Erik The Red (Candiese Lenferna)

Erik The Red Shows His Colours

Erik The Red could be Durban bound after making it four off the reel with a devastating turn of foot in the Kuda Somerset 1200 at Kenilworth on Tuesday.

Varsfontein’s homebred Captain Al colt was giving away more weight than a sumo wrestler yet he started almost unbackable at 3-7 and, when Richard Fourie pressed the button, he accelerated like a Ferrari to storm home four and a half lengths clear of the smart Matthew The King.

Erik The Red (Candiese Lenferna)
Erik The Red (Candiese Lenferna)

“He could end up in the Cape Guineas at the end of the year but the question now is whether we go to KZN for the Group I races,” said Jono Snaith, adding diplomatically: ”That will be up to Susan Rowett and John Kalmanson.” Seemingly, though, the owners are not going to be left in any doubt about what the Snaiths feel because Jono said, almost in the same breath: “The way he won, it will be hard not to – and I think he is good enough.”

Fourie shares much the same view, saying: “He’s a racehorse and I wake up in the mornings to ride horses like him. He is definitely capable of winning a Group 1.”

Of course, unless the regulations change, Fourie won’t be able to ride him or any of the other Snaith-trained KZN stars. How does he view this, Fee Ramsden asked him. “I’ve put a line through the Durban season,” he admitted. “I am just focussing on earning a living and what racing needs to do is to keep focussing on keeping the show going.”

Amazingly this was the first Somerset success for Justin Snaith since Gimmethegreenlight nine years ago. The dual champion trainer also won the Kudex Pinnacle with last year’s Winter Derby second Nexus and the Kudex Perfect Promise with Captain’s Ransom who fairly flew up the rails in Suzette Viljoen’s colours to lead just over 50m out.

Fourie was on both these and Jono Snaith sees Captain’s Ransom as a classic filly – “She is a very exciting prospect and she will end up in the Cape Fillies Guineas. She should stay every inch of the mile too.”

Piet Steyn has had to wait a long time for a horse good enough to take him back to the glory days of his early training career but in Katak he appears to have found it. So have the punters who backed the colt from 5-1 to 23-10 favourite in the Kuda Variety Club Mile – and Aldo Domeyer made sure they never had a moment’s anxiety. Indeed when he pressed the button it was race over.

The jockey was mightily impressed, saying:” Mr Steyn told me that he thinks he has one of the best horses in the country and I don’t feel that sentiment is out of place. Indeed I can’t wait for the summer season because that is when you are going to see the best of him – and he has everything he needs to go to the top.”

The Winter Series looks like being on the agenda and Steyn, who owns the colt 50:50 with Marsh Shirtliff, said: “I am thankful to Marsh (for coming in with me). He is a great man and it’s nice to be in partnership with him.”

Hassen Adams’ What A Flirt goes for the second and third legs of the fillies winter series after delighting Paddy Kruyer and Greg Cheyne in the Kuda Fillies Maiden while Anecdote showed the benefit of first time blinkers for Geoff Woodruff and Mj Byleveld in the mile maiden. Woodruff, to move to Cape Town later in the year, also won the last for Mike Fullard and James Drew with Worlds Your Oyster (Corne Orffer).

Brett Crawford and  Orffer doubled up with impressive newcomer Invincabelle in the opener and Sing Out Loud in the Kuda Sweet Chestnut. This Ridgemont filly was plumb last for much of the way after fly-jumping as the gates opened but, as her jockey related, “When I gave her the bit she just took off.”

By Michael Clower

Image: Candiese Lenferna

Do It Again (Candiese Lenferna)

Vodacom Durban July First Entries

All the top guns were among the first entries for this year’s R1.5 million Grade 1 Vodacom Durban July when nominations closed today.

The 52 horses nominated for the showpiece at Hollywoodbets Greyville, included two-time winner of the race Do It Again, who, if he triumphs on Saturday, July 25, will become the first horse in the 123-year history of South African’s most famous race to achieve the treble.

But Justin Snaith’s champion will not be short of opposition should all pan out with Hawwaam, Rainbow Bridge and Vardy also amongst the nominations.

