicappers would do to the horses’ ratings – and future
chances – should they run well.
He said:
“The handicappers are being instructed to make the ratings high in order to keep
Grade 1 status for out top races but I feel we should instead focus on our own
racing.” – info@caperacing.co.za
Women jockeys are increasingly making an impact around the world and, if sheer determination is anything to go by, Erin-Lee Watkinson may one day make her mark in what is still largely a male dominated profession.
The Andre Nel-trained Magnetic Dime opened one of the favourites for the Work Riders’ Maiden but punters, most of whom had never heard of her, allowed her mount to drift out to 107-20.
They won’t make that mistake again. This may have been only Miss Watkinson’s third ride but she sent her mount to the front 400m from home and coolly kept her going to score by three-parts of a length. Not bad for a qualified engineer!
The 24-year-old explained: “I made a deal with my parents – I wanted to become a jockey but they said ‘You must get a qualification first.’
“I have already spent a year at the Jockey Academy but then they changed the rules. However Andre is now applying for me to be apprenticed to him. If that doesn’t work out then I will go to New Zealand because the academy there has already offered me a place.”
Vardy, winner of last season’s L’Ormarins Queen’s Plate and expected to be one of the favourites for South Africa’s premier mile race in January, will be out of action for several months after suffering an injury to his near-fore suspensory.
Trainer Adam Marcus, speaking at Kenilworth on Saturday, said: “It’s not career-ending but he has a small lesion in the suspensory branch on his near-fore. I’ve dealt with injuries like this before and they take a lot of TLC but I am hoping that we can get him back on the course.
“The lesion is something that can heal with time and we picked it up immediately. We will give him the time he deserves. He is a gelding, and lightly raced – and we still hope that we can bring him back to his best.
“But for the moment one step at a time. We will rescan in two months and then we will be able to see the speed at which the injury is healing.”
Marcus disclosed that this is not the first time the five-year-old has suffered a serious setback, saying: “He is prone to issues. As a young horse he had surgery to remove chips from his near-fore knee and his off-fore fetlock. He is a big horse and this time he may have simply put his foot wrong during training.”
Justin Snaith, out of luck at Turffontein, won three of the other seven races but he disclosed that he has been going through a fair bit of soul-searching about the races in which he should risk his three-year-olds. Like most trainers, he has to consider what the handicappers would do to the horses’ ratings – and future chances – should they run well.
He said: “The handicappers are being instructed to make the ratings high in order to keep Grade 1 status for out top races but I feel we should instead focus on our own racing.”
IT’S
been two months since Hollywoodbets Scottsville saw
a racehorse with the track undergoing its annual spring treatment and with
ample spring rains to help, tomorrow’s runners should be racing on a ‘billiard
table’.
Many trainers have taken the opportunity to
race on fresh turf and punters are faced with well-filled fields that should
make for top racing.
The card opener is a work riders’ race
where you pays your money and takes your chances.
Yessiricanboogie is a quick filly but ran
way below form last run and probably needed it although she did find some
market support. Gareth van Zyl’s filly has been up against much stronger of
late and Aaron Xabendlini has a top strike rate in
these races. Michael Roberts has been a good to Rachel
Venniker, always giving her a ‘live’ runner and she partners Sir Pom. He is the
highest rated horse in the field and may just have needed his last outing.
Tristan Mustard is headed to the UK on Monday to take up a position with top jumps trainer Nicky Henderson and delayed his departure to ride Father’s Frost for Kom Naidoo. Father’s Frost took on much stronger last run. He has improved with a tongue-tie and goes well this course. Callan Dixon rides Light The Loose who may just need it. But he has been contesting features since his maiden win and has a touch of class.
Should Dixon pull this off, it could be a family
double with father Mark sending out favourite Prince Tyrion in the second.
Prince Tyrion came in for heavy market support last run and with a strong
tailwind helping the runners home Ashton Arries took off like a dirty shirt,
trying to lead all the way. He beat all but Palace Wind who finished like ‘the
wind’. He will probably be better this shorter trip.
After a frustrating spell in the doldrums,
Duncan Howells’s string is finding form and he will be looking to Irish Belle
to build on her current good form. Narrowly beaten into second at her last
three, she is due a change of fortune.
