keegan latham site

Latham to ride in the UK

Latham has plenty of overseas experience already, having left to ride for Herman Brown in Dubai shortly after graduating from SAJA in 2007 and then riding for three seasons in Ireland for Ger Lyons. He also had a short stint in Mauritius last year.

Latham had a few rides in the UK during his three season stint in Ireland and among them was a win in the Gr 2 Temple Stakes over five furlongs at Haydock in 2011 aboard the remarkable Edward Lynam-trained Sole Power, who as a seven-year-old this year increased his career tally of Gr 1 wins to four after winning both the King’s Stand Stakes at Royal Ascot and the Nunthorpe at York.

The closest Latham has come to thoroughbred Gr 1 glory was when finishing a head back in third on Sole Power in the Gr 1 Prix De L’Abbaye over five furlongs at Longchamp in 2011.

However, he does have a Gr 1 win to his name in purebred Arabian racing, landing the HH The Presidents Cup in Abu Dhabi on a horse called Dynamite in 2008. He made a bit of history in the process as Dynamite became the first locally bred horse to win the prestigious event.

The win in that race attracted the attention of legendary Irish jockey Johnny Murtagh, who then recommended Latham to Lyons.

Latham rode 113 winners in his 2008-2010 stint in Ireland with a high of 44 winners in 2009. He had three winners in the UK in that period.

Latham rode over 100 winners as an apprentice and received a lot of support from Mike de Kock, which brought him a victory in just his second year of race riding in the Gr 2 Gold Vase aboard Wise Son in 2006 and in that same season he also won the Listed Flamboyant Stakes on the top class De Kock-trained Bold Ellinore.

Latham’s other Graded successes in South Africa have been in the Gr 3 King’s Cup on the Glen Kotzen-trained Moscow Rising in 2007, the Gr 2 Senor Santa Handicap in 2012 on the Herman Brown/Frank Robinson-trained Antious and the Gr 2 Post Merchants on the Michael Roberts-trained Mike’s Choice in 2012.

He is hoping to be based around Newmarket in the UK next year. Jockeys ride seven days a week in the UK and spend a lot of time on the road travelling to the many racecourses, so every one of them has an agent. There are more than 35 jockeys’ agents over there and a rider’s success is partly determined by their astuteness in finding competitive rides.

Latham has a British passport as his father Kevin, who now lives in Hillcrest, was born there.

Latham said upon returning from overseas a few years ago that race riding in Ireland and Britain was generally easier than over here, “The horses are bred to handle softer going and are also fitter. They don’t train them faster, but rather further. The average horse that is race fit will have two hard gallops over a mile per week and on the other days will canter over a mile. They are consequently easier rides than the ones over here as they are not as tuned up. Generally the horses train themselves and will let us know when they are ready to race.”

Picture: Keegan Latham (Nkosi Hlophe)

Hammie’s Hooker is on track

“Those two weekends were never part of her program and she will likely be running in the Diadem and will then run in either the Queen’s Plate or Paddock Stakes and then the mile on Met day.”

The races Bass was referring to were the Gr 2 Khaya Stable Diadem Stakes over 1200m on December 27, the Gr 1 L’Ormarin’s Queen’s Plate over 1600m or the Gr 1 Maine Chance Farms Paddock Stakes over 1800m on January 10, and the Gr 1 Klawervlei Majorca Stakes over 1600m on J&B Met day January 31.

He added that he had deliberately planned a fairly light Cape Summer Of Champions season campaign for Hammie’s Hooker (pictured) in order to keep something “in the tank” for a possible big race campaign in Johannesburg, where he currently has a small satellite yard. The Gr 1 Laurie Jaffee Empress Club Stakes over 1600m on April 11 would be her most obvious target on the Highveld, although races like the Gr 2 Hawaii Stakes over 1400m on February 28 and the Gr 1 HF Oppenheimer Horse Chestnut Stakes over 1600m on March 28 could also be options.

Bernard Fayd’Herbe is the regular rider of Hammie’s Hooker and said recently that she was the horse he was most looking forward to riding this season, an indication of her class. The merit rated 110 mare certainly looks to have a few big races at her mercy now that her nemesis Beach Beauty is retired.

Hammie’s Hooker has only had one race this season to date and finished a fine 0,85 length third to her stablemate Tevez on November 16 in the Gr 2 Cape Merchants over 1200m, despite giving the winner 2,5kg.