Do It Again has not been out since a disappointing effort in the Sun Met at Kenilworth but put in a pleasing gallop at Hollywoodbets Greyville last Sunday and looks on track for a tilt at his third victory in the race.

A somewhat surprising omission was Sunday’s Grade 2 Wold Sport’s Betting Guineas winner, Wild Coast, but with two further entry dates, Snaith still has opportunity.

Hawwaam, the disappointment last year when scratched at the start, was back in business at Turffontein last Saturday with a convincing win in the Grade 1 HF Oppenheimer Horse Chestnut Stakes. There are export issues to navigate before the race and his participation is not assured. If the European Union protocols are approved, Hawwaam will take his place but if the colt is to be exported via Mauritius he will need to be in quarantine before the race.

Rainbow Bridge, second last year, and second in the Sun Met, has not been seen out since the Met but will be out for revenge and give stalwart owner Mike Rattray the victory in a race he so desperately wants to win.

Stable companion to Rainbow Bridge and Grade 1 Cape Derby winner Golden Ducat, was an eye-catching third in last Sunday’s World Sport’s Betting Guineas and has also been nominated by trainer Eric Sands.

Vardy, a touch disappointing when third in the Grade 2 Independent On Saturday Drill Hall Stakes last Sunday, was a cracking winner of the Grade 1 L’Ormarins Queen’s Plate and will surely come on from that race after a four-month break from the track.

Marcus has also entered Twist Of Fate, third last year for Joey Ramsden who has since moved to Australia.

An interesting nomination by Dean Kannemeyer who has won this race twice, is KZN Derby winner It’s My Turn, off the track with injury for over a year.

Other notable entries are impressive Independent On Saturday Drill Hall Stakes winner Bunker Hunt and Soqrat.

By Andrew Harrison

Featured Image: Last years Vodacom Durban July winner Do It Again (Candiese Lenferna)

Aldo Domeyer (Nkosi Hlophe)

Watch out for Katak

Super Silvano could be the answer to the Kuda Variety Club Mile at today’s quadruple-feature fixture at Kenilworth.

There is precious little to choose between the pair on their running in February and on adjusted ratings they have a bit in hand over Cane Lime ‘N Soda, and a minimum of 4-5kg over everything else.

Aldo Domeyer (Liesl King)
Aldo Domeyer (Liesl King)

Silver Host showed much improved form to beat Super Silvano two and a quarter lengths in the Politician but proved a disappointing favourite in the Cape Derby and, although the stipes ordered a veterinary examination, nothing showed up. “The Politician was a hard race and it flattened Silver Host for the Derby which was only three weeks later,” explains Justin Snaith. “He is much better now and I think he will run well although he may find it a bit on the short side. He is a nice horse and this race will decide whether he comes up to Durban.”

Super Silvano, third in the Cape Derby, could also find the mile on the short side but he receives a kilo and is 2.5kg better with his rival on Politician form. At 33-10 this Brett Crawford runner is a decent price and he gets the vote.

But watch out for 5-1 shot Katak who has won both his starts, has the advantage of Aldo Domeyer and is almost certainly still on the upgrade. “It’s still early days but I rate him and he is very well at the moment,” says Piet Steyn. “He is stepping up in class and this will show how good he is.”

Erik The Red, winner of his last three, should be the answer to the Kuda Somerset but his 1-3 price hardly makes him a betting proposition. Many of the most successful punters over the years have made it a golden rule never to bet at odds-on and personally I believe that life is too short to back horses at 1-3. You need to have four consecutive winners to show a profit betting on horses at that price.

No reason why the Snaith horse shouldn’t win – indeed, it will be a shock if he doesn’t – but Matthew The King at 15-2 is a much more appealing bet. He impressed when winning first time out at Durbanville in March, receives 4kg and has been working nicely. “I see they don’t give him a hope in hell but he is a very nice horse, albeit an unknown quantity,” says Greg Ennion. “He is doing well and he went well when I galloped him last week.”

The stats point to an upset – Armando 12 months ago was the first favourite to win this race in five years. His stable is represented by 14-1 outsider Futura’s Hope. Vaughan Marshall often has his two-year-olds ready to win first time so, if you fancy Freedom Park at 10-1, don’t be put off. He and Futura’s Hope receive 2kg from the selection and a whopping 6kg from the favourite.