Her two biggest dangers are also
Ashburton-based. The Kom Naidoo filly Badrah made a smart debut for her new
stable when drawn widest at Greyville and must have a big chance on a repeat
showing while Jarett Rugg is still looking for his first win in KZN and Cherry
Tomatoes has made good improvement in blinkers and looked a winner last start.
Best bet on the card comes in the first leg
of the Pick 6 with Banzai Pipeline, named after the infamous and dangerous
Hawaiian surfing spot.
Garth Puller’s runner ran a cracker from a
wide draw last time out and has a plum draw this time around. He is by far the
highest rated runner in the field and he should be hard to beat.
Pinnacle Plates over 2400m are as scarce as
hen’s teeth. It is something of a catch 22 situation for the operator as these
races are often under subscribed and either abandoned due to a lack of numbers
or only attracting a few runners that does not make for optimum betting
turnover.
But top horses in this category get limited
opportunities and a Pinnacle Stakes event gives them an opportunity without
having to carry the grandstand in lower handicaps.
Marchingontogether disappointed in a
slow-run Gold Cup and his run since was too short. His last success was over
course and distance and he should put in a big effort. American Indian made a
promising debut for his new stable and steps up to what may prove to be his
optimum trip. The mare Flichity By Farr has been rested since the Gold Cup
where she ran a cracker with first time blinkers. She stays well and will be a
factor.
THE National
Horseracing Authority confirms that at an Inquiry held in Durban on 26 November 2020, Trainer L F
Robinson was charged with a contravention of Rule 72.1.43.
The specifics of the charge
being that on or about 14 November 2020, he posted a comment on a social media
platform which could reasonably be construed to be racist to other persons in
the racing industry.
Trainer Mr L F Robinson
pleaded not guilty to the charge. However, after considering the
evidence, the Inquiry Board found Trainer Robinson guilty as charged.
The Inquiry Board imposed a
penalty of a cancellation of his Trainer’s Licence, which is wholly suspended
for a period of 2 years, on condition that he is not found guilty of a similar
offence during this period. In addition to this penalty, the Inquiry
Board imposed a fine of R25 000.
Furthermore, Trainer L F
Robinson’s interim suspension, that was imposed on him in terms of Rule 91.2,
pending the finalisation of the Inquiry, is lifted with immediate effect.
As such, Mr Robinson may enter and declare horses to race in terms
of his Licence as a Trainer.
Mr
Robinson has the right of appeal against the finding and the penalty imposed.
THE WSB Summer Cup to be run over 2000m on
Turffontein Standside on Saturday is one of the country’s big three races and
is always a particularly exciting betting heat as the handicap weight structure
gives most of the twenty runners a chance.
There will have been plenty of rain during
the build up and the going is likely to be on the soft side.
SUMMER PUDDING is unbeaten in eight starts
but will have to break a weight carrying record for a female in this race as
the 59kg she has been set is 1kg more than Dancewiththedevil carried to victory
in 2011. She also has to overcome a wide draw of 18 and this is the first time
she faces males, so it is not surprising she has drifted out to a more
realistic 7/2 with the sponsors. There are plenty of plus sides to her chances
though. Wide draws in soft going are sometimes not much of a disadvanatage at
Turffontein Standside because in such conditions the riders have been known to
head for the standside in the straight . Summer Pudding always does just enough
to win and having come back from her holiday looking full of substance and well
being her big stride could well and truly carry her into the hearts of the
nation.
CHARLES will attempt to give Mike de Kock
a tenth Summer Cup victory and has been backed into joint 7/2 favourite. He is
by Trippi out of the Ipi Tombe Challenge winner Demanding Lady, a Dynasty mare
whose five wins were from 1200m to 2200m. He has finished second over 2400m
before and has enjoyed a good preparation. He has the rounded action suited to
soft going and has won in such conditions before. He runs off a competitive
merit rating of 110.
PACK LEADER, al;so backed in to 7/2, has
blossomed since joining Alec Laird’s yard on the Highveld and is attractively
weighted considering he finished seventh in the Sun Met on weight for age terms
against most of the best in the country. He now carries just 54.5kg off a 109
merit rating. He is suited to the galloping nature of Turffontein Standside
with its long straight. He has a good draw of five and his jockey S’Manga
Khumalo, who has won this race before, needs no introduction. One possible
concern is soft going, as he has a daisy-cutting action, which is usually best
suited to fast going.
