Andrew Harrison
SHARE HOLDER has been something of an under achiever – always threatening but never producing what was expected. Paul Lafferty explained that one of his problems was that he had a serious hoof injury that had only recently allowed them to fit a proper shoe.
With all four hooves in working order it was a change of tactics that finally produced the effort that most knew he was capable off in the third at Hollywoodbets Greyville yesterday.
Most pundits pegged the race as a two-horse contest between Seventh Gear and last season’s WSB Guineas winner Wild Coast, but they were both out-pointed by Muzi Yeni who rode a perfect front-running race.
To quote a Lafferty euphemism, ‘Share Holder pulls like a dentist’ and the instructions to Yeni were to let Share Holder roll. In hindsight, the instructions were superfluous as Yeni wasn’t left with an option as the big chestnut pulled him clear.
Given a breather up the hill, Share Holder was going great guns at the top of the straight with Wild Coast already under the pump but there were ominous signs from Seventh Gear as Keagan de Melo stalked his rival. With two furlongs to run, De Melo released the handbrake and for a few strides it looked as if Yeni was smelling cooked goose.
But Seventh Gear probably needed to gear down to fifth for a bit of grunt as he only got to Share Holders’ tail and no further.
It was a win full of merit and long overdue while Seventh Gear will improve a few lengths. As for Wild Coast, his Champions Season may have already hit the rocks – time will tell.
No one was going to get rich on Kailene in the card opener but those who did have a plunge on the odds-on shot had little to worry about. Making her local debut after a creditable showing in a Cape feature, she always looked to have the wood on her opposition and so it proved.
Lyle Hewitson rode a copybook race, one wide with cover as Global Secret cut modest early fractions under Warren Kennedy.
Taking a traffic-free passage for home, Kailene was never asked a serious question as she cruised to the line under hands and heels with Global Secret staying on for a well beaten second.
The history of sport is littered with precocious talents that have made their names before hitting their 20’s. 19 year-old Luke Ferraris, just recently out of his time as an apprentice, has had a leg up with his Grand Father and father being top trainers, but no matter the pedigree, if you don’t have the talent you are never going to make it.
Young Ferraris is a man of few words, ask him a question and he cuts to the point in a few syllables, a television interviewer’s nightmare but a journalist’s pleasure.
The second was not the Cape Met on Rainbow Bridge or the Triple Crown on Malmoos, but Ferraris was clinical aboard the well fancied Final Destiny for Garth Puller in his maiden win. “He was a right horse in the race,” commented Puller and Ferraris executed it with the precision of a veteran.
The 14-length margin of defeat at her last start will have put many off Laurel Lane but Duncan Howells was quick to admit that his filly was beaten by a better horse. “Sorry Mister Howells, there was nothing I could do,” was the succinct observation from Ferraris who was in the saddle that day.
He was back aboard yesterday, took the race by the scruff of the neck, and kept rolling to the line.
Yeni has had a memorable week with War Of Athena rounding off the Wilgerbosdrift Triple Tiara and winning the HF Oppenheimer Horse Chestnut Stakes aboard Joey Soma’s charge Got The Green Light, second in last year’s Vodacom Durban July.
He may have a few tough choices to make come July time – the first nominations out on Wednesday.
When races go punter’s way in the early exchanges, there is generally a bomb on the way and Yeni was the provider as he produced Nathan Kotzen’s filly with a telling late run to win the sixth at the ‘skinny’ odds of 40-1.