The in-form Candice Bass-Robinson has won two of the last three runnings of the Kudex Perfect Promise Sprint and she can collect again, this time with Lemon Delight whose debut win was far more impressive than the half-length verdict might suggest.

The danger to the 33-10 shot could well be Captain’s Ransom who showed phenomenal finishing speed on debut at Durbanville and her stable has won this race twice in the last four seasons.

Selections:

Race 5: Matthew The King
Race 6: Lemon Delight
Race 8: Super Silvano

By Michael Clower

Featured Image: Aldo Domeyer rides Katak at Kenilworth racecourse today

Paul Peter

Summer Pudding skips Vodacom Durban July

Turffontein trainer Paul Peter said a decision would be made at the end of the week on Summer Pudding’s participation in the Grade 1 Woolavington 2000 but he added she would definitely not be running in the Vodacom Durban July.

The Silvano filly has now won six out of six and doubling that number will earn her a new South African record unbeaten streak.

The mark of eleven wins unbeaten was set by Home Guard in the late 1960s.

If the Wilgerbosdrift Triple Tiara heroine does travel down for the Woolavington she will travel shortly before the race and will then “winter” at Summerveld for the rest of the season. 

Summer Pudding (JC Photographics)
Summer Pudding (JC Photographics)

Peter watched her bid to become the third horse to win the Triple Tiara on one of the only two working TV’s at a deserted Turffontein, near the jockey’s room, and said although normally quiet during races he could not on this occasion contain his emotions.

He did have one moment of real concern, explaining, “She hit a flat spot at the top of the straight.”

Some fans feared the worst when Gavin Lerena’s attempt to slot her in was thwarted by Diego De Gouveia’s determined race riding on the eventual third-placed Ballet Shoes.

Lerena was thus forced to stay out wide down the entire back straight. However, this did not concern Peter, who said, 

“She was comfortable and if you are on the best horse it is ok to be a little wide, you are going to then be sure of getting a run.”

Lerena did find cover around the final turn but had to become urgent 500m out to extract her from her flat spot.

She found her gears at the 400m mark.

She then ranged alongside her chief market rival Marygold and then in resolute style her big stride carried her clear.

She was bred by Mauritzfontein and Wilgerbosdrift Stud and is owned by the former. 

Mauritzfontein stud owners Stephen and Jessica Jell were soon conveying how proud they were of the unbeaten filly on a social media video.

Peter said the Jells and Mary Slack of Wilgerbosdrift Stud were “really nice” people to train for and elaborated, “They really love their horses and are ecstatic when they win and happy if they just return home safe.”

The win was richly deserved as the Jells and Slack had recently kindly stepped in as financiers of a Phumelela business Rescue plan. Accolades duly poured in for the much respected family.

Meanwhile, Ormond Ferraris, who never misses a day at the tracks as a valued advisor to Peter, had an extra spring in his step this morning (Monday). 

The Peter yard had three other impressive winners on the day. 

In the first, a workriders maiden over 1600m, the two-year-old Marchfield filly Cloth Of Ice galloped clear to win by 2,25 lengths under Tshepiso Matsoele. She has plenty of scope for improvement and Peter is eyeing the Grade 1 Thekwini Stakes over 1600m at Greyville on Gold Cup day, August 29.

Later, four-year-old Ideal World filly Vistula bounced  back to her best in a Pinnacle Stakes event over 1600m, winning by 2,50 lengths under Lerena.

She will now go for the Grade 1 HSH Princess Charlene Stakes over the same course and distance on Champions day June 27. After that she might take her place in the Grade 1 Jonsson Workwear Garden Province Stakes over 1600m on July day, where she ran fifth last year.

Jet Start then displayed her finishing speed when winning the last, a Pinnacle Stakes event over 2000m, in comfortable style under Calvin Habib, and she will likely also be seen in a forthcoming feature.

By David Thiselton 

True To Life (Candiese Lenferna)

True To Life could best the boys

The Vaal Monday meeting features a Pinnacle Stakes race over 1000m sponsored by Betting World which has attracted many top sprinters, most of whom will be preparing for the Grade 1 Computaform Sprint to be run on Champions Day, March 27.