CHRISTOPHER ROBIN’S two stakes wins have
both been in rain affected ground and he impressed when winning the Grade 3
Victory Moon Stakes over 1800m on the Standside track under S’Manga Khumalo. He
was given an eleven point merit rating raise so it will be tougher this time
but he carries a nice galloping weight of 54kg. He will relish the step up to
2000m and is drawn well in two. Dennis Schwarz is an able replacement for
Khumalo and will be out to make it two Summer Cup victories in succession.
ASTRIX should finish together with
Christopher Robin on form. Concerns have been raised about him seeing out the
trip based on his pedigree and his Grade 1 SA Classic run. His sire
Vercingetorix is imparting more speed and less stamina than does his father
Silvano. Furthermore, his dam is a half-sister to Thunder Dance who did win the
Paddock Stakes but was essentially a miler. However, his damsire Victory Moon
gives him a shout of staying and it should also be borne in mind that in the SA
Classic he was caught wide throughout. Last time in the Victory Moon over 1800m
he had to do some early work to overcome another wide draw yet stayed on well
for second. He is now well drawn so should get cover and pace master Piere
Strydom is in the irons.
TIERRA DEL FUEGO’S five length third at weight for age
terms in the Champions Challenge reads well here. He has three wins, a second
and a third in five outings on rain affected ground and his rider Gavin Lerena
has won this race three times. However, he does have a tough draw of 14 to
overcome and has to carry joint-topweight over a distance which stretches him.
TRISTFUL has been staying at Stuart
Pettigrew’s yard and will have come on from his Charity Mile run. That run came
about three weeks after he had arrived on the Highveld, which is usually around
the time horses traveling up to the altitude hit a flat spot. On the form of
his Grade 1 Champions Cup fifth place finish he has a definite chance. He will
enjoy the course and distance as well as the conditions, having won on the soft
before. The pace should be on so his pole position draw could well be an
advantage.
DIVINE ODYSSEY is a long-striding sort who
is capable of a strong finish but takes a while to find topgear and thus enjoys
the long straight of the Turffontein Standside course. He has won twice in soft
going and usually peaks for big races, so could be a threat.
ZILLZAAL strode out well in the Charity
Mile and was entitled to tire late in his first run for eleven months. Sean
Tarry said he had come out of that race well, so he is sure to make a bold bid
to defend his crown.
CROWN TOWERS is proven in soft going. Wet weather is
also known to make it easier for horses to handle the effects of high altitude.
He is by Epsom Derby winner Camelot, so will enjoy this tough 2000m course and
distance.
TREE TUMBO has always been rated by Tarry
and is improving in the typical style of a Silvano four-year-old, so from a
good draw is a dark horse. He is out of a sprint-miler by Oasis Dream and still
has to prove he stays this trip. However, he was the fastest finisher in the
Charity Mile and in his only attempt at this trip, when unplaced in the Daily
New 2000, he pulled up with an abscess.
CORNISH POMODORO is 1.5kg under sufferance
but has improved with gelding. He was doing his best work late in his comeback
over 1600m, so should relish this trip, and he had excuses for his below par
run in the Charity Mile.
YOUCANTHURRYLOVE finished a close third in
both the Grade 1 SA Classic and Charity Mile and is well drawn. He is by
Gimmethegreenlight out of a Jallad mare who won up to 1800m and he is a
half-brother to a horse who won over the Summer Cup trip. Chase Maujean would
have learnt something from his Charity Mile run so he has a shout.
HERO’S HONOUR has dropped to a competitive
mark for a former SA Derby winner but does have a tough draw.
RUNNING BRAVE is usually ignored in the
betting but proof of her class is that she comes out on top in her one on one
clash with the champion Celtic
Sea and she stays this
trip. Her best performances have been against females but she will be dangerous
if getting to the front from draw ten.
RIVERSTOWN could play an important role if
he is used as pacemaker for Summer Pudding. He could otherwise be a threat for
although he has given the impression he would prefer shorter he should easily
stay this trip on pedigree. His sire Byword won a Group 1 over a mile and two
furlongs at Royal Ascot and his dam won over a mile and four furlongs in
yielding going in Ireland.
VICTORIA PAIGE sneaks into the handicap
with the minimum weight. She is capable of plugging on resolutely but has the
widest draw of all to overcome.
