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Dettori and Khumalo’s pivotal days

History-making jockeys Frankie Dettori and S’Manga Khumalo will clash this weekend as respective captains of the two teams competing in the Air Mauritius International Jockeys Challenge.

Both can look back on a single pivotal day in their respective careers.

Dettori became an international sporting icon on September 28, 1996, when winning all seven races of the Champions Day meeting at Ascot. He was already adored at the time, not only for his skill in the saddle, but also for his eccentric personality and his trademark “flying dismounts”.

Frankie Dettori (Supplied)

Frankie Dettori (Supplied)

The final winner of the “Magnificent Seven” was Fujiyama Crest, who had been available at 12-1 in the morning. Alarm bells were ringing loudly for Off Course bookmakers after Frankie had won the first six races. However, on probably the darkest days in UK bookmaking history, the usual mechanics of the bookmaking system then suddenly broke down, as explained by writer Chris McGrath of the UK Independent newspaper. “Mug money” was pouring on to Fujiyama Crest on course. Bookmakers in the ring could not believe their luck. They could lay 2-1 against a horse whose chances in reality were closer to 12-1.

They felt it was imperative to seize the opportunity. Instead of meekly lowering the odds they continued to lay the horse at 2-1 for everything they had. The Off Course Starting Price (SP) is dictated to in the UK by the On Course market. Thus, the stand the bookmakers in the ring were taking was immeasurably raising the stakes on Fujiyama Crest off course too. One On Course bookmaker Barry Dennis laid the horse to lose £23,000. Even watching the race, he remained convinced he had done the right thing. He recalled, “Reality … Frankie’s done it. I stood on my stool, staring, not hearing a thing, in a trance.” He went home to his wife and collapsed into a chair, sobbing. The losses to the bookmaking industry were about £30million, with Hills over £8m down and Ladbrokes even more. One North London betting shop still has its clock stopped on the exact time Fujiyama Crest crossed the line.

On Course bookmaker Gary Wiltshire was the biggest individual loser. He had been on his way to a Worcester jumps meeting when a motorway pile up forced him to change his plan and head for Ascot. The decision cost him £1 million. Frankie had started the day saying, “I could have an each-way chance in the first, and I may win the third.” It was the day the mug punters finally had their revenge. One Mary Bolton’s Ladbrokes £5 accumulator on Frankie’s seven mounts netted her £500,000. Dettori later bought Fujiyama Crest as a pet and the gallant horse happily lived out his retirement on the Dettori family small holding.

Dettori was born in Milan on 15 December 1970. His father Gianfranco was a champion jockey in Italy and his mother a professional circus performer. At age 14 Frankie left home to work for trainer Luca Cumani at Newmarket. In 1989 he was made Cumani’s stable jockey after becoming Champion apprentice. In 1990 he rode 100 winners in a season, the first teenager to achieve the feat since Lester Piggot. In 1994 he joined Godolphin. He won his and Godolphin’s first English classic on Balanchine the same year in the Epsom Oaks. He was UK Champion jockey in 1994, 1995 and 2004. In 18 years with Godolphin he rode 943 winners from 3,430 rides. A phenomenal 110 of those winners were at Gr 1 level. Dettori has ridden the winners of more than 500 Group races, including 16 English Classics. Dettori split with Godolphin in 2012. However, the flow of winners has not stopped. This year he rode 23 graded stakes winners, including four Gr 1s.

S'Manga Khumalo

S’Manga Khumalo

This will be Frankie’s third appearance in the SA Jockeys International Challenge and his first since 2009. He recently achieved his 300th winner in Britain, but is yet to ride a winner in South Africa.

S’Manga Khumalo grew up in the poverty stricken township of Kwa-Mashu. He joined the South African Jockeys Academy in 2000 and was immediately commended for his “natural seat.” He was initially scared of horses. However, he went on to ride 104 winners as an apprentice. He rode over 60 winners in each of his first three seasons out of the Academy. Trainer Joe Soma recognised him as a champion in the making and said in 2008, “He has a natural talent and a lovely affinity with horses. He is always laughing and joking but when I see him get on a horse he goes into his own world.”

Khumalo big break happened in  2011 when St. John Gray put him on the filly Dancewiththedevil in the Gr 1 HF Oppenheimer Horse Chestnut Stakes. She thrashed the boys and two weeks later he rode her to another emphatic victory in the Gr 1 Laurie Jaffee Empress Club Stakes.

Sandwiched in between those two big wins, Khumalo won the Kenya Derby on a South African-bred horse.

Alas, a terrible fall at Turffontein in June that year saw him laid off until November. In his comeback the injuries continued to plague him and in March 2012 he even considered hanging up his boots. However, he was talked out of it and later that year rode the Soma-trained Wagner to victory in the Gr 1 Sansui Summer Cup. Later that season he won the Gr 1 President’s Champions Challenge on the Sean Tarry-trained Heavy Metal. Then came the pivotal day when becoming the first black jockey to win the Vodacom Durban July, partnering Heavy Metal to victory on July 6, 2013.

His confidence soared and he became a major force virtually overnight. Two weeks after the July, he rode the first five legs of the Pick 6 at Turffontein.

He won the National Jockeys Championships in the 2013/2014 season and established himself as first call rider to current national champion trainer Sean Tarry. Khumalo won the championships again last season and has developed into the consummate professional.