The three-year-old filly True To Life has exceptional natural speed and could upset the two best males in the race, Mr Flood and Chimichuri Run. However, she does have a low draw, which is sometime disadvantageous on the Vaal straight course. Calvin Habib was aboard her last time when she won easily at Hollywoodbets Greyville over 1400m and retains the ride.

Mr Flood has looked to be a star in the making from day one and since returning from a layoff of more than a year has won three and placed second once in four starts. It was likely only the low draw which beat him last time too in the Grade 2 Senor Santa Stakes. His strength is his ability to find extra when challenged.

Chimichuri Run is the reigning Grade 1 Tsogo Sun Sprint winner and carries topweight. He is better at 1200m but is fitted with blinkers whenever he runs over 1000m and finished third in the Computaform Sprint last year.

The filly Mighty High is also a Grade 1 winner and beat Mr Flood narrowly when last meeting in the Senor Santa.

Two others to consider are Winter Storm and Singforafa.

PA (R216)
Leg 1: 10,2
Leg 2: 1,3,4
Leg 3: 3,2
Leg 4: 6
Leg 5: 4,5,2
Leg 6: 5,2
Leg 7: 3,6,10

Pick 6 (R3600)
Leg 1: 1,3,4,2,10
Leg 2: 3,2
Leg 3: 6,3
Leg 4: 4,5,2,1,3,14,11,8,12
Leg 5: 5,2,1,10
Leg 6: 3,6,10,8,1

JACKPOT (270)
Leg 2: 3,2,1
Leg 3: 6,3
Leg 4: 4,5,2,1,3,14,11,8,12
Leg 5: 5,2,1,10,9

BEST BET Race 6: No. 6 OUR MAN IN HAVANA

VALUE BET Race 5: No. 3 BELLAGIO KING

By David Thiselton

Bunker Hunt (Candiese Lenferna)

Bunker Hunt Stakes His Claim

Bunker Hunt gave early notice that he will be a force to be reckoned with in the next three months of South Africa’s Champion Season with a stunning display in the Grade 2 Independent On Saturday Drill Hall Stakes at Hollywoodbets Greyville today.

L’Ormarins Queen’s Plate winner Vardy was a short-priced favourite and looked to have most in his favour, but Bunker Hunt put the race to bed in a matter of strides as Keagan de Melo let him loose at the top of the straight.

Wild Coast (Candiese Lenferna)
Wild Coast (Candiese Lenferna)

Vardy challenged pacemaker Kasimir all the way up the straight but was just not able to get to terms, but the pair were no match for Bunker Hunt who swept past up their inside to win as he liked.

Given his previous form, this was a distance that looked short of his best but he showed plenty of class in victory. Much was expected of Bunker Hunt last winter but he met with many hiccups and this could be his year.

His name is sure to be among the first nominations for the Vodacom Durban July that are due tomorrow.

Trained by Justin Snaith, Bunker Hunt races in the familiar silks of Sabine Plattner and was bred at Varsfontein Stud.

There’s not much of her but what she lacks in stature she makes up for in courage. The diminutive but feisty Mississippi Burning scored back-to-back Fillies Guineas victories with a last gasp triumph in the Grade 2 World Sports Betting Fillies Guineas, the favourite edging home ahead of rank outsider Mary O with Labyrinth some way back in third.

The race was hardly run to suit as Lady Legend set a modest pace but Craig Zackey had his mount in the box seat, one off the fence as the pace quickened up approaching the final turn.

Hunting daylight, Zackey angled his mount up the inside fence and gradually wore down Mary O who was game in defeat.

Trained by Adam Marcus, Mississippi Burning races in the familiar silks of Mario Ferreira and was bred at Mike and Tanya McHardy’s Rathmor Stud.

Star filly Beach Beauty was nigh unbeatable at Hollywoodbets Greyville and her aptly named son, Wild Coast, scored a narrow, upset victory in the Grade 2 World Sports Betting Guineas at the same venue. In a nail-biting finish, Donovan Dillon got the colt home in the shadow of the post, edging out pacemaker Padre Pio with Cape Derby winner Golden Ducat putting a storming late effort for third, a showing that augurs well for the Grade1 Dily News 2000.

