The lightly raced Tristful made short work of odds-on favourite Captain And Master and a useful field of gallopers as Tony’s Rivalland’s gelding out-gunned the field in the Morris Vee Sports Betting Progress Plate at Greyville yesterday.
There were few willing to bet against Captain And Master who was backed deep into the red, but Lyle Hewitson was never able to get close to the rail and stayed three-wide throughout as Run To Denmark towed the field along from his inside draw.
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Sean Veale made an early move at the top of the straight on Tristful, catching the field flat-footed, and hitting the line nearly two lengths clear of Captain And Master, letting Hewitson know that he had been well beaten.
This was only the fourth start for Tristful and given that this was a Plate race he could still be flying under the handicapper’s radar with the Champions Season classics beckoning.
It was also just reward for owner Mary Liley who has a number of horses in training with Rivalland and who has been a staunch supporter of the sport for decades.
Most publicity in horse racing – and any sport for that matter – is centred around the high and mighty but there is always place for those at the bottom, for without them the sport becomes just another boring procession.
Lowly Leicester’s win in the British Premier League two seasons back created more column inches than Manchester City’s follow-up because it was a great story of David vs Goliath.
Michael Clower writes elsewhere on this page of Riaan van Reenen being forced to join Glen Puller due to lack of support and in order to keep going in a sport that they love.
Ashburton-based Julie Dittmer’s roots in the sport go back to race-riding at Richmond in KwaZulu-Natal and other long-closed venues, but has stayed staunch ever since taking out her trainer’s licence. She will be first to admit that there are no superstars in her string and has not had the good fortune of a really smart horse.
But more importantly than that, she has a band of staunch owners and Vanessa Williams – especially Michael Salter will have been ecstatic the way See The Prize dusted off her rivals in the DPG Logistics Maiden.
This was only the third start for the filly, bred by former Supreme Court judge Alan Magid and raised at Summerhill, and the manner of victory belied her 36-1 odds.
She was tailed off on the home turn with apprentice Khanya Sakayi in a seemingly hopeless cause as he scrubbed away. But he kept hard at the filly and she responded with a great turn of foot, reeling in the opposition from way back to win going away.
Granted, the field was not the finest, but it was a tremendous performance no less.
Sakayi, 45 winners, edged another three closer to losing his apprentice claim as he was also successful on Love Button for Glen Kotzen and Ooh La La for Doug Campbell, another graduate of the Richmond races. Not to be out-done, Sean Veale also registered a treble, Tristful and the also Liley owned Clara for Rivalland and Dieci for his regular boss, Dennis Drier.
By Andrew Harrison