Bass has one runner in Saturday’s Gr 2 Vasco Premier Trophy over 1800m, the talented but temperamental Jet Master gelding Heldeberg Blue. He has won his last two starts, both over this distance, in good style and Bass said, “We have done a lot of work with him and he has settled down a lot, he is almost normal. We will see how he shapes on Saturday to see whether he runs in the J&B Met, although I don’t think he can beat a horse like Legislate in the Met. Saturday’s race is not cut and dried, but he is doing well and I think he will run well.”

The yard run the four-year-old Trippi filly Shingwedzi and the three-year-old Australian-bred Authorized filly Lucky Tuesday in the Victress Stakes.

Bass felt that the well-drawn hard-knocking Shigwedzi had a reasonable chance in this race, but said Lucky Tuesday would be “thrown in the deep end”, especially from her wide draw.

 

Anton Marcus

Marcus and Shea still on the mend

Meanwhile another top jockey who is on the sidelines, Kevin Shea, has undergone a back operation and is recovering in hospital.

Marcus(pictured) was substituted by Piere Strydom aboard Act Of War in the Gr 2 Selangor Cup and the horse’s reputation as the best three-year-old male in the country was enhanced after his impressive win in that race.

However, Strydom revealed over the weekend that he will remain loyal to the Paul Lafferty-trained Harry’s Son for the Cape Guineas.

This leaves the ride on Act Of War vacant.

The favourites to fill it are likely to be Bernard Fayd’Herbe and Sean Cormack, both of whom have been called on regularly by the Ramsden yard during the current Cape Summer Of Champions Season.

Shea was looking forward to a good season before being struck down by excruciating back pain at the beginning of September. This turned out to be a “bulged C3 vertebra” which was causing one of the discs to touch a nerve. Fortunately, scans showed no damage to the nerves and after a program of rehabilitation he was back in the saddle on October 12. Despite riding a double on the Greyville polytrack a week later on two classy Charles Laird-trained three-year-olds, Rich Girl and Thirtytwosquadron, he was back on the sidelines less than a week later with the same back pain. This time it was shown to be a bulged vertebra lower down. The cause of these problems is simply due to wear and tear after 37 years in the saddle. Shea was initially confident that he would overcome the setback again through a program of strengthening the core area of the body as well as the ligaments near the vertebra. However, he eventually had to agree to the back operation, which was always going to be the last resort between himself and his sports medicine consultant, the former Sharks team doctor, Craig Springate.

He said from his hospital bed over the weekend Sunday, “I am lucky that we did decide to have the operation as the surgeon said that my back was a mess. There was more damage than the MRI scan and the X-rays had shown. The one vertebra was collapsing and new discs have had to be put in. It is going to be a long way back as there is a big adjustment. I will virtually have to learn to walk again. I have taken one or two steps, but am walking like a new born giraffe! The pain is absolutely excruciating, but one would expect to have to deal with that for a spinal injury in which they have had to cut through the muscles.”

Shea said he would love to return to the saddle, but had not yet discussed his riding future with any medical experts.

The operation was performed by a neurosurgeon and an orthopaedic surgeon and was watched by Springate, so he is in good hands.

He will be in hospital for about another week and concluded, “I am hoping to have a good 2015.”

His riding statistics for the season are 8 wins from just 50 rides for a strike rate of 16% and most race fans will be hoping to see his sublime big race skills as usual in next year’s Champions Season.

Paul Lafferty with Harry's Son

Lafferty taking no chances

Lafferty said: “It’s a real safari by road and we are not going to bu**** around. He is a muscle-bound horse and I don’t want him on a heavy track. We will land in Cape Town early on the morning of the race and fly him back again afterwards.”

Piere Strydom, who has ridden the Australian-bred in his last four starts, will again have the mount. The six-time champion won the race on Pointing North in 2008.

Harry’s Son was beaten four and a quarter lengths by 55-1 shock Unparalleled when starting 16-10 favourite for the Investec Dingaans last time but Lafferty was well satisfied with the performance.

He said: “The heavens opened 40 minutes before the Dingaans and the ground became an absolute bog. I thought they were going to have to cancel racing. Our horse ran his heart out but he couldn’t get near one who loved the going.

“I have great respect for the other horses in the Guineas, especially Joey Ramsden’s Act Of War who I think is a superstar, but we are not going to shirk the challenge. We’ve got to get down there and take them on.”

Generalissimo, who broke the Kenilworth 1 200m record last month but failed to stay when tried over a mile in the Selangor, has not been entered.