Wild Coast was the outsider of Justin Snaith’s pair with Sachdev starting favourite but Wild Coast will not be denied his place in the sun. Captain Demonami was an early casualty as he refused to jump and it was Craig Zackey, hunting back-to-back Guineas triumphs, who set the pace on Padre Pio. As in the filly’s equivalent, the field was barely out of an early canter and Frosted Gold the next casualty. He was forced to check and switch off the heels of the pack, losing valuable ground.

Dillon had Wild Coast settled midfield and once in the straight set out after Padre Pio who had pinched a lead and was showing no signs of stopping. Sachdev loomed dangerous for a few strides but didn’t go on with his effort as Wild Coast gradually ate into Padre Pio’s lead and nailed him on the line.

Trained by Justin Snaith, Wild Coast is owned by Anyaasec (Pty) Ltd and Miss Caroline Rupert and was bred at the Rupert’s Drakenstein Stud.

By Andrew Harrison

Featured Image: Bunker Hunt (Candiese Lenferna)

Vardy (Liesl King)

Vardy a penalty kick at the weights?

Vardy, stunning winner of the Gr1 Queen’s Plate, starts his Champions Season campaign in the Gr2 Independent On Saturday Drill Hall Stakes at Hollywoodbets Greyville tomorrow. Adam Marcus has the Vodacom Durban July in his plans and the gelding he looks difficult to oppose in this season opener.

Vardy took on the best ‘milers’ in the country in the Queen’s Plate and gave them a galloping lesson, coming from off the pace and breezing past the opposition in seemingly effortless fashion.

Vardy (Liesl King)
Vardy (Liesl King)

On that performance the Gr1 Sun Met looked well within his compass but there is never a racing certainty in this sport as favourite Hawwaam, ran into the back of him, fatally compromising both horse’s chances.

Hawwaam starts his season in the Gr1 HF Oppenheimer Horse Chestnut Stakes at Turffontein today, and if their stars align the pair could meet again come Saturday, July 25.

Given the weight conditions of the Drill Hall, Vardy need only be at half-throttle to win and this should be the ideal blow-out for his next VDJ stepping stone, the Rising Sun Gold Challenge.

The only possible threat could come from top sprinter Kasimir. Justin Snaith’s charge is no stranger to the course having beaten the top filly Celtic Sea in the Gr1 Mercury Sprint last season. He comes into the race off a grinding victory in the Diadem Stakes at Kenilworth where he looked beaten a furlong out but kept fighting off all challengers. The majority of his form has been over 1200m but given his never-say-die attitude, Vardy’s rider, Craig Zackey, will need to be fully aware of what he is up against especially with master tactician Anton Marcus aboard.

Matador Man could battle in this line-up but loves this course while Sniper Shot tries blinkers for the first time. The balance should all prefer more ground.

Adam Marcus has had a stellar season to date, with two Gr1 wins to his credit. Vardy’s Queen’s Plate triumph was his second, Mississippi Burning his first in the Gr1 Cape Fillies Guineas.

She is also in action in the World Sports Betting Fillies Guineas tomorrow where there are a few in opposition who will be looking to turn the tables.

Mississippi Burning is not the most striking physical specimen but she made her Cape rivals look pretty ordinary as she won the Guineas easing up with three lengths of daylight back to the runner-up Driving Miss Daisy, also in tomorrow’s line-up and one of the leading contenders. A repeat performance will see her hard to peg back.

Kelpie was no match in the Cape but has since run two smart races in open features and comes from a very much in form stable.

Labyrinth is unbeaten since Vaughan Marshall tried her in blinkers and looks a far better proposition than when beaten by Kelpie three runs back.

The Gr2 World Sports Betting Guineas is an intriguing contest where the Cape raiders are again likely to hold sway. Golden Ducat, a half-brother to the pair of top gallopers Rainbow Bridge and Hawwaam, was easy to back in the Cape Derby where he revelled in the ten-furlong contest beating the well fancied Sachdev. The pair meet again tomorrow, but the latter could be more at home over this shorter trip and able to turn the tables.

Golden Ducat is a giant of a horse and one would reasonably expect him to battle around the relatively tight Greyville circuit but the past has shown that big horses are not necessary at a disadvantage so it would be foolish to write off the Derby winner’s chances.