By David Thiselton

Sail South (Liesl King)

Crawford continues impressive run

Sail South will take on Marinaresco in the Green Point Stakes early next month after powering home like a tornado in the NRC Charity Plate at Kenilworth on Saturday.

Richard Fourie, who is quickly building up a rewarding association with Brett Crawford’s big stable, swept his mount to the front over a furlong out and the 9-2 chance drew right away to slam Baritone by three and a half lengths.

Sail South (Liesl King)

Sail South (Liesl King)

“It’s going to be a hard season for Sail South off 110 but he now has to take his chance against the top horses,” said

Crawford. “He runs in the Green Point next and then maybe we will consider the L’Ormarins Queen’s Plate.”

Justin Snaith, although pleased with Baritone, blamed himself for 14-10 favourite Black Arthur managing only fifth (“He looked rusty. Good horse – bad trainer. It was shocking”). But maybe the self-flagellation was unwarranted. After all, this was the horse’s first run since the July and he is still a colt.

However it was the end of the road for third-placed Blarney Bay even though he seemed to be enjoying his customary gallop-them-into-the-ground tactics as much as ever. “He is eight and, with the summer course coming up, it’s time to call it a day but at least he went out the way I wanted,” said Mike Robinson who put himself on the map by improving the horse out of all recognition soon after taking him over.

Crawford also has a string of big race targets for the Corne Orffer-partnered Beach Goddess who really exerted her authority in the closing stages of the Laisserfaire to beat 1.5kg-conceding stable companion Chevauchee by three-parts of a length. “Laisserfaire was a brilliant filly who I trained,” he recalled. “Beach Goddess will stick to fillies sprints like the Southern Cross (Dec 10) and Sceptre (Jan 6) for now while, as I have said before, Chevauchee, now goes back round the turn.”

Beach Goddess (Liesl King)

Beach Goddess (Liesl King)

Loading for this race proved a starter’s nightmare – it took almost six minutes with more and more of the 13 runners playing up – and the longer it went on the more upset the horses (and their trainers) became but the legendary Ralph Rixon and his wife Val have lived with this sort of thing for over 60 years and they were understandably thrilled with Our Destiny’s third place.

So too was Dean Kannemeyer with the Diadem-targeted Real Princess’s second to Search Party (yes, Crawford again!) in the last while the Milnerton trainer explained that he had reason to believe that Cape Speed’s performance when runner-up to Kilrain under top weight in the Swartz Family Handicap heralds a return to the winner’s box. “He was so fat that this will have taken 50lb off his gut,” said Kannemeyer who has his eye on the new version of the J & B Stayers.

Candice Bass-Robinson is aiming Kilrain at the Peninsula Handicap on January 7. This horse was sold for R1.4 million as a yearling but, when breeder Robin Hamilton later bought him back for R200 000, Robert Bloomberg shrewdly stepped in to take a quarter share.

Owner-breeder Paul Zeeman, who has just had an operation in Cape Town’s Panorama Hospital for heart and shoulder problems, had the sort of tonic that no doctor can match when Nutbush Citilimits got up on the line for Harold Crawford and Ossie Noach at 22-1 in the Elite Fibre Maiden.

By Michael Clower

Lala (Nkosi Hlophe)

There is no substitute for class

When it comes to most sports there is no substitute for class and that is especially true in horseracing when it comes to horses and jockeys. There was plenty in evidence at Greyville yesterday as Lala outclassed her rivals in the Open Handicap while top riders Anton Marcus and Anthony Delpech showed their mastery of the Greyville poly track.

Lala (Nkosi Hlophe)

Lala (Nkosi Hlophe)

Lala has always been well regarded by her stable and she confirmed Doug Campbell’s opinion with a solid victory in the opening leg of the jackpot. Well handled by apprentice Denis Schwarz, he always had Lala in the firing line as Seattle Belle made the early running and making full use of his 4kg claim he got the daughter of Visionaire to quicken away from her rivals to win rather comfortably with Playboy Buddy and Mamasita chasing her home.

Marcus and Delpech generally have free range when it comes to booking rides but in the end, they still have to get them home.

Delpech pounced late on Icy Spirit for Alyson Wright to undo favourite La Di Var two jumps from the line in the second but had to be content with runner-up berths on Dean Kannemeyer’s runners Playboy Buddy and favourite Tanjiro who found a fast-finishing Olympic Power too much to handle in the Track & Ball Gaming Handicap. Delpech made amends for Kannemeyer in the sixth, keeping favourite Soldier’s Code hard to his task to hold off the attentions of Golden Fort and Breakfast Club.

Marcus opened his account with a comfortable win in the card opener on Malhama, the Mike de Kock-trained Australian bred daughter of Commands finishing like a train, and followed up two races later with a superbly timed finish on One O Won. Marcus had Garth Puller’s runner last turning for home but as is his want, he switched his mount towards to the outside rail and One O Won responded with a telling stretch run to win going away from Newyorkstateofmind and Aramouse.

In spite of apprentice Eric Ngwane’s best efforts, Nicklaus gave him a torrid ride in the seventh. Hanging out under pressure he never left Thirtytwo Squadron and Tristan Godden alone for a furlong and the resulting objection and reversal of the result was no surprise.

There was some relief for punters in the last as the well fancied Arctic Teon responded to a driving ride from Keagan de Melo to finally shed his maiden.

By Andrew Harrison

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