ATYAAB is a former Cape Derby
winner and finished fifth last year. He has not run for 301 days but did put up
a good recent grass gallop.
DANCE CLASS is 3.5kg under sufferance but
stayed on well in the Victory Moon over 1800m. She will relish the step up in
trip as well as the possible testing conditions just as her close relative
Dancewiththedevil did when winning this race in 2011.
SEVEN PATRIOTS has his toughest task to
date here and is half-a-kilogram under sufferance. He is yet to try the
distance but although being by Soft Falling, who was a miler, his
Australian-bred dam finished a narrow second in the Grade 2 Gold Bracelet over
this trip. He could be a threat if allowed an easy lead from a good draw of six.
JUSTIN SNAITH said the decision to run Crown Towers
in the Grade 1 WSB Summer Cup was largely as a show of support for the like of
MOD (Mary Oppenheimer and Daughters), Mike de Kock and the RA, who had done a
lot to save Cape racing.
He said,
“They have always supported our racing and Mike de Kock has often said I
am too scared to come up to Johannesburg but Crown Towers and Keep The Lights
On (who runs in the Grade 3 WSB Magnolia Handicap) are just the first two, we
are going to raid regularly from now on.”
Crown Towers was brought back down to Summerveld
after his unplaced run in the Charity Mile.
Snaith said,
“That was a bit on the short side, he has always been more impressive over
further.”
Snaith said it
had not been easy to prepare him because of the amount of rain there had been
at Summerveld, but he added this had just made it more challenging and it was
not going to change his chances.
He said,
“I am very happy with his preparation. Whether he is good enough to win
it, time will tell.”
He is also
happy with Keep The Lights On and gives her a shout.
Snaith could
not use the usual method of traveling the horses overnight and arriving on the
morning of the race because of recent incidents of unrest on the Highway at
night.
The pair of horses
thus arrived in Johannesburg
today (Friday).
A point in
their favour is the rain that is around. Wet weather is believed to make it
easier for horses coming from the coast to handle the high altitude of the
Highveld. It should also be born in mind that Summerveld is not at sea level
but is in fact a third of the altitude of the Highveld and horses have traveled
from there to win over long distances before.
GLEN
KOTZEN has decided to have no runners for the next fortnight
after a mysterious and undetectable virus forced him to scratch all his 12
horses at Kenilworth on Wednesday.
“The horses ran so badly at the last meeting (he ran
11 – only one made the frame, four finished last and another four were second
last) that I have decided to pull the plug. I will give them all 14 days off
and have no runners during that period. Once they start freshening up again we
will start nominating.
“It’s a respiratory infection but it shows nothing and
there are no symptoms. The horses look good, they work well, eat up and don’t
cough. But when they get to the 400m mark, and the jockey starts asking them,
they stop as if they had been shot.
“Last Saturday’s runners looked fine beforehand, we
lung-washed them and the bloods were good to go yet they ran badly. The
quickest way to get rid of something like this is not to run anything.”
It has been a tough week for the Woodhill trainer. On
Monday he was fined R35 000 as a urine sample taken from Herodotus, after
winning a race at Kenilworth over two years ago, was found to contain traces of
a human painkiller. Seemingly this came from the urine of one of the stable
staff.
But Kotzen, typically, is looking beyond this week’s
bad news, reasoning that the Cape season is
only just getting into gear and that his present patient approach can pay big
dividends in the next three months.
It was 4.45am on Wednesday when Eric Sands found out
that he was in trouble. “Rainbow
Bridge had traces of
urticaria on his neck and cheek. It’s an allergy, like somebody coming out in a
rash, and it can happen in a few minutes. By the time I checked out the rest of
the string it had gone down his shoulder.
“I wasn’t going to wait until it covered his whole
body. I had to give him treatment and I couldn’t run him after doing that.’
Obviously the treatment would show up in any post-race
dope test and the horse would be disqualified. Not treating him, and letting
him run, was not an option either. “True, he might have won by six lengths but
he was 5-10 and, if he was beaten, what would that have done for the public,
the horse and myself? Running him would have been absolute stupidity and I
certainly wasn’t going to risk it.”
Last year’s Met winner will now start off in the Green
Point on December 12 and unfortunately his second run back, the one where he
tends to run a bit flat, will be the L’Ormarins Queen’s Plate on 9 January.