Count Jack comes off three straight wins, Sachdev his most recent victim, so must also come into the reckoning while local hopes could rest with Padre Pio and Guru’s Pride.

The lock-down initiated by the Covid-19 pandemic saw horse racing on hold for the past two months but was given the green light to resume last Monday, June 1. Under strict quarantine guidelines, only persons essential to the running of the race meeting are allowed on course but all races can be watched live on channel 239 on DStv. All TAB and bookmaker rooms are closed and betting can only be conducted on line.

By Andrew Harrison

Gavin Lerena

Summer Pudding takes Triple Tiara

Summer Pudding became only the third filly to win the Triple Tiara after powering home in the Gr1 SA Oaks at a deserted Turffontein today. Gavin Lerena rode a confident race on Paul Peter’s charge, racing three wide early but able to tuck in before the final turn.

Summer Pudding looked to be making heavy weather of it with 400m to run, but she kept finding to wear down Pomander and win rather comfortably in the end.

Summer Pudding (JC Photographics)
Summer Pudding (JC Photographics)

Owned by Jessica and Stephan Jell, Summer Pudding is out of the mare Cherry On The Cake, who is a half-sister to the dam of the 2013 Triple Tiara winner Cherry On The Top.

The latter was trained by the legendary Ormond Ferraris, who is now a valuable member of the Paul Peter team as an advisor and Peter was profuse in his praise for the veteran trainer.

Mike de Kock has had more than his fair share of tribulations with Hawwaam but it was back to business as usual in the Gr1 HF Oppenheimer Horse Chestnut Stakes. De Kock attributed a disappointing Cape Summer to all of his horses being ‘flat’, including Hawwaam and Queen Supreme, and both turned in their best today. Callan Murray drove Hawwaam to a comfortable victory while Queen Supreme came from last to snatch second ahead of an always game Cirillo.

De Kock and owner Sheik Hamdan are keen to see Hawwaam take on international opposition – “he is good enough” confirmed De Kock – but just when the colt travels is up to export protocols.

If via Mauritius, Hawwaam will be in quarantine before the Vodacom Durban July but if the European Union gives the green light for direct export, the July will still be an option.

The SA Derby saw a major upset as rank outside Out Of Your League gave Fabian Habib the first Gr1 winner of his short career. It was a win of sheer courage as Out Of Your League, made most of the running. Swamped by challengers with a furlong to go, he rallied gamely under Raymond Danielson to run them all out of it. The finish was not without drama as Out Of Your League and Shango came together over the final furlong. Gavin Lerena chose to up-grade a race review to a full-blown objection but it was a desperate gamble that was never going to succeed.

Got The Greenlight ran a terrific race in third, all over the winner before the final 100m tapped the last of his stamina.

By Andrew Harrison

Summer Pudding (JC Photographics)

History awaits Summer Pudding

Paul Peter’s Silvano filly Summer Pudding will attempt tomorrow at Turffontein to become only the third horse to land the Wilgerbosdrift Triple Tiara and she has a strong connection to the last filly to complete this arduous feat.

Summer Pudding is out of Cherry On The Cake, who is a half-sister to the dam of the 2013 Triple Tiara winner Cherry On The Top.

Summer Pudding (JC Photographics)
Summer Pudding (JC Photographics)

The latter was trained by the legendary Ormond Ferraris, who is now a valuable member of the Paul Peter team as an advisor.

Ferraris has been at track everyday in the build up to this race so the filly has a fine chance of arriving tomorrow in peak condition.

Ferraris was in fact the original trainer of Summer Pudding but upon his retirement last year she was sent by her owners and breeders, Mary Slack and Jessica Jell of Wilgerbosdrift and Mauritzfontein Stud, to Paul Peter’s yard.

Peter has idolised Ferraris since the days he sneaked on to his local Turffontein racecourse as a racing-mad schoolboy, but despite the reassurance of having such a wealth of experience and expertise beside him he was a bundle of nerves this afternoon.

“I have no more finger nails left,” he chortled.

He added, “There is always that worry when they come back from rests whether you have done enough or whether you have done too much. But she is very well.”

She had just returned from a mid-afternoon walk and Peter reported her to be “fresh and alert.”

