David Thiselton
REIGNING national champion jockey Warren Kennedy is “living in limbo” at present as he awaits feedback from various overseas racing jurisdictions who have displayed an interest in him but he said he would definitely still be in South Africa for the Vodacom Durban July and he was confident of Summer Pudding’s ability to handle the tight Hollywoodbets Greyville track.
Summer Pudding has won eleven out of 12, including three Grade 1s among eight stakes races victories.
However, the darling of the South African turf still has her detractors, who point to all of her wins being at Turffontein and to the form of her Paddock Stakes failure being collaterally similar to her Grade 1 Woolavington 2000 victory.
However, Kennedy said there was no doubt whatsoever that the Paul Peter-trained Silvano filly had not been herself in the Paddock Stakes.
He elaborated, “I could feel as far out as 800m that she was not herself. I had the perfect position behind Queen Supreme but by the 500m mark horses were going past us and she felt dead underneath me, yet she only finished five lengths back. And then she later scoped full of mucous which proved there was something wrong.”
Kennedy said about her ability to handle Hollywoodbets Greyville, “I think she will be fine as she has lost that flat spot she used to have. You must remember that when she ran in the Woolavington she was coming off a stop-start Triple Tiara campaign. The Oaks date kept on changing and she had to be kept on the boil for a long time without a definite race date to work with. Then the Woolavington was just three weeks after the Oaks so we decided to go for that but she was under par. I was at her the whole race, so she was flat and she still won which shows how good she is.”
At Turffontein Summer Pudding has reined supreme and although most of her wins have not been by wide margins she has always looked to have a bit in hand.
Kennedy was reluctant to name Summer Pudding as the best he had ever ridden, having also ridden the like of Rainbow Bridge, but he declared, “I would say she is the consistently best I have ridden.”
He has a lot of good rides to look forward to in the SA Champions Season and the ones that immediately came to his mind were MK’S Pride, whom he said would be good anywhere from 1200m to 1600m, the Gareth van Zyl pair Vernichey and She’s A Keeper and AJ’S Captain from the yard of his wife Barbara and her brother Wayne Badenhorst.
The Kennedys reasons for immigrating are to maximize their financial security in order to provide the best possible foundation for their children. Their second child is due at the end of this month.
Warren has sent his CV to such racing countries as Hong Kong, New Zealand and Australia.
Hong Kong is the ultimate destination for any jockey in the world due to the high earnings potential but the committee that assesses the applications only sit in May.
Ex-patriot South African jockey Donovan Mansour put Kennedy in touch with the right people in New Zealand. Mansour, a former champion jockey of Mauritius, had a career-ending injury while riding in New Zealand.
The advantage of immigrating to New Zealand is the possibility of attaining a “critical work visa” which enables a jockey to not only ride in New Zealand but also to travel over to to Australia to ride.
However, immigrating straight to Australia generally requires a jockey to ride for one stable for two years.