Dennis Drier said that there are no definite plans for the colt at this stage, adding: “I will play it by ear, freshen him up and then bring him back sprinting.”

Kentucky Guest Scottsville Dec 7

KZN Summer Challenge well received

New hold up tactics have paid off for the Kumaran Naidoo-trained five-year-old Albert’s Hall gelding Albert and he finished strongly off his lowest ever merit of 75 to win the 1200m final under Warren Kennedy. The Mike Miller-trained Clear Sailing had looked the winner when striking the front at the 300m mark but had no answer to Albert’s finish. The favourite Varbration led early but was found afterwards to not be striding out on his left hind and faded out. Commodity Strike finished third and was followed by Libertine and Mr Harry. Albert, owned by the Sukhraj family, was bred by Cecil and Gary Baitz, who ironically own Clear Sailing.

The Doug Campbell-trained five-year-old Miesque’s Approval gelding Kentucky Guest looked a picture going down to the start of the 1950m final and after travelling comfortably in midfield throughout he ran on resolutely to win by an easy 1,5 lengths under Donovan Dillon. This horse was battling until stepped up in trip and looks to have a whole new career ahead of him now as he is relishing the extra ground. De La Danza pipped the second favourite Zhivago for second. Delamere and Good Idea were next best. The favourite Buck Shot was unsettled in the preliminaries and overraced badly, so was eventually pulled out of the race.

Kentucky Guest winning at Scottsville yesterday (Nkosi Hlophe)

Kentucky Guest winning at Scottsville yesterday (Nkosi Hlophe)

Kentucky Guest was bred by Campbell and he also owns him in partnership with Raymond and Paula Deacon, BE Miskin, Morgan Pillay and AR Rapp.

The Duncan Howells-trained five-year-old Spectrum gelding Zestful caught the eye going to post in the 1600m final and after being settled well by Stuart Randolph produced a strong run down the inside to win comfortably despite carrying topweight. Sacred Jewel pipped the joint favourite Auction King for second. Translunar and Big Bird were next best. Zestful is owned by Albert Boshoff and Andre Hauptfleisch and was bred by Highlands Farm Stud.

King’s Gold was the highest points earner in the series and earned R28,500 for his trainers Greg and Karin Anthony. Royal Colours and Royalsecuritypower were joint second and earned R10,750 for trainers Paul Gadsby and Kumaran Naidoo respectively.

Mike de Kock completed a fine weekend when his odds-on first-timer by Captain Al, Captain’s Cup, converted stable confidence over 1200m in the second race under Anthony Delpech. On Saturday De Kock not only won the Gr 1 Avontuur Estate Cape Guineas with the brilliant Majmu over, but also the Listed Advance Fire Systems Secretariat Stakes over 1400m at Turffontein with the Australian-bred Northern Meteor colt Mitraad, who just got up under Randall Simons despite carrying topweight. All three of the aforementioned winners were owned by Sheikh Hamdan bin Rashid Al Maktoum. De Kock added another winner yesterday when his Western Winter gelding Rockaberry Lane won a 1200m handicap under Delpech.

Howells and Randolph also had a double at Scottsville yesterday as King Of Torts won a competitive Pinnacle Stakes event over 1400m.

There were also maiden race wins yesterday for Michael Roberts and Brandon Lerena with Aqaba, Dennis Bosch and Muzi Yeni with Surfing Belle and Tony Rivalland and Athandiwe Mgudlwa with Listen And Learn. The latter caused a major 33/1 upset in the last leg of the Pick 6.

Harry's Son

Strydom sticks by Harry’s Son

The connections of the Paul Lafferty-trained Equus champion colt have sweated for a long time on his travel plan for the big race.vHowever, the Bidvest Group have come to their rescue and the Australian-bred three-year-old colt by Haradasun is booked on an unscheduled BidAir Cargo 737 flight from Durban to Cape Town on the day before the race. Harry’s Son is one of the most laid back horses in training and took both of his recent return journeys by road to Johannesburg in his stride, so should enjoy the flight.

Strydom will consequently relinquish the ride on the likely favourite for the race, the Joey Ramsden-trained Act Of War. He was forthright and said, “Harry’s Son will be up against. It will be his first time around a left hand turn, while Act Of War has experience of the course. But I have been with him for so much of his career that I feel it is right to stay with.”