She will be without her regular pilot, the national champion jockey elect Warren Kennedy, and she is drawn out wide too.

However, Peter is not overly concerned.

He said, “Gavin Lerena is aboard and is a champion at overcoming draws.”

Lerena, a former national champion jockey and a fine horseman, has been riding her work in the build up.

Sumer Pudding has a perfect racing temperament, being a relaxed type with a good turn of foot and plenty of courage.

Peter said at the beginning of her Triple Tiara bid that the first leg, the Grade 2 Wilgerbosdrift Gauteng Guineas, would be her hardest leg as it was on the sharp side for her.

The further she goes the better so she is expected to add tomorrow’s Oaks to her cosy win in the Grade 1 Wilgerbosdrift SA Classic over 1800m.

Her main dangers will be the classy Victoria Paige, who had to be scratched from the SA Fillies Classic when expected to go close, and Marygold, who ran on strongly for second in the SA Fillies Classic. Victoria Paige has a stamina doubt whilst Marygold is by the stamina influence Flower Alley. 

The strange part of tomorrow’s race will be no crowds, but there are sure to be many screaming Summer Pudding home in their living rooms.

Peter is also quietly confident with his SA Derby runner Western Fort, whom he said had improved a lot with the application of blinkers as they had helped him focus.

He also labelled his classy filly Vistula a “massive runner” in the sixth race.

By David Thiselton

Hawwaam (JC Photographics)

Hawwaam on track for Horse Chestnut

Mike de Kock said Hawwaam was back to his “aggressive” self ahead of his bid to add a fourth Grade 1 to his CV in the Grade 1 HF Oppenheimer Horse Chestnut Stakes at Turffontein today, where he faces some tough opposition, including his stablemate and defending champion Soqrat.

De Kock has a third runner in the race too, the crack filly Queen Supreme.

All three of these horses disappointed to various degrees in their last starts down in Cape Town and De Kock said, “All of our horses ran flat races in their second or third starts this season in Cape Town.”

Hawwaam (JC Photographics)
Hawwaam (JC Photographics)

In Hawwaam and Soqrat’s cases they had to endure the calamitous 25-minute delay to the start of the L’Ormarins Queen’s Plate. 

Hawwaam’s over-racing antics that day blunted the turn of foot he is famous for while Soqrat “fell apart” completely.

De Kock immediately sent Soqrat to the farm for a holiday and he is now a happy horse again and “doing very well.”

Hawwaam subsequently ran in the Sun Met and although still not quite the horse who had thrilled crowds in Johannesburg and Durban with his effortless change of gears, he still managed third place in a high class field.

Hawwaam has a perfect draw of five today and his fans will hope to see him settling in behind horses before slicing through the field like a hot knife through butter.

The four-year-old Silvano colt will be exported this year, but the connections do not know when, as any change to the export protocols is still forthcoming. 

If they are forced to go the Mauritius route, Hawwaam will depart for the Cape Town quarantine station in June and thus miss the Vodacom Durban July. 

However, if the EU inspection on African Horse Sickness containment does take place soon, and brings with it good news, then he might still take his place in the July. 

Queen Supreme (Candiese Marnewick)
Queen Supreme (Candiese Marnewick)

Hawwaam is in fact a rig, a common condition in which one or more of the testicles fails to descend from the abdomen. The late great stallion A. P. Indy was a rig so there is still every chance Hawwaam can go on to convert his racing and pedigree class into stud success. 

De Kock said Soqrat was a versatile type who could go handy or come from off the pace, so the draw of ten should not affect him too badly.

This horse is the ultimate professional, as he proved in this race last year when digging down deep to fend off Cirillo. His trusted partner for the whole of last season, Randall Simons, is aboard for the first time this season.

Queen Supreme had the plaudits rapturous when winning the Grade 1 Paddock Stakes over 1800m, but she subsequently ran a flat race in the Grade 1 Bidvest Majorca Stakes over 1600m. 

De Kock said, “She is doing very well but it is a tough race.”

De Kock runs Pomander in the SA Oaks and said, “She is fit and well and stays well, she could place.”

Tomorrow, he runs Frosted Gold in the Grade 2 WSB Guineas. This handy-running grey should be ideally suited to Greyville and has a form chance of winning.

By David Thiselton