They say they never come back but Captain Of Stealth,
struck down by serious injury after looking a star of the future last season,
put up a truly eye-catching performance in today’s Tabonline.co.za Pinnacle.
True, the race took a lot less winning without Rainbow Bridge but Sean Veale’s mount pulled his
way to the front early and looked as if he might just hold on a furlong out. At
the line he only went down by three-quarters of a length to the fellow Vaughan
Marshall-trained Silver Operator in the Mario Ferreira colours and, if he stays
sound, his day will surely come.
“I was very happy with Captain Of Stealth,” said Marshall, “and I think we
will look at the Green Point with Silver Operator.”
African Night Sky, running for the first time since
the 2018 Durban
July, finished last but Justin Snaith was far from disheartened, saying: “He
was very keen, too above himself and too excited – but he had only had the one
grass gallop in all the time he has been off.”
A panel discussion focussing on Saturday’s World Sports Betting Gauteng Summer Cup at Turffontein will be broadcast on Tellytrack at 19:45 this evening.
The panel comprises commentator and host Alistair Cohen and trainers Sean Tarry, Alec Laird and Paul Peter, who will saddle unbeaten four-year-old filly Summer Pudding and stablemates Astrix and Riverstown in the Cup.
The show will be broadcast again tomorrow night after the last race at Chelmsford City at 21:00.
ALEC LAIRD said Pack Leader had come through his
two WSB Summer Cup preparation runs well but believed he would have to
“run the race of his life” to win the big 2000m event at Turffontein
Standside on Saturday.
Pack Leader
was not given any merit rating raise after his 4,50 length win in a Progress
Plate over 1600m last time out.
He won that
race effortlessly despite the lead rein having mistakenly been left attached to
his bridle and lashing around in front of him before S’Manga Khumalo managed to
gather it up around the turn.
The
six-year-old Philanthropist gelding seems to have blossomed since joining
Laird’s Randjesfontein yard.
Laird said a
change could be as good as a holiday and added he was also suited to the tracks
on the Highveld before pointing out he had been just as good a horse with Glen
Kotzen.
“Those
last two runs were quite easy races and he has not had the chance to run in
such plate races for quite a while.”
Pack Leader’s
seventh place finish in the Sun Met, beaten 6,70 lengths on weight for age
terms, proves Laird’s point.
In that race
he had One World, Rainbow
Bridge, Hawwaam, Twist Of
Fate, Bunker Hunt, and Vardy ahead of him and among the horses he beat were
Undercover Agent and Do It Again. He had also beaten Undercover Agent and Do It
Again in the Green Point Stakes about seven weeks earlier.
He now runs
off a 109, which ranges from 13 to 25 points lower than the respective merit
ratings of the aforementioned horses he mixed it with in the Met.
On the other
hand he ran disappointingly in a number of lesser races last season and hence
the seven point drop in his merit rating from the 116 it was at the time of the
Met.
However, one
of his most eyecatching runs last season was in the Cup Trial at Scottsville
over 1800m when running on strongly from last to finish fourth.
That run and
his Met run, when coming from near the back, gave indicators that he would
appreciate the galloping nature and long straights of Highveld courses like
Turffontein Standside and the Vaal. And so it has proved.
He is enjoying
himself on the Highveld too, so looks set to reproduce that Met run.
One possible
detractor is he has the daisy-cutting type of action that is usually best
suited to fast ground.
Therefore,
Laird was asked if he foresaw any problems Pack Leader would have handling soft
going.
He said,
“We don’t work them on soft going so it is always difficult to tell. I
think if there is just a bit of cut in the ground he should be fine although if
it turns out heavy it will be difficult for any horse unless he or she is a
mudlark.”
There is rain
forecast most days this week in Johannesburg
so the going is likely to be on the soft side.
Pack Leader
jumps from a plum draw of four and has a nice galloping weight of 54,5kg with
S’Manga Khumalo in the irons.
Laird won the
Summer Cup in 2006 with the Rakeen colt Malteme, who converted 14/1 odds
carrying 51kg under Brett Smith.
Khumalo has
also won it one once, aboard the Joey Soma-trained Wagner, who converted odds
of 16/1 in 2012 carrying 52.5kg.
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