Strydom said Harry’s Son had moved up so well in the early part of the straight in last weekend’s Investec Dingaans that he thought he might hit the front too soon. However, the classy colt suddenly became one-paced at the 300m mark and could only plug on gamely for a well beaten second. Strydom was not sure whether this was due to the horse not staying the tough Turffontein mile or due to the sticky conditions.

Strydom with Publishing-steStrydom replaced the sidelined Anton Marcus on Act Of War for last weekend’s Gr 2 Selangor Cup and the latter is likely to be back aboard as soon as he returns from his thumb injury.

However, the brilliant Dynasty colt will always loom large whenever Strydom’s illustrious career is discussed as his victory in the Selangor gave the great jockey his 5000th career winner. The milestone accomplishment has been accompanied by much fanfare from the racing media, the wider media and the public.

Gold Circle honoured the achievement on Friday night by flying Strydom down for a lavish function at Greyville. It co-incided with a well attended night racemeeting and “Striker” was able to meet and greet his many Durban fans and sign autographs for them.

The six-times champion jockey said, “The 5000th winner was by far the greatest moment of my career, better than winning the July, the Met and the Gr 1 in Hong Kong.”

Picture: Piere Strydom with the Gold Circle Publishing crew. (Left to Right) Warren Lenferna, David Thiselton, Strydom, Andrew Harrison (Nkosi Hlophe)

via afrika cape flying lk  site

Via Africa on the Shea Shea route

The arduous five month journey she and the other Dubai bound South African horses took was via Mauritius and England.

Hauptfleisch said, “She took the travel and the quarantine very well and Mike (De Kock) said she is doing well in Dubai. The plan is for her to follow the same route that Shea Shea took. She will have a prep run at the end of January. She will then run on Super Saturday on March 7 and on World Cup night. After that she will go back to England and be aimed at Royal Ascot and other top sprints.”

The races Shea Shea took in were The Dubai Excellence Stakes, followed by Super Saturday’s Listed Meydan Sprint and World Cup night’s Gr 1 Al Quoz Sprint. All of these races are over 1000m on turf. In England he then ran in the Gr 1 King’s Stand Stakes over 1000m at Royal Ascot, the Gr 1 July Cup over 1200m at Newmarket, and the Gr 1 Nunthorpe over 1000m at York.

Hauptfleisch raced Via Africa’s mother, the Qui Danzig mare Bump ‘N Grind, with Noordhoek Beach-based trainer Mike Stewart and she won three races over 1000m. However, she does not have a strong female line on paper and Hauptfleisch consequently bought out his racing partners for breeding purposes. His father Gren owned a share in Var and the rest is history.

The now five-year-old Via Africa, who is part-owned by Albert Boshoff, won three Gr 1s under the care of KZN’s current champion trainer Duncan Howells. She was unlucky to not be named Equus three-year-old Champion Filly, but won the Equus Champion Sprinter Award last season.

Her siblings have not fared well to date and three to have raced have only won one race between them, and that was courtesy of her full-sister Imbolc.

However, Hauptfleisch has a share in Elusive Fort and Bump ‘N Grinds two foals by this stallion give reason for hope. The first of them a Howells-trained colt called Al Wahed gives Hauptfleisch “goose flesh” on looks alone and has had two promising starts, a 3,15 length third to the promising Dreamuponadream and a six length second to the top class Generalissimo, both over 1200m. The second of them is a two-year-old filly who looks remarkably alike Via Africa and she is also with Howells.

Bump ‘N Grind currently has a robust foal by Oratorio and is in foal again to Var.

One characteristic of her foals according to Hauptfleisch is that they all eat up every scrap which is always a bonus for a trainer.

Hauptfleisch and Bishoff were at Scottsville to watch the Howells-trained Spectrum gelding Zestful running in the Gold Circle Witness KZN Summer Challenge and their journey from Cape Town proved worthwhile as the horse won the race in commanding style despite carrying topweight.

Picture: Via Africa (Liesl King)

Setback for Afrikaburn

The Milnerton trainer said: “He was shaken up after the Green Point and I wasn’t quite happy with his off-fore joint. I spoke to Fred Crabbia and we are going to geld him. We will then throw him out before bringing him back for the Durban season.”

Studs are apparently queuing up for stable companion Capetown Noir after last week’s decision to retire the Cape Guineas, Cape Derby and Queen’s Plate winner.

Kannemeyer said: “The injury that caused him to be scratched from the Champions Cup (bruising on the near-fore tendon) flared up again and quite a few people are keen to stand him.

“He was a brilliant miler and a magnificent individual as well as being one of the most intelligent horses that I have had anything to do with.

“He also has great presence and just to watch him walking round gave me goose pimples.”

 

majmu skips clear lk site

Met and then the world

The Australian-bred grey boosted her reputation sky-high when she totally outclassed the opposition in the Avontuur Estate Cape Fillies Guineas at Kenilworth on Saturday and her famous globe-trotting trainer is intent on the world stage with his latest star.

Mike de Kock, winning his third Cape Fillies Guineas, said: “I will talk to Angus Gold (racing manager for owner Sheikh Hamdan Al Maktoum) but the Met is definitely in our thinking and it might be her last start here if she is exported.

“I don’t see any need for her to run again before that but, if I do run her, it will be in Jo’burg. We will definitely export her eventually because I believe she is well capable of winning a Group 1 abroad.”

Saturday’s race was robbed of a lot of its significance when second favourite Cold As Ice plunged through the pens, giving Bernard Fayd’Herbe a nasty fall and galloping the full mile of the race. A bitterly disappointed Joey Ramsden felt he had no choice but to withdraw her while De Kock sympathised: “To get to the start in a Group 1 and not get a run is gut-wrenching and I’m gutted for Joey, Finchy and the boys. It took a bit of a shine off the race.”

Fayd’Herbe, who sprained his neck and was stood down for the rest of the day, saw it coming and believes it should have been avoided.

He explained: “She played up and I called to the starter for them to let me out. They didn’t and she broke through the gate.”

Anthony Delpech is still haunted by the ghost of Igugu’s defeat by Ebony Flyer four years ago and he disclosed afterwards that this lay at the heart of his decision-making.

He said: “Igugu got all lost round here and I rode her too confidently – I didn’t get aggressive early enough – and that’s why I rode Majmu the way I did. I wouldn’t have gone clear at the 500m otherwise.

“I also pulled the trigger early because my pacemaker was coming in on me and I wasn’t sure that he knew I was there. She will be better when I can chase a couple home and I think she wants further.”

Indeed it was only in the final furlong that the 30-100 hotpot really came into her own. She seemed to slip into another gear as she strode away and the two-and-a-half-length margin said far more about the way Delpech allowed her to ease than her superiority.

De Kock commented: “The further she goes the better she will be and I thought she won this in facile fashion. She is a tough, strong filly who weighs in excess of 500kg. She is straightforward although fairly temperamental in that she knows what she wants – but I suppose that is typical of most of the female species!”

The surprise packet was 25-1 shot Inara who ran on into second and Mike Bass is now targeting the Maine Chance Paddock Stakes on 10 January.

He said: “She will be comfortable over 1 800m. She is not the most robust filly but she has ability and next season she will come into her own.”

Greg Cheyne made his move on Double Whammy immediately Delpech made his (“she moved up well and stayed on”) but Glen Kotzen was concerned about the way she lost second close home – ”I don’t think she quite gets a mile and she will probably go for a sprint next.”

Vaughan Marshall immediately ruled out suggestions of the Paddock Stakes for Jet Set Go (fourth) and said: “I will take her to Jo’burg and have a crack at the Triple Tiara.”

Picture: Liesl King

fly by night alboran sea lk site

Fly By Night on top of her game

Bass said: ”It’s the Diadem on 27 December next and then probably the Cape Flying (24 Jan) but bear in mind I’ve also done the Sceptre (17 Jan) as well in the past!

“This was a good run from Fly By Night. Alboran Sea went for her life and it was a big ask to catch her. But mine was good enough to do it.”

Stable companion Lanner Falcon (fifth) was severely handicapped by a slipping saddle which, to Grant van Niekerk’s consternation, began to go backwards soon after the start

If Alboran Sea is again in opposition on 24 January she won’t risk being the hare a second time as Mike de Kock said: “This is the wrong place to go to the front.”

Darryl Hodgson and Hassen Adams had some compensation for Fairyinthewoods’ recent career-ending injury when Gerrit Schlechter got Dressed In Cotton up on the line in the Val De Ra Southeaster Sprint.

Hodgson said: “Fairyinthewoods (winner of last year’s Southern Cross) damaged her near-fore tendon in her final gallop for this race. I am very disappointed because I feel she would have won again.

“She now goes to stud – Hassen will decide which stallion – while Dressed In Cotton will run in the Diadem although he won’t be as well in as he was here.”

Picture: Fly By Night gets the better of Alboran Sea in the Southern Cross Stakes at Kenilworth yesterday. (